Zombie Ballroom
Let this be the dance floor for the end of days! Unfurl this glow-in-the dark carpet — fibre optic weft & warp, an infrared brocade — lavish it out across the polished bones of a space station in ruins — shake your feet out, party animals, jiggle your wrists, swivel your hips, crack your fingers (but not too hard!), crack a radioactive glow stick, snort a line of silica, pop a magic mushroom cloud & shelve a dead star — go on, ready your damned selves for one last throw down — palm to palm, strobe lit silhouettes, cheek to cheek, the undead twirl & pirouette, slow motion sweep, controlled riot, counterclockwise sashay through columns of light, clouds of carrion cologne — red - red - blue flash blue — ultralight beams sear through cumulous smoke ultraviolet — ultraviolence distilled in me, your very partial observer, all class, all glass, controlled riot, I watch from above, hang like a man condemned, suspended, no no no, I am zero gravity Mother Mary in my finest robes, dripping green gems, luminous, no emerald no forest green no lime rind or chlorophyll — this is Hulk Green, goblin, Ninja Turtle Green, Slimer from Ghostbusters Green — reflect in each polished facet the decadent mayhem, your million mouths raising voices towards me, as one, singing the final counted with 3D-printed voice boxes. Did you know, the first chandelier maker used candles fashioned from animal fat, wicks of human hair — he set the ceiling on fire & burned down the temple.
About the Author
Omar Musa is a Bornean-Australian writer and visual artist. His debut novel, Here Come the Dogs (Penguin Books Australia, 2014), was longlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award and Miles Franklin Award; and his one-man play, Since Ali Died, won Best Cabaret Show at the Sydney Theatre Awards in 2018. Musa has also released four poetry books — including Killernova (Penguin Books Australia, 2021), four hip-hop records and had solo exhibitions of his woodcut prints.
Powerhouse Publication: 1001
This work appears in the latest Powerhouse Publication, 1001 Remarkable Objects. A celebration of the scale, breadth and relevance of the decorative arts and design collections held by Powerhouse Museum it catalogues the eponymous exhibition that opened at Powerhouse Ultimo, 26 August 2023. The publication opens with a series of 32 still life images produced by photographer Lauren Bamford in collaboration with art director and stylist Sarah Pritchard. It is punctuated by 15 narratives, from the four curators plus 11 Australian authors commissioned by Powerhouse to respond to one or more remarkable objects.