6 June '75
Cold today, quite cold due to the high wind which swept the plateau all day and funneled down narrow streets. Still, there were people sunbathing on the Plains of Abraham - I have noticed that Quebec's public places are mercifully free from the scourge of the portable radio. We visited the Museum of Contemporary Art, which was small but quite nice - saw an exhibit of sculpture (Henry Moorish and geometric), paintings by [a] Qeubec artist; he didn't create his first work until age 50, thirty-some years ago. Encouraging to say the least.
7 June '75
Rode thru Parc des Laurentides today, a rather bleak former logging area of innumerable little dirt roads, strange blasted-looking aras, and little lakes. There are only two paved roads in an area over 50 miles square, which as far as I'm concerned in the proper way to run a park. Route 17 along the Saguenay is definitely the second best scenery to date - high, dark mountains, beautiful, dark-looking streams and lakes, very few houses, noble vistas thru gaps in the hills. Missed the thrice-daily ferry as St. Simeon, and so holed up at a small campground. The only other campers were a Quebec trio - Pitou, Bernard, and Claire. Drank beer and conversed in their broken English and our broken French.
8 June '75
It was worth missing the ferry to wake up beside the St. Lawrence. Spent most of a beautiful morning 8th in line (of an eventual 70) for the 10:30 ferry. Met Roy Trannante, a lab technician from Labrador City, NF, which sounds like the end of the world for snow and isolation. He is a native Newfoundlander and loves it. Very self-assured and into the hot car mystique. His idea of a vacation is to drive 800-1000 miles a day if possible, at 80-90 mph.
The scenery throughout New Brunswick was somewhat disappointing. If was not overly dramatic or beautiful, and the moment we crossed the Quebec border, it seemed to go downhill. The graphics were not as good, the countryside seemed more cluttered (also more American, and hence, less foreign - sigh). Ended up a long, dull day of driving at Lubec, ME, easternmost point in the U.S. We could find nowhere to camp, and as soon as we told a grocery-store keeper, Howard Jones, or our predicament, he offered us his land to stay on and shanghaied a friend in the store to lead us out there at night. We had not been parked on his land 1 1/2 minutes when two men drove up to find out what we were doing there. Solicitous (nosy?) neighbors, these downeasterners.
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Friday, June 11, 2010
Communication Issues
5 June '75
If I thought Montreal seemed French, it was because I hadn't seen Quebec. Geoff, our world-traveller-in-residence (whom we incessantly question about Europe) assured our grateful ears that old Quebec does indeed seem somewhat European. We found a plain, cheap, rather comfortable 4th floor room across a small park from Chateau Frontenac. Comfortable beds, a refrigerator (beer, bread, meat) and a table. Geoff insisting that by European standards, it is a great room. Chateau Frontenac is magnificent to see - it seems so much the landmark of old Quebec that it's hard to believe it was build between 1890-1921 as a resort hotel by the Canadian Pacific Railway. I wonder if the residents as the time deplored it as a monstrous highrise which blocked their views of the St. Lawrence?
Many of the locals speak English as poorly as I speak French, and one of my triumphs of the day was asking simple directions and buying stamps in French successfully. It's like a game to me whereas Sharon knows enough French that she knows how poorly she speaks it, and avoids doing so out of embarrassment.
In the evening we sat for awhile in a marvelous twilight at the fountain between our room and the Chateau. Earlier, Geoff and I had wandered far along the Governors Promenade (a boardwalk by any other name is still a boardwalk) high above Le Baisse Ville and The St. Lawrence.
We dined on Gaspe Lobster.
P.S. This evening before the fountain and dinner, I took my first bath in 1 1/2 years. I wouldn't have enjoyed it anywhere but in a 4th floor bathroom in Old Quebec.
Monday, May 31, 2010
Flipping off Bambino
3 June '75
For breakfast, we bought bread, milk, and orange juice and ate in the park. This of course is something one could do in Washington or anywhere else, but one never see,s to think of it until he is on vacation. As a matter of fact, Geoff thought of it.
Saw St. Joseph's Oratory on the Westmount, a new-Baroque basilica that is thoroughgoing 50-60's modern on the inside. There are displays of crutches, canes, and all sorts of braces left by pilgrims claiming cures, and a great sloping rack of hundreds of red prayer candles with "Saint Joseph Patron of The Church" spelled out in white candles like people holding up placards at a stadium.
