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Barry X Ball, Elise Siegel, Jane Yeh, Jessica Stoller, Leonid Lerman, Mary Szybist, Radcliffe Bailey, Salvador Jimenez-Flores, Theodore Weiss, Victoria C. Slotto
“rough edges,” by Elise Siegel
2026 Anthology!
Call for poetry submissions:
In celebration of dVerse Poets Pub’s 15th anniversary in 2026,
we invite poets from around the globe to contribute to our upcoming anthology,
Krisis: Poetry at the Crossroads.
Submission period: April 1, 2025 to June 30, 2025.
Check it out here!
Welcome to the dVerse Universe. I’m Lisa, your Tuesday Poetics host today. The Enchanted Tiki Bar (so dubbed by De) is open, and I’m serving magical concoctions and most excellent snackage. What can I get you? This past Tuesday, like every Tuesday, I met up with my family at Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park. Not only are the sculptures out in the sprawling acreage, they dot the interior corridors. Even the floor of the main corridor is a sculpture!
“Last Man (Guardian of Forbidden Books)”
by Leonid Lerman
There are also real galleries with changing exhibits. A new exhibit, “Busted: Contemporary Sculpture Busts,” opened last week. Described at the fmg’s website as:
showcases this ancient sculpture genre as radically transformed by 21st-century artists. Throughout history, sculpted busts have served to commemorate and preserve the likeness of distinguished individuals, and to celebrate divinity or nobility. In recent years the bust format has experienced a revival among contemporary artists, as they’ve found it a compelling means to address issues tied to identity, mortality, power, and history.
I don’t know about you, but I *adore* the idea behind this exhibit! My granddaughter had so much fun looking at the them. Listening to her impressions was the highlight of the afternoon.
“Nommo,” by Radcliffe Bailey
Being geeked with the busts made out of so many materials, in so many styles, with so many ways of communicating “issues tied to identity, mortality, power, and history,” I thought it would make a wonderful prompt. Searching through the dVerse archives, I found this most excellent prompt by Victoria C. Slotto from 2012, titled, “Sculpting a Poem.” After reading it, I realized I didn’t need to reinvent the wheel. Thank you, Victoria! I encourage you to read her prompt for guidance today.
“Iberoamerican,”
by Salvador Jiménez-Flores
Seeking poems about sculpture, I found a few. First this excerpt, discussing an artist at work.
From The Hook
By Theodore Weiss
...
She is hammering. I hear
the steady sound inside our dry,
noisy days. Sparks fly; the mind,
so taken, mighty for a moment,
becomes quarry and sculptor both,
something caught like love and war
in this golden mesh: and daring
caught that flings like sparks girls
and boys, flagrant cities prompt
to daring’s will, love and war
its burly seconds.
…
“Envy,” by Barry X Ball
Then these excerpts from a “negative” form (not something.)
From Why I Am Not a Sculpture
By Jane Yeh
To be a statue carved by Bernini
Lounging in a climate-controlled museum in Rome is luxury
Like the luxury of a personal pan pizza with unlimited free toppings
Or the luxurious feel of a premium eye pencil used to draw bisons on the walls of a French cave
To be so white and glossy is unimaginable
...
Where I am marble and still my wrist will be a marvel
Like the marvel of an isthmus whose name can only be pronounced if you have a lisp
Or the marvelous sausage that saved a man from the Inquisition in 1582
...
(Although I am not a statue I have often held my arms aloft
As when catching a carelessly thrown baby or pointing at two meteors at the same time)
It is exhausting trying to be so inanimate and desirable
If my arm breaks off like the shell of a freshly-filled cannoli
You will know why
“Untitled (Slip),”
by Jessica Stoller
I love this next one, where the poet interacts with a sculpture.
Touch Gallery: Joan of Arc
By Mary Szybist
The sculptures in this gallery have been
carefully treated with a protective wax
so that visitors may touch them.
—exhibitions, the art institute
of chicago
Stone soldier, it's okay now.
I've removed my rings, my watch, my bracelets.
I'm allowed, brave girl,
to touch you here, where the mail covers your throat,
your full neck, down your shoulders
to here, where raised unlatchable buckles
mock-fasten your plated armor.
Nothing peels from you.
Your skin gleams like the silver earrings
you do not wear.
Above you, museum windows gleam October.
Above you, high gold leaves flinch in the garden,
but the flat immovable leaves entwined in your hair to crown you
go through what my fingers can't.
I want you to have a mind I can turn in my hands.
You have a smooth and upturned chin,
cold cheeks, unbruisable eyes,
and hair as grooved as fig skin.
