Mirabilia
By (Author) Lisa Gorton
Giramondo Publishing Co
Giramondo Publishing Co
1st August 2022
Australia
Paperback
96
Width 148mm, Height 210mm
140g
**Shortlisted, NSW Premier's Literary Awards 2023, Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry**
The poems in Mirabilia test the relationship between art and politics. They are ekphrastic poems complicated by historical narrative; or, they are political poems, inspired by artworks. The title poem is a tribute to the pangolin, the worlds most-trafficked mammal implicated, some say, in the evolution of coronavirus.
Written in Fibonacci syllabics, it is also a reflection on Marianne Moores poem The Pangolin with its sense of natures perpetuity lost in the years since her poem was written. The final sequence Great World Atlas tracks the destructive extent of nuclear testing across the world in the 1960s. It was written for Izabela Plutas artists book Figures of Slippage and Oscillation. The sequence Tongue reflects on da Vincis 1478 painting The Benois Madonna, including the circumstances of its creation in the Pazzi conspiracy and the life of Fioretta del Cittadino perhaps the paintings model who gave birth to the child of the murdered man. Her child was taken; she was written out of the record. In other poems too, Gorton reflects on the experience of the female muse, wife, or mother.