Chelsea Dearden
by Kristin Garth, Regular Contributor

 

after Legal Eagles

 

She sleeps inside a chalk outline of what 

remains when she turns nine.  After she climbs

last time into an alabaster wrought 

iron bed, piece of cake, a platinum 

head singed forever in father’s studio. 

How many daddies must she show the blaze 

of her biography? From flickers follows

pleas to stay, doe-eyed promise to obey, 

if they could only penetrate a corpse 

with foreknowledge, without remorse.  Coffin 

flavored birthday cake, favorite artist 

his burning makes her pale palette crimson,

her body brush detailing both their deaths.

What she will offer next is what is left. 


image: Pixabay
Author’s Note: I was writing poetry involving aspects of my child abuse and my own artistic obsession with my trauma when I first watched the movie Legal Eagles as a teenager.  Daryl Hannah plays a performance artist named Chelsea Dearden who reenacts her father’s death and her own trauma again and again in her work.  It was the first time as a child in a small town rather uncultured upbringing that I was exposed to an artist that was making art of their trauma.  It spoke to me.  I also related to this character’s intense daddy issues that play out in the film as she seduces Robert Redford’s character after first exposing him to her art, her wound.  I feel like I do this with people I love.  I want them to love that little me that got lost and understand her before I can give myself to them.  There’s just a lot in this character I relate to and so I decided to write a little sonnet homage to her as part of my manuscript The Stakes.