
Reckitt's Blue
An iconic work of Western art, Fragonardâs Lâescarpolette, or The Swing, is often reproduced, and its famous foreground image of a young woman losing her slipper mid-swing is widely familiar. In Reckittâs Blue, John Wilkinson explores that well-known scene in a sequence of poems that engages with the image of the flying slipper.
Though born out of visual encounters with art, the title poem of this book also examines artefacts that evoke a violent encounter, weaponry, and domestic and ritual objects from the Jolika collection of Papua New Guinean materials in San Francisco's de Young Museum. It is here that Wilkinsonâs concentrated lines evidence what the critic Simon Jarvis has called Wilkinsonâs âunfree verse,â reaching into new and unexpected territory in both style and theme.
This combination of sensual beauty, intellectual ambition, and political acuity is like nothing else in contemporary English-language poetry. The âTornadaâ that separates and stitches together these sequences meditates on fire, clay and glaze, on violence and reflective stillness.
âJohn Wilkinson's taut, precise poems, in which lyric grace and ethical urgency move together but never comfortably mix, amount to one of the most significant bodies of work in contemporary poetry.â âPatrick McGuinness
An iconic work of Western art, Fragonardâs Lâescarpolette, or The Swing, is often reproduced, and its famous foreground image of a young woman losing her slipper mid-swing is widely familiar. In Reckittâs Blue, John Wilkinson explores that well-known scene in a sequence of poems that engages with the image of the flying slipper.
Though born out of visual encounters with art, the title poem of this book also examines artefacts that evoke a violent encounter, weaponry, and domestic and ritual objects from the Jolika collection of Papua New Guinean materials in San Francisco's de Young Museum. It is here that Wilkinsonâs concentrated lines evidence what the critic Simon Jarvis has called Wilkinsonâs âunfree verse,â reaching into new and unexpected territory in both style and theme.
This combination of sensual beauty, intellectual ambition, and political acuity is like nothing else in contemporary English-language poetry. The âTornadaâ that separates and stitches together these sequences meditates on fire, clay and glaze, on violence and reflective stillness.
âJohn Wilkinson's taut, precise poems, in which lyric grace and ethical urgency move together but never comfortably mix, amount to one of the most significant bodies of work in contemporary poetry.â âPatrick McGuinness
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$5.85Description
An iconic work of Western art, Fragonardâs Lâescarpolette, or The Swing, is often reproduced, and its famous foreground image of a young woman losing her slipper mid-swing is widely familiar. In Reckittâs Blue, John Wilkinson explores that well-known scene in a sequence of poems that engages with the image of the flying slipper.
Though born out of visual encounters with art, the title poem of this book also examines artefacts that evoke a violent encounter, weaponry, and domestic and ritual objects from the Jolika collection of Papua New Guinean materials in San Francisco's de Young Museum. It is here that Wilkinsonâs concentrated lines evidence what the critic Simon Jarvis has called Wilkinsonâs âunfree verse,â reaching into new and unexpected territory in both style and theme.
This combination of sensual beauty, intellectual ambition, and political acuity is like nothing else in contemporary English-language poetry. The âTornadaâ that separates and stitches together these sequences meditates on fire, clay and glaze, on violence and reflective stillness.
âJohn Wilkinson's taut, precise poems, in which lyric grace and ethical urgency move together but never comfortably mix, amount to one of the most significant bodies of work in contemporary poetry.â âPatrick McGuinness












