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The brilliant, highest paid living Poetess in the world, Arch Hades.

Artist, poet, author and much more. Her work, 'Arcadia', sold for $525,000 in NY.

By Antoni De'LeonPublished about a year ago Updated about a year ago 5 min read
AI Pic by Antoni

The brilliance of Hades. I have not yet been able to procure a copy of her poem. It sounds phenomenal on video. Close your eyes and listen as she speaks.

The story of 'Arcadia' is a 648-line rhyming, narrative poem that explores how our 21st Century existential crisis of alienation and anxiety has been brought on by the phenomena of m media, consumerism, and instant gratification that attempt to fill the void of meaning and habit left by organized religions of the 20C. The five-canto poem argues that even though our symptoms are psychological, our problems are philosophical at their root, and so urges us to overcome nihilism by embracing solitude, individuality, self-ownership, beauty, and art.

Arch Hades

A British poet and artist known for her poignant and introspective work, Arch was Born on March 17, 1992, in Saint Petersburg, Russia, she moved to London with her family at the age of eight after her father was murdered. She legally changed her name several times before settling on Arch Hades.

Her poetry often explores themes of love, loss, existentialism, isolation, and contemporary angst. Some of her notable poetry collections include High Tide (2018), Fool's Gold (2020), Paper Romance (2021), and Arcadia (2022). In 2021, her poem "Arcadia" was sold as a work of digital fine art at Christie's New York for $525,000, making her the highest-paid living poet in the world at that time.

Hades is also a multidisciplinary artist who has extended her themes into painting. She has given talks on philosophy at prestigious institutions like Oxford, Cambridge, and UCLA. Her work has been celebrated globally, and she continues to contribute to cultural discourse through her poetry and art.

Specific aspects of her life.

Hades, a Napkin Poetry review.

“In a society where publicity and participation are rewarded with ‘likes’ and envy, we are reduced to expressing ourselves through self-exhibited consumption and branding,” Arch Hades writes in Arcadia, striking the heart where ego and anxiety meet.

The never-ending ‘Current’ she coins—the reduction of our lives to an endless stream of information and production that punishes us for not participating—is so ubiquitous it seems like second nature. Yet beneath the Current is a lie: no matter how far upstream we go, no matter how many accomplishments we achieve, we’re left feeling hollow.

The poem speaks directly to us as individuals and as a collective, going deeper than the warnings we’ve heard before—the risks of screen time, the dearth of true connection, the horrifying rates of body dysmorphia and teen suicide because no one is allowed to feel they are enough—and substantiates them with age-old philosophy.

When Hades speaks about her work’s intentions, she said she hoped to distill complex ideas by philosophers like Nietzsche, Sartre, and Shoshana Zuboff into accessible language.

Zuboff is the author of the books, In the Age of the Smart Machine: The Future of Work and Power and The Support Economy: Why Corporations Are Failing Individuals and the Next Episode of Capitalism, co-authored with James Maxmin.

In this effort, Hades succeeds, bringing us back to poetry’s roots. Before writing, stories were told aloud in poetic form: elements like rhyme and meter helped information stay intact. While free verse poetry is most common today, Hades work signals a revival of formal rhyme and meter. Her poem works powerfully on the page, but out loud it is captivating, its truth now rhythmic.

Often this truth takes the shape of our most pressing questions. For example, we’re told to convince ourselves we’re unique, but deep down we know that we’re not. How do we reconcile this contradiction? Where can we find meaning, and should we even try? “How do we deal with our present delusions?” she writes. Without prescribing answers, Hades offers steps towards peace. These include being in nature, creating beauty for beauty’s sake, and choosing morality even when it won’t benefit our images or careers. I’d like to highlight that last point for two reasons: first, as Hades notes, without the rules of religion we’re exploring new, murkier moral grounds than past generations. But second, without dogma, we now have an opportunity to create our own resonant truths.

“How do we survive/thrive in a society without being enslaved by it? How do we maintain authenticity when we’re rewarded (at least at first) by self-sacrifice to a simulacrum", (an image, a representation of someone or something else)?

