This and That at the Frick
I bring my students to the Frick to see Frank
O’Hara’s beloved Polish Rider, and after giggling
at the work Bronzino did on the silver painted crotch
of Lodovico Capponi, whose silk sprouts like a big
snail or scrolled bedpost between his legs, we walk to the West Gallery
and all agree Rembrandt did a grand job. The young man is handsome,
his horse handsomer, especially its head. The rider
looks like he could dismount, meet O’Hara and
Ashbery at the San Remo or Cedar for drinks.
I get it. But across the hall, El Greco’s Vincenzo Anastagi,
despite every frippery, draws no titters.
Graying at the temples, he is armored at the chest and arms,
with a white ruffle around his neck. It escapes
his sleeves, too, bloomy as a rind of stinky cheese,
or egg whites whipped to stiff peaks.
Against this froth his uncultivated face, mid-length
beard, dark eyes—maybe kind, maybe sad. The green
velvet of impossibly puffy shorts does nothing
to lighten the weight of his eyes, nor does cloth
billowing behind him, a drapery from nowhere
come to hold him in relief. A color I can’t name. Not
red, not purple or brown. Like blood in a dream,
oiled as bone broth. What a strange word,
“relief,” which used to denote the body
of a dead person or any kind of remains, but now
means ease, deliverance from pain, or the impression,
in art, that a thing is raised above a surface. Vincenzo
is all these things at once, and I can’t wait to bring Louisa here—
Louisa, who this morning on the train said gross, reading
over my shoulder O’Hara’s description of
“laborers” who “feed their dirty/glistening torsos.”
Gross, she said, on the B train going over the bridge,
meaning O’Hara’s reduction of these toilers to objectified
working class trunks, and she was right, they’re never
just beautiful, these old things, these men’s things.
Source: Poetry (June 2020)