THE EXHIBITION
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THE EXHIBITION •
‘Eclipse’
Autumn Farmer is an artist and writer studying Creative Media at Champlain College. Throughout her time on earth, she has used poetry as a coping mechanism and way of documenting every day life, however exciting or mundane. She has had several poems published in the Rutland Herald, as well as a creative nonfiction essay in the North Dakota Quarterly.
Eclipse
you awake in a bush
the road, deepening to a crisp orange around the cracked clay and gravel,
stretches its curving spine over the
heat-laden heaps of jaundiced grasses
hips and elbows and buttocks of fertile dirt
in it burrows mice and vole
you can hear their hearts pumping beneath
the substrate
timid feet skittering through veins of earth
you’re planted on the soil, toasting under an emptying sky
you’re naked, crescent flare boring into your drooping back
starting between stooped shoulders
your pores well with reflective beads
thousands of wet eyes to see the blackening hole
coils of smoke slither up from the sparse trees
that you can see, the vertebrae reaching for cloudless
cerulean that purples as it meets the dirt
rippling with warmth and sagebush
all these shadows trembling in foretaste
your fingers and toes are knotty branches
brittle from drought and hot shale
there’s a distance between you and them
a rift in your senses
swaying like the aspen and limber pine as you rise
an Almeh astray in ardent orange and dusty saffron
timber to singe and turn to skeletal ash
there is no white to your eyes
in the sand you scrape a garden of footprints towards
the water, a flat Shangri-La beyond the expanse
rainbows and redbands swim corridors and chasms
sparrows greet the steam writhing off the surface
you drag your sack of bones and muscle
weary under the might of a waning sun ligaments and sockets thrust and strain
such a machine, desperately following the valley road
so mortal, the gouge in the earth that plunges to her
swelling cobalt blood
your feet reach the shore
followed by knees and elbows and ribs
obedient soldiers to the fatigue
you watch the crescent grow atop the water
as rays descend like gallow branches
a hollow reckoning gapes in the sky
surrounded by glowing lips as the humps and canyons
begin to blue and cool
you scoop it into your florid palms
and drink the empty sun.
Autumn Farmer is an artist and writer studying Creative Media at Champlain College. Throughout her time on earth, she has used poetry as a coping mechanism and way of documenting every day life, however exciting or mundane. She has had several poems published in the Rutland Herald, as well as a creative nonfiction essay in the North Dakota Quarterly.
‘Tchaikovsky’s Click’, ‘When Does a Boy Become a Snarling Canine?’, & ‘You’re Officially A Woman’
Richie Magnia is a student at the University of North Texas, studying Creative Writing and Media Arts. While primarily working as a screenwriter, he got his start in short fiction and poetry. Working in various genres, he is able to meld them together to create cinematic prose and poetic cinema. Themes prominent in his work include: violence in men, cycles within families, and the connection between art and violence. Acting as president, he is the founder of UNT's Screenwriting Camp and has been featured in the North Texas Review, Mantis, and Wingless Dreamer. He can be found on Instagram @richiemagnia.
Tchaikovsky’s Click
Fifty-fifth of Swan Lake, Op.20, Act II
Realization settles in the pit of the stomach
caressing in a searching manner
in a dreadful spirit —
mix it carefully with two fingers
gouge them into the eyes
staring into the mirror.
“Who is he?”
He tries to recall the features that held his gaze mere seconds ago
“I cannot recall my own face.”
He recognizes himself enough times to hold them in the palm of his hand.
“I recognize myself
I slam a door
chunk a remote
yell a profanity.
the click in my stomach.
I recognize myself
I stare at a wreck on the highway
pick raw at a hangnail
fantasize about choking—
the click in my stomach.
I recognize myself
in my hands not my face.
They had just gotten into a fight.
That’s what I hope it was.
the click in my stomach.
I recognize myself
in the carmine and the wine;
they dance, battered in holy matrimony.
the click in my stomach.
I recognize myself and I don’t know if I like it or not.
