| Watch Where You Point That Thing |
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| Written by Rabea Murtaza | |
| Thursday, 01 January 2009 05:00 | |
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Her body presents itself, the product of her life. A life which happens to involve a body, but does not require the obsessive presentation of body; body concentrated so heavily in the top layer that it slithers off in dark moments alone. She is anchored to her chair, planted on the grass in front of the fake backdrop.
The answer is in the gun. Her body is in the gun, resting on her knees. She is playing a trick on us. She is pretending that she isn't there, that she's no threat; but that body is powerful. It can point to other bodies and hurt them. She doesn’t even need to grip the gun very tightly. It can dangle down, slightly, romantically, barely restrained from slipping down, a sly, slick message. Look at her innocent face.
The above photograph, which is the inspiration for this poem, is borrowed from the series 'Woman as Photography Model: Qajar Period"Kargah.com. More articles by this author |

