Another Political Bestiary, Ep. XLVII

Cloture (2020). Acrylic and ink on paper. From my book, Another Political Bestiary, available at Amazon Books. Artwork and text copyright Danny Grosso.

Continuing the expeditions of Jeff MacNelly, James Kilpatrick, and Eugene McCarthy, with apologies.

The Cloture

Robed in a Byzantine frock, Book of Spells in hand, the Cloture haunts the aisles of legislative chambers and holds enormous power. The Cloture can, with a mere whispered incantation, rob the legislators of their reason for existence, the continuing dalliance and debate of matters on the floor. This blunt power is all the more hard for the elected to take because it emanates in short order from this soft spoken and opaque creature. The Cloture’s deed is devastatingly quick and lethal, and invariably leaves one side of a legislative body panicked, frightened, traumatized. A friend to the majority, mostly, the Cloture can be vexing as it sometimes switches sides in times of crises or need, proving that it has no ideology but its own mystery and power. By that infidelity, the cloture is at times the ultimate foe of elected officials who, left unable to speak on the matter at hand, are left to cry about it on the prime time opinion shows.

-Danny Grosso

Instagram @artispolitics

My Amazon author’s page: amazon.com/author/dannygrosso

Moda VII

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A Spring Tan (2020). Cut paper. From the book Barefoot and Other Stories, available at Amazon Books. Artwork and text copyright Danny Grosso.   

It was his first tan suit. A rich guy’s suit, because it wasn’t black or navy blue. If a guy could only swing one suit, he’d buy black or navy, so he could wear it to both weddings and funerals. Black or navy was a safe buy, tan was something else. Tan was a little escape from the mundane, a little step away from safety. It also meant a little more dry cleaning and home pressing. No matter, a guy with a tan suit could afford a splurge or two. He, after all, had purchased something to wear because he wanted to, not because he had to. Indeed, while the other guys dusted off the dark suits for wakes, he might throw his lightweight tan suit on over a tee shirt just for a walk. He might further find occasion to sport it about with a scarf over brunch. Professionally, he might add a repp tie and head to court on a spring afternoon where he would stand out like a tulip in a fallow garden box.

Back then, when everyone wore suits all of the time, differentiation was difficult. Variations on the theme became the vehicle for standing out. He stood in the mirror adjusting his lapel, but saw himself prancing down the pavement, a picture of noblesse oblige and elegance, a small vignette of happiness. It was the way he would eternally see himself in that suit. Memory has a way of perpetuating its images, even those only imagined.

-Danny Grosso

amazon.com/author/dannygrosso

Instagram @artispolitics