1190: At the Museum of Empress Livia’s Garden Room by Pimone Triplett
1190: At the Museum of Empress Livia’s Garden Room by Pimone Triplett
Transcript
I’m Major Jackson, and this is The Slowdown.
In the middle of the day, my friend Jeremy and I shared a joint then went to the Philadelphia Museum of Art. We were young and seeking fun. Our friend Jennifer met us there. We gave ourselves the assignment of guessing the names of visual art, only looking at the wall signage after making our guess. We stood close, then moved back, then inched closer again, studying every inch of a canvas with great seriousness — then, bursting out a title, like it was a great game no one had ever thought of before.
In front of Cezanne’s The Large Bathers, Jeremy shouted The Nude Beach at Sundown. By Picasso’s The Three Musicians, I said, The Clown Sits In and Plays Bluegrass. We roared in delight and were shushed by several attendants. I became self-conscious, aware other museum goers were agitated by our boisterous laughter. But we kept at it, going from room to room.
But then, we found our play silenced, by powerful works that demanded our attention, conceptual works that elicited our stillness. I remember how Brancusi’s Bird in Space, abstracted to a single gesture of flight, blew our minds. We heard on the surface of a canvas, the noisy and chaotic music of Duchamp’s mechanical painting Nude Descending a Staircase. We were coaxed into the quiet and serenity of the museum.
Today’s lyric poem walks us through a villa garden painted on a fresco. Reading the poem, it is as though we eavesdrop on the speaker’s awe, but also how a rich, imagined replica of fruit, birds, trees leads us to thoughts about our own relationship to natural spaces.
At the Museum of Empress Livia’s Garden Room
by Pimone Triplett
In a future we believe in, these plants will all be ghosts. In the Rome that likes to be a mirror, you can see the way a single shrub, once quick-set to seal the emerald shade to a spiky evergreen shape on the thousand-year-old-fresco, is all smudge and distant cousin now to its own far forward arboreal bogey. In the ancient room you can walk right into eons of oscillating blurs, bend down close for leftover pigment drippings, alembics of a laurel self. The nouns pile up. Umbrella pine, oleander, quince. Or go missing as anything else because we think so, thought so even in this painted garden where an emperor’s wife came for the quiet scheming held essential for her well-preserved world to go. If you squint, the eggshell poppy comes clear. The planned erasures of boxwood or cypress say how much an underground passion for ruins first requires the building of a city above. You hope the copy in the gift shop captures the delicate crawl of chamomile that fades left of center like a garden overlaid with the idea of garden, ongoing. Come to your senses. The guard in the hallway has a bad cough. The only bird in a cage is near the exit. The rest are free.
“At the Museum of Empress Livia’s Garden Room” by Pimone Triplett. Used by permission of the poet.