Two egg yolks
quivering in
the icebox.
Kinesthetic
swag
gold coins
kept together
by the thinnest
of film.
Fertile
artifacts
two little dots
slightly gelatinous
at this point,
prick to see
thick yellow
nutrition
bulge a drop
from the wound.
This way they
keep
for a day or
two, freshness is key
to art,
panting, lapping up
paint with full
nouns
like an adult.
Can albumin
bleach
the translucent
leak
from shaking
separation
back and forth
plopping
into halved
shells, porous white
in a bowl and
then the yellows
kept intact for
now.
If
quick-tempered
the shells are
a light way of cracking.
Method acting
your way
through life.
Tempera is a
technique to paint
with pigments
powders, powder
the cheeks
to fill in the
blanks of dermis,
powders mixed
with yolks
to form a
consistency
that endures.
Application has
a drier
sheen than oils
a hard shellac
but a fecund
being.
Imagine
painting in
reproductive
cell tissue
ovum mother.
The embryo
hidden in a yellow halo
is just another
product
of
modification, mindless protein
leveled across
the canvas
like an insult
to all the
babies relaxed
into existence.
Klara du Plessis [photo credit: Brian Campbell] is a poet and critic residing alternately in Montreal and Cape Town. Her chapbook, Wax Lyrical, was released from Anstruther Press, 2015, and a full-length collection of multilingual poems is forthcoming from Palimpsest Press. She curates the monthly, Montreal-based Resonance Reading Series, and writes reviews and essays for Broken Pencil Magazine, The Montreal Review of Books, The Rusty Toque and other journals. Follow her on Twitter @ToMakePoesis
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
No comments:
Post a Comment