We spent out first evening in an outdoor cafe (first for Sharon and me), one of 5 or 6 along place Jacques-Cartier in Ville-Marie, the old section of town. We were not disappointed. In the toilet, a little one-eyed man told me, first in French and then English, "man is not a camel. He cannot hold water 24 hours." Later this same fellow, who called himself Bambino ("if you ask me questions, you will hear a lot of fucking lies") stood outside the rail by our table expressing grave concern over Sharon's bandaged eye. Geoff flipped him to buy 2 beers (Geoff lost) and I gave him a cigar. His friend (the artiste) begged a quarter from Geoff.
The people one one side of us who spoke poor English, passed us joints of very weak dope. The people on the other side were young French separatists. They were more eloquent in English, and we discussed politics et all until midnight. We expressed surprise over the liveliness of Montreal at 11:30 on a Sunday or Monday night, and were told that the town used to jump 24 hours. Now, by law, it closes down at 3am. The separatists said that they appreciate it if a tourist tries to speak even very poor French because it shows he is willing to make the attempt. Quebecois say "bon jour" rather than au revoir.
So far the three of us prefer O'Keefe beer to Molson or LaBlatt.
4 June '75
We spent last night in a student type guest house McGill University for 2 dollars apiece. Our roommate, Jeff, had just ridden his 10 speed bicycle 1000 miles from Calgary to Montreal along Canadian route 1. He was trying to sell it for $350 so that he could continue travelling around the world.
We ended up our three days in Montreal with a bread-cheese-peanut butter-sherry picnic atop Mont Royal. That's what we ate for dinner, to - today was our lean day to make up for spending money the last few days.
Nil scenery beyond Montreal. Stopped the night in your typical pack-em-in campground near Drummondville, Que. Mercury vapor streetlights, even, but it was almost empty and so rather pleasant. I won my first game of backgammon from Geoff by mercury vapor streetlamp. Our brand-new nylon tent is lightweight, airy, light, and roomy enough for three.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Like Metal Under a Welding Torch
31 May '75
Celebrated Veteran's day with a ride through beautiful NY state, singing old, off-key (not morally) songs and marvelling at mountains.
Passed through the pastel cottageland of the Irish Catskills and arrived at Schoharie. Doubtless it is like tiny towns anywhere, but now that we are here, its special charm seems evident. In historic Schoharie, people leave their skis and bicycles on the porch. Unlocked.
1 June '75
No phones, no TV's, sporadic plumbing, not cheap either. But now I always want to stay in places like the Parrot House. We ssat up late out in the poorly lit hall (10-11' ceiling, old fashioned light fixtures, dumpy furniture) playing backgammon, smoking, and drinking tap water (no ice, either). You could never do this in a Holiday Inn. You wouldn't want to, even if there were a lounge at the end of the hall.
Pleasant wedding, very pleasant reception, danced with everybody. Uncle Ray made a hit with people in general. Sharon's whole family singing "I've Been Working on the Railroad." They dance much more than Mary Beth's family does. Bill and Marybeth have quite a view. I guess if you are going to live in the mountains, you should always live where you can see the sunrise and/or sunset through a cleft in the hills. It was so orange - like glowing metal under a welding torch.
2 June '75
Travelled to Canada via "America's Most Scenic Highway, 1966-1967," I-87, which well lived up to its reputation. The Adirondacks are stunning and fairly empty of human presence. Montreal has a definite cosmopolitan feeling - "all of those continental-looking males," as Sharon said. One also tends to feel that many of the French-speaking females look sort of French. Mont-Royal rivals Roch Creek Park as an urban getaway. It offers wonderful views on all sides, and most of the people cluster about Le Chateau on the southern end. The rest of the 10-12 acre summit is fairly wild and empty. Canadian beer has a deliciously un-American tang which Geoff ascribes to higher alcoholic content and a lack of preservative chemicals.
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Scumbled
30 April '75
I have always known that my work would develop and change with time, and it has. However, my excursion into minimal composition, while not as wrenching as Larry Poons' abandoning ellipsoid dots for thick, scumbled surfaces, was a giant step. Perhaps I could compare it to Frank Stella's development in that I kept about half of my arsenal (my textures) and changed the other half (my shapes). It was a successful step, but it leads me to wonder "what next?" Stripes will be exhausted some day, as were dots and the giant protractor exhausted, and I shall once again wish to start boldly anew. A false start of half a dozen paintings and several months to discover the end of a blind alley would be a great waste and yet my more rigid format may preclude a more predictable and successful "development." Stella as changed 3-4 times and made great art. Smith was cut off in the prime of his "Cubi" period. Frankenthaler, Francis, and some others have lost that original fire in their successive incarnations. Nevelson has mined the same ground for years, but the result always glitters.
