Saturday, September 30, 2023

Live at the Rickshaw


The launch of Jason Schneider's Art Bergmann bio and the release of Art's latest record all wrapped up into one night only at the Rickshaw. The poster said 7pm, and I was there on time but had to wait in line for a half-hour. That might have been my favourite part of the night: all those 1980s babyfaces from the club days looking grandparently grey and at ease in their leathers, denim and unripped tees. The lowlight: a panel moderator whose presentation style is a cross between Super Bowl Sunday and a Las Vegas MMA title match. "Art Bergmann, are you ready to mumblllllllllllllllllllle!"


Friday, September 29, 2023

Walking Home


Walking home last night from Hero's Welcome, the old ANAVETS legion at 23rd and Main, scene of too many indiscretions committed by students, faculty and sessionals of UBC's "success-oriented" Creative Writing Program, but now a sparkling place made safe for $7 pints and, where Thursday was once Karaoke night, "Thursday Night Football" and the barking dogs who watch it.

The picture up top was taken a couple blocks west of Fraser Street on the south side of 19th. An unfinished house and an almost-full moon. Today that moon will be fullest, and I'll be at the Rickshaw for the release of Art Bergmann's new album and the long overdue launch of Jason Schneider's biography of the man, the myth, the legend.

That section of 19th between Main and Fraser is what was once known as the Tea Swamp. The "tea" being Labrador Tea, a common and effective indigenous medicine for all manner of things, except post-colonial syndrome. Those who live in this part of Vancouver will know that's why the ground beneath them is unstable, an instability that is most evident in the up-and-down nature of the sidewalks, which are unsafe at any speed, especially after a night of pints. 

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Groceries


Our funny bilingual country, where sometimes the English and French (translation) meet in a single expression. I am almost half-certain someone in a Monty Python skit once described something as a "stuffing farce." To wit: "It was a right stuffing farce!"

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Prison Wall


I started watching Don Siegel's Riot in Cell Block 11 (1954) yesterday, but lost interest after the first 40 minutes. The film must have been shocking for some when it was first released, given that it begins with high-ranking officials admitting to flaws in the federal U.S. prison system, and a sympathetic view of both inmates and guards. Nineteen-fifties acting seems so jumpy. Maybe that was it. The prisoners got on my nerves.

A shot near the beginning (top) is a pan of an exterior prison wall, what I believe is Michigan State Penitentiary. A curious pattern, no? Why such variation in the size of the blocks? Some look like bricks, laid sidelong and end-long; a block four rows from the bottom looks much longer than it is taller.

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Street Photography


As I approached the entrance of the Hotel Vancouver, a voice called out behind me. I spun around, semi-dramatically. It was Paul Wong.

"Do that again," he said, "but more so."

So I did. Dramatically.

"Again," he said, and I complied. Comedically.

"One more!" he insisted.

"Three takes," said the actor Callum Rennie -- "I need my third take." I'll always remember that.

Monday, September 25, 2023

Audain Prize


The Audain Prize is having its luncheon today. Like last year, we're back at the Hotel Vancouver, and we won't know who the winner is until they are seated at the table closest to the podium. I dressed in autumn colours for last year's ceremony; and because I made such a splash, this year I am dressing in blacks and dark greys.

I'm getting pretty good at guessing the winner of this award. Took a while for a pattern to establish, but I am fairly certain I know who it can't be, and who had the more recent Vancouver Art Gallery survey exhibition. Is this year's winner worthy? It hardly matters anymore. Everybody's worthy. All art feels the same.


Sunday, September 24, 2023

One and Many Films


Phase Shifting Index (2020) by Jeremy Shaw is a seven-monitor projection that carries at least as many sound sources, all of it depicting fictive, though vaguely familiar movement-based groups designed to pass for past, present and future entities, as carried in a range of old and new media. Too much of everything happens for about thirty minutes, until it becomes apparent that the groups' movements have started to speed up, and in doing so align -- both visually and in its suddenly shared soundtrack. Once aligned, the picture images further unify in an eruption of bright colours, where parts emerge from other parts, eventually ending with what looks like a neurological field map.

