Alexandepoetry R
Alexandepoetry R
Alexandepoetry R
Karen Alexander
Why Should I Buy a Bed When All I Want Is Sleep?, the title of Nicolas Humbert
and Werner Penzels 1999 Chamber Film on the American poet Robert Lax, is
taken from a Lax poem first published in the New Yorker in 1942. The Man with the
Big General Notions1 is a fable that mocks the mans abstract ideas. This man is ac-
counted very wise. When he went to build a house he said, Why get brick when
all you want is HARDNESS?, and he makes a pile of various hard things. Next he
asks, Why should I get cement when all that I need is STICKINESS?
So on top of the stone he put some snow
And on top of the bone he put some glue
And on top of the box he put some tape
And on top of the bar he put some gum
And on top of the pile he put molasses
This mans lack of practicality and disregard for the concrete in favour of the abstract
is ultimately his downfallor at least that of his house. It eventually tumbles down
about him. Some man // Some house, the poem ends.
Abstract vs. concrete is a relevant opposition to raise, for although Laxs work
appeared in anthologies of Concrete poetry, and he was described in 1968 as a con-
crete poet of international fame, he is more properly characterised as an abstract
Minimalist. Laxs eventual development of an abstract style was strongly influenced
by the work and thought of his friend, the painter Ad Reinhardt, and The Man with
the Big General Notions may have been directed at Reinhardts dogmatic insistence
on abstraction as the only true mode of art. Reinhardt also dictated that there should
be a strict separation between art and life, an issue Lax grappled with time and again.
Yet in Humbert and Penzels film, as well as their 1999 video installation Three
Windows, Laxs life has become art. In both works, which share footage, the camera
lingers close to Laxs face, showing only his eyes. Mundane tasks such as washing
dishes and feeding cats are attended to with solemnity in the film. The camera fol-
lows Lax down the winding streets of the village on the island of Patmos where Lax
lived for more than thirty years at the end of his life, and patiently records the proc-
ess of an elderly Lax walking into the sea, step by step, with the aid of cane. A sig-
nificant portion of the film is given to the reading of One Island, one of Laxs most
impressive poems. The treatment given to the poem undercuts its abstraction, and
ties the work of art to life by combining footage of Patmos with Laxs reading, turn-
ing an abstract rendering into realistic representation.
Humbert and Penzels video installation on Lax was co-produced by Kunsthaus
Zrich, Haus der Kunst Mnchen, P3Art and Environment Tokyo, Kiasma Museum
of Contemporary Art Helsinki, and Bavarian Radio. Laxs Journeyman Press books
and films made of Laxs work by Emil Antonucci were the subject of a show at the
Zona Gallery in Florence, Italy in 1979. An exhibition of his work alongside that of
Reinhardt was held at the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart in 1985. A reading in celebration of
Laxs eightieth birthday was staged in Zurich, the home of Pendo Verlag, one of
Laxs publishers. A performance of his Black /White Oratorio was staged at the Festival
de la Btie in Geneva in 1997, attended by a triumphant full house, probably be-
cause the audience remembered the festival six years previously, when he read be-
1 Robert Lax, The Man with the Big General Notions, Love Had a Compass: Journals and Po-
etry, ed. James J. Uebbing (New York: Grove, 1996), pp. 35-37.
Interval(le)s I, 1 (Automne 2004)
The Abstract Minimalist Poetry of Robert Lax 111
fore an utterly enchanted audience.2 These facts are some of those that can be of-
fered as evidence for the international fame of this American poet who produced a
distinctive body of work before his death in September 2000.
