Titles without Tales

 

graphite on paper

One of Our Best Operatives is Missing . . .

As both a visual and verbal storyteller, I’m bound to come up against the stubborn blank wall of imagination empty on occasion, if not often. Long ago I began using the trick of “forced randomness” to fill in the blank until something more substantial would either emerge from the resulting prescription or I’d get a welcome brain-wave from another source to rescue me. As I learned, it’s simply making the first mark on the page that’s generally the hardest part: once there’s a mark, whether genuinely random scribble made with the blessed No. 2 pencil or a slightly gibberish-tinged line written in exasperation, I now have something to respond to, to edit, to like or dislike or build upon, in whatever way I’m moved to do. The response may be disgusted continuous pressing of the Delete key or furious “unscribbling” with the big bad eraser (a tool I find I rarely use for actually erasing). If that’s the case, why then, I can work to divine just what was so unsatisfactory to me about the initial move I’d made and then there’s probably fodder in the facts enough to get me started on something more useful, more personally motivated.

If, on the other hand, I see the seeds of utility and interest in that first foray, I’m often well served by turning the whole process into a good healthy bout of problem solving. That’s what real creativity is to me: my flighty little brain’s attempt to figure out what’s missing from the world, real or not, and fill in the blanks. Blank page, blank canvas, blank silence. Aside from beautiful and meaningful moments of personal zen, I’m driven to fill them with stuff that intrigues and feeds me.

Sometimes I’ll use external means to try to force motivation. I might pick up the first book or magazine I see, crack it open to the first page my fingers find, point to a spot on the page, and tell myself that whatever word or image I land on has to serve as my starting point, the guide for making Mark One. I might look out the window and whatever moves first within my view has to be the source. Any of the old standard repertoire of such tricks will likely do. But perhaps my favorite is to give myself a title or an over-arching concept that could conceivably serve as the framework for a whole series of artworks, chapters, stories. I think of it as my “Mr Booktitles” approach, named years ago in honor of a school of “acting”, sometimes embodied by very famous and very popular actors speaking every line of dialog or soliloquy or narration as though it were a stand-alone title from a very badly written book, a method that still keeps me astonished these particular actors–or the writers and directors that should be forcing them to do better–can get hired and admired. Go figure. But the fatuous title approach has served me reasonably well, so I guess I mustn’t criticize. All I do in the instance is create my title and use either the text or the artwork to try to flesh it out, give it some meaning.

The graphite drawing above came from just such an approach, and ended up being the first in a series of five or six drawings that “illustrated” different parts of the “story” represented by the title, a sort of post-Cold-War spy adventure that never did get written and for which the present artwork illustrated, ultimately, the nonexistent prequel to the never-happened story. Not that I wouldn’t write the actual story at some point, but it wasn’t necessary to have it in hand as impetus to get some work on the page in another format. Who knows, it may be that the illustrations had to exist in order for the story to ‘need to’ happen at some point. If that isn’t convoluted enough, I don’t know what is. But at least it gave me a useful jumping-off point for a series of works that remains something of a favorite among my audiences and yes, with me too.

Rosy Outlook

 

ruffly-roses + text

Every sign of growth and newness brings new hope . . .

Somehow, sometimes, a bad thing can be a good sign. Like the third day following surgery, feeling pretty lousy. So perfectly fits the expected pattern that despite the awfulness of watching my loved one’s pain and exhaustion, it’s oddly reassuring to me. Strange, no? Kind of the way this screwy world can work, with funny, breakable characters like us in it. We see and feel hurt that we dread and yet can find promise in it. We look for the expected outburst of anger or depression, the need to scream vituperation at the gods, and a weird calm descends and what emerges instead is a single blink of zen, that sense that something new and right will come of it all in the end.

oil painting on canvas

Peace conquers all darkness . . .

There was a time when I had a project deadline for a painting and there wasn’t a glimmer of hope that I would finish it in time. A lot was riding on the outcome, and my life outside of the studio was not exactly providing either inspiration or even enough contentment and comfort to help me fake it. So I decided the only alternative was to take my frustration and anger out on the canvas. Since the subject and treatment of the painting were wide open, what better way to find catharsis than in the virtual reality of art.

