The clan has, it seems, an intermittent membership of virtually one hundred percent of the adults of our species.
Scars – the psycho-emotional kind – with only one cause: love. The lack of love or its excess or one of its many malformations.
Some shelter their scars, constantly fingering them. They do not feel fully alive without this.
The Fist Derek Walcott, 1930-2017, Saint Lucian
from Collected Poems: 1948-1984.
The fist clenched round my heart loosens a little, and I gasp brightness; but it tightens again. When have I ever not loved the pain of love? But this has moved
Melancholia, 1953, opaque watercolour on paper.
Ben Shahn, 1898-1969,American born Lithuania. Philadelphia Museum of Art
past love to mania. This has the strong clench of the madman, this is gripping the ledge of unreason, before plunging howling into the abyss.
Hold hard then, heart. This way at
least you live.
Saddle, 2000, full raw hide.
Jennifer Antoni, American born 1964.
A cast made from rawhide of the artist’s body. On display at the Metropolitan Museum, NY in 2017
Chlorosis (love sick), 1994, ink, gouache and acrylic on 24 sheets of paper.
Marlene Dumas, South African born 1953. MOMA, NY
The Sitter, 1992, wax, cheesecloth, wood and dye.
Kiki Smith, American born 1954. On display at the Metropolitan Museum, NY in 2017
The poet, however, forswore his scar addiction and learned to live without them
to write the magnificent poem he called ‘Love After Love’.