Much of Laxs poetry is instantly identifiable as his own. It features starkly re-
duced lines that give it the appearance of verticality, a severely restricted vocabulary,
and rhythmic repetition, and it resembles that of no one else. As David Miller put it
in 1975, long before Laxs literary production ended, Lax is a poet whose discoveries
are entirely his own and not drawn from the books of other poets; he has been from
the beginning an extremely original, an unprecedented innovator.3
Lax persisted in his uniqueness through the nineties, but he remains relatively
unknown in his native country. His work has not, to my knowledge, been antholo-
gised since he appeared in two collections of Concrete poetry in the 1960s, and liter-
ary scholars have largely neglected him. The economics of printing bear some of the
blame for this neglect. Some of Laxs poems, while Minimalist in nature, require a
great deal of paper for their proper presentation. The proportion of text to white
space is exceedingly small, and editors have expressed reluctance to publish him for
this very reason. His characteristic vertical style is at odds with the demands of the
publishing business. If you have any short poems which are more horizontal than
the one you sent me last year, wrote James Laughlin to Lax on New Directions sta-
tionery in 1969, Id love to have a look, for Ive always wanted to see you in the An-
nual one year. But we do have this terrible space problem now, which cuts down
badly on certain types of poems.4 A few years later Laughlin reiterated his interest
and again stressed the issue of spatial constraint: do let me see some of your journal
or any short poems.5 James Fitzsimmons of the Lugano Review, who in 1965 did pub-
lish Laxs Sea & Sky, a Minimalist poem extending to 117 pages, also expressed
concern that it would too expensive to publish some of Laxs poems as they should
be presented.6
Many of Laxs poems contain only one, two, or three words, and first-time rea-
ders may find this stark simplicity baffling or even off-putting. These poems run the
risk of provoking the response not unknown to Minimalist artists working in various
media, that the artwork has too little work in it, that it is not-art-enough, or was
so easy to produce that it could have been done by anyone without much effort.7
Claims that Laxs preferred method of production is automatic writing and the
characterisation of his attitude as one of confident negligence with regard to the
publication of his workwhich poems should be printed and where and how
do nothing to dispel such initially erroneous assessments of his work as carelessly
conceived and constructed.8 As Lax himself noted, it is hard to write a simple
2 Vincent Barras, The First Production of Black/White Oratorio, and Two Meetings with
Robert Lax, both in The ABCs of Robert Lax, eds. David Miller and Nicholas Zurbrugg (Exe-
ter: Stride, 1999), pp. 226, 221.
3 David Miller, The Poetry of Robert Lax: An Introduction, New Lugano Review, no. 2 (1975),
p. 46.
4 James Laughlin, letter to Robert Lax, 2 July 1969, Papers of Robert Lax, Columbia Universi-
ty.
5 Laughlin, postcard to Lax, 23 December 1973, Lax Papers, Columbia University.
6 James Fitzsimmons, postcard to Robert Lax, n.d., Lax Papers, Columbia University.
7 See Richard Wollheim, Minimal Art, in Gregory Battcock, ed., Minimal Art (London: Stu-
dio Vista, 1969), p. 395, and James Meyer, Minimalism: Art and Polemics in the Sixties (Yale
University Press, 2001), p. 81.
8 Gerhard van den Bergh, On Robert Lax, in Lax and Bergh, On and By Robert Lax: Essay,
poem. . . . it is hard to write a poem that is not simply, simply a poor reflection of
many other(s) poems.9
Whatever the reason for Lax remaining unknown and thus unappreciated (for
those who do know his work praise him generously), his continued neglect is a
shame. I agree with Richard Kostelanetz that Lax is among Americas greatest poets,
a true minimalist who can weave awesome poems from remarkably few words.10
Laxs Minimalism is precisely what sets him apart from most contemporary Ameri-
can poets. It is inextricably bound with claims for his excellence, for it is not just the
case that Lax is good and a Minimalist: Lax is good through or because of his Minimal-
ism. Abstraction is the key to his Minimalism, and it was influenced not only by
Reinhardt, but also by Laxs spiritual concerns. His achievements in this mode repre-
sent the best of literary Minimalism itself and demonstrate the power a reductive
method can hold for getting to the root of the question of why literature matters to
us.
The late 1950s were crucial, transitional years for Lax as a poet. His letters to
Thomas Merton, whom Lax met while both were students at Columbia University in
the 1930s,11 indicate that he was in close contact with Reinhardt at this time, when he
was living in New York. In 1959, Lax and Reinhardt visited Merton at the Geth-
semani monastery in Kentucky where Merton eventually settled. According to Rich-
ard Kostelanetz, Lax sought linguistic purity comparable to the visual purity of
[Reinhardt] and the spiritual purity of [Merton].12 But the divisions are not so neat.
Lax recognised the spiritual element of Reinhardts doctrines. Reinhardt exhibited a
keen interest in a variety of spiritual traditions, and acknowledged the validity of
making a religious analogy to his artistic process.13 Though years earlier Reinhardt
had attempted to talk Merton out of entering the Catholic Church, in 1957 he pre-
sented Merton with a small version of one of his black paintings, with the under-
standing that Merton intended to use it for meditative and latreutic purposes.
