The Gray Bird
Alex Carrigan
After “Find the Gray Bird” by Saya Behnam (medium: different botanical and mineral pigments on paper with 24k gold leaf)
She should be easy to find in the vapor.
All the bursts of saffron and hibiscus
should make the gray of her plume
stand out in this space.
My eyes are continually distracted by
the flecks of gold leaf throughout.
Are these her eyes, or are they her talons?
I try to look deeper to see, but then
I notice what appears to be some wild plants
that have managed to cut through the fog.
I see the dark bend of their stalks,
the full shape of their leaves,
close enough for me to reach.
But then I notice I’ve fallen too deep
into the painting, the scent of all
the crushed spices and flowers making me dizzy.
It’s not until I cover my mouth and force myself
back out of the frame that I realize the gray bird
was in the middle of the painting the whole time,
with gold leaf making a crown upon her head
and a gold rose ensnared in her talon.
I should have found her quickly, but anyone
could miss her if they give themselves to
the roiling clouds that perfumed out of the frame.