I’m sure you know where this is headed: I got into the studio late at night, frazzled and feeling pretty desperate and certainly hot under the collar, and planning to take out all of my aggression and madness in making a wild, dark, slashing abstraction that would act as a personal bloodletting, maybe give me a cool high-intensity painting that would start me on a useful new artistic path, and get lots of that pent-up grotesquerie vented. No surprise to anyone that’s ever had the slightest brush with pop psychology, a few hours after I dragged myself into the studio, I produced the most floaty, peaceful, candy-coated painting of ethereal sweetness that I’d ever managed to produce, possibly after as well. Didn’t fire off my moment of impending doom into a monstrous painting; I dealt with my darkness by making a world of safety and joy to swallow it up instead. From grimness, growth. And yes, it became the impetus for a series of idealized abstract landscapes that still remain among my most gentle-spirited works to date.

Boston rose photos + text

From the dark earth, newness emerges . . .

Elemental, My Dear

photo duo in blue

The elements . . . not just for survival anymore . . .

Let’s face it, no question that we’re deeply dependent on the elements of nature. If I ever had any doubts, this summer has been full of wonderfully explicit reminders. The fiery heat of this record-breaking high temperature streak is scorching the land, making the state as water-starved as it’s ever been and turning the very air into an enemy (friend Patrick perfectly described standing in the wind here these days as being “like I’m standing inside of a giant hair dryer“). Even the water that still exists around here is overheated: fish are being cooked in the lakes. Parched crops are dying and threatening to starve the livestock, which in turn are being sold off before they too die off, and that means whole farms and ranches crossed off forever. At the same time, in other parts of the world, flood and typhoon and hurricane–a surfeit of the water my region is desperate to drink–are equally fierce in toppling crops and towns and livelihoods. These wet winds blow with the same violence that stirs up the dust of our baked clay ground and desiccated, blasted trees’ branches, but when loaded with water their fury takes on drowning power along with the walloping wall of pressure that forces the world into what we would like to think are unnatural contortions–but of course are sent directly by nature.

The elements are also high in my consciousness when I’ve been seeing my partner through a series of outpatient procedures, the latest and most significant of them (nasal surgery) intended to greatly improve his ability to breathe. Let me just tell you that nothing on this bejeweled and stupendous planet will compel me now to steer my current search for vocation (a job will do, but a vocation would be SO far preferable!) in a medical direction! I always knew I was not a natural-born caregiver, being much too self-absorbed to devote my all to looking out for the best interests of another properly. I knew I was, to put it kindly, timid in the face of danger and not especially tough, unless you might be referring to the calluses on my drawing hand. But I also rediscovered my squeamish side, finding that seeing my beloved in the least discomfort, let alone wan and semi-anesthetized and speckled with his own blood, renders me just this side of paralyzed and struggling for equilibrium and air just about equally with his own distress. Not a huge help. Luckily for us both, his medical teams throughout the summer have been truly outstanding and the procedures have all gone as nearly perfectly as one could wish, or we might both have been marooned.

The latter surgery itself was a fresh reminder of the centrality of air in our lives. My spouse, being a singer and conductor and teacher, has always been very pneumo-centric in the peculiar way of such creatures, and has also long had nasal breathing impairment that made a good night’s sleep an unattainable grail. Despite this, it wasn’t until we decided to further investigate the possibility of some of his seemingly mild allergies being better treated that his ENT discovered a whole world of underlying trouble with a CT scan and a little nostril-gazing. A drastically deviated septum, bone spurs on his internasal structures, and a whole “secret room” closed chamber taking up space on one side to further block air passage–it all makes me curious how he managed all of these years on such inadequate resources.

It’s a little like when I finally got the treatment that brought me off the brink of disaster when that infamous foe of a chemical imbalance in the brain couldn’t be corrected with talk therapy and a better physical health and earnest intentions for self-improvement. The minute my meds really started kicking in I began to realize not only that I was capable of being my whole self, but that I could do so without enormous impediments it’d never occurred to me other people didn’t have, let alone that I didn’t have to have them. What a pleasant shock. I am hopeful that once he’s fully recovered my guy too will find a perfectly astonishing improvement not only in his breathing (his surgeon says he wouldn’t be surprised by an 80-90% improvement) but in all of the aspects of life directly influenced by it. There’s no question that being far more fully oxygenated will drastically change his life experience, and I can only expect that that will be for the better.