Reinhardts influence, that is to say, was not at odds with Laxs religious inclinations,
but it did affect the way in which those appeared in his poetry.
Laxs 1959 book Circus of the Sun is replete with religious overtones and has
been admired by Denise Levertov, E.E. Cummings, Marianne Moore, and Susan
Howe. It was put together in its final form during the transitional period of the late
1950s but was begun in the late 1940s and represents an earlier mode for Lax. Lax
remarked that at the end of the book, everything, the whole circus disappears (as
they always do) & with it disappeared my interest in such a wide variety of images.
From this point on, Lax says, he began to concentrate on one image, or a few very
simple ones, or still later,. . . on no image. The end of the circus was for Lax the
beginning of a more abstract style of writing.14
The treatment of religious themes in Laxs poetry accords with Reinhardts
ideas about the spiritual in art, and his influence no doubt had something to do with
the poets abstract Minimalism. But his impact can also be demonstrated in practical
9 Lax, (notes for comment) [Notes for a commentary to accompanying a recording of Laxs
work for the Library of Congress made in Athens, Greece on 18 November 1965], Lax Papers,
Columbia University.
10 Richard Kostelanetz, Robert Lax: Neglected Minimalist, American Book Review, XXI/3
friendship there. Lax features prominently in Mertons book The Seven Story Mountain.
12 Richard Kostelanetz, Lax, Robert, Dictionary of the Avant-Gardes (Chicago: A Capella
Books, 1993).
13 Naomi Vine, Mandala and Cross, Art in America, November 1991, pp. 124-133; p. 126.
14 Lax, (notes for comment), Notes for the commentary accompanying Laxs reading of his
poems for a Library of Congress recording made in Athens, Greece in 1965. Lax Papers, Co-
lumbia University.
Interval(le)s I, 1 (Automne 2004)
The Abstract Minimalist Poetry of Robert Lax 113
terms. In an interview, Lax said, I think that conversations with Reinhardt, and his
directions in painting, certainly had an influence on my writing. Sometimes not spe-
cifically, but the general direction that he was working in certainly didtowards re-
ducing the number of colours, reducing the form, and repeating the theme.15
The transition to a new style was not altogether smooth. One can see Lax strug-
gling to reconcile ideas like those espoused by Reinhardt with more expressive mo-
des of art and poetry in Problem in Design, written in 1958, when Lax was in the
process of shifting to his new style:
what if
you like
to draw
big flowers,
but what
if some
sage has
told you
that
there is
nothing
more beautiful
nothing
more
beautiful
than a
straight
line
?
what should
you draw:
big flowers?
straight lines?
i think
you should
draw
big
flow
ers
big
flow
ers
big
flow
ers
big
flow
ers
big
flow
ers
big
flow
ers
15 Nicholas Zurbrugg, Interview with Robert Lax, The ABCs of Robert Lax, p. 28.
Interval(le)s I, 1 (Automne 2004)
114 Karen Alexander
big
flow
ers
big
flow
ers
un
til
they
be
co
me
a
str
ai
gh
t
l
i
n
e16
Lax breaks up the word flowers into syllables, and then reduces them even more,
making the poem represent visually the straight line the flowers are to become. A
layout on the page like this makes the poem concrete, ironically so, since it in effect
advocates abstraction. It seems reasonable to assume that the sage is Reinhardt.
Continued development in this direction can be seen in a poem I discovered in
the Lax Papers at Columbia University in a large notebook with material from 1960
and 1961, including work that was to be published in Laxs 1962 book New Poems:
i draw
straight
lines,
said
the young
man,
and think
they are
perfectly
beautiful;
but what
can I
draw now?
straight
lines,
i said
straight
lines,
straight
lines
until
they
disappear
16Lax, Problem in Design, Love Had a Compass: Journals and Poetry, ed. James J. Uebbing
(New York: Grove, 1996), pp. 40-41.
Interval(le)s I, 1 (Automne 2004)
The Abstract Minimalist Poetry of Robert Lax 115
This poem suggests that Laxs aesthetic moved even further at this time toward ab-
straction and Reinhardts doctrine of negation. Big flowers have been left behind,
and the question now is how far one can follow the trajectory of the straight line.
Note also the shift in perspective: In Problem in Design, there seems to be an indi-
vidual speaker muddling over the question, and prefacing his conclusion with the
somewhat tentative I think [you should draw big flowers . . .]. In the second poem,
there is a dialogue, the first half of which appears to be contributed by the speaker of
Problem in Design, but he has been relegated to the third person: his words here
are reported. The response is much more positive this time: there is an unequivocal
statement of what should be done. The I in this poem has now adopted the role of
the sage.
