About I, Ursula
By Ruth Stacey
My second poetry collection focuses on muses and discusses various aspects of the artist / muse relationship. Muses are often used as a projection for the artist's personal feelings, making a muse something that becomes idealised and objectified. How does the muse feel about this, and how do they strive for their own artistic expression? There are varying perspectives in the book; some poems embody and voice famous muses like Lizzie Siddal, Jane Morris or Iseult Gonne. Other poems direct the gaze at the poet’s muses becomes poetic memoir. The relationship between artist and muse is often romanticised and sensual; it can project a strength on to the muse to buttress against the existential dread and anxiety felt in the artist. This becomes an uneven relationship of unreliable narratives. I explored many poetic forms as a way of expressing these anxieties and desires. The various expressions of haunting and themes in the work, that appeared in the many redrafts and creative process, include inhabiting rural landscapes, animal shapeshifting, mental illness, inheritances, folklore, witchcraft and fears centred around mothering children.
Here are two poems from the collection:
against new canvases.
Modi sketches me; my neck slicks into a snake.
Brown eyes tender in his version of my face.
Peach and pink oil paint on my skin:
painted becomes my skin.
in my cheekbones.
transforms into a headdress.
reflected from my mirror into portrait.
I capture my soul more accurately than he.
Averse Muse
poems written about
you, then
by seducing me softly until the honey
suckles.
will transform you into a buck
leaping to escape the word dogs.
Beware, your brown eyes will turn bitter –
I am not just this season, not your bit of fun
your royal jelly into wax; I will
describe the growl that you make as you come
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