How many times will I (Have to? Want to?) change? Where will that next step take me?
I don't even know whether I am striding out across the world or spiralling in to find myself. It really does not matter.
I have always known that my work would develop and change with time, and it has. However, my excursion into minimal composition, while not as wrenching as Larry Poons' abandoning ellipsoid dots for thick, scumbled surfaces, was a giant step. Perhaps I could compare it to Frank Stella's development in that I kept about half of my arsenal (my textures) and changed the other half (my shapes). It was a successful step, but it leads me to wonder "what next?" Stripes will be exhausted some day, as were dots and the giant protractor exhausted, and I shall once again wish to start boldly anew. A false start of half a dozen paintings and several months to discover the end of a blind alley would be a great waste and yet my more rigid format may preclude a more predictable and successful "development." Stella as changed 3-4 times and made great art. Smith was cut off in the prime of his "Cubi" period. Frankenthaler, Francis, and some others have lost that original fire in their successive incarnations. Nevelson has mined the same ground for years, but the result always glitters.
How many times will I (Have to? Want to?) change? Where will that next step take me?
I don't even know whether I am striding out across the world or spiralling in to find myself. It really does not matter.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Improbable Schemes: Part 1
Last summer as I sat staring out the window at life's colors while working at S&B, I solemnly promised myself that I would not spend the next summer inside an office.
Here it is next summer, and there I am again (My God, this time I've even given the bastards my Fridays).
So here I go again: I solemnly swear that I shall not spend next summer inside an office, drawing lines or anything else. How hard it is to guard against security and normalcy. I have more money than most people ever save before age 40, and I'm working against my will. When I was laid off, I thought that if would be the truly correct and normal decision to go on unemployment and paint full-time for several months. If I had not been married (and that is a criticism of my won weakness, not of Sharon) I would not have sought another job.
How I admire Geoff Desobry's complete aversion of work and his exchange of small savings for 4 months in Europe. How I envy Steve or Bill Vought their long-term personal businesses and 2-3 day work weeks.
My, what unaccustomed bitching! I hope this will be the most negative (and last negative?) pages that ever this diary shall see. It is the 5 day work week (under particularly niggling circumstances - not heavy pressure, but the constant annoyance of a disorganized boss) which has filled me with woe. In the last month I have changed from a fortnightly dope smoker to an every-other-day toker.
And how sweet it is.
Change of Subject
It is hard to sell good work, or new work. Paintings should sit around for awhile - although one always has an opinion of them when they are finished, finishing art differs from finishing a race. Some of my paintings have been finished half a dozen times, only to be added to or altered time and again (sometimes to the better, occasionally to the point of contrived overworking), sometimes a month later.
The answer: not every painting can be the best. Some must be average. Some will be failures and it's hard to part with good work. Rather, I try to steer people toward "average" paintings that move me less, or toward older paintings, whose value and importance in my oeuvre, although considerable when they were done, has since been eclipsed by better work or different work.
Which presents this dilemma: is the artist disseminating his second rate work to public view while he keeps the good stuff at home, out of sight? Can he build a reputation out of "seconds."
The answer: not very painting can be the best. Some must be average. Some will be failures (and should be learned from and then painted over or destroyed). It is no dishonor not to hit a home run on each attempt, just as it is no dishonor to make god use of the doubles and triples.
Also, it is of vital importance to have a body of work to show - and I'd say that at least half of that body should be my best. Reputations are build much faster on shows than on scattered paintings in scattered living rooms.
I can't support myself at my work anyway, right now. It would be foolish to sell off best paintings for a few hundred dollars whose promotional value (toward a future pay of full-time painting) is not easily estimated.