Now, of course, the post-op life is full of struggling for enough hydration to counter the dry breathing (particularly through the humidifier-free night) constricted by swollen sutured tissues and following the effects of anesthetic, meds and stress. Ay! It’s conscientiously working on deep breathing techniques to counter the post-op blockage. It’s being careful to gently spray rather abused tissues with plentiful healing saline but conversely not to let bath, shower or shampoo water get, literally, ‘up in his face’.

What’s ahead, no knowing. Only that we will continue to learn our respect for the elements both when they attack us in excess amounts and when we long for them in their absence. For now, I will join in the communal rain dance and add to it my own arabesques for more air. Just be glad I’m doing any of my dancing in the metaphorical or perhaps metaphysical sense and you don’t have to watch me perform it, or there would undoubtedly be a surfeit among my readership of another kind of saline. Whether you cry from horror or from laughing yourself to tears is up to you.

Rachmaninoff Plays Rachmaninoff

album cover portrait

You old romantic, you!

In my early record collection was a lovely, only slightly scratchy LP, with an equally well-aged photographic portrait on its cover, of Sergei Rachmaninoff playing his own compositions. Needless to say, if you’re a big gooey fan of sweeping, high intensity passionate music like I am and you’re going to have a limited audio selection, it’s beyond stupendous to have such a jewel in it. I undoubtedly increased the mileage on that piece of vinyl tenfold, listening to it in a virtually continuous loop at times, before the era of CDs rendered my old faithful stash of LPs–at least the equipment on which I played them–obsolete. I’m no sophisticated audiophile, able to detect the finer distinctions between LP and CD, let alone to wring the delicacies out of super-duper-HD-splendiferous solid plutonium audio wire with sprinkles on it. But I know gorgeous and moving music when it smacks me upside the head. So of course I’ve always been a sucker for Sergei.

My fabulous blogger friend XB at ‘In Search of My Moveable Feasts’, offered a 25 July rumination on Rachmaninoff and the question posed in some circles as to whether he should be considered a second-rate composer. In some ways, asking me that particular one boils down to what is always treated as quite the prickly question: whether there is a direct relationship, either as equivalents or as antagonists, between popularity (wide public approval, say) of an artist or his work and their level of critical acceptability and the kind of greatness that somehow transcends the current stamp of approval. I’m not entirely sure I buy that these are mutually exclusive evaluations. But at bottom, the very happy obsession to which I confessed earlier answers the question for me far enough for my purposes: Mr. Rachmaninoff makes music that moves me deeply and without which I would be loath to spend any great length of time, and that’s my brand of critical success.

Meanwhile, the portrait above, which was based on the album cover photo, was a surprise to many. It was made as part of a portrait show honoring many of my favorite influences, particularly artists of every stripe, each of whom has played some role in pushing me ahead artistically. It wasn’t until the show was hanging in the gallery that others pointed out and I saw for the first time the marked resemblance between Sergei Rachmaninoff and the also marvelous Vladimir Horowitz in profile, all the more intriguing considering how well known Horowitz is for playing the compositions of fellow eastern Europeans like, say, Rachmaninoff.

In a final confessional note, I will say that an additional major source of my attraction to this great Rach star is his glorious choral music, most notably the exquisite Opus 37, the All Night Vigil (in popular parlance, his ‘Vespers‘). That my life-partner was in the midst of rehearsing an upcoming production of that miraculous piece when we came together could possibly be blamed in part for this addiction. The Sweet Nothings he whispered to me in his sleep being Church Slavonic seemed plenty romantic! As it has transpired, I have now been blessed to be immersed in this piece several times again as he’s conducted it in rehearsals and concerts with an array of different choirs. Given my experience, if Greatness is partly defined by the sophistication and complex subtlety that grows and changes with repeated exposure, never losing but rather increasing in richness over time–I would call Rachmaninoff decidedly first-rate. Whether anybody else buys that as valid or not, I’ll happily wake up any day to a faint humming of ‘Bogoroditse Djevo’, whether it’s from the CD player or from the other side of my bed.

