James Merrill:
Other Writings
Washington University Libraries, St. Louis, Spring
2001
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Table of Contents
Introduction Steven Meyer James Merrill's Narrative Prose Garth Hallberg The Summer Place: James Merrill's Fantastical Wallpaper Ida McCall and Margaret Funkhouser The Occasional Verse Jennifer Kronovet and Jeffrey Shotts "best not shown too widely": James Merrill's Combinatorial Texts Jason Stumpf James Merill, Playwright Todd Borlik The Spiritual Archive Beneath the Poetic Artifice: A "Double Vision" of James Merrill's Poetry Matthew McClelland and Ryan Sherry Hans Lodeizen Rachel Slaughter and Dolsy Smith Online Exhibitions Special Collections Home |
The
Summer Palace: James Merrill's Fantastical Wallpaper
Ida McCall and Margaret Funkhouser
Mirabell
opens with the lines, “Oh very
well, then.
The border renders in two shades of tan
These, indeed, are the same patterns (in addition to fans with oriental designs) that appear in the wallpaper. Merrill also says in the opening of Mirabell that, like the rug, the wallpaper is just one of his and David Jackson’s efforts to add “grandeur” to their home. Although he is writing about material possessions, the wallpaper is more than mere interior design; it is the artistic creation of the collaboration between Merrill and Pierce.
James Merrill’s wallpaper is the location of many
intertwining stories. As a work of art on its own and as the subject for
another work of art, the wallpaper brings together the visual and the written.
It is a place where the spiritual and the material meet. Through the wallpaper,
the lines between reality and the created world of the poem blur. Now,
we have broached the matter of the wallpaper.
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| Last update: Thursday, June 28, 2001 |
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