Brian Teare
Neither objects nor time nor space nor anything – no forms.
reading Agnes Martin
on the bus I think
about her “perfection”
for about four blocks
until I begin to hate it
in the drawings I love
she leaves evidence
of process fraying
the grid’s edge
like leftover math
her forms suggest
a counter-rhetoric
dots of color or
the hand-drawn
incidental
serves as a frame
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a word changes as it enters a new discourse
freed from received ideas and responsibilities
stripped to its core it’s made “perfect”
but a word might choose to change itself
outside the realm of perspective
a line that constructs a system
continually escapes perfection
a kind of found quality persisting
a word might choose its medium
graphite over a light acrylic wash
emptiness as an outer limit or
graffiti scratched into the bus window
existence makes a thing useful
nonexistence makes it work
the impossible patterns a life
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* * *
This developing awareness I will also call "the work" It is a most
important part of the work.
I look at paintings
I work on another poem
the teacher Agnes made
with a ruler
and I wonder about
compulsory repetition
the grid as endgame
helpless entrapment
not a spritiual practice
or meditative lyric
but the mind's limit
iterated constantly
I know she believed
satisaction is impossible
art is better hungry
but now I remember
before I became ill
I could open my mouth
I could eat without fear
I could be nourished
teare.html
my lover could enter me
until illness entered me
and I desired nothing else
more deeply than health
A 2015 Pew Fellow in the Arts, Brian Teare is the recipient of poetry fellowships from
the National Endowment for the Arts, the MacDowell Colony, the Headlands Center for the Arts, the Fund for Poetry,
and the American Antiquarian Society. He is the author of four critically acclaimed books — The Room
Where I Was Born, Sight Map the Lambda Award-winning Pleasure (also from Ahsahta Press),
and
Companion Grasses, a finalist for the Kingsley Tufts Award. An Assistant Professor at Temple University, he lives
in South Philadelphia, where he makes books by hand for his micropress, Albion Books.
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