And lastly, they are all part of me - I reserve the right to do with them as I will. Some will never leave; I want a living history close by where I can breathe it in.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Like an Indian Head Penny Nowadays
11 April '75
Last night was submittal night for the NVFAA show judged by Lawrence Alloway - and for me, it was the first evening of spring. As I stood outside John Arcuri's beautiful old apartment bldg in my old denims, with blowing hair and sprouting mustache in the arm gauzy light, I felt rebirth and energy flow through me. The ride down the daffodil lined roads of Rock Creek Park and beside the silver Potomac, passing joggers and bikers, was as dramatic as the cadmium orange ball of the sun painting all the river backwaters near National Airport. After leaving our paintings we returned to John's to reinforce our waning glow with still more sherry. On my way to pick up Sharon, I was moved by my annual (approximately) whim to wander again down the basements of McClean Gardens. Ah, roots (ah, bunk), I could see again the spaceships, submarines and tunnels of my youthful fantasy in those fine old sinuous, up-and-down basements with all their exposed vitals of steam piping, conduit, panels and gauges. I spent many hours of rainy, and even sunny, days with my friends in that subterranean labyrinth. It felt good to see it again. I did notice that the good old apartment hallways seemed much more like those of Hyattsville and Mt. Rainier than those of the "home" of memory. Also, they had cut down the rose bushes where we would see the Japanese beetles of summer drowned in little kerosene traps. (A memory like that is like an Indian Head penny nowadays).
21 April '75
I would not have been so long away from my writing had I not mislaid the notebook and been unable to find it for a week. It was, naturally, under a pile of papers and detritus in the studio.
Like being newly in love, or like a recent convert, I find all my thoughts these days occupied by "creation," a subject (feeling?) as wide as life itself. There isn't 15 minutes of spare time each day (not to mention much time at work, cleaning house, eating) that I don't think of painting, or cartooning, or composing. Creation is the source of my happiness, the irrigation of my love, my proof against bitterness and ennui. Like a love anew, it causes me to regard the world anew. I see my friends and either applaud their projects and energy or hope that they will yet discover life. My God, how can the Dave and Nancy Snyders of the world come home and watch TV each long evening - how can a Kathy Lyons find primal satisfaction in her job as a government administrator? It boggles the mind.
I remember how blithely (a scant two months ago) I was resigned to doing no music, because I was a painter, because there was only time to paint. I remember how the cartoons had bloomed and withered within me starting with last year's impeachment hearings, but were left undrawn (despite strong encouragement from Sharon and from Frank Bowie) because there was only time to paint.
I was wrong - there is time to do what you want in this world; there is plenty of time for cartoons, painting, and songs because there must be, because creativity is life. For years, Sharon and a few others (Dolores, Frank Bowie, John) have encouraged me to go pull steam, to not deny myself, and they were right. The weeks-old change from "painter" to "person" has been a shock like going to sleep at home and waking up in the woods. I wouldn't have thought that such a naturally happy person as myself could have found this joy - I didn't even know that there was so much more joy to be found.
It makes me realize that the next discovery of personhood will be the regaining of the woods. I haven't been camping in 3 years although I have all necessary equipment, although I have experience, although thinking of camping (and then never doing it) is like a kick in the heart. Seeing this month's Nat'l Geographic feature on the Adirondacks didn't help any, either (ah, New England; Ah, upstate). This solemn pledge I make: From March thru October each year from now on, I will get in 6 weekends of camping. That's not even a weekend a month, and that's not even cold weather ( I've slept in the frost before). And I can do it. I can do anything - I know that now.
Ah, but there's the rub.
There may be enough time in life for the work of creation, for love, for smoky mornings beside the lake, for biking the C&O Canal, for seeing Europe; but there is not enough time for "WORK." Work is a thief - it subverts your time and energy away from life, and all that is dear thereof. I work to be pain, period. I regard an office an a warehouse, a supply source of art material, xerox copies, long distance phone calls, and whatever else will better enable me to complete my own projects. Work is but a small adjunct to real life - never could I measure my life by my job, not if it were in a studio. I pity those who work on other people's projects 5 days, and spend their most precious commodity, their own time, in spendthrift TV viewing and "relaxation."
Not that I knock the noble process of unwinding; I too, drink, smoke, and spend time away from the studio in non-productive pursuit. But I spend all the time I can creating - witness the languish of this diary as I have begun to use those daily commutes for music writing. When I arrive home from "work," I still have plenty of energy for work.
How I pity those who spend all that is good within them on other people's projects, who have only "relaxation" to look forward to, who eat, sleep, and work never knowing what it is to feel themselves expand, grow tall, and become aware of the beauty of all life through the power of creation, the work of the soul.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)