Saturday, February 28, 2015

Triennial at the New Museum

I loved the Triennial at the New Museum. So far none of the reviews I've read have it right, especially the atrocious piece in the times, which reveals a perspective so woefully out of touch it is difficult to believe this is the paper of record. Conversely, perhaps this is exactly the kind of review one should expect from the paper of record.

To be clear I don't have it figured out either (yet), but I do think the show marks a huge step forward, and is one of the most successful conceptual-political-aesthetic-emerging-artists exhibition I've ever seen. The artists are a very diverse group--excellent, yes--and the art is challenging, fascinating, and beautiful. Much is devoted to internality-externality, the ephemera of contemporary society, and the bizarre melding of identities and conditions in constant turmoil and flux--some of the most interesting art throws this against a surreal-feeling totalitarian, static background. Collage unifies much of the work, and we as audience are brought into many of the pieces. I even enjoyed an animation piece from Oliver Laric.

It is difficult to know where the exhibition begins and ends, and how exactly to navigate the halls and galleries of the space. Impressive is a Josh Kline installation (FREEDOM) featuring an Obama-esque speaker in Zuccotti Park--this will leave you feeling uncertain, troubled, and perhaps, hopeful. Hopeful because you will exit the museum knowing you've experienced an exhibition full of the work of artists who know the deep melancholy of life today, who are suspicious of the dubious promises of a brighter future, and who are capable of expressing something of it in art.

You'll read about Juliana Huxtable in the coming weeks, as you very well should. She's the face of a trans world.  

They're onto something at the New Museum. 




Njideka Akunyili Crosby




Verena Dengler












a new vision of empathy, Antoine Catala




Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Overheard on the N

I've always thought of the N as something of a red-headed stepchild.  I boarded the train in question at 57th and 7th and discovered a veritable orchestra of delight, by which I mean an incredible stench of urine and decay coated a conspicuously empty car. In haste I jogged to the next car, which on first glance seemed clean and quiet. This would, of course, not last for very long.

The N reaches one arm into Astoria, and with other makes a periphrastic pilgrimage to Coney Island via Bay Ridge whilst straddling Manhattan, like the final moments in a game of twister before tangles of limbs tumble to the ground.


It was late at night when I found the N, or the N found me--whichever you prefer--on the unendurable Saturday last, the day that begun with snow and ended with rain and ice. I had had a long night out in Midtown, which was odd, and didn't have luck with a cab, so I decided to try my luck with the train.


The N is not one of the trains that will at times fill with the beautiful and the damned, as is notable with the F, which funnels these, the careless, and the pretty between Chelsea and the New Lower East Side.


On this occasion, on the other end of the car sat a shabby fat man in a half-doze stupor, his face obscured in the chic naivete of his garments. Soon would appear a female companion, draped in the eternal blue of the Indianapolis Colts. The two had a dispute, and he began to tell her in no uncertain terms that when he finds himself on the train, she needs to take care also to board the train, and that she really must be sure she is on the train sitting by his side. He repeated this over and over again, and it became clear he did not believe she was on the train, sitting by his side--in fact, he believed she was elsewhere, and up to no good. This continued for some time.


In a moment, the tone transformed from conciliatory to hostile. "You fat fuck," she said. "Yeah, fat fuck...big fuckin' moo moo. You're as big as the twin towers, fat fuck." A swarthy latin boarded the train and engaged the seat across the train from this couple.


"You're as big as the twin towers, you big fuckin' moo moo."


  

Monday, February 23, 2015

Ice Age

I've been busy. I met Liberia and Princess at Liberia's loft in Greenpoint, a quintessential borough-loft. Liberia threw a party on an enormous yacht this weekend, a rave, burning man style, madness! Especially as Manhattan has been surrounded by a sea of ice. Ice shelfs have been spotted floating down the Hudson + East River. Mastodons are reported in Queens. Dubious, the existence of a Northwest Passage. Princess told me about omf (our mutual friend, for future reference), shooting the video for Ferg while I leaned slow into some sizzurp I procured last week. Life is starting to move fast.  