Formal reduction and repetition together with an abstract treatment of spiritual
themes characterise the following poem, written in 1960 and first published by John
Ashbery in Locus Solus in 1962:
The port
was longing
the port
was longing
not for
this ship
not for
that ship
not for
this ship
not for
that ship
the port
was longing
the port
was longing
not for
this sea
not for
that sea
not for
this sea
not for
that sea
the port
was longing
the port
was longing
not for
this &
not for
that
not for
this &
not for
that
the port
Interval(le)s I, 1 (Automne 2004)
116 Karen Alexander
was longing
the port
was longing
not for
this &
not for
that17
The Port Was Longing is visually striking, exemplifying Laxs vertical style.
This poem and the three other Lax poems that accompany it are immediately distin-
guishable from the rest of the work in the Double Issue of New Poetry of Locus So-
lus in which it appeared alongside work by Ashbery himself, Frank OHara, Diane Di
Prima, James Merrill, Barbara Guest, and Kenneth Koch, among others. The lines of
Laxs poems are markedly shorter than the others, and there is decidedly more white
space on the pages on which they are printed. The insistent repetition also sets Laxs
poems apart, as does the severely restricted number of words. Particularly noticeable
is the complete absence of adjectives, and the lack of any definite descriptions. In
fact, this is in part what the poem is about: not this, not that, but something inde-
finable, ineffable. I would argue that the indefinable, inexpressible something ges-
tured toward with these demonstratives is religious in nature. It indicates a sort of
negative theology, in which one can only say what God is not, and not what God
is. Reinhardt had a similar notion about his painting: in interviews he would talk
about his painting in terms of what it was not.
Traditionally in religious poetry, the port represents the serenity and safety of
heaven the storm-tossed soul on the seas of life longs for. In Laxs poem, however, it
is the port itself that does the longing. Perhaps the port could still be said to stand for
a sort of heavenly abode, and its longing could be a force that draws souls to it. But
in the context of Laxs work, it more likely stands as a metaphor for spiritual desire
on the part of the soul, a theme found in Laxs Circus of the Sun, 21 Pages, and Psalm.18
There is more to be said about the poem from Locus Solus. The repetition of the
phrase the port was longing does not suggest, as the poem goes on to tell us, that
the port is longing for something specific. Rather, longing is its state of being.
Something essential about its nature is being asserted here: the port is longing. It may
still function as a religious poem, even though overt religious references have been
dispensed with. The emphasis on a state of being, on an essential nature, takes the
poem far from any reference to a specific port, as does its lack of adjectives and iden-
tifying terms. It is, therefore, abstract. These abstract features, together with its terse
lines and limited vocabulary also make it Minimalist.
The distinctive verticality of Laxs poetry was to become even more prominent
in a number of the New Poems: he seems there to have abandoned the big flowers
in favour of the straight line. Lax chose the title New Poems in order to emphasise
the stylistic difference of these new works. Even some of his closest friends were at
first taken aback at the poems starkness. I was surprised at the small thin lines run-
ning up and down the pages, wrote Merton.19 Laxs former teacher at Columbia
University, Mark Van Doren, must have expressed his initial reservations to Lax, and
received instructions on how to get more out of them. I read your new poems aloud,
several times, as directed, and they had power. But they would have morefor me
still moreif they had more different words in them, and therefore more (I think)
17 Lax, the port was longing, Love Had a Compass, p. 9. Written in 1960. First published in
Locus Solus, vol. 3-4 (1962).
18 The Circus of the Sun (Journeyman Books, 1959); 21 Pages (Zurich: Pendo Verlag, 1984);
Thomas Merton and Robert Lax, ed. Arthur W. Biddle (University Press of Kentucky, 2001), p.
244.
Interval(le)s I, 1 (Automne 2004)
The Abstract Minimalist Poetry of Robert Lax 117
thoughts.20 There are certainly fewer words in New Poems, and the small thin lines
or the straight line in poetry is perhaps nowhere better illustrated than in the series
of one-word poems Lax wrote in 1960-1962, some of which appeared in New Poems.