Be Still and Listen, Thou Big Dope

run-down beauties

It's there, if you use your six senses . . .

Just because I believe that inspiration and the skill to fulfill it are best bought with persistent and focused labor doesn’t mean I don’t think it lies all around for the taking, too. There’s just so much astounding and strange and beautiful and fun stuff in every imaginable cranny of the world that the real charge here must be to keep all senses twitching at all times, not least of all the antennae of intuition. And I also lean toward the ‘it’s all been done already’ theory of creative endeavor, wherein pretty much every grand idea in history has very possibly already been had and it’s our pleasure and somewhat difficult responsibility to somehow recombine the DNA of our arts into something new and wonderful that’s now our own. So I have no hesitation about going shopping amongst all kinds of artworks extant for a better chance of gathering useful inspirations from them to move me toward my own next project.

When I go to an art exhibition I’m not only basking in the inherent attractions of the works hanging on the walls and filling up the galleries but also filing away molecules of inspiring marvels and, not least of all, building up a slight head of steam that makes me antsy to get into the studio again myself. When I attend a concert, dance, play or other performance, I’m absorbing whatever tremendous artistry, craft, skill, design, and magic came together to make the moments possible, and on the side, I’m mentally revising, redesigning, rehashing and reinventing on my terms every aspect I can imagine, making it mine. It need not diminish my admiration for the work in hand, but rather tends to let it bloom in every direction as an expanding universe of potential artistry. Granted, I am no dancer, haven’t acted since high school (unless you count acting competent, or like I’m not scared, when the occasion requires), and I’m certainly no great shakes as a musician of any sort. But I’ve attempted each just enough of each to appreciate the fineness of what I’m seeing when I sit at the feet of masters.

Even when I dine, the food and its preparation and context can provide a wild cornucopia of not only tasty satisfaction and belly filling sustenance but also another source of artful inspiration of every sensory variety. It might lead to more food (a grand enough goal, to be sure), might lead instead to some seemingly unrelated object’s invention.

Most directly of all, reading stuff that makes me shiver with happiness or shock or reverie or any other sort of appreciation has a strong tendency to get the creative juices flowing–specifically, toward my pen point.

Boston photos + text

Now let me lie between the pages of a fine book . . .

It’s all, and always, research as it happens. Right down to the purposeful hours I spend staring into nebulous space after the fact, looking for that miraculous confluence of thought word and deed that will combine all of my life’s experience into the right synchronous process of art-making to produce my next inspired work. Luck, be thou a true lady . . . tonight, tomorrow, forevermore. Muse, approach.

Rants in My Pants

Yeah, yeah. I get that itch and I just gotta scratch it. Clearly, I’m not much on keeping my feelings to myself. Secretive? Uh-uh. Obviously I’m not paranoid about my privacy. Got nothing worth stealing but the loves of my life, and they are all masters of their own destinies thankyouverymuch. The skeletons, if any, in my closet would likely bore the socks off of any self-respecting archaeologist, and any idiot that puts in the effort to sneak a peek into my nekkidness, physical or spiritual, will get the severe eye-poke he she or it deserves without requiring any action on my part beyond existing in my infinite beauty.

Then again . . .

photo collage of blue/white images + text

The unmapped life is full of wonderful surprises . . .

What I could never have designed for myself or expected as a reward for my humble personal resources is a life history marked by the remarkable and filled with the fabulous. To take inventory of the amazing things I have experienced and the outstanding people whose paths I have been privileged to cross is to stand in awe of my incredible good fortune and all of the odd and pleasing presents it’s tossed in my circuitous life’s wanderings. Here’s a little inventory of some of that funny life o’mine in the form of a list, in no particular order, of things I have or have not done, for good or ill. I guess we all do this sort of self-inventory from time to time because such reflection is an intriguing way of finding out surprising things about each other and, more than that, about ourselves.

Here goes.

