The personal nature of this artistic seeking is most evident in the poem “Portrait of Fryderyk in Shifting Light,” in which Siken's attempt to paint his subject, presumably a lover, begins with the troubled assessment “There is something terribly wrong with his face-” before launching into a brilliant description of an uncapturable beauty: “his eyes shine like wedding rings.” In this case, the inability to provide an exact portrayal is a proxy for the actual problem, the inability to truly know another person. To make something / beautiful should be enough. Siken sets this conversation in motion from the book's opening line: “The paint doesn't move the way the light reflects, / so what's there to be faithful to?” The trappings of aesthetics are insufficient: “It should be enough. The erotic energy and dazzling infatuation that drove Crush are replaced in War of the Foxes with frustrations about the impossibility of creating pure and true artistic representations. Richard Siken's second collection, coming a decade after his Yale Younger Poets prize-winning debut Crush, finds the poet a subdued man with more mature preoccupations.
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