top of page
Oracle Dreams Her Death (Excerpt)

A poem, even within the most revered traditions of form, remains a site of grand permissiveness.

 

The heart of poetry resists grammatical fascism and, as such, often denies the reader a singular interpretation of its text.

Readers of poetry become translators, collaborators, and performers of information.

We place emphasis, annotation, and pause as directed. But more often  we place these as we individually see fit.

As readers we perform poetry to ourselves in the theater of our minds. And we do it the way we think it should be performed. 

This work investigates the act of reading and presents it as a suggested score for mental movement within a sensory and memory-based experience of the poetic.

Oracle Dreams Her Death (Excerpt)

Digital Video (0:54)

2021

bottom of page