Eric Holder dropped by Brooklyn's office the other day at work; she'd been drinking. These things happen. 

I met Chilena at Santina, a perfect restaurant situated in a little grotto underneath the end of the High Line at the north edge of the West Village, around the corner from the relocated Whitney. The food was phenomenal; when they can open the doors up with a breeze off the Hudson in the summer, the Whitney around the corner? It's like La Grenouille's downtown outpost.  

Thursday I had drinks at a small venue in the East Village with folklorist friends. Folklore is palatable to this generation, to people who are young, to the internet (memes, anyone?). Understand the culture you possess, be it hand clap games, stories, legends, foods, traditions...it's a beautiful thing to discover you're already part of something, and, you are. 

Tonight I hit Barclays to see Golden State. I hope they win it all. Steph Curry is illmatic.   

In 2015 watch for Cara Delevingne and A$AP Ferg...summer of the Dope Walk. Heard.

Friends visiting from LA this weekend.














Sunday, February 15, 2015

Cambodia

As mentioned in an earlier installment, I love Cambodian Space Funk from the 60s and 70s. Often I imagine throwing a birthday party like so: red velvet cake and batik dress code, lots of cocaine, champagne, and oysters, and Lady Jane Fonda and Erykah Badu responsible for the music and keeping everyone under control. Wouldn't that be jolly?

There is a documentary at film forum on funk from Kampuch in April. Mark your calendars.

Friday night I went to an opening at Camille's store. Camille is a caricature of bourgeois social climbing vulgarity. Kim hates her, in fact when Kim saw the photos from the party I immediately received a "I can't believe you hung out with the user" text. Kim needs to cool it--Camille isn't all bad, and can be a delight when she isn't concerned with her social position or maneuvering into a position where she will in the future feel she has the ability to request a difficult and outrageous "favor" of a near stranger. 


Camille works at a store where it's unlikely you'll meet anyone worth knowing, although Friday you would've had the chance to meet China, Cash, and I. China put down the champagne and we reminisced about her recent fainting spells. You see, China used to drink, used to get down, but she's fallen out of it, the result being that she'll fall down on herself--collapse--in the middle of a bar or club. It's alarming, and ambulances have been called. I asked China if she had been to the doctor and she laughed. 

Kim and Brooklyn both forwarded me the same article in the New Yorker, the Michael Pollan piece on hallucinogens, and each in her own way is interested in having this trip treatment. I thought, "Please, let's just find some hallucinogens and champagne and spend the weekend at Charlus' in the Hamptons." But my great ideas fall on deaf ears when it comes to such things as therapy, and why? In fact for many years I have had this idea of Brooklyn and I being put in charge of a mental institution.  

China and Cash and I, however, have made a definite plan to have a bitch weekend--we refer to ourselves as "the bitches"--at Charlus to do just what I outlined above. I cannot wait until the weather improves as it is miserable in New York. 


An estranged friend and former roommate of mine has become semi-semi-semi-notorious. The other night he met Kanye and Jay, via the A$AP Crew (he's worked with Ferg in the past). The little fuck. Actually, I'm not Gore Vidal envious. 

After the opening, I went with Cash for a drink on Eighth Street. Afterward we went to an uneventful birthday party in $kid Row$, Lorimer stop. 


The next day, I saw Karl Lagerfeld/Rhianna/Erykah Badu at a party for the opening of the Fendi store on Madison Avenue. I could almost add an additional title to this journal relating to someday being invited to such an event. Of course afterward they all had dinner in the penthouse at One57.    

Angelica moves to New York tomorrow. Angelica is elegant, but has a tendency to drink and screech like her good friend Grace. Angelica is so much more attractive, so much more put together than Grace--ie., Angelica would never expose a bulbous, half-tattooed midriff (sorry Grace)--that when she does lose control it's amusing. She plans to live in Greenpoint or in my beautiful neighborhood, obviously the best choice in Brooklyn.