As someone who tired quickly of drugs or dance clubs, I get it but no longer feel it. Nor do I care for it. If our current anxiety is expected to accelerate before it's suppose to get better, I'll take my last pill now. I have seen the future, and it is Jeremy's past and present obsessions. An amazing work, currently at the Polygon Gallery. Today's the last day. Go see it!

The other moving thing I watched yesterday was from my current pile of VPL DVDs, and that was Terrance Malick's Song to Song (2017). I loved Malick's Days of Heaven (1978), and both appreciated his nineteen year hiatus from filmmaking ("There is something to be said about not making a movie") and the film that ended it, The Thin Red Line (1997). But The New World (2005) left me cold in the way some critics accuse all his films of being -- cold as in "artificial." The Tree of Life (2011) had some moments I connected with, moments delivered poetically through language and image. Song to Song even more so, I think, despite its excesses. Could he not make his film ever less than what they are? 

Here is Faye speaking:

I went through a period when sex had to be violent. I was desperate to feel something real. Nothing felt real. Every kiss felt like half of what it should be. You’re just reaching for air. 

And here too:

I thought we could just roll and tumble. Live from song to song. Kiss to kiss.


Saturday, September 23, 2023

I Am Angry With You Because You Can't See How You Caused Me This Pain


A couple months ago I learned the Rolling Stones were releasing their first album of new music in ... years. Just how many years, I forget, but long enough to have been ... ages. Speaking of time, it's almost 62 years since the band first got together. As for their last listenable album, that's debatable, but most of those I listen to say 42 years ago, when they released Tattoo You (1981).

How old is the band's singer? often gets asked when this new album is mentioned. So I looked it up. Mick Jagger was born in July, 1943, making him 80. As for the album, it's called Hackney Diamonds, and in a recent CBC interview Jagger was talking about it as if it too were old -- having been mastered in March. Judging from the album's first single, "Angry", Jagger is still capable of hitting some high notes, some of them above middle C.

As for songwriting, listeners familiar with the Stones will recognize "Angry" as a pastiche of past licks (the video visually supports that). It's not unusual for bands that have been around long enough to write songs like this, especially those conscious of a come-back (yes, the Stones have been away long enough for those under 50 to have forgotten them), but something about "Angry" had me wondering if they used AI to make it? And if so, what instructions were added? You can hear the drum intros that signal past hits like "Get Off My Cloud" (1965) and Tattoo You's "Start Me Up" (1981). So a combination of the two? Certainly a nice way to say goodbye to the band's nice guy drummer,  Charlie Watts, whose died a couple years back of natural causes.

What is "new" about this song is its lyric, which very much speaks to our moment -- and just how difficult it is for some of us to converse with it. This is not a lyric designed to produce a memorable chorus (the world spins too quickly for that now, and besides, where this song might have a chorus, it has a bridge instead), but a refrain based on an emotion ("anger") and to whom it is directed (the singing "me"). Indeed, this refrain ("Angry/ Don't be angry with me") is a refinement of past "angry"s and "me"s and comes in the last 1:30 minutes of a 3:46 minute song that essentially runs out of itself at the end of the second minute.

Here's the lyric:

One, two
One, two, three, go


Don't get angry with me
I never caused you no pain
I won't be angry with you
But I can't see straight (Yeah)
It hasn't rained for a month, the river's run dry
We haven't made love and I wanna know why
Why you angry with me?
Why you angry?

[Chorus]
Please just forget about me
Cancel out my name
Please never write to me
I love you just the same
I hear a melody ringing in my brain
Just keep the memories
Don't have to be ashamed

Don't get angry with me
I'm in a dеsperate state
I'm not angry with you
Don't you spit in my facе
The wolf's at the door with the teeth and the claws
My mouth's getting sore, I can't take anymore
Ah, why you angry with me?
Why you angry?