Consider, for example:
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never21
The form of this poem is reduced to the utmost in simplicity, and the vocabu-
lary is cut down to a single word, which is repeated. Laxs instructions to Van Doren
to read the poems aloud reveals the natural rhythm he wanted to capture in the
number of repetitions, a point Lax made again in an interview in 1985.22 Negation
dominates, by virtue of the particular word chosen. Never is a straight line stretch-
ing into infinity, disappearing into nothingness.
It would be misleading to claim that negativity is prominent as the content of
Laxs poetry, unless it is in the inexpressible nature of God, as suggested in the works
I mentioned above, and in Laxs remark, I think that by definition God is unknow-
able to us.23 Although stop and death constitute the vocabulary of other one-
word poems, is, life, and go receive the straight-line treatment as well.24 But
the negativity of a reductive method, which excludes various things from the poetry,
is a relevant topic. We have seen how Lax reduces the line to a single word, and in
some cases, to just a syllable. In a statement of purpose Lax repeatedly stressed his
interest in the syllable as a basic unit of poetry and language. Clearly, he often omits
words, leaving the reader to construct any possible grammatical unit with what is
given, or dispensing with grammar altogether. Laxs concern with formal reduction
is evident this poem:
forms
forms
forms
basic
basic
forms
basic
basic
basic
basic
basic
20 Mark Van Doren, letter to Lax, 16 February 1963, Lax Papers, Columbia University.
21 Lax, New Poems (Journeyman Books, 1962), n.p.
22 Nicholas Zurbrugg, Interview with Robert Lax, Patmos13th January 1985, The ABCs of
Weeds, dated December 1961 and January-February 1962. The others are published in New
Poems, n.p.
Interval(le)s I, 1 (Automne 2004)
118 Karen Alexander
basic
forms25
Lax has also written poems that use reduction to basic forms as a method to
explore the meaning of what it is to be a poem. These two also appeared in New Po-
ems:
123
123
1234
123
123
123
1234
123
1234
1234
1234
123
123
123
1234
123
AAA
AAA
AAAA
AAA
AAA
AAA
AAAA
AAA
AAAA
AAAA
AAAA
AAA
AAA
AAA
AAAA
AAA
When asked about these poems, Lax explained that they were inspired by see-
ing what abstract painters can do with their workand trying to find what the es-
sence for me of a traditional poem is, and getting it down to that. . . . I wanted to see
what it would be. And its something like this. I wanted to do it with the simplest
elements.26
The structure of these poems is worth noting. Both exhibit a certain pattern ba-
sed on the numbers three and four that recurs in various ways in Laxs work, and
they do so on different levels. On the larger scale, each poem comprises four stanzas,
the first, second, and fourth of which are the same, while the third varies. The same
pattern applies to the lines in the first, second, and third stanzas: one, two, and four
are identical, and three is a variation. There may be a mystical significance to the
combination of the numbers three and four. Certainly the number three is prominent
in Christian theology and symbolism. In an article on the spiritual in Reinhardts
paintings, Naomi Vine points out that the painter may have had Jungs notion of the
quaternity [a]s an archetype of almost universal occurrence in mind when compos-
ing his black paintings. In addition, Reinhardts notes on his work include numer-
ous lists of ways to divide the universe into four parts.27
But a simpler, less esoteric explanation serves just as well. Lax used repetition
as in music, in order to establish a pattern to play against. A theme is established
by stating it once and then repeating it. Next there follows a variation, and finally a
return to the initial pattern. The minimum number of units with which this can be
accomplished, then, is four. These poems are minimalist because they stick close to
the bare minimum number of units required to be the type of thing they are, they
make use of an extremely limited variety of units, and their referential aspect is se-
verely curtailed. They are also abstract because what they do refer to is a pattern,
something that doesnt exist in its own right, not in any physical or concrete sense,
but must be drawn out of or read off instantiations of it. Lax is looking for or
describing similarities: he is engaged in the process of (in his own words) discover-
ing principles at work in the universe and applying them to art, discovering that all
the principles are one, & applying that to art.28
Laxs colour poems form a significant proportion of his oeuvre. These poems
make use of a strictly limited number of colour words, and are experiments in starkly
Minimalist abstraction. Nevertheless, they also raise issues of the relation between
the abstract and the concrete, and between abstraction and representation. Here is
one example of this group of poems:
black white black white
black white black white
white white white black
white white black
black black black white
black black black
white white
white
Although it was published as one of Three Concrete Poems,29 this is about as
abstract as one can get. Other poems in the same vein make use of red and blue
instead of black and white. Years later Lax composed a maxim on this type of po-
etry: it doesnt matter if red is not red[;] what matters is, red is not blue.30 In other
words, it is the contrast between the elements that is important, and that allows the
poet to use them to suggest a pattern.
