By
I.B. Rad
Banality of Evil/Then and Now
While admiring Judy Chicago’s diptych,
“Banality of Evil/Then and Now,”
comprised of two photolinen panels
reproducing brown tone photos
on which the actors and their props
are painted in acrylic grays,
I was roused to write:
The “Then”
The “Then” starts with a photolinen panel
showing a European cottage
in a sylvan setting.
The Nazi flag swings beside a window
as a small acrylic boy proudly thrusts his dad
a Heil Hitler salute
(four toy soldiers and a drum
at his feet);
meanwhile, still in SS uniform,
jacket slung over his left shoulder,
newly arrived from his post,
dad strokes the pet dog
while smiling at mom
who, hugging a chubby baby,
beams at hubby,
while a diminutive daughter,
standing pigeon toed,
demurely waters the garden.
Innocuously painted in the background
so as not to disturb this idyllic scene,
a smokestack oozes
a horizontal plume of gray.
Nothing to bother about,
no need to fear,
no evident pollution here,
just more Gypsies and Jews
going up in smoke.
The “Now”
Underlying the “Now” scene,
is another photolinen panel
showing two suburban homes
set against the backdrop
of an imposing New Mexican foothill.
Two acrylic boys toss a Frisbee.
while a little girl, holding her dolly,
sits on the lawn.
Physicist, part-time outdoor cook, dad,
complete with apron, chef’s hat,
shorts, and sandals,
barbecues hamburger patties
while beaming mom,
also sporting shorts and thongs,
lounges in a lawn chair,
drink in hand.
Standing beside her, their pet dog
looks longingly toward the hamburgers,
a large bone between her forelegs.
All the while,
disclosed by a cutaway,
the imposing foothill
hides a nuclear armory
[“out of sight, out of mind.”]
Just one more lazy weekend in the sun
with nothing more important
to worry about
than enjoying a good barbecue,
except, perhaps, too much exposure.
The artwork described above can be found in Judy Chicago’s fine book, “Holocaust Project, From Darkness Into Light“
Until the Lion Lays the Lamb
Until the lion lays the lamb
I fear our future’s rather slim.
Love between such dissimilar beasts
is less improbable than peace
surmounting that monumental hump,
honest international unity.
And from such unseemly intercourse
what might the issue be?…
Time to love enough for you and me.
Nuclear Pat-a-cake
‘Pat-a-cake, Pat-a-cake baker’s man’ is one of the oldest and best known surviving nursery rhymes
Yellowcake, yellowcake,
nuclear man,
make me a bomb
as fast as you can,
protecting baby and me.
We’ll buy them and buy them,
check them and try them,
then mark them with an “E”
for those mean Enemies,
who’d irradiate and cook us
if we ever strike
and bake baby and me.
Yellowcake, yellowcake,
nuclear man,
make me those bombs
as fast as you can…
I.B. Rad
I.B. Rad lives and plays in New York City. This somewhat controversial poet is widely published with much of his work available on the internet. His most recent book, “Dancing at the Abyss” was published by Scars Publications.”
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