In 1994, the late Helen Pinkerton published Bright Fictions: Poems on Works of Art, a chapbook of twenty-seven poems about paintings, sculptures, pottery and photographs. Her publisher was the poet R.L. Barth. Helen’s ekphrastic poems are not art criticism or mere descriptions of subject matter. They are more fanciful than that and sometimes read like contemplative fables. Helen projects her imagination sympathetically into the works and their creators. One of my favorites in the series is about an artist unknown to me before first reading her poem some years ago: “On Gari Melchers’s ‘Writing’ (1905) in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.” Helen uses the first line (and the third line and the title) of Wallace Stevens’ “The House Was Quiet and the World Was Calm” as the poem’s epigraph:
“How often did she make
such quiet, one wonders,
This woman writing at a
covered table—
Full summer light warming
the roseate hues,
Mauve, red, and pink of
dress and cloth and room.
A Wedgwood pier glass
shows three Roman figures
In ritual dance—cool
neoclassic Graces—
Beside a clay pot of
geraniums.
Her taste eclectic—like
our modern lives—
Loving the past but
settled in the living,
“She seems
meticulous—even, perhaps,
Like Edith Wharton,
passionate for order,
Feeling, as she did, that
in house and novel,
‘Order, the beauty even of
Beauty is.’
Stevens, though you sought
order in the sea
And grander heavens, the
threat of nothingness
Unmanned you. Most women
have no time for such,
For fate constrains them
to immediate means,
The quiet art of keeping
calm the house.”
When viewed for the first
time, Melchers’ palette is stunning – “roseate hues, / Mauve, red, and pink of
dress and cloth and room.” Often, portraits of writers at work indoors are heavily
shadowed, very serious and almost grim. Melchers’ painting is a sumptuous celebration
of the writer and writing – and of painting. Outside, it’s summer. Indoors,
facing the faceless woman are the Graces – the goddesses of beauty, grace and
charm – the virtues of all good art. The quoted line is taken from Thomas
Traherne’s “The Vision.”
Imagining the writing
woman as Edith Wharton (whom Helen’s teacher, Yvor Winters, thought superior to
Wharton’s friend Henry James) is inspired. I especially admire Helen’s knock at
Wallace Stevens, who could be awfully fey when entering his philosophical mode.
Call it noble feminism – or simply dismissing a clichéd notion about sexual roles.
The poem’s first line – “How often did she make such quiet, one wonders” –
suggests we may be witnessing not a routine event but a privileged moment. What
she’s writing we’ll never know.
[You can find the poem in Taken
in Faith: Poems (Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, 2002) and in A
Journey of the Mind: Collected Poems of Helen Pinkerton 1945-2016, (Wiseblood
Books, 2016). Helen died on December 28, 2017, at age ninety.]