[Chorus]
Voices keep echoing
Calling out my name
Hear the rain keep beating
On my window pane
I hear a melody ringing in my brain
You can keep the memories
Don't have to be ashamed

Don't get angry with me

[Outro]
(Angry, angry)
Yeah, yeah (Angry, don't be angry with me)
If we go separate ways
(Angry) Yeah, don't be angry with me
Let's go out in a blaze
(Angry, don't be angry with me) Yeah
Don't you spit in my face
(Angry) Oh
Don't be angry with me
Don't get, don't get
(Angry, don't be angry with me)
I'm still taking the pills and I'm off to Brazil
(Angry, don't be angry with me)
Please, don't be angry with me (Angry, don't be angry with me)
Come on
Don't, don't, don't, not (Angry, don't be angry with me)
Not, not, not, not, not, not, not

Friday, September 22, 2023

"Mom, look!"


My neighbour is done with lawns. His last stretch of lawn was the boulevard, which he covered last year in an effort to kill the sod's root system. This spring the tarp came off and mission accomplished -- with grass on only my side of the property line. Not that I blame him, because when he asked if I was committed to my lawn, I never gave him a definitive answer, and he is not the kind of person who asks twice when given anything less than an affirmative. 

Last week he asked to borrow my metal rake so that he might break up the hard packed soil and get the rocks out before seeding. The seed will be a cereal grass of some kind, like the magnificent sliver, green and blue rye he planted last year on what was once his front lawn. Can't say I wasn't a little sad for not having said No to lawns when he asked me, because I like the idea of our boulevard being unified, and not divided.

While tempted to bust my sod and join him, I decided instead to preserve the lawn, shine a light on it. I began by giving it a wide edging. From there, I pulled up everything that wasn't from grass seed. Because the ground is hard with tree roots, I highlighted one of the knuckles from the Japanese cherry trees the City planted some 70 years ago. I even took it further, roping it off and hanging from it a sign. Well, that sure got the kids stopping on their way home from school!

Thursday, September 21, 2023

VAG Announcement


The Vancouver Art Gallery announced another announcement about its new site inside the Chan Centre for the Visual Arts after its "ground awakening" ceremony at Larwill Park last week. Because I didn't go to the "awakening" I thought I should go to the next announcement -- this one under the VAG's canopied patio and hosted by the new Deputy Director and Director of Curatorial Programs, who, for five minutes, spoke as if what she was scheduled to announce was pulled by the development office at the last minute.

The announcement was at 10.00 a.m. and of course I was early. Never too early for a sunny day, I thought as I wandered Granville and Robson, shocked at how far the downtown shops have fallen, yet at the same time not surprised given that people are doing without "new" clothes and books and jewelry. Sad to see the souvenier shops go. Everything in them was a meeting between someone insisting the buyer could sell it and the buyer settling on a price that balanced the risk.

On the way back I visited the Holt Renfrew portion of the Pacific Centre Mall. What's Prada going with this fall? Ah, black and brown.



Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Poets, Locks, Cages


Parviz Tanavoli was born in Tehran, Iran in 1937. He received an excellent education at home and later in Italy, from which he returned to co-found an art movement, teach, stoke an international art career, then, in 1989, Iran's greatest living modern artist and now dual Canadian citizen began splitting his time between Iran and West Vancouver -- but the Lower Mainland's largest public art gallery never opened its doors to him, until now. 

So the questions remains ... or is it two questions: Why did the Vancouver Art Gallery wait so long? and Just how much does the VAG need Persian/Irani community support if it is going to move into that purpose-built mall known as the Chan Centre for the Arts?

And the work? Well, the work is not what I expected, but it's not unfamiliar, either. Drawing, painting and sculpture. Pictured up top is a more recent sculpture of one of the artist's more enduring motifs, the kind of work one makes when one feels they have secured a place for themselves as a 20th century modern and feel confident enough -- or arrogant enough -- to enter into self-parody. "Look at me," this bird chirps. "I am free to be as a please."

Here is that caged bird in an earlier, more traditional iteration:


And here is the cage or gridded grill in a painting that brings to mind Philip Gaston:


Now here is the artist channeling Jasper Johns:


Rather than share with you my pictures of the floor sculptures, I urge you to see the show. It's worth seeing. But read its first didactics. Tavanoli believes the cage is not an oppressive device (or symbol), but one of freedom -- the cage being a protector of the heart (of the poet?). I would have liked to have seen more on locks, but we see ample evidence of locks in the keys commonly used to pick them. Skeleton keys these keys are called. Are they still called that? Still? For Tavanoli, a key is a stylus, the tip of a brush. With every constraint, a liberty.



