Information desk An epic

Robyn Schiff

Book - 2023

"From an acclaimed and wildly imaginative poet, a book-length poem set in the Metropolitan Museum of Art that is a work of art history and a coming-of-age story. Robyn Schiff's fourth collection is an ambitious book-length poem in three parts set at The Metropolitan Museum of Art's information desk, where Schiff long ago held a staff position. Elaborately mapping an interconnected route in and out of the museum through history, material, and memory, Information Desk: An Epic takes us on an anguished soul-quest and ecstatic intellectual query to confront the violent forces that inform the museum's encyclopedic collection and the spiritual powers of art. Novelistic in its sweep, frantically informative, and deeply intimate... in its private recollections, Information Desk: An Epic wayfares with riveting lyric intensity through an epic array of topics and concerns, including illusion, deception, self-deception, complicity, lecherous coworkers, the composition of pigment, the scattering of seeds, ideas, and capital, and insect infestations spreading within artwork. Along the way, Schiff pauses to invoke three terrifying muses-parasitic wasps-in desperate awe of their powers of precision and generative energy. Information Desk: An Epic undertakes a hemorrhaging ekphrastic journey through artifice and the natural world"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

811.6/Schiff
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 811.6/Schiff Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
New York : Penguin Books [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Robyn Schiff (author)
Physical Description
125 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 117-124).
ISBN
9780143136804
  • Invocation: To The Jewel Wasp
  • Invocation: To The Oak Gall Wasp
  • Invocation: To The Cuckoo Paper Wasp
  • Notes and Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Schiff (A Woman of Property) revisits her days as an employee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in this breathtaking sweep through personal and public history. A three-part epic subdivided by invocations to the jewel, oak gall, and cuckoo paper wasps, the text considers the beauty of objects made through tortuous and often reprehensible processes. Schiff shifts between the secret harassment to which she was subjected as a staffer at the museum's information desk and the famous artifacts she saw every day, including Edward Steichen's photograph of Balzac's monument, Ingres's painting of the Princesse de Broglie, and the Egyptian Temple of Dendur, where photographer Nan Goldin stages a protest and employees are treated to a complimentary lunch that "felt like a disembodied wedding... you're marrying/ someone you've never met named/ Money who has no idea how to/ enter you." The result is not a surreal layering of images but a flowing, insistent stream, wherein "gushing water/ exposes veins of gold" just as Schiff's "memory rushes/ down the artifice/ thus." Returning often to a 1995 exhibition that brought real Rembrandts together with imitations and student works, the poet uses the painter's "darkness painted with a pigment made of/ cooked bone" as a powerful metaphor for the cruelty in art-making. Schiff has composed a fascinating poetic study of the ways that art relates to its audience. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved