"Dazzlingly alert." --MARY SZYBIST
"What is a song but a snare to capture the moment?" This central
question drives Crow-Work, Eric Pankey's ekphrastic exploration of the
moment where emotion and energy flood a work of art.
Through subjects as diverse as Brueghel's Procession to Calvary, Anish
Kapoor's Healing of Saint Thomas, Caravaggio's series of severed
heads, and James Turrell's experimentation with light and color, the
author travels to an impossible past, despite being firmly rooted in the
present, to seek out "the songbird in every thorn thicket" of the
artist's work. Short bursts of lyrical beauty burn away "like coils of
incense ash"; bodies in the light of a cave flicker, coalesce, and
disappear. By capturing the ephemeral beauty of life in these poems,
Crow-Work seeks not only to explain great art, but also to embody it.