Thursday, May 8, 2025

this room is under study


the room is triptych

a distortion of the manifesto:

space, silos, substance


there is no roof

nor ceiling, only sky & clouds

are our constants

whatever lies beyond

the dark blue skyline is anyone's

guess

spin your story & see 

where this takes you-


imagine:  there is no wall

or cabinets to display photos

or keepsakes, yet

every absence holds shape 

of what can be 

every unopened door stirs & tears

of what may be 


you are told

this room has two doors-

but what you see is not just two doors 

the openings are everywhere

also the ground is unlevelled, moving

under your feet, folding & unfolding-


you roll over

get egg wash all over your face

& unroll again & again

this ground is not a vanishing point-

the room is under study

for you see so many possibilities

and in this moment, you are 

both light & darkness

both ending & beginning



Kay Sage, entitled, My Room Has Two Doors (1939)


Posted for dVerse Poets Pub - OpenLinkNight.   The image is for the optional prompt but I also used some words from our Tuesday's Poetics, In Our Words, hosted by Melissa Lemay.

Join us when the pub doors open at 3pm EST.      Thanks for your visits and comments.

21 comments:

  1. Love how you managed to capture the surrealism of the picture, it can be seen both as very confusing, but also a place of many possibilities.

    but what you see is not just two doors
    the openings are everywhere
    also the ground is unlevelled, moving
    under your feet, folding & unfolding

    and with the moving ground there is also a sense of urgency.

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    1. I love this comment - the moving ground connoting a sense of urgency. I feel this now with our newly elected government (Canada).

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  2. "every absence holds shape
    of what can be "

    you spun such a surreal story Grace - a joy to read

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  3. "every absence holds shape / of what can be"
    This line works well with the shadows coming from the right, out of frame and left to the viewers imagination.

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  4. A unique ekphrastic poem, Grace, and I like the combination with Melissa’s prompt. I love the opening lines, the thought of ‘only sky & clouds’ as ‘our constants’, and every absence holding ‘shape of what can be’. The repetition of ‘the room is under study’ is very effective.

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  5. Love your take on the artwork. The moving ground is felt globally I think.

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  6. Surreal feel with so many possibilities yet many constraints

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  7. It's so surreal (words and painting), but I love how it feels grounded and hopeful at the end.

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  8. I love not only the title but the whole interpretation in your poem, especially the final stanza.

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  9. The beauty of a great ekphrastic poem is that it enhances the viewing of the picture with at least one interpretation of its meaning. I love yours. This surrealist image is disquieting, challenging the way our brain makes sense of things at a glance but when you look at it more, those assumptions don't hold and you render this perfectly, Grace...

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  10. "Guess," "imagine": a fine invitation to quest for meanings, singular or plural or whatever. That's the call to abstraction: "every absence holds shape / of what can be / every unopened door stirs & tears / of what may be." Lively response to the challenge.

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  11. A wonderful interpretation of the picture, Grace!

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  12. I love how you used the egg image. Very clever. For some reason, this put me in mind of John Lennon's "Imagine".

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  13. Grace, your poem is gorgeous! My favorite chill producing line ~~
    "whatever lies beyond the dark blue skyline is anyone's guess spin your story & see where this takes you" ~~ the ultimate flight of fancy I think. Thank you for leaving me a comment.

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  14. A surreal and beautiful poem , Grace. Elegant and eloquent...JIM

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  15. Coming at it cold I didn't get to the picture until the end - then it all made sense. Great interpretation of the picture.

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  16. A kind of quantum physics dream!

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  17. A delightful poem, Grace! I tried to write to the image and only got egg all over my face...

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  18. You captured the surreality of the artwork so beautifully, Grace. Love your interpretation of it.

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