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The Saturday poem: Putting Away Pictures

Written By Unknown on Friday, June 21, 2013 | 11:36 AM


by Maitreyabandhu


When a painting lost its lustre,

it improved, Braque said,

if you put it in the sun

to warm the madder browns

and umbers. People laughed at that.

But paintings do improve

if you put them in a drawer

or like reprimanded

children, turn them to face the wall.

No one rearranges

the forms, adjusts the faulty profile

of a tree, the figure

out of kilter with the ground;

no one modulates

the colour key, takes it down

a pitch or two: shadows

and a wall are all that's needed

to make amends.

The same could be said of you.


• From The Crumb Road published by Bloodaxe, RRP £9.95. To order a copy for £7.45 with free UK p&p call Guardian book service on 0330 333 6846 or go to guardian.co.uk/bookshop





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