It's October, but it's not October
behind your ears, which don't hint
of dark birds moving overhead,
or of the blush and canary leaves
emptying themselves
in slow spasms
into shallow hedgerows.
Still bride of your own armor,
bride of your own blind eyes,
this isn't an appeal.
If I could I would let your hair down
and make your ears disappear.
Your head at my shoulder, my fingers on your lips—
as if the cool of your stone curls were the cool
of an evening—
as if you were about to eat salt from my hand.
“Untitled,” by Radcliffe Bailey
I took a bunch of pictures of the busts yesterday and have included several of them here (please click on the images to enlarge them.) Your challenge, if you choose to accept it, gives you two options:
a) Create a sculpture (or bust) of yourself. Use any materials – real or imagined – using the guidelines within Victoria’s 2012 prompt.
b) Write an ekphrastic poem using one of the included busts. If you choose this option, please make sure you include artist attribution on your blog.
New to dVerse? Here’s how to join in:
• Write a poem (in any form) in response to the challenge.
• Enter a link directly to your poem and your name by clicking Mr. Linky below
and remember to check the little box to accept the use/privacy policy.
• You will find links to other poets, and more will join so please do check
back later to read their poems.
• Read and comment on other poets’ work– we all come here to have our poems read.
• Please link back to dVerse from your site/blog.
Prompt Open Until Saturday at 3 PM







The pub is open. Welcome!
Good evening from Stockholm in this Easter week… Friday and Monday are holidays here… so it feels like the end of the week is coming.
Welcome, Bjorn. For working folks, I imagine it does feel that way. Glad you get a couple of days off.
Hi Li and Björn. Li, I loved the poems you selected and a great prompt.
I am still catching up with OLN poems.
Welcome, Punam. Thanks so much. I just finished reading your stellar poem.
You are welcome, Li. Thanks a lot, I didn’t hold back writing this one.
❤
hi all
easter weekend nearly here only two work days and two evenings of live poem sharing to go.
really enjoyed the pics to chose from.
rog
Welcome, Rog. Sounds like you and Bjorn are headed towards a long weekend. Great! Glad you liked the pics.
Pingback: Depth Through Mindfulness – Experience Writing
Stepping out for a bit. Will be back later to stroll the poetry trail…
My Son and I enjoy Las Vegas, though we don’t gamble ~ the music, people, shows, lounging by pools, food, sports venues ~ all of it entertaining ~ thus my poem today. Thanks for hosting, I would love a pinot grigio!! Enjoy your week, Lisa.
Welcome, Helen. I’ve been to Las Vegas once and enjoyed it very much. Heading over to the poetry trail to read your poem…
p.s. Oops! Almost forgot your glass of pinot grigio. Cheers!
A very interesting choice for our prompt. It should be a fun challenge. Thank you for hosting! How about another root beer float with chocolate Ice Cream in it.
Welcome, Dwight. Glad you like the looks of the challenge. Making two root beer floats with chocolate Ice Cream, one for you one for me. YUM! Cheers.
Cheers! Enjoy!! They are the best!
Nice prompt, Lisa.
Welcome, Robbie. Thank you ❤ Hoping you write to it (and may already have because this comment was 12 hours ago.)
Yip, I have written 😊
Just read it — and love your cake sculpture art!
Thank you, Lisa. Thanks for the inspiration.
You’re very welcome x 2, Robbie.
😊💓
obliquely to prompt A, Lisa, but if not, please feel free to remove. cheers, M ~
Welcome, Michael. Just finished reading and loved you sculpted composition. Cheers, and don’t bogart that joint.
Hello, Lisa, thanks for hosting. The poem/sculpture came to me swiftly and easily, love it when that happens, thanks to your awesome prompt!
Welcome Jay 🙂 My pleasure on hosting. Am very happy you were inspired by the prompt. Heading over to read your poem right now.
I’m sorry I missed your wonderful prompt, Lisa. I looked up your sculpture gardens—they look amazing. They remind me of a the Yorkshire sculpture park that I love visiting. Has the bar closed? I’d love a Negroni if it’s still open 🩷
Welcome, Lesley. The bar is always open. One Negroni, coming up. Cheers!
I’m happy you have a sculpture park within visiting distance.
You can write to the prompt and link up with an Open Link Night Thursday. Maybe choose a sculpture from the Yorkshire park as an ekphrastic?
Thank you, Lisa. Slurp. Delicious! Oh yes, what a good idea! I’ll try and sculpt something! 🙏🩷
🙂 ❤