I recognize myself
in the pupil reflection,
a heart to heart
a knife and a hand connection.
the click in my stomach.
I recognize myself
the weight of me sinking me deeper.
I wouldn’t find a love like this ever again.
the click in my stomach.
I recognize myself and I don’t know if I like it or not.
Before I know it,
the click is gone.
I recognize myself
yearning for return
realization that time stood between the next click.
whether I like it or not.”
You Are Bare, Let Me Dress You
You can search your home
for something you will not find,
in your full cupboards,
in your wedding beds,
in the palms of your neighbor.
You are bare. Let me dress you.
Without me,
you will find slashes
in every which way upon your back.
It’s your fault for not letting me dress you.
I will gift you soothing rain to rinse your skin
because I am kind and you are bare.
You will pick your scabs,
keep yourself raw and willing
so I may cover them with my own flesh
until you have to pry the skin from yours.
You are bare. Let me dress you.
Will you tense up
or will you not be able to stop yourself from squirming from my grasp?
Why are you shaking?
Stop squirming.
You are bare. Let. Me. Dress. You.
You yearn to be seen.
You yearn to be consumed.
Let. Me. See. You.
Let. Me. Consume. You.
You are bruised and you are battered.
You. Are. Bare. Let. Me. Dress. You.
I will come for you when the time is right,
when you least expect it,
when you least deserve it,
when you don’t even have grey hair yet,
when I need you,
because I’m me and I can do whatever I want.
But for now,
let me dress you.
When Does a Boy Become a Snarling Canine?
When a boy become so hungry
he can’t help but bare his teeth
and threaten the throat of his mother
When a boy no longer quivers
in the face of danger and discernment
and runs to hide behind his father’s leg
When a boy begins to use his pinky nail
to scrap out the muscle of his mates
from the cracks of his bleeding gums
When a boy’s stomach is filled
with any who let him sink his teeth
but time goes on
When does hunger return and only his mother remains?
“You’re Officially A Woman”
I can’t go into that store anymore,
walk in like it’s no big deal,
grab femininity by the twenty-count
and pay an absurd $10.49 just to feel like shit.
Mountains upon mountains of lost opportunity will drown,
and I’ll be left with “a simple stomach ache”
and a craving for something I know isn’t good for me.
Why couldn’t He have just put me in the right one in the first place?
Blood will pour down my leg,
seep and stain into my skin.
Boyhood is slipping through my fingers
and is caught by a heavy flow cotton.
Heat will make me rip off my clothes in the middle of the night,
Your divine creation stranded, searching for cool relief.
Tears will fill my ears as I am reminded
of what You chose not to give me.
No matter how my clothes hang from my body,
no matter how flat I can get my chest,
no matter how many times he calls me his darling boy,
the blood still remains.
No matter if manhood presents itself on my face,
no matter if I change my name,
no matter if they finally call me their son,
I’ll still have blood stains on my legs.
Jesus Christ,
I CAN’T FUCKING BREATHE IN THIS THING.
Richie Magnia is a student at the University of North Texas, studying Creative Writing and Media Arts. While primarily working as a screenwriter, he got his start in short fiction and poetry. Working in various genres, he is able to meld them together to create cinematic prose and poetic cinema. Themes prominent in his work include: violence in men, cycles within families, and the connection between art and violence. Acting as president, he is the founder of UNT's Screenwriting Camp and has been featured in the North Texas Review, Mantis, and Wingless Dreamer. He can be found on Instagram @richiemagnia.
‘Laundry Manifesto, Unspoken’
Costello Keene is an undergraduate student at Slippery Rock University, where she majors in secondary education English and minors in writing. She has been previously published in multiple young writers' anthologies and acts as the assistant editor for The Slab magazine. Costello has been writing ever since she can remember and could not imagine a world without it.