Tuesday, September 19, 2023

A Trucker Government

"Our world is becoming unhinged. Geopolitical tensions are rising. Global challenges are mounting. And we seem incapable of coming together to respond," dit Antonio Guterres aujour'hui. Ou peut-être hier, je ne sais pas, après Camus.

Eh bien. No matter. the U.N. Secretary General said it, and we believe it to be true. But to be said at the U.N., where what is said never registers as what the tenant is thinking, only the landlord?

It's hard to say when the U.S. began seriously fiddling with its own hinges. You'd have to pick a perspective to account for all the hinges you'll miss.

You could say that the Constitution Americans hold up and wave about when not shouting "Lawyer!" is an idealistic, if not at times diabolical, hinge-fiddling document that carries with it enough perceived justification to raise an army and, with only the most superficial or schadenfreudian of reasons, blow apart that document, not to mention the person holding it. Have you looked at the first ten amendments to its Constitution (passed in 1791), also known as the "Bill of Rights"?

Here's "Amendment II":

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

The relationship between what is promised in that amendment and the "Star Spangled" picture playing in your parents' head as they storm the Capitol, " ... the bombs bursting in air ..."

A national anthem with the word "bombs" in it!

In Canada we had truck drivers and their families storming Ottawa, where, once in possession of its streets, they stopped their rigs in a gridded formation, hopped out and ran around like the opening credits to Dog the Bounty Hunter. For days those air horns, and somewhere sitting in a circle with their arms crossed a gaggle of mostly Albertans under the impression the Trudeau government was preparing to surrender the country to them. And then what? A trucker government? A trucker corporate state? And the rest of us hiding in the woods, attending Holly Schmidt's pay-what-you-can fireweed seminars, waiting for Mad Max to free us?

Monday, September 18, 2023

"Seasons change and so do I"


Last year I purchased a prison and made it a feeder for freedom flyers.

The flyers I had in mind were the chickadees and finches who had made themselves my friends, and in honour of that, I wired open the door of the feeder.

Soon enough, some of what bullied the little birds found their way into the feeder. Rats and squirrels, but also bigger birds like jays, who are high strung and bring an edge to everything.

Summer is officially over this week. We don't say "officially" about any other season except summer.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Death by Sheer Torture (1981)

 

Robert Barnard’s Death by Sheer Torture sat atop a box of other paperbacks outside AA Furniture & Appliances. The title suggests a crime novel, and the domination of the author’s name (half the cover) tells me he has a readership. Nearer the bottom is a still-life of a rope, a belt and a scissors; up top, an ambiguous endorsement from the pre-merger San Diego Union newspaper: “There is no one quite like Robert Barnard.” In other words, If you can’t be great, be … ineffable?

 I am one-third my way through this book and it seems perfect for that “no slackers” Britain Margaret Thatcher promised when elected Prime Minister in 1979. For the elder reaches of the Trethowan Family are, according to Detective Peregrine “Perry” Trethowan, just that: an idle brood of composers, poets, playwrights and painters who have never distinguished themselves in their field, yet have built a brand as self-promoters. This of course was long before the Kardashians came on the scene, but also the very thing Thatcher keyed in on: an electorate that came to loathe excesses at both ends of the class spectrum -- from artistocrats deferring their castle taxes to their disowned teenaged children using fake ID to collect dole from a Brixton squat.

 

All but Perry live in a 19th century postmodern Northumbrian castle built by a great-grandfather whose accomplishments are vague but involve production on the scale of our Lord Dunsmuir -- if not in coal, then in agriculture. From that batch of work came a series of impurities in the form of Perry’s aunts, uncle and a father whose murder in the clutches of a strappado is currently being investigated and the reason why Perry has been asked by his superior to interpret the behaviour of his relatives for a lead investigating officer who, though competent, is naïve to the ways of the Trethowan. 