Things I Have Done:

*   Been bitten by a pony
*   Exposed a thief by revising a public swimming pool’s accounting system
*   Captured a bird by using a veiled antique hat
*   Canoed the Kickapoo River
*   Designed/sewn a ball gown out of plastic trash bags for a special party
*   Used an arc welder—very briefly and ineptly, to be sure
*   Seen celebrities at airports and discussed tuna sandwiches with one TV star
*   Forgotten very nearly as many things as I’ve learned
*   Grown vegetables
*   Been president of a theatrical organization
*   Helped rebuild an old toilet by custom manufacturing obsolete parts for it
*   Changed tires
*   Been the pianist for a wedding and for a theatrical production
*   Attended a formal banquet in a foreign palace
*   Told lame jokes
*   Been served coffee by a famous symphony conductor
*   Gotten stitches for a hockey injury
*   Drawn pictures
*   Drawn a crowd
*   Drawn butter
*   Drawn a blank
*   Slept with my hairdresser (okay, my husband cuts my hair)
*   Won a Best Actress award
*   Won a safety-orange knit dickey
*   Fallen through a ceiling and hung by my armpits from the joists
*   Rooted plants from cuttings
*   Grilled shark
*   Had an allergic reaction
*   Taught university courses in art, English (writing) and learning strategies
*   Ice skated on a frozen lake
*   Stage-managed a national convention
*   Practiced archery
*   Delivered a homily to a chapel full of theologians and religion professors
*   Darned socks
*   Made dinner for an internationally famous cookbook author-editor
*   Carved alabaster
*   Run lighting for a professional ballet performance
*   Created a computer cataloguing system for a library
*   Disassembled and reassembled an ellipsoidal reflector lamp
*   Played guitar
*   Fried eggs
*   Worked as a temp in a software company
*   Served on a jury
*   Danced onstage at the Opera House
*   Photographed dead flies
*   Shaken hands and exchanged greetings with a reigning King and Queen
*   Driven a shuttle van
*   Attempted Bikram yoga
*   Written and produced a one-act melodrama on commission
*   Taken Chinese calligraphy lessons
*   Slept on a tall ship                                                                                                         *   Glazed a window
*   Been the subject of a midnight police raid on the wrong house
*   Won a baseball trivia contest without knowing a thing about baseball
*   Composed a song about a pony (not the one that bit me)
*   Gone snowshoeing
*   Seen a Blue-crowned Motmot in the wild
*   Fallen in love

Then there are all of the Things I Haven’t Done (yet, anyway):

*   Won a cash lottery
*   Had a dental cavity
*   Owned a four-legged pet
*   Broken a bone in my body
*   Been to Asia, Australia/NZ, or Antarctica
*   Learned a second language (some will say I’ve not yet mastered a first)
*   Eaten escargot
*   Written a bestseller
*   Visited all of the states in America
*   Cured cancer
*   Gotten skillful at any sport
*   Truffle hunted
*   Been able to understand and/or believe what politicians are talking about
*   Milked a cow
*   Danced gracefully

*   Lived overseas longer than a few weeks at a time
*   Mastered the marketing skills to sell my artwork and writing well
*   Been chased by a badger
*   Looked attractive in yellow or orange clothes
*   Died
*   Played golf
*   Decided to have children
*   Swung on a trapeze
*   Competed willingly
*   Overcome all my fears and anxieties and inhibitions
*   Made glass artworks
*   Had an audience with the Pope
*   Been arrested
*   Successfully raised Himalayan blue poppies for more than one season
*   Figured out how to get square pegs OUT of round holes once in
*   Knitted (except my brow)
*   Gotten irrevocably bored
*   Hybridized a plant
*   Studied marine biology
*   Piloted an aircraft or any boat larger than a rowboat

If I were to do even a tiny portion of the latter list, imagine where the remainder of life will take me. Oh, yeah–you can’t, nor can I. It’s the whole wacky and delightful point, isn’t it. There’s just no way to guess where the next turn in the road will lead. That’s how an ordinary broad like me managed to get to this point in life. Coo-wull.

As American as Whaaaaaa…???

Digital collage of eagle, flag, baseball, etc + text

So much for inalienable rights . . .

