Nighthawks "After Edward Hopper's Painting" by Wolf Wondratschek Reviewed
Brent Jones
A poem about the painting ‘Nighthawks’
'“After Edward Hopper’s Painting”
by Wolf Wondratschek
It is night and the city is deserted. The lucky ones are at home, or more likely there are none left.
In Hopper’s painting, four people remain the usual cast, so to speak: the man behind the counter, two men, and a woman.
Art lovers, you can stone me but I know this situation pretty well.
Two men and one woman as if this were a mere chance. You admire the painting’s composition but what grabs me is the erotic pleasure of complete emptiness.
They don’t say a word, and why should they? Both of them smoking, but there is no smoke.
I bet she wrote him a letter. whatever it said, he was no longer the man who’d read her letters twice.
The radio is broken. The air conditioner hums. I hear a police siren wail.
Two blocks away in a doorway, a junkie groans and sticks a needle in his vein. That’s how the part you don’t see looks.
The other man is by himself remembering a woman, she wore a red dress, too. That was ages ago.
He likes knowing women like this still exist but he’s no longer interested.
What might have been between them, back then? I bet he wanted her. I bet she said no.
No wonder, art lovers, that this man is turning his back on you
(This poem is an effective review of a famous painting. Edward Hopper's Nighthawk.