Christian Schlegel's RYMAN consists of three talk poems, in the tradition of the artist David Antin. The first talk was conducted at the author's desk in the Hudson Valley, the second over Zoom, and the third, in two parts, while he paced a cemetery in Ithaca and a businessperson's hotel room in Albany. Topics include the painter Robert Ryman and his contemporaries, Romantic poetry, avant-garde film, obsessive-compulsive rumination, and friendship.
These pieces were composed ex tempore, recorded, and mostly faithfully transcribed, for an effect very close to speech, or thought in action. Something like poetry.
I like artists who are confused by what they do or for whom the doing comes first always, writes Christian Schlegel, who in this riveting book takes up and extends the idiosyncratic and revelatory art practice that was--for forty years--David Antin's talk poems. Like Antin's, Schlegel's thinking in public is something you feel, as if in the room, happening to remain on the surface of the thought, to accompany artists like Robert Ryman and Donald Judd and filmmakers like Charles Burnett and Nicole Holofcener through ideas and forms, and to find a poetry with my life as the medium and the action are objectives that choreograph this free intellection, captivating and bracingly precarious in its development. Friendship and facture, shame and embodiment are sorted and moved around as concepts, as a continual preparation for a performance that, it turns out, this book is delivering.--Brian Blanchfield
What happens when pages talk? What are these forms of attention and involvement that they instigate--forms which feel so qualitatively different from reading even as I know that reading is exactly (is all) I'm doing? Christian Schlegel's RYMAN is a transformative sequence of poems which gently, deliberately, with detailed concentration, as well as great risk and vulnerability, hold open a space-time for something like participatory rumination. To read them is to play a part in their new social system. I was addressed, committed, and everything mattered.--Kate Briggs
To talk is very pleasant when it looks like writing, writes Gertrude Stein in Listen to Me (1936). Here, where to read is to hear and to talk is to compose, the reverse is the case. Schlegel's wager is to run on by elaborating, digressing, extrapolating, and ruminating, to circle back to produce what David Antin refers to as radical coherency. Radical because it develops sometimes rather startlingly and is held together by something so elusive, itís nothing if not pleasant. I, for one, am all ears.--Mónica de la Torre
Poetry.