Museum Hands
I keep getting thrown out of museums.
Blame my mother, a sweet dabbler who told
me to get my hands dirty whether in
the garden with a trowel, kneading bread
in the kitchen or in the studio
by the wheel, throwing clay and mixing glaze.
Mostly I get thrown out for touching things.
Every guard has been affable, charming
and insistent. I do appreciate
places where the good stuff is kept under
glass, although I weep for all that lonesome
beauty we must leave to share. Yes, I know.
This is how we learn to know things, by touch.
Reading is only a secondary
skill. I can tell you that European
porcelain heft’s totally different
from the Chinese – the types of clay, I think.
Texture of hand-mixed and layered paint is
grittier than acrylic. I can tell
you that gold leaf has a slightly oily
feel. Sometimes I have to lick my fingers.
This is how I know the dust on Dali’s
Last Supper has a different taste than
Rothko’s Chapel paintings. If I could I
would make a coat out of any Watteau
and wear that glory snug against my skin.
Give my love and my apologies for
being overcome to the National
the Hirshorn the Met
to Byodo-In
Canterbury Cathedral the Bishop
to La Maison Caree the Gibbes,
Plaza de Toros and the V&A
……as the list grows.
K. L. Johnston's poetry has appeared in journals ranging from Small Pond magazine in the 1980s to more recent work appearing in Humana Obscura and Pangyrus. She is a contributing poet to the 2022 anthologies "Botany of Gaia" and the upcoming "South Carolina Bards 2022."