Laundry Manifesto, Unspoken
What comes of a button front shirt
Fluttering in the wind
On a line
Dancing like a porcelain
Girl
Shining legs exposed
Brazen in this fertile
Sun
Taken
Polished finger
Tips
Spreading
The wooden
Mouths
Send the
Sheets
Falling
Layed flat
Across warm board
Fabric touching
Fabric
Dusting white
Snow
Shatter to the
Lapelled
Collar
Broken tails
Of a bombshell
The act of
So lovingly
Plucking paper
Boxes
Full of the
Fatal
Powders
To be adorned
The dressing
Table
Despise the
Inequity
Maroon sweater
Lying
Unalive
In the arm chair
Killed maybe
By its own
Cotton membrane?
Spoon the iron
Killing machine
Burning seams
Flat
To stretch again
Be pressed level
Once more
By another set of
Of noonly
Hands
Finally
In my last ditch
Attempt
Thwarted
Always
By the impenetrable
Steam
The choking
Starch
I throw limp
Dusted
man
Body absent
Into the
Dryer
Heat up
Wait patiently
For it
To Shrink
Costello Keene is an undergraduate student at Slippery Rock University, where she majors in secondary education English and minors in writing. She has been previously published in multiple young writers' anthologies and acts as the assistant editor for The Slab magazine. Costello has been writing ever since she can remember and could not imagine a world without it.
‘Golden Torus’, ‘The Ceramic Tiger’, & ‘I, Sequoias’
Matt Gulley is a poet, playwright and fiction writer. He attended Wayne State University in Detroit and currently resides in Brooklyn with his partner Jenna. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Moon City Review, The Madrigal, The Minnesota Review and Consequence Forum. Find him @selfawareroomba on Twitter or @mattgulley.bsky.social on Bluesky.
Golden Torus
Juice in the teeth,
eyes concave and dry
Sunday, just before seven
just before the rainstorm ends
industrial cable, color of oil
mixes with the wet leafy green
threaded with the brown of vine
early evening, damp city light
on the shelf, the hole becomes the curve.
The Ceramic Tiger
this moveable statue was already here
when I move in to the place,
this lovely little apartment in New York
she faces the window, and shows her fangs
to the passing weather, seasons and passions
frozen in a rictus growl
my girlfriend had bought it at a bazaar
how bizarre, a reasonable facsimile
that I was here with it now, sharing space
hey eyes are open, set back
so it looks a little sad, a little tired
you would be too – snarling forever
the least I can do, for the soul of the thing
is opening the shades each morning
so the day can move across it, lending motion
I moved in last October, it’s my home too
I’ve found my own station, in comfort
my own poses in which I arrive
and stay awhile, in silent familiarity
the plants, more alive, have less character
candles and forks are useful but not citizens
ultimately, I remain the newcomer
seniority is earned in afternoons
and hierarchy’s color is true
orange and smudges black
white belly and tan
guarding our Brooklyn view forever.
I, Sequoias
Ancient sprouts,
structures looming in glen.
What will they think on me
when I press these temporary
limbs on them?
Matt Gulley is a poet, playwright and fiction writer. He attended Wayne State University in Detroit and currently resides in Brooklyn with his partner Jenna. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Moon City Review, The Madrigal, The Minnesota Review and Consequence Forum. Find him @selfawareroomba on Twitter or @mattgulley.bsky.social on Bluesky.
‘Celestial Rendezvous’
Liss McNeilis is a current undergraduate studying English (Creative Writing). She is a first-generation college student with a passion for all things literature.
Celestial Rendezvous
The last time the Moon engulfed the Sun,
They had just finished a bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon-
Tongues and lips stained scarlet
And their cheeks flushed a similar shade.
The Sun’s Brooklyn apartment felt hundreds of square feet
Smaller as they had clamored through the door,
Knocked their shoes and hips against the oak frame
With the force of meteors entering the Earth’s atmosphere.
When the Moon engulfs the Sun, she loses her incandescence,
Her radiance swallowed up to cast only a ring of light-
A mere shadow of herself.
She knows after this celestial rendezvous,
She'll anticipate the next orbit the Moon makes
To come back and devour her once more.
Liss McNeilis is a current undergraduate studying English (Creative Writing). She is a first-generation college student with a passion for all things literature.