I highly recommend Jesús Rafael Soto at Galerie Perrotin on Madison/73rd. The exhibition closes on the fast approaching February 21st. These are unusual forms and arresting aesthetic endeavors.


Here is the first useful writing I've ever seen from the "Center" for "Fiction."
 
 

 
 


      

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Useful Ignorance

"We have heard of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. It is said that knowledge is power, and the like. Methinks there is equal need of a Society for the Diffusion of Useful Ignorance." 

                            Thoreau


New York Public Library, Midtown
Lower East Side

Detail, NYPL


Essex Street

Lunar New Year: Thursday February 19th
Year of the Goat

Shel Silverstein in the West Village, Washington Street

Over 70,000

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Speed and the Sublime

When you race, he said, when you find the proper line through the curves, 'your consciousness is projected in front of you, the present is suspended, and it's like the dreams you had of flying when you were ten.'"


Masses, magazine of the worker

Communipaw, New Jersey, 1884, Thomas Moran 

The sublime (Lighthouse, 1879, Thomas Moran)

Liber Studiorum, 1812, J.M.W. Turner


"New York is still the best place for puppet talent."

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Mental Noise and Bleak Skies

To tell you the truth, I feel perfectly fine while typing this. A little sentimental, to be honest, when I saw the news Jon Stewart may retire from The Daily Show, which feels like a piece of my childhood living on in the present.

I work a day job these days, and my life has changed. A part of me desires to transform myself into an automaton: to wake, work, exercise, fuck, sleep, repeat. To move with brutal vigor, to thrash about with precision. But it is difficult to forgo elegance. 

The dark of winter has begun to lift. I leave work at 5:30 and there is still light. The Bank of America tower, dare I say it, is thrilling, a shard that pierces the soft underbelly of dusk. The gentle blue of twilight has now replaced night, and the days grow longer. As with children, this happened overnight--the world does not equally and smoothly move, rather, its motion is jerky, like the growth spurts of children. 






For no reason in particular, I wandered the streets of the Lower West Side, full of gloomy musings and uncertain convictions. 

"In my dreams, I see shadows on the sidewalks..." 

Many people who are small pieces of me have begun to fade from this life:

a Hungarian Folklorist, a last vestige of an old world that faded away after the first world war  
a carpenter and artist, friend of Taj Mahal, who lived off the grid
a cantankerous Catalonian who couldn't stand the blues
a younger brother of my grandfather, who never could live up to the older brother he idolized, on whom the army experimented with lsd, who, alone and forgotten, lived out his days in a veteran's affairs hospital in Chillicothe, Ohio...

As have I myself begun to fade, my present looking at a distance ever further toward the present, a present which is the bright light on the horizon that indicates the disappearing sun...there are now many who live on only in my mind, in the minds of others, and I begin to feel the pressure that Proust must have felt, a pressure to imagine and construct a beautiful, immense architecture veiled in scaffolding, that builds itself again and again in the minds of readers, so that some of the dream of this life, this moment, may live on.

The new world grows up around the old, young grasses and daffodils shrouding the rusted idols which melt sadly into the soil. The future waits not for us to acquiesce to it, but streams through, steams on, blind, dumb, menacing.  

"Different cities follow one another on the same site and under the same name, born and dying without knowing one another, without communication among themselves..."

"The lake's surface was barely wrinkled; the copper reflection of the ancient palace of the Sung was shattered into sparkling glints like floating leaves."
   



  
I've quoted Modiano and Calvino; I'll quote Calvino once more, on why the construction of a certain city never seems to end: "so that its destruction cannot begin." The inhabitants of this city, if asked whether they fear that, once the scaffoldings are removed, the city may begin to crumble and fall to pieces, add, hastily, in a whisper, "not only the city."

That's New York. 

I'm reading Octavio Paz, his Laberinto de la soledad; last weekend I went to a factory party in the Bronx. No, it wasn't Warhol, no, not at all.