So the husbandly-personage and I were talking about Libertarian ideals and as usual, the conversation drifted as we meandered the miles homeward through another hot afternoon. I think you know enough about me already to guess that I’m generally less than hot on talking, or even thinking, politics. Always a topic for argument, disagreement, divisiveness when I’m out of the safe environs of my own little twosome. Even within it, occasionally. And I just plain don’t relish conflict at any level. When it comes to politics, that’s also occasioned by its being one of those few areas in which I am admittedly cynical and tend to lack my usual annoyingly perky attitude of perpetual be-nice-ness that assumes all the best of all humanity. I think when it comes to civility and unselfishness, ours is a race of creatures ill-suited to follow our best instincts.

Which is to say, I think a great many political systems, even democracy for cripes’ sake, look fabulous on paper. There are lots of admirable aspects not just to democracy but to constitutional monarchy, to communism, socialism, even anarchy, not to mention a whole slew of sub-categories within each. And don’t get me started on all of the world’s religions and pseudo-religions and cults, which I may have mentioned in crankypants moments I find are often freely intermixed with political, social and more personal beliefs to the point that I’m quite convinced few (any?) living beings have any clear concept of what any of the aforementioned means by definition, let alone in their originators’ intended forms, any more.

The problem–you can see where I’m headed–is that despite the beauty of many ideas’ intentions, they are very seldom enacted with anything near the purity of heart they might require to actually work. We Homo pseudo-sapiens just have a tremendously powerful tendency to do things to please and satisfy our personal inclinations. We work hard to define wants as needs, to translate privileges into not just constitutional rights but, by cracky, as pretty much divine rights and Not To Be Messed With, Dammit. It’s in this world that, while I think most thoughtful persons will agree that focusing on anything other than actual driving while driving is potentially dangerous not only to the persons in the vehicle being driven but to any others sharing the road and its vicinity, I still had this afternoon the not-at-all-uncommon opportunity to look over at the next lane and watch a driver assiduously texting from behind the steering wheel without the remotest indication that he was worrying himself about whether that was risky for him, let alone aware that we were in a car not one metre distant from him and hurtling along at the same mad freeway pace.

This is the same world where plenty of people know perfectly well that it’s an iffy proposition to suck tar and nicotine into your lungs but do so willingly and regularly and are quite content to share all of their available leftover smog with nonsmokers’ adjacent lungs without even having to be asked for the gift*. *(In this setting, feel free to assume I’m using the Norwegian version of ‘gift’, in which language the word means poison.) It’s the same world full of people well-versed in the basics of their home countries’ and counties’ laws who are still completely willing to flout and break those laws if and when they think they can get away with it.

Crotchety? Oh, yes, I certainly am when it comes to assuming people will do the right thing if left to their own devices. But I’m not exactly sure there’s any cure for that, least of all within any political, legal, religious or social system we’ve yet discovered, and even the most would-be benign autocracy slides off into murky territory and rots from the inside without a great deal of delay. Am I dark-minded enough to say It’s Just Our Nature? Just the way we ARE? Sounds like a quitter talking, at best. But yeah, there’s an element of defeatism or even fatalism involved when I see how far we’ve come along the ol’ human timeline, how many Golden Ages have crashed and turned to ethereal gnat poo in how many stupendous civilizations, how often the stubborn and unsanitary insanity of self-interest has brought down the greatness of the moment . . . well, fill in the blanks yourself. I told you right up front, now, didn’t I.

Meanwhile, I would like to reiterate my longtime belief, what perhaps you could almost legitimately call one of my few real articles of faith, that the majority of people are weirdly, strangely, pretty good at center. Go figure. That’s the basis for my muddle-through theory of salvation–well, continuity. It’s simply that, no matter how awful and disgusting we’ve managed to be as individuals, let alone to one another, and this also on a global level, despite the number of massive historic failures to succeed in being simply ongoing nations and cultures, somebody always seems to carry on. How improbable! How bizarre! How heartening. Okay, alla youse guys, I guess that means we have to soldier on in our own limping, screwy, fatheaded mortal way. If every one of us manages to be just a little bit less self-centered and, what the hey, less often deserving of placement in the time-out corner of life–well, I think we might have a shot.

