Saturday, September 18, 2010
Saturday commute ii
We say, we welcome the weekend, but always there is the spectre of car trouble.
One does all one can, to come to terms with a wholesome terror of car trouble.
An unseemliness attaches to car trouble, despite the most enlightened tolerance - to say nothing of the nasty suspicion, that we simply desire car trouble.
Who could possibly believe that?
Friday, September 17, 2010
Daydreaming of justice
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Every one of them
. . taught us, learned with us.
This poem, The Yoke, is by a teacher,
Frank Bidart.
I'm going to take it.
don't worry I know you're dead
but tonight
turn your face again
toward me
when I hear your voice there is now
no direction in which to turn
I sleep and wake and wake and sleep and wake and
but tonight
turn your face again
toward me
see upon my shoulders is the yoke
that is not a yoke
don't worry I know you're dead
but tonight
turn your face again
This poem, The Yoke, is by a teacher,
Frank Bidart.
I'm going to take it.
don't worry I know you're dead
but tonight
turn your face again
toward me
when I hear your voice there is now
no direction in which to turn
I sleep and wake and wake and sleep and wake and
but tonight
turn your face again
toward me
see upon my shoulders is the yoke
that is not a yoke
don't worry I know you're dead
but tonight
turn your face again
Non so più cosa son, cosa faccio
E a parlare
mi sforza d'amore
Un desio ch'io
non posso spiegar
E, se non ho chi m'oda,
Parlo d'amor con me.
Lorenzo da Ponte after Beaumarchais
Photograph Hedi Slimane
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
A dialogue of need and nourishment ii
Commentary at a blog:
For me, the theft of "The Guy in the Striped Room" from the Frick always made it too poignant to visit the museum after lunch. Indeed, it made lunch necessary, to recompose upon a sequence of plates, those elements of nourishment the canvas had framed completely in itself. The failure, then, of the whole restaurant principle comes crashing down upon one, to return to that house on a full stomach.
The general crisis of public gastronomy has not yet figured here. However, it is obvious, that his participation in the cyclical drama of a basket of fruit is what Epicurus had in mind as he lingered for a table at Lucas Carton - which Senderens has self-named, at last, in despair of presenting cliché. Tellingly, he has adopted the very blues for himself that Louis Malle commissioned of Miles Davis, to guide Jeanne Moreau on her erotically anguished march down the Champs-Elysées in Elevator to the Gallows.
A jest, such as a culinary titan's embrace of the jazz theme of a murderess to project a radical passion, exposes a tension that is real, and famously inherent in exhibitive consumption. In fact Lucas Carton was an indisputable ornament of France. Senderens gutted it in every way, risking travesty to restore its meaning.
For his muse Senderens resorted to iconography even less assailable to the French, indeed to the world, than the name of his restaurant. Whether he fails as Mme Carala did, to salvage love in an assassination of husbandry, is less important than his assertion of artistry in the act.
Still, none of this answers to the tragic gap in the Frick Collection, since the heist of "The Guy in the Striped Room." It only pretends to. Another radical epicure already showed this, in an artistic gesture famously thrusting the life cycle beyond the edge of its shelf, into consuming space. The dialogue between need and nourishment, at least as old as Plato's Symposium, has not lacked depiction for 400 years.
Monochrome for author's comment at The Slab
Music by Miles Davis, "Florence sur les Champs-Elysées"
Colour photograph gift of Tassos Paschalis to Laurent
Jeanne Moreau by window light at midnight by Louis Malle
A Basket of Fruit, ca 1593, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio
David Chaloub by window light, morning
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
sometimes the face of Julien Sorel
reminds, without a word,
he never went away.
He never will, he's our Julien.
Photo Paolo Roversi for Gucci
W, August 2010