This creation might take time. To show how we got here, Hades outlines a convincing historical-philosophy. Without religion at the forefront, there is a “God-shaped hole” which 21st Century consumerism and the Current try to fill. Emphasis on “try”: as Albert Camus writes, “the only means of fighting a plague is common decency,” but when the first thing on our minds is our own image, it can be hard to know what decency means. Without the other, the “I” can be suffocating; without relief from the Current, we once again feel powerless to question a society.

But we can question it, Arcadia reminds us. “If you don’t know where to start / aim to tell one truth,” Hades writes, recalling Martha Beck’s notion of integrity as wholeness that starts by being honest about where, and who, you are.

In Arcadia’s second canto, honesty starts with the right questions. In a structure reminiscent of Dante’s The Divine Comedy or Beck’s The Way of Integrity, the first three cantos of Arcadia invoke a situating and a reckoning. How do we survive/thrive in a society without being enslaved by it? How do we maintain authenticity when we’re rewarded (at least at first) by self-sacrifice to a simulacrum? But eventually, the questioning settles and the fourth canto, “Silence,” steers us to solitude. “It’s in the wilderness / where we safely hand over control,” she writes, reminding one of a Frost poem padding through the snow.

That wilderness might be psychological, sanctioned, or geographic, Hades noting trajectories that mirrored the cantos: from city to countryside to somewhere in the middle. While stillness is one of the most important things ever undertaken, it’s not the end. In the last canto, “The Chorus,” Hades harnesses the hope inherent in great existential philosophy. Here, there’s a balance of our actions, intentions, and internal beliefs, no matter the cultural norms. As Judith Butler writes, “One does not always stay intact” after loss of any kind. But if we must change, we can at least change for a truth we choose: “But I won’t turn away / from the world and all in it / I think I’ll stay / and rediscover myself entirely within it.”

Original watercolor painting of Hades, Persephone with Cerberus Greek Mythology

InspirationStream of Consciousness

About the Creator

Antoni De'Leon

Everything has its wonders, even darkness and silence, and I learn, whatever state I may be in, therein to be content. (Helen Keller).

Tiffany, Dhar, JBaz, Rommie, Grz, Paul, Mike, Sid, NA, Michelle L, Caitlin, Sarah P. List unfinished.

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

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  • Novel Allenabout a year ago

    Hades has hit the meat of the matter at the root of our humanity in our day and age. We are losing control of who we are at a deeper level. Such profound truths in her words. Fully deserving of her accolades. Very well written story.

  • C. Rommial Butlerabout a year ago

    Well-wrought! Another interesting avenue to explore are the works of Dobrowski: "The question of normality in a person is usually decided on the basis of how similar his personality characteristics are, both in frequency and in force, to those psychosomatic processes most often encountered in a given society. The most frequent and thus "normal" traits express themselves in the following norms: practical rather than theoretical intelligence, predominantly egocentric rather than alterocentric attitudes toward society, and preponderance of the self-preservation, sexual, exploratory, and social instincts. These traits are commonly in compliance with group thinking and behavior and are often accompanied by minor, "safe" dishonesty. Such a group of "normal" traits in a person should, according to many, allow us to describe him as mentally healthy. Can we agree? No. This formulation is humiliating to mankind; a more suitable definition of mental health must contain, besides average values, exemplary ones." -Kazimierz Dobrowski, "Positive Disintegration" As for Nietzsche, he is gravely misunderstood by many. However, even he admitted he was not an end but a means. His most important contribution is the recognition that morality is relative, and he foresaw what our poetess did, that secular ideology would masquerade in the old role of religion. However, we must beware that we do not fall into the trap of upholding "will to power" as a moral, but rather recognizing it as an underlying driver that can be modified. I wrote about this at The Cynickal Art recently, in an essay exploring Kubrick's 2001: https://crommialbutler.substack.com/p/there-is-way-more-inner-space-than No required reading here! Sharing because it is relevant to the topic you so eloquently presented! If you so choose!

  • Tales by J.J.about a year ago

    Thank you for sharing this comprehensive and thought-provoking piece

  • Komalabout a year ago

    Wow, this really helped me reflect on my dad and see him in a new light! It's wild how we can be forgiving when we understand the struggles people face. Makes me want to keep things light and loving in the future, no regrets! Thanks for this insight!✨

  • Whoaaa, she is insanely inspirational!

  • Sid Aaron Hirjiabout a year ago

    wow never heard of it till now

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