 

It is all seems rather improbable to me, but then the same was said of a boys-club Britain that could nominate, then elect a woman as its (Conservative) PM and an America that, a year later, could elect a (Republican) actor for its president. That we are made to feel and indeed sympathize with the pragmatic Perry gives you some indication why this book might have been taken up by Brits who bought and read books back in the day, seeing in the Trethowans those Oliver Reed types who arrogantly showed up drunk on their TV talk shows and, at the same time, those up-too-late children shrieking down the street at 3:00AM on a Monday morning.

 

Below is an excerpt from the “Cristobel” chapter -- Cristobel (Chris) being Perry’s sister, who also lives in the castle:

 

“Chris, what had things been like in the family recently?”

 

Oh, you know, much as usual. We each lived in our own wings, but still -- it wasn’t an easy house to live in, Perry.”

 

“I know,” I said.

 

“But I don’t complain. It’s always the way, isn’t it? The men go off and do the glamourous and exciting jobs and the women get left behind looking after the older generation. It’s always been like that and I suppose it always will be.”

 

Hmmm, well, I thought. I’d been getting stuff like this in letters from my sister recently, showing, I suppose, that this kind of lowest common denominator feminism has at last filtered down into the kind of magazine my sister reads. As the bandwagon slowly grinds to a halt, my sister hears of the movement. Now, the fact of the matter is that my sister stayed home with my father because she had no aptitude for any kind of interesting job and wanted to inherit what was going. Highly sensible reasons, of which I heartily approve, but no basis for a good feminist whine. My great aunts, daughters of the redoubtable Josiah, may not have had much choice, but Chris did, and made it. (55)


Bingo! The word "choice". And what did those who led governments in the U.K., the U.S. and soon to be my country, Canada, encourage us youngsters to be reading in those times-they-are-a-changin'-back 1980s but this piece of crap, death by sheer torture libertarian fantasy:




Saturday, September 16, 2023

Lady Bird (2017)



PRIEST: Okay Christine

CHRISTINE: Lady Bird.

P: Is that your given name?

C: Yeah.

P: Why is it in quotes?

C: Well, I gave it to myself; it's given to me, by me.

The scene above is one of many humorous exchanges in Greta Gerwing's Lady Bird, a film about a high school senior in Sacramento, California that takes her birthplace literally and gives us just that -- the sacraments -- as our hero passes through them, en route to divine grace, with stops at the gas station that is narcissistic rage.

The senior's name is Christine "Lady Bird" McPherson and her mission is to graduate from high school and go to university on the east coast, "where culture is," not UC Davis, which is close by. You get the impression her loving parents would grant her this if they had the means, but Dad just lost his job (the film is set in 2002, and we are right to assume he was caught in the popping of the dot com bubble), so Lady Bird has to take measures into her own hands, which she does, entertainingly.

I've been thinking a lot lately about Greta Gerwing's more recent Barbie (2023) and her creation and deployment of the wise and wonderful Weird Barbie. The great thing about Weird Barbie is she is not a corporate creation but a folk hero co-authored by the people. Weird Barbie has insight and experience, and provides guidance to Barbie, just as Lady Bird too has insights, not to mention faith, loyalty, courage and critique, which she dispenses freely to those who share her alienation, but also to the cool kids who, despite seeing her as "weird," find her interesting, if not useful. But she calls bullshit on them as well.

Saoirse Ronan starred in Gerwing's first two films and appears on friendly terms with the director. I wonder if she was considered for the role of Weird Barbie? Oh well. Everything turned out fine. 

Friday, September 15, 2023

Time Has Come Today


Over the past couple weeks I have been in a respectful email conversation with my local Vancouver Public Library (VPL) that began with its titled sections.

My local has a "Fiction" section and a "Non-Fiction" section -- even a "Movies" section -- but no "Poetry" section. I asked about this, and why the library doesn't have any programming focused on the appreciation and enjoyment of Poetry. The local branch's response implied a powerful Main Branch central authority.

