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Review: Zigzag

A light shone through the darkness

March 16, 2011 11:58
Anthony Rudolf: artistry

By

Clive Sinclair

1 min read

By Anthony Rudolf
Carcanet, £9.95

The painting on the cover of Tony Rudolf's new collection of verse and poetic prose shows an artist in the process of producing a self-portrait. To the left is the artist's image in a looking-glass, to the right is the work-in-progress itself. Between them stands the painter, his back to the viewer. But the puzzle is not yet complete, for the composition implies a second artist, who has captured the scene for posterity (he needed to, for the man in the picture died in the same year as its composition, aged only 20). As in a 1973 poem of Rudolf's: "In bed, to die young/ like an early night".

But in common with (at least some of) The Who, Rudolf has grown older, and now stands in for that invisible (but implied) other artist. Though, needless to say, his instrument is the pen, not the brush. The object, however, remains the same: to send a telegram to the future.

Zigzag is divided into five sections. In the one called Scenes from Childhood: after Schumann, Rudolf describes another going down of the sun: "I raise up my eyes./ The lowly sun/ Has disappeared./ This place is called/ The headland". This cerebral terrain is Rudolf's home turf; a place where intellect rules, and words are the only legal currency.

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