
Issue No. 11
by Meri Utkovska
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
Issue No. 11 of the series includes works by Iranian poet, painter, screenwriter, and filmmaker Forugh Farrokhzad, American director and filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson, English musician, lead guitarist, and keyboardist of Radiohead Jonny Greenwood, and French-Russian artist Marc Chagall.

POEM
Wind-Up Doll
By Forugh Farrokhzad
Translated by Sholeh Wolpé
Even more, oh yes,
one can remain silent even more.
Inside eternal hours
one can fix lifeless eyes
on the smoke of a cigarette,
on a cup's form,
the carpet's faded flowers,
or on imaginary writings on the wall.
With stiff claws one can whisk
the curtains aside, look outside.
It's streaming rain.
A child with a balloon bouquet
cowers beneath a canopy. A rickety cart
flees the deserted square in haste.
One can remain fixed in one place, here
beside this curtain ... but deaf, but blind.
With an alien voice, utterly false,
one can cry out: I love!
In the oppressive arms of a man
one can be a robust, beautiful female—
skin like leather tablecloth,
breasts large and hard.
One can stain the sinlessness of love
in the bed of a drunk, a madman, a tramp.
One can cunningly belittle
every perplexing puzzle.
Alone, occupy oneself with crosswords,
content with unimportant words,
yes, unimportant letters, no more than five or six.
One can spend a lifetime kneeling,
head bowed,
before the cold altar of the Imams,
find God inside an anonymous grave,
faith in a few paltry coins.
One can rot inside a mosque's chamber,
an old woman, prayers dripping from lips.
Whatever the equation, one can always be a zero,
yielding nothing, whether added, subtracted, or multiplied.
One can think your eyes are buttons from an old ragged shoe
caught in a web of anger.
One can evaporate like water from one's own gutter.
With shame one can hide a beautiful moment
like a dark, comic instant photo
rammed deep into a wooden chest.
Inside a day's empty frame one can mount
the portrait of a condemned, a vanquished,
a crucified. Cover the gaps in the walls
with silly, meaningless drawings.
Like a wind-up doll one can look out
at the world through glass eyes,
spend years inside a felt box,
body stuffed with straw,
wrapped in layers of dainty lace.
With every salacious squeeze of one's hand,
for no reason one can cry:
Ah, how blessed, how happy I am!
Copyright Credit: Forugh Farrokhzad, "Wind-Up Doll" from Sin: Selected Poems of Forugh Farrokhzad.
Copyright © 2007 by Forugh Farrokhzad.
Source: Sin: Selected Poems (University of Arkansas Press, 2007)



FILM
Phantom Thread (2017)
Renowned dressmaker Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his sister Cyril (Lesley Manville) are central to British fashion and glamour in 1950s London. Their house dresses celebrities, royalty, debutantes, heiresses, and socialites, with a distinctive and refined style. Woodcock's life is filled with beautiful women who provide both companionship and inspiration for his work, but he remains a confirmed bachelor. One day, he meets Alma (Vicky Krieps), a young waitress at the hotel where he's staying. Her unlikely gracefulness, strong will, and beauty quickly transform her into his muse and lover. Once rigid and composed, Woodcock makes Alma the fixture of his life and finds himself consumed by a love that borders on perverse, disruptive obsession.
In Phantom Thread, Paul Thomas Anderson carefully portrays an artist on his creative journey, a man with an insatiable desire for the woman he loves, and the power that woman can have over him. Daniel Day-Lewis, Vicky Krieps, and Lesley Manville deliver unmistakenly powerful performances, which, harmoniously paired with PTA's intense storytelling and cinematography, and Jonny Greenwood's hauntingly arresting music, make the film stick to the viewer long after they are done with it.
Writer: Paul Thomas Anderson
Director: Paul Thomas Anderson
Language: English
Cinematography: Paul Thomas Anderson
Music: Jonny Greenwood

PAINTING
Bouquet with Flying Lovers
DATE: 1934 -47
MEDIUM: Oil paint on canvas
DIMENSIONS: support: 1305 x 975 x 23 mm frame: 1545 x 1215 x 126 mm
COLLECTION: Tate
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2025