Tender Terrors
By Tom Wachunas
“…I grew old distracting myself from what I
knew to be true. And then, just like I knew it would, it came late one night,
looming with slowness, from the fjords.” –from What Would Kill Me, poem by Zachary Schomburg
EXHIBIT: FJORDS – Art inspired by the poetry of
Zachary Schomburg, through September
26th, presented by Translations Art Gallery at Cyrus Custom
Framing, located at 2645 Cleveland Ave NW, Canton 44709, with over 30 artists
exhibiting. (330) 452 – 9787 www.translationsart.com
Zachary will be
coming to Ohio and doing a poetry reading and book-signing on Thursday,
September 24th, from 7-9 PM, at Cyrus.
Webster defines
fjord, or fiord, as “a narrow inlet or arm of the sea bordered by steep
cliffs...” So already, the imagery conjured in our minds sets up an expectation
of encounters with the strange, dangerous, and perhaps mystical. From that
perspective, this exhibit doesn’t disappoint.
After reading
several of the poems from Zachary Schomburg’s Fjords, volume 1, and viewing their accompanying art works, I began to envision myself in a Quentin
Tarantino movie, speaking the poems out loud, as in reporting my dreams to a psychiatrist. He’s gonna have a Freudian field day with
this stuff, I’m thinking. The good doctor looks up from his note pad and
pensively sucks his pen for a few seconds before mumbling the proverbial, “So
tell me, how does that make you feel?”
At which point I leap from the couch and punch him repeatedly in his face. As I
wipe my bloodied knuckles on his chest, our eyes lock. His are wide,
unblinking, terrified. “Thanks, Dad,” I say, leaving the room, adding,
“I love you.”
Rest assured that
such an event would never transpire in my personal dealings. But it wouldn’t be
so shocking in the situations and circumstances that Mr. Schomburg describes.
He does so neither with sing-songy rhymes nor metric rhythms, but rather by seamlessly blending conflicted emotional rhythms. “There is one tree for every
person,” he writes in The Killing Trees, “and the trees have all started falling on the person
they’ve grown tall to fall on…” His image-laden sentences are delivered with
such matter-of-fact, disarmingly conversational ease that their often barbed absurdities,
or their precarious and occasionally nihilistic content, can take on an edgy
humor if not unexpected tenderness.
So Schomburg’s world
is a fated one where, among other possibilities, people routinely wait for
purposed trees to fall down and crush their skulls; where kids’ cereal is a
malevolent commodity; where you might not be able to get into the movie theater
because the clerk is having sex in the ticket booth; where rescue from disaster
can make you just as likely to fall in love with the inevitability of death as
with the rescuer.
There are many
commendable artworks in this exhibit – wildly diverse in styles and media - by
more than 30 artists from both the Canton area (including some made in classes
at the Stark County Board of Developmental disabilities) and outside our region.
The ones I find especially arresting are those that - while to varying degrees
recapitulating specific imagery from Schomburg’s words - resonate necessarily
as metaphors for, or symbols of the poems’ often enigmatic and metaphysical
aspects.
Here’s just a
partial list, pictured above in the following order. Tim Belden’s digital photo
collage, Dead Star Breakfast Versus The
Ming Muses (from the poem, What Would
Kill Me) – a crispy contemporary Pop icon of insouciant cultural
consumerism; Matt Medla’s monochromed painting on a knobless door, Boy in Waiting (from the poem, The Killing Trees) – a moving portrait
of contemplative loneliness; Patrick Buckohr’s acrylic painting on a stressed
wood panel, Because It Comes Right At You Does Not Mean It Comes
To Save You (from the poem of the
same name) – ambiguous and foreboding; Annette Yoho Feltes’ mixed media
assemblage, The Relationship was Balanced
by Equal Amounts of Baggage (from the poem, Someone Falls in Love with Someone) – a vaguely erotic device
looking like it came from a Medieval alchemist’s lab.
This exhibit offers an intriguing take on
“fate” and “bittersweet.” Many of the poems seem characterized by a wearied
resolve, like knowing that even as you bite into a succulent peach, your
pleasure is destined to end with cracking a tooth on the pit. And the idea of a
fjord still looms large. There’s the lingering sense – alternately intriguing
and cloying – that even if we’re left terribly mangled from our torturous slide
down its stony ledges, there’s always the waiting arms of the sea. There, we’ll
either bleed out, drown, or tread water until saved.
Life can be like
that.
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