& Later,
Published in Poem Of The Day
-after "Trumpet," Jean-Michel Basquiat
the broken sprawl & crawl
of Basquiat's paints, the thin cleft
of villainous pigments wrapping
each frame like the syntax
in somebody else's relaxed
explanation of lateness: what had
happened was. Below blackened
crowns, below words crossed out
to remind of what is underneath:
potholes, ashy elbows, & breath
that, in the cold, comes out in red light
& complaint shapes- 3 lines
from the horn's mouth
in the habit of tardy remunerations.
All of that 3-triggered agitation,
all that angry-fingered fruition
like Indianapolis's 3-skyscaped smile
when the sun goes down & even
the colors themselves start talking
in the same suspicious idiom
as a brass instrument-
thin throat like a fist,
flat declinations of pastors
& teachers at Christmas in the inner city.
Shoulders back & heads up when
playing in holiday choir of hungry
paints, chins covered
in red scribbles in all of the songs.
About this poem
"I get caught up easily in Jean-Michel Basquiat's paintings, especially his work focusing on boxers and jazz. His painting from 1984, 'Trumpet,' cracked open a tense holiday moment from my childhood. I don't remember any actual trumpets at that holiday fracas, but Basquiat's lines and pigments always seem to create unexpected opportunities for improvisation and meditation."
-Adrian Matejka
About Adrian Matejka
Adrian Matejka is the author of "The Big Smoke" (Penguin, 2013). He is the Lilly Professor/Poet-in-Residence at Indiana University. He lives in Bloomington, Ind.
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The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.
(c) 2015 Adrian Matejka. Originally published by the Academy of American Poets, www.poets.org. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
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