The Feast that Never Ends

Thanks to our kind friend Joelle, I met fellow blogger XB tonight over dinner. Her blog, ‘In Search of My Moveable Feast’ at http://www.xiaobonestler.com/, is a wonderful melange of food and culture spiced with her delightful wit. I’m also reminded by both blog-mate and the friends around the dinner table tonight–composer hosting, saxophonist and pianist and conductor gathered around the table with me as we all enjoyed the meal and conversation–that shared love of culture and other naturally crazy things is an endless banquet of marvels and wonders.

ratatouille ingredients + blackboard text

To dine is divine, and among friends the conviviality never ends . . .

Is the conversation inspired by the food? The food by the gathering? The gathering by the conversation?

Of course all three happen. In the case of a tableau like tonight’s at table, there can be so many possible tangents to pursue. Avidly swapping bits of life-story over splendid bowls of creamy cool beet soup with yogurt leads to thoughts of yet other meals, stories, and gatherings. Discovering common interests with newly met friends over a glass of wine: how can that not lead to further tales (tall and otherwise) and onward to inspire more the pleasure of dolmas and Greek salad, these then becoming sustenance for other hungers for knowledge and enjoyment?

It is, clearly, an infinite table, this one where strangers sit down to untasted treats and rise up as well-filled and newly minted fellow sojourners. Art is the avenue where all of these fine riches intersect: thought and music and speech and history and language and hope and hilarity and the sharing of ideas in inspiring new ways.

I don’t doubt that the cats, from their respective corners, were moderately bemused by our various enthusiasms, but I for one found in all of it great nourishment.

Senility isn’t a Second Childhood If You Never Left the First One

It’s pretty simple, really. I’m planning to carry on a long tradition (I won’t name names) of remaining not just childlike but completely immature in every way possible. That way no one will catch on as I slide on down into full dementia.

One of the things that makes this so wonderfully easy for me is artistic license, naturally. But another is simply that I’ve never shaken the innocence of the young and naive twerp and am happy to continuously wallow in my ignorance and the fantasies it engenders. I’ll try to be a realist as far as required, sure, when it comes to stuff like keeping my teeth brushed and taxes paid and not subsisting entirely on quiescently frozen treats, no matter how alluring that may be. Beyond that, no promises.

photos + text

What good can come of being overly adult when there's still so much mischief to make?

I can pull up the ol’ Big Kid Underpants with the best of ’em, but much of the time I don’t really see the point. Far preferable to frolic the halcyon meadows of silliness for as long as I can get away with it.

parakeets in car + text

If you're not ready to just jump in and hit the road, step aside!

Too responsible or distracted by Real Life to get on board with that? See you later, pal!

Stories without Words

I may have mentioned–some few blog entries ago–that the visual world is full of stories for me. It’s not just me, though. You’ve heard it plenty yourself: “A picture is worth a thousand words.” There’s no end of people inspired to find tales, ideas, inspirations of every kind in things seen, in the real world and in all sorts of visual images, and what we like to imagine they mean, or could mean. So have at it. I give you now a digital collage and know that no one else will see precisely the same collection of Stuff or relationships between the things collected here exactly the way I see them. You might guess why I put some of this together in a single image, maybe even could see some of my motivation more clearly than I do myself (you shrink you), but the fun of the whole thing is the same as what I love experiencing when I have an art exhibition: seeing my own work through others’ lenses and knowing that they always bring something different to it than I did either in looking at the finished piece or in revisiting any part of its birthing.

digital collage of Things

All these things together . . .

Every sighted person “reads” the world through his or her own filters, and for the most part, that’s good. It’s not only what helps us to be ourselves fully in the world but what gives us a large measure of pleasure in existence: we can create the world in which we find ourselves as well. Imagination and interpretation are colorful ways of coping with reality and reshaping it as we go. We can be horribly misled by our crazy or wrongheaded or under-informed explication and conceptualization, and that usually leads to trouble of one sort or another (not least of all making one be a chump, a dimbulb or even a full-fledged jerk). But really, isn’t there a lot of fun in just giving ourselves a moment of fiction to stretch our boundaries and enlarge our existence in some small measure?