Such patterning is audible when Laxs Abstract Poem is read aloud:
red red black red
red red black red
black black blue black
black black black
black black black black
black black black black
blue blue blue blue
27 Naomi Vine, Mandala and Cross, Art in America, November 1991, p. 128.
28 Lax, untitled notes, September 1972, Lax Papers, Columbia University.
29 Lax, Three Concrete Poems, Love Had a Compass, pp. 15-17.
30 From A Red and Blue Notebook, 4-8 October 1972, Lax Papers, Columbia University.
The title, Abstract Poem, echoes those of the numerous works by Reinhardt he
called simply Abstract Painting. Written in 1965 and published in 1967, this poem
has a structure like that of the 123 and AAA poems from New Poems, where there
are four units, the first, second, and fourth of which are identical, and the third a va-
riation. This is also the case with Homage to Reinhardt, published a year after the
artists death:
black
black
black
blue
blue
blue
black
black
black
black
blue
blue
blue31
The title of the poem refers us to the black paintings of Reinhardt, some of
which apparently also had hints of blue. Even a play, New Verse Drama, which
appeared in Monks Pond in 1968, has the same basic structure.
Laxs long poem Black & White appeared in a 1966 issue of the Lugano Review
featuring Concrete poetry, and by the mid-1960s Laxs name came to be associated
with Concrete Poetry. The Scottish Concrete poet Ian Hamilton Finlay was the first to
make this connection. Finlay gave Laxs The Port Was Longing pride of place on
the cover of the Concrete Number of his little magazine Poor Old Tired Horse in
1964. Finlay probably chose the poem because of its distinctive appearance, although
the visual element does not contribute to its meaning in the way it would in a prop-
erly Concrete poem. In 1967, Finlay devoted the entirety of Issue 17 of Poor Old Tired
Horse to Lax. Issue 18 was given over to one of Reinhardts dogmatic texts beginning
There is just one Art. Later still, Finlays Homage to Robert Lax employed
Reinhardts name as one of its few words, appropriately broken up into syllables in
imitation of Laxs vertical style.32 Stephen Bann included Lax in his 1967 Concrete
anthology, and Mary Ellen Solt followed suit in what is perhaps the best-known col-
lection of the form, Concrete Poetry: A World View.
Despite the fact that the contributors notes to Mertons periodical Monks Pond
proclaimed Lax in 1968 to be a concrete poet of international fame,33 doubts that
Lax truly fit in the company of Concrete poets crept in early on. In the introduction to
his anthology, Stephen Bann admits that Indeed Robert Lax comes closer than any
other poet whose work is included in this collection to achieving an almost abstract
style. By abstract, says Bann, I mean something significantly different from con-
crete: something which is in fact almost the antithesis of concrete. . . . One might say
that the concrete procedure is inductive, while that of the abstract is reductive. And it
is this element of reduction which is the remarkable feature of Robert Laxs work.34
Although I am unsure whether Banns analysis of Concrete procedure is correct, his
31 Lax, For Ad Reinhardt, Stereo Headphones vol. 1, no. 1 (Spring, 1969). Originally publis-
hed in Voyages, vol. 1, nos. 1 and 2 (1968).
32 Ian Hamilton Finlay, Homage to Robert Lax (Wild Hawthorn, 1974).
33 Monks Pond: Thomas Mertons Little Magazine, ed. Robert E. Daggy (University Press of Ken-
Yet evidence suggests that Laxs colour poems were not entirely uninfluenced
by current events. On 15 September 1963, four young black girls were killed in a rac-
ist bomb attack while attending church in Birmingham, Alabama. In early October,
Merton wrote Lax that he was tired of belonging to the humiliating white race.
