This is a blog of criticism and advocacy, so much the same thing that you may already be annoyed. But this isn't the end of our repetitiveness. If this is your first visit to the page, you will find it to be an exercise in writing from a tactile point of view, of engaging a picture, and of enlisting a picture to accompany its journey. There are tens of thousands of you every month; no one can say for you, why you like the picture. One can say, the picture will not be of you, or I; but from the instant it was made, it was ours. And what then?
There are pleats in the subject's background, which accompany the foreground of his gaze. He is old enough to have defeated Darius, and written Die Entführung aus dem serail. One enjoys the study of the ones who got away with something left. That way of keeping modifies the act of going, but not necessarily contradictorily. Do you ever wonder whether it would have been harder to have been Henry James or Tennessee Williams, both going but not getting away, or Scott Fitzgerald, going and getting lost, but showing something gained?
But most of us, I would think, are closer to the ones who do not get away, such as James's Roderick Hudson, Williams' Tom;
and it's incredible and beautiful, that of all the works of both these wonderful writers, these were the ones they couldn't end, which is to say, bring to an end without a mechanical trick, a deus ex machina of a fatal fall in one, a blowing out of candles in the other. There is an art of reconciliation, and we are trained to appreciate it in art. And there is sometimes only art.
And Roderick left you in - in irritation?
I offered him my company on his walk,
but he wouldn't have me.
Henry James
Roderick Hudson
The Atlantic Monthly, 1875
Macdonald & Co., Ltd, 1909
Harper, 1960©
Denim and Cuffs
Left Profile
2011
Unidentified tumblr
Paul Cézanne
Card Players
ca 1890-92
Richard Shiff
Cézanne and the End
of Impressionism
University of Chicago Press, 1984©
T.J. Clark
At the Courtauld
London Review of Books©
12/10/2010
Peter Schjeldahl
Game Change
The New Yorker©
2/28/2011
Jed Perl
Playing for Keeps
The New Republic©
4/28/2011