Tag Archives: art

Out of Sync

I imagine a man walking up those concrete steps and through the glass door into the main lobby of a local museum. He hands over double the suggested donation to view the works that ultimately leave him uninspired. What’s worse is a major section of the gallery is cordoned off while they prepare for the next exhibit making its way around the country. And he thinks to himself, “a day too early, or maybe a day too late.” The money is of little concern in spite of the expectation in getting what he paid for that hangs about his mind. Still, he decides to leave.

About eight blocks east on second south is an artists’ residence set up innocuously enough from the outside as a regular brick building except for the grand mural that covers the eastern wall. The brick is old and time stained with drilling holes from long gone signs filled with foam or caulk or backer rod. The smooth brushed joints worn away such that sediments of white aggregate show like bits of teeth within the mortar beds. The brass push plate on the main door polished bright from sixty years of use, and used again this day as he enters.

What hooks him first is the smell. Solvents and the faintness of creosote. And beneath that first impression is the old building smell. A dampness in the wood and brick, of earth wafting up from beneath the stuffy crawl spaces in the way of old buildings. A bouquet like a whiskey that tastes better while inebriated.

Next is the sound of the door snugging in to place with a squeak and click from the bolt against the misaligned strike plate. Then the squeak of the floorboards beneath his feet as he makes his way up the stairs that amplify the sounds of his steps no matter how conscientious he is of rocking his feet from heel to toe, and heel to toe.

He looks around from floor to floor, from studio to studio, and gets his view of the artist in the raw, of unrefined ideas, of creativity so schizophrenic it comes about like wild gashes no matter the medium; as if the works were so lit with meaning that he was blinded to their very nature. And, of all the creation myths that persist in the world, it seems that all before him is of another kind of clay.

Yet with all these works, there was one that stood out among the others, and it started with a side-glance that stirred the feelings in the depths before realization catches up some four strides after. And so he turned. And he stepped back to peer through the doorway into the meager studio of paint splattered on the walls and a sink seemingly covered in fordite from layer after layer after layer of paint washed from the brushes.

In this tiny studio were canvasses leaned up against the walls with their backs turned or stacked from left to right like a library of books. But there was one still easeled. A landscape about four feet high and six feet wide. It was dark in value except for the scrapes of titanium white like phosphenes skittering past the dark light when you close your eyes, and then other colors alternating between hues of grey and blue and violet. Simply brutal in its composition of straight lines knifed on. And haunting in that it was understood beneath the surface of an unstirred mind — understood only through the lens of a deep sleep, where somehow, the next morning arrives and the world is different.

I imagine this man, walking home, yet completely oblivious to the intensity of the undercurrent stirring. The only inclination in his mind that something happened is that the particular painting lingers. And it lingers into the next day, and the next. After a while, he is so aware of the lively opinions in the world that he can see nothing else except the limits of acceptability. So he goes to a bookstore, a major retailer traded on the New York Stock Exchange. But he finds much the same as he imagines the books here are similar to the books on the south end of town as are the books on the west side.

They’re the classics — there’s no denying that — so their profit margin is almost guaranteed. And these others are popular and along the trend. And still others sell better than what they would not carry. And as he wanders, he sees an empty author’s booth, either to be filled up or taken down until the next time a new artist hustles their work.

“A day too early, or maybe a day too late,” he says to himself before leaving.

Not more than an hour later, he is at a cafe and drinking coffee and staring blankly at his surroundings when a bookcase in the corner caught his mind. It was a secondhand antique of Art Nouveau: the simple curve of the valanced skirt upon slippered feet leading to the rounded mid-molding and to the uppercase where on the top shelf sat a spiral bound notebook among board games and magazines and the occasional schlock. But it was that notebook that stuck out most of all, as if within that bookcase was a portmanteau emerging from the mismatched ideas, but it was the notebook that struggled its way through as the best fit for its place.

And who knows why he found significance in what he saw; the meaning was arbitrary in much the same way a schizophrenic obsesses over a specific leaf in a tree via some preternatural awareness, as if to intuit another rank in the taxonomy of life where this blade of grass comes from the other side of the river. Sometimes, things just work out in the daily meanderings, where there is no reason other than faith or some stubborn belief or delusion or inspiration. But still, significance remains, albeit, beneath the trappings, and it was significance that lead him to this — a notebook written by a teenager. At least, that’s what he surmised from the class list on the inside cover.

At first were the studious notes as nothing more than a mirror to the voice of education and structured like a simplistic religion. Soon, however, the thoughts wandered off into a blooming adolescence faced with the death of a mother in poetic form:

Today, today — a summer’s day —

Seems cold and gray

With your departure,

But forced to grow up this day.

And I fill the space

Into your absence.

What will I do without the grace

Of a mother’s embrace

When life is hard?

Of all the things there is to say,

While in the fray:

“Not today. Not today.”

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Slow Down and Reset

My brain is rambling today — not about the need for a new residence, but because of people, society, and culture. There is an absurd level of fragmentation made worse by the volume of anger: even those liberal minded folks have their version of Donald Trump. And then there are the posts with some variation of “unfriend me if you like Trump.” It’s hard for me not to see this partisanship furthering the fragmentation as we embed ourselves in a sinkhole of our own views. And when we speak, it’s not so much to inform as it is to seek agreement and like minds to prop us up with meaningless epaulet so we know the hierarchy and our place in it with the implicit notion that we must strive for the top.

I was reading Yeats’s poetry again today and always go back to “The Second Coming,” not because I like it, but because there is a line that hits you over the head with sublime truth: “The best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity.” Bertrand Russell intimated the same sentiment with is own version of this concept: “The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.”

I like to think of truth as some omnipresent thing, and each of us imbed ourselves in a section of it like parasites feasting on what will sustain us and our worldview. And we discard the rest so long as we find our group of like minds in our cordoned off little section — a sinkhole of myopia, a mistake that occludes one from seeing true purpose and does violence to the human spirit: the glaucoma being all the screaming voices that distract and seduce you and pressure you into parroting them with vicious intensity, then positive reinforcement once you acquiesce to the mire.

To get unstuck, I read poetry or look at art. I reset and move on. And with that, I leave you with my thoughts on one of my favorite paintings,“Wanderer Above the Sea Fog” by Casper David Friedrich.

Everyone has seen Twilight Zonesque type shows or movies where the protagonist escapes the maze only to realize their freedom is now the ability to see how grand the maze is and that they are still in it. Sometimes, that futility is the conclusion. But the story I tell myself with this painting is of a man at the precipice. He conquered one challenge only to see the vastness of what’s next. It’s almost meaningless in some way, but he’s neither daunted nor discouraged. Instead he stands tall and regal and unafraid, and most importantly, alone. His back is to us, but we see what he sees, so he’s not shutting us out. Instead, there is some goal out there made invisible by the fog. It could be an impossible dream, but that doesn’t matter – obstacles don’t matter – because his determination is unbreakable. Our man here is the pinnacle of the everyman, from the child standing up to a bully, to the exhausted single parent with two kids working on a master’s degree, to those that were never more sure there was never a heaven than there was a hell on earth and made it. This man is inviolable purpose – the definition of the human spirit.

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