The 1,000-piece Jackson Pollack puzzle |
“I’m putting this puzzle away,” she declared
from the edge of the conference table in the middle of the workroom. An intern,
startled from their work at the station nearby, ripped out their ear buds.
Shawnya addressed them more resolutely, “I’m tired of this. This thing is
driving me crazy.”
“This thing” is a partially
complete 1,000-piece puzzle of Jackson Pollock’s 1952 painting Convergence.
Though the collective museum staff usually makes short work of similarly sized
puzzles during breaks and lunches, this particular tiger trap has lain in mocking
defiance of progress for weeks.
The intern, sympathetic to
Shawnya’s sentiments and having experienced firsthand the relief the small
manual game brought amongst hours of conceptual, literary, logistical
rigmarole, nodded and turned towards the puzzle in their swivel chair. “I don’t
blame you. I mean, raccoons chew off their arms to get out of traps, I guess
you have the right to do this.”
Shawnya, spirits lifted,
accepted this was true, but made the amendment that she would not, in fact, put
the entire puzzle away, just what had yet to be assembled in any form. Even so,
she was afraid of those members of the staff who might misunderstand her
actions.
“I can just hear everyone
going crazy,” she said, shoveling loose pieces back into the box nevertheless. “‘Where did all the pieces go?!’”
Such an impression is not
an exaggeration. One particular chief preparator, Todd Rivers, has a specific –
and usually quite successful – method wherein he arranges loose pieces by
shape, rather than color or shade, in order to expedite assembly. This method
had been adopted as a matter of course by the time Convergence ruptured
all conventions. Unfortunately, even this ingenuity would seem to have fallen
before the monstrosity that is a 1,000-piece puzzle made from the
hyper-repetitious drip technique of an abstract expressionist.
As of yet, the sting of
Shawnya’s decision is still fresh. Assistant Editor Taylor Lear, shaking the
box ominously upon discovery, let only a single glum word, “troublemaker,”
escape her.
Other staff members remain
blissfully unaware of the consequences that their uncompromising position has
forced. Others are disappointed; yet they admit the wisdom of the psychological
defense deployed, even if the call was made without consultation. Overall, it is
better for the health of the team in the long run, which some believe will be
both seen and felt once there is some distance from the matter. Museums, of
course, must think about both the past and the future, and never dwell too long
on what they wish could have been.
One intern in particular
had few feelings on the matter beyond the hope that the puzzle would be
entirely given up on and replaced soon, as staff members have been visiting the
workroom less frequently lately and the intern misses the comfort of having
real people close by, as well as the little joy of having conversations to
listen in on while they pretend to listen to music.
--
Penske McCormack
Intern, Department of Communications
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