I think I may begin using drugs again. Thinking people use drugs, because they understand that addiction is impossible for them. Addiction is a condition--a disease--that will find an object and dig in its claws. It is a psychological disease born in the pain of life. 

Unusual experiences keep a person growing, changing--we must become children again to feel at least ephemeral carelessness and delight in life. Sometimes lately I take magnesium.



DAYBREAK    

Bebel Gilberto & Duke Ellington with His Orchestra
Donn Alan Pennebaker, 1953

Sunday, February 8, 2015

The lonely and the desperate

Lindsay, lonely and desperate, has begun dating sleeping with (they may date) her fat-dweeb roommate who is also pretentious and condescending.

I've often said Tinder is for the lonely and desperate, but Lindsay's sinking to such a low indicates how lonely and desperate we--and I mean the universal we--can be. People whose formative adolescent social beings came to rely on technology, who were nascent adults during the advent and ubiquitous adoption of a social internet world, these people have difficulty when it comes to forming and maintaining relationships that have no electronic component. Beautiful, smart women settle for ugly men with personalities that leave much to be desired, because they feel they are unable to meet the smart, attractive men they deserve. Kim has transcended this and I am proud of her. Blue collar romance never really blossomed, but she has struck up with a French-Canadian/Eastern European consultant. I'm pulling for this one.

I may go to a pretentious art party in the Bronx tonight where Lindsay's fat condescending fuck buddy cum roommate with bad music taste will DJ. The art party in the Bronx intrigues me, but spending any time with fat condescending dweeb? I just do not think I can submit myself to that sort of thing tonight. Definitely for the first time in weeks I will see China for drugs and clubs. Kim may come along and Cash too, but Kim is semi-obligated to attend Bronx event. Cash finally paid Kim the money he owed her so I think she can at least be pleasant to him as I think Cash plans to meet China and I later on. 

I love this song and contemplate tracking Gloria down to talk with her. There is such an intense level of feeling in her voice. I only fear if she was old before her time when she sang this song it will be too late.    

Tina Turner is another favorite. I took my mother to see Tina in Chicago maybe six or seven years ago, and man, even in her late sixties that woman brought down the house. I wish I could have seen her in the sixties. 

It is an unshakeable conviction of mine that American R&B will stand in history as some of the greatest production of the human spirit. There is very little as arresting and bursting with raw power and feeling and life--and for that matter death--as this music that blends the dusty cry of the guitar, the steps of the piano, the certainty of the drums, the low throb of the bass, the wail of a woman telling her story, the shout of a man telling his troubles, the trumpets and horns underlying everything in opulent oranges and golds (because how they sound, for me, I can only convey in color).

Then there is Saint-Saëns and Rufus Thomas

I am very interested in Timbuktu and the forthcoming Terrence Malick--it looks like Malick may have grasped the spirit of today in the same way David Lynch managed to package and wrap the 2000s in Mulholland Drive, accomplishing what Kubrick groped toward in Eyes Wide Shut...the Malick film looks fantastic.   

On a lighter note, I saw the effort of CityLore and a determined Irene Chagall, the film Let's Get the Rhythm: the Life and Times of Miss Mary Mack. Fantastic! Uplifting! A wonderful documentation of lived culture. 

I maintain an active interest in the "life" films of 1960s Paris. Some people will call these "French New Wave"--this is an indication they do not really know what they are talking about, or, that they know so much that they are unable to grasp anything but amorphous threads of experience so cerebral as to be nonexistent. These films are about spontaneity, chance, beauty and existence. Lola (1961) is nice but I love Adieu Philippine (also 1962), there with an odd Norwegian (?) soundtrack. The promenade sequence is a classic of cinema and also available on youtube.    






Saturday, February 7, 2015

February Life & El Guero

It's cold as f*ck in New York.

I walk to the train between 7 and 7:30, AM, and for the walk yesterday (friday) it was 12 degrees, windchill 5-6. For those of you that think windchill or "feels like" is bogus, I'm with you. At the same time though, please, when I say "it was cold as f*ck," commiserate. Don't be like these Chicago dweebs who insist on recounting a story about ten or twenty below. Go away. You either chose to live in that city or were unlucky enough to be born there.