I was told that if people want to talk about poetry at VPL branches, the Main Branch's Programming & Learning Department has put together book club sets featuring two Indigenous poets (a good thing!) from Alberta and Ontario (not such a good thing when we have many Indigenous poets from B.C. to draw on). Maybe one from here and one from away?

I shared some of my thoughts in a second email and received an equally positive response. My third email, then, would be a list of local or area authors who might be worth acquiring for my local's dedicated "Poetry" section, and in doing my research on which local books have resonated over the years, I checked the B.C. and Yukon Book Prize online archive and found that it only goes back to 2008, when in fact the organization has awarded prizes since the 1980s.

Why 2008? Then yesterday's news story about Ontario's Peel District School Board removing from its library shelves all books published before 2008, as part of its quest for equity, diversity and inclusion, how students returned to school in September only to find gaping holes in those shelves, with many of their favourite titles -- The Hunger Games, Harry Potter, the Diary of Anne Frank -- removed and, according to the New York Post, taken to the landfill.

The closest correspondence I could find to 2008 and a signal event that occurred that year is the Truth & Reconciliation Commission of Canada, which was founded on June 2 by Murray Sinclair. The TRC is something I was aware of in the moment, and followed as it made its way across Turtle Island, with a stop in Vancouver, where Tarah Hogue and Rose N. Spahan curated a parallel exhibition that featured Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun's crucifix made of boys and girls underwear, the kind issued by residential schools, each pair with a red dot on them.

So 2008 it is. A date to remember, or to at least keep in mind. Only a matter of time before it enters the lexicon, those water cooler conversations. "Was that before or after 2008?" Laughter. "Oh, long before! Long before!"

Thursday, September 14, 2023

The Future of History


At no time in the future will our current moment be looked back on or discussed. Certainly not in negative critical terms. The Last Days of Liberal Democracy, no one will write, was characterized by a flowering of objects and gestures whose function was unequivocally and unambiguously concerned with healing. 

This was the art the corporate state didn't have to declare degenerate because, as before when modernist principles were being defined and implemented, nobody paid much attention to art unless the institutions that held it (museums, schools, libraries, online delivery systems) were negligent in defining it, expanding it, privileging the maker over the work.

Art's Therapeutic Turn, then, came in advance of what came to be called the Syrian Model of Governance, which saw populations under threat of a singular difference system based on immediate access to resources: you could either have that access (quick enough to save your life), or you couldn't. Presiding over this was a supreme leader who you were either with or against (indifference was considered a worse offence). Even writing about it would have you and your neighbourhood bombed.

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

A Pilgrimage to Polygon


A portrait format I have a lot of time for these days is not the selfie, nor the autofictive memoir, but that necessarily collaborative effort whose pages and paints and music and movements are brought together by those familiar with the person and their impact on those around them, and that is the memorial. Or as we call it today: the Celebration of Life. 

Like painting, the Celebration of Life comes out of religious rituals, from the first shamanistic cave painting/dances to church iconography to votive art. For some, the museum is today's church; its objects and gestures ends in themselves, but also props in the sacraments (baptism, confirmation, etc.). Yesterday I travelled to North Vancouver to attend a memorial for Diane Evans (1954-2023) -- photographer, educator, curator and long time employee of Presentation House Gallery. Or as we call it today: the Polygon Gallery.


Diane was as modest as she was principled, as quiet as she was forthright. She believed in service and valued hard work. Doing the work, not looking up to see who is watching you; just getting 'er done, earning your eye-rolls if it should come to that, the right to complain later. A complaint in Diane's case usually took the form of an aside, born of astute observation and delivered exquisitely -- a fewer-than-nine-word comment, like those hammered into bracelets for sale at Granville Island. Words to live by.

I worked with Diane on five fundraisers while I was on the board of PHG in the 2000s, not to mention PHG's Candahar Bar entry into the 2010 Cultural Olympiad. There were many of us who worked hard on those fundraisers, and then there was Diane, who, after having done enough of them, picked up as much as she could and ran with it, checking off boxes in half the time it would take the rest of us. Never to show us up, mind you, but to make sure it was done right. Exactly right. With the same care she took when making pictures, framing them, hanging them ...

