When it finally passed
there was no announcement
on the six o clock news. The flags
continued to flap languidly
at the end of their poles. A notice
went up outside a gallery:
today Working Class Art died.
It had been ailing for years; had
been fed an unhealthy diet due
to rising food prices and
had been breathing dirty air.
During the pandemic while
some art grew fat and robust,
while ballet dancers practiced
in kitchens and the nation
baked bread, working
class art was fighting
to survive in a small flat,
working two jobs and
caring for its elderly mum.
But it had survived, until now.
A crowd began to gather
outside the gallery at four
o clock. They didn’t bring
flowers or balloons or cards.
They didn’t light candles
or hold hands. Instead they
brought poems, scribbled
on receipts and the backs
of letters – poems which
showed the light which
squeezed through the cracks
of a difficult life. Poems which
said yes, but this is what we
can do. They brought
paintings of streets
and shops and flats and
people, of bent backs and
hidden scars. They
brought music, played on
second hand instruments
and stories about ordinary
lives. They brought all of
these things, the intention
to remember and celebrate.
The intention to show that
even though, on that day,
working class art had finally
succumbed to a protracted
illness, nobody could claim
that it had never existed at all.
This makes me wanna cry.
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