I have been having extreme pain in my back lately, which I believe is due to a mixture of high stress related to the new job (unbelievable, I know) and my own laziness: I haven't been working on my back lately and am paying the price. Last night I took a large quantity of muscle relaxers, cyclobenz, and my, it put me out. I intended this morning to write, drop off some laundry, surround myself with art, grab a few green tea cream puffs, perhaps even  make a trip up the Cloisters, but I couldn't get out of bed until around noon. I refer to the experience of this class of drugs, muscle relaxers/relaxants, as "cycling," and when I can't get out of bed in the morning because I'm so laid up by the drowsiness, well, that's when I can't get off the bicycle.

I finally did manage to pry myself out of the nest, though, and skulk into the kitchen to put water on for espresso. My mind was a limp balloon, what with the cycling, and I stumbled and glowered between the stacks of filth my roommates cultivate in our kitchen. After a cup of espresso I could feel the balloon twisting itself into a taut, spry form, a Koons balloon animal, and now I'm writing. The world is strange and life is unusual.

I've been intrigued by the jewel street blocks between Brooklyn and Queens, an area some people call "The Hole" because it's below sea level and lacks a municipal sewer water. It looks almost gothic, and could perhaps be a peripheral neighborhood in a city like Memphis. What is The Hole doing in New York? Narratively just produced an excellent photo essay w/ accompanying narration and there is also a bit here that features some photographs and commentary. The NYTimes features the neighborhood as far back as 2004.

One of my grandfather's was born in 1912 on a train in Pocatello, Idaho. He rode the rails during the Depression, worked on the rails, served with Patton in Europe, and later wound up a successful businessman working on Park Ave in New York. That generation, those people born 1910-1918/20, to me that is one of the most fascinating generations of Americans, those who were adolescents/young adults during the Depression, when this country was still a vast, unknown wilderness, and when many young people had to sort things out for themselves because their parents simply couldn't afford to clothe, house, and feed them. PBS produced a stunning portrait of a few of these peoples in the 90s, which is now on youtube in its entirety. It's about an hour, and comes highly recommended. People talk about feeling about children into their twenties or thirties, well, these people became adults as teenagers. I suppose the feeling I have when thinking of the experiences of these people invokes a kind of test of experience, a risk-it-all-reality that we have lost. Joseph Conrad, in an early Marlow story, has it well put:

I need not tell you what it is to be knocking about in an open boat. I remember nights and days of calm when we pulled, we pulled, and the boat seemed to stand still, as if bewitched within the circle of the sea horizon. I remember the heat, the deluge of rain-squalls that kept us baling for dear life (but filled our water-cask), and I remember sixteen hours on end with a mouth dry as a cinder and a steering-oar over the stern to keep my first command head on to a breaking sea. I did not know how good a man I was till then. I remember the drawn faces, the dejected figures of my two men, and I remember my youth and the feeling that will never come back any more—the feeling that I could last for ever, outlast the sea, the earth, and all men; the deceitful feeling that lures us on to joys, to perils, to love, to vain effort—to death; the triumphant conviction of strength, the heat of life in the handful of dust, the glow in the heart that with every year grows dim, grows cold, grows small, and expires—and expires, too soon—before life itself.

Youth, unabridged, available here.


The MTA, rather than improve and add to extant subway service, has chosen to build an expensive and unnecessary subway under Second Avenue. Once, there was a functional El on Third Ave, which was torn down in the 1950s or 1960s. Wouldn't it be fun if we were still able to ride a train up and down Third Ave? And then we might have a G that once again reached as far as Forest Hills, additional service on the 4/5/6...just think of the possibilities!

Take a ride on the Third Avenue El.