If you had a problem with Diane's pace, it wasn't because Diane had a martyr complex or was a bad teacher, it was your problem. I never once heard her say No to anyone who asked if they could help her with a task, or for advice on how to do something. But you had to ask -- you had to let go of your ego. And if you didn't mean it, if you were in any way insincere -- yikes! You'd be lucky if she pretended not to hear you.



Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Nothing, Okay?


An earthquake in Morocco's Atlas Mountains, a storm off the coast of Libya. Countless dead, injured and unaccounted for. 

China's junkyard dog takes a train to Russia, hoping to exchange guns for butter. Beyoncé takes the stage in a disco ball cowboy hat.

What gives?

September croci, that's what!

Monday, September 11, 2023

A Historic Day


Well, what to say. It happened, and as it burned we heard how different everything would be, this after the $106 billion merger of Time Warner and AOL in January 2001 and, beginning shortly before that, the deflation of the dot com bubble, which, within a couple of years, would return NASDAQ to what it was prior to the promise of a newer, cleaner oil patch.

While most Americans were looking east, to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the ghosts of Walt Whitman and Jack Spicer were hovering west, scanning the streets of San Francisco, wondering where all the doughy tech boys went, knowing full well they were back in their parents' basements in Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Georgia, overhearing their mothers upstairs wondering aloud for the umpteenth time how was it that their kid could be worth ten million one week and in need of a loan to move home the next.

The effect of the collapsed dot com "economy" on San Francisco is unlike anything I've ever noticed. Though not a natural disaster, it had, in its own way, a visible effect on the city -- like Hurricane Katrina had on New Orleans, only slower, quieter, without the wreckage and flooded out homes, the people waving from rooftops.

Evidence of San Francisco's dot com-era began to accelerate in the mid-1990s, with the emergence of this wealthy 20-25-year-old largely het while male consumer and a city eager to accommodate him, make his stay a permanent one. For a final time, the Bay Area had lost sight of itself as something more than money and was content to treat historic neighbourhoods like the Castro and the Haight not as sights of wonder or resistance, but as theme parks. 

But as with all speculative markets, there are crashes, and once the wound bleeds out, as in the case of San Francisco, a city changed can never change back. Have you visited San Francisco lately? Like Seattle's Belltown, the measure for me is always Union Square, at the edge of the Tenderloin. When things aren't going well, what ails these neighbourhoods tends to expand, cross the street. For those who take their cues from retreating retail chains, the San Francisco Chronicle has a "downtown exodus" map. For those don't, you likely left long before them.

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Saturday's Walks


I can't remember the last time I was as social as I was yesterday. A six block walk to the Equinox Gallery, for Ben's opening, then, for the first time, Artem Exhibits across the street, where I met Susan Loudon and Doug Rowed and heard their story: that the gallery is theirs and is devoted to their artworks, which they are showing "in instalments."


Most of the work is Susan's and feels as much, if not more, like pages from a book (see above). I mentioned this to Doug -- that some of Susan's paintings and illustrations feel like they were inspired by art historian Herbert Read's novel The Green Child (1935) -- and was told, in the most pleasant way possible, that Susan, who was sitting behind a desk at the entrance of the gallery, has never read the book, so no, they're not.

On my way out I asked Susan if she had read The Green Mile. She said no, but asked to hear more, so I talked about a couple of her works that could have appeared nearer the beginning of the book and she jotted down the title and author. I know I bought a second copy of the New Directions edition, so if I find it I'll be sure to drop it by.


From there, south on Commercial Street to 21st, then east to Perry, where I thought I'd stop by Famous Foods and replenish my supply of dried fruit and nuts. Suddenly there was Margaret (above), who was about to lead a neighbourhood tour as part of her block's block party, so I joined and, because I'd done some research and writing on the area, added my two-bits when asked. Also on the tour were two very funny Pauls -- Morstad and Rigby -- whose humour Margaret indulged like the professional she is.


The final stop was the People's Co-op Bookstore (above), for the launch of SOME, which I'd recently posted on. George (Bowering) couldn't physically make it, nor read due to eye problems, so Colin Browne read in his place, while George watched from home, via Skype. Renee (Rodