Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I stand, cold. ice white, lit bright by delicate light High above casting block shadows basking art in light. I step front faced with Monet ahead, to right, gaugin I stare, Rembrant, clad in thick frames reflecting scant expression on the face of art on art, tête-à-tête I am wisps of turner set in stone and city galleries staring back into the old disease of oil eyes meeting mine receding grid tiles on floor, axis legs axis, human waxes indifferable from porcelain busts in clear boxes - bowels of heart and lungs quivering on canvas, draped hastily on white walls Cold light, turned down, reflecting frame, but not the painting.
0
Mar 27, 2016
Mar 27, 2016 at 6:43 PM UTC
Stendhal Syndrome
I stand, cold. ice white, lit bright by delicate light High above casting block shadows basking art in light. I step front faced with Monet ahead, to right, gaugin I stare, Rembrant, clad in thick frames reflecting scant expression on the face of art on art, tête-à-tête I am wisps of turner set in stone and city galleries staring back into the old disease of oil eyes meeting mine receding grid tiles on floor, axis legs axis, human waxes indifferable from porcelain busts in clear boxes - bowels of heart and lungs quivering on canvas, draped hastily on white walls Cold light, turned down, reflecting frame, but not the painting.
This poem describes Stendhal syndrome, or the out of body experience felt when seeing a great work of art.
Rosel
Written by
Mar 27, 2016
Mar 27, 2016 at 6:43 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem