Still Life with Oysters and Lemon is the title of a painting by Jan
 Davidsz de Heem (above)  that hangs in the Metropolitan Museum in New 
York - or rather it was the title; it was recently changed to Still Life
 with a Glass and Oysters, ignoring that glorious curl of lemon. But it 
still the title of a rather wonderful slim volume - a long essay really -
 by the American poet Mark Doty, which I've just read. 
Doty's small book begins with an encounter with De Heem's painting 
and takes off into a heartfelt meditation on our attachment to things, 
their place in our lives. Doty's brilliant analysis of the power of the 
Dutch still life interweaves with scenes - and objects - from his own 
life, from the red-and-white-spiral mints that his grandmother always 
carried, to memories of his wife's mother and her house (it was an 
early, doomed marriage), rummaging and collecting with his late partner 
(death is ever present here), things seen and picked up, things that 
stayed in his life, others that were lost... He finds in the Dutch still
 life a celebration of abundance, of the pleasures of the senses, the 
fall of light on objects, their Presence, their Thisness. The most 
commonplace things are intensely seen and celebrated for their own sake,
 as in Adriean Coorte's Still Life with Asparagus, which is simply a 
bunch of asparagus painted with meticulous attention, against a brown 
darkness, the bundled stalks brought (or restored) to the fullness of 
their being by the act of concentrated attention. 
Towards the end of his essay, Doty ponders the relationship between
 painting and poetry, seeing both as essentially unparaphrasable; they 
can only exist as they are, in the form they are in. Whatever he says 
about a painting will always fall short, will always miss an element of 
mystery - its 'poetry'. Part of that poetry, Doty concludes in his 
beautiful closing sentences, is 'the inner life of the dead, held in 
suspension. It is still visible to us; you can look at the paintings and
 you can feel it. This is evidence that a long act of seeing might 
translate into something permanent, both of ourselves and curiously 
impersonal, sturdy, useful.
  Of what use, exactly? As advocates of intimacy, as embodiments of
 paradox, as witnesses to earth, here, this moment, now. Evidence, thus,
 that tenderness and style are still the best gestures we can make in 
the face of death.'

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