Reinhardt was a prominent subject of exchanges between Lax and Merton at this
time. They discussed his participation in Civil Rights Marches, and writing from
Greece, Lax declared himself present at the marches in spirit. Both were full of praise
for their artist friend, and not just for his political activities. By this time Reinhardt
had begun to paint his five-foot square black paintings exclusively. Old Reinhardt is
a splendid fellow and all but the king of the birds, wrote Lax. His paintings is mag-
nificent and works like dynamite when set down in any particular locale. They are all
black paintings (get it?) black, black, black & can hardly help doing some good in the
whole situation. In the midst of this conversation, Lax gave Merton some poetic ad-
vice: as reinhardt makes now all the time the same black painting, make you also all
the time the same dark poem; all the time, just that one poem: here a word, there a
word, maybe a little different; only when you think it should be, until it gets to be
tight as a sonnet: the music, the music always the same, here a word, there a word
just a little different. You got the right answers, returned Merton, I think this
poem should get blacker and blacker and blacker like Reinhardts paintings, then
everyone will see the light, they will have to. Every man got one poem, and when he
stumbles on it he got to make it smaller and smaller and blacker and blacker and
then it will finally convince. Lax replied that he had of recent months become so
generally small & black myself that it is useless for me to apply for abrogation from
the whites. How come you want to get out of the race (they would snigger) you was
never in it.39
Along with this letter Lax sent Merton the first part of the second volume of
the book I am always writing, probably a long poem called Black & White that
was eventually published in the Lugano Review in 1966. In the autumn of 1972 Lax
explicitly stated what the context of the 1963 Black and White poem suggested,
that life or life provides models for art at a certain early stage of the game. Ab-
straction and purification of art, that is, art drawing on its own resources rather
than looking outside its domain, is not a divorce from life which relegates it to a
barren sphere. It is an extension, a development of life, as abstract science is. . . . it
is a further development of nature, a further refinement of processes already in exis-
tence. Reinhardts name, as usual, comes up in this context: abstract painting, as
painting, has a short way to go, and has probably gone it. Reinhardt may not have
been wrong in saying he was doing the last paintings, even though the other arts lag
behind in furthering the new non-mimetic modes.40
Lax finally rejected Reinhardts insistence on the absolute autonomy of art. The
following by Lax appeared in the catalogue for an exhibition of his work shown
alongside Reinhardts in Stuttgart in 1985:
Im beginning to think
r was wrong
not r, but an idea i had
of him that i practically
worshipped
that said life was the
opposite of art
& art was the opposite
of life
& proud of it
39 This exchange took place between 5 October and 2 November 1963. See When Prophecy Still
Had a Voice, pp. 251-259.
40 Lax, Untitled notes, 21 September 1972, Lax Papers, Columbia University.
round round
& &
turn turn
ing ing
earth sun
earth sun
earth earth
earth earth
bright round
& &
burn turn
ing ing
bright bright
& &
burn burn
ing ing
sun earth
sun earth
sun sun
sun sun
41 Quoted in Sigrid Hauff, A Line in Three Circles: The Inner Biography of Robert Lax (Munich:
Belleville Verlag, 1999), p. 197. Also published in Timeless Painting: Ad Reinhardt (exhibition
catalogue) (Stuttgart: Staatsgalerie, 1985), p. 85.
42 Lax, Round & Turning (Firenze: Rattenfallen, 1978)
It seems to me that in this 1978 poem Lax has told of the roundness of earth
very simply, one word at a time, as he said he wished to back in 193943. By empha-
sising geometric shape, it also echoes, in an abstract fashion, a passage from the 1959
Circus of the Sun about the creation. Such poems thus serve as evidence of Laxs long-
standing commitment to finding a poetic method adequate to such profound con-
cerns as the nature of the world and the human relation to it.
Here is another of Laxs nature poems, Dark Earth Bright Sky (1985):
dark dark
earth night
dark dark
earth night
bright bright
sky day
bright bright
sky day
dark dark
earth earth
dark dark
earth earth
bright bright
sky sky44
We could not be more familiar with the simple contrasting elements in this poem, but
we often allow the clutter of our lives to obscure our awareness of them. Lax medi-
tates upon them and presents them anew, direct and primitive, clarified for our
consideration. The contrasting terms and simple rhythm of the poem reflect the two
poles that define our earthly existence and the rhythms of alternating light and dark,
as the earth turns, that give order to our lives. We are reminded of the presence of
forces in the world much larger than we are, forces that make patterns and provide
regularity. With the help of life-giving light and the restful dark, life exists at the con-
junction of earth and sky. This is truly essential poetry, poetry with its roots deep in
the universal foundation of the human consciousness.
43 Untitled Notebook, 2 September-18 December 1939, Robert Lax Papers, Columbia Univer-
sity.
44 Lax, Dark Earth Bright Sky (Furthermore, 1985), n.p.