I finished Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities and have begun Octavio Paz's Laberinto de la soledad (Labyrinth of Solitude). It's a fascinating book that a fallen white Mexican recommended to me. To compress what could easily balloon into a dissertation-length piece, I'll say the following: Latin America has complex class systems that are often understood racially. By "white Mexican," I mean a person who has a "European" look. In Mexico, a country where most people are a beautiful brown, these European-looking people dominate politics, entertainment, culture. It is a legacy of colonialism and largely the reality in most of Latin America (not to say the US is superior or different). The night of the blizzard that never arrived, I went to my local bar for a drink, and met one of these white Mexicans. We had a few drinks and shot the shit, discussed the women that had destroyed our lives, etc., it was cathartic for me and brought me back to my days in Merida, Acapulco, and DF. He began to reveal details about his background: a fancy prep school in DF, cars, a private university. He moved to New York with a woman, an American girl from Philadelphia (!), and his parents, who disapproved, cut him off. Money and a position was lost. For years they struggled, in love, barely living on a slice of pizza a day, unable to find work (he has no papers and she refused to marry), until they ultimately moved to farthest Brooklyn, Sheepshead Bay, to work in the kitchen of an Uzbek restaurant. They fell out of love, he devastated, she with no remorse, and he found a place and a job waiting tables at a restaurant in Park Slope. Meanwhile, the parents, having heard nothing for some years at this point, hire a private investigator to track him down. I cannot imagine how his mother would react were she to learn he was waiting tables, never mind that he had worked in the kitchen at an Uzbek restaurant in a neighborhood so far from any image of New York she could possibly possess. He avoids the parents, and changes his phone number frequently because he fears not only the authorities (no papers), but his parents and the private investigators. I refer to him as the guero, both to protect his anonymity, and because that is a name I was often called when I lived in Mexico.

I relayed this tale to my Aunt K, who responded with the following:

Wow, Marcel, I love your story of the guero.  Has all the murky promise of those Graham Greene tales of fallen South Am RCs.  Now you should get busy!  As I see it his story could go several different ways:

1.      His family is actually allied with some heavy duty drug money, the girlfriend was one of their mules, or something, and she defected by running away with father-hating son. Now private detec on his trail is actually because father is  worried he/she got away with potentially destructive info (contacts in US govt?).  Detec finds her first, threatens to dispose of her unless she tells him where son is & they both return with her to Mex.  So now both detec & ex-gf are going round & about ethnic underworlds of Coney Island, stop laughing, in search of him.  Do they find him? Is he an unreliable narrator & there’s something really scary he left out of his story???

OR


2.      He’s a classic downward driven anti-hero, abandoning and/or destroying all who get involved with/want some human response from him:  first his family, then his girlfriend, finally when detec finds him detec thinks he’s bonding over guero’s new lifestyle, terrible ending for detec, anti-hero wanders off to another continent … there to wreak further, etc

OR


3.      There’s a shameful secret in his family, incest, father’s mistress living with them so mother becomes alcoholic/schizo compulsive Mex shopper whatever, and he runs away with what he thinks is innocent & true girlfriend.  Story is what & when he finds out girlf’s living a lie also, and discovery robs him of all hope in world, he drifts into Russian émigré bar world.  Told from vpoint of detec who becomes saddened/alienated himself as he discovers these various secrets


Of course none of these address his reading habit:  maybe he’s a Cortazar hero who won’t engage, but is living off writing about the sordid/disappointing lives/secrets of everyone he comes to know, from family to gfriend to detec, he‘s trying to find an overarching narrative for these 3 tales when he discovers v threatening one to do with owners of bar, and their detached observation of him writing causes final horrific end???

Good luck tomorrow! 



  

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

February Four

Sorry about the silence. I started a new job, a serious job, with real movers-and-shakers, and I keep an active social calendar, and I write, and I maintain a certain physique. It can consume.

My new work has a Lavazza machine.

Watch out, its amNewYork's Lit Posse




The Fountain






The Unexpected Rewards of Inquisitiveness

FDR Branch on 3rd Ave



This utterly revolting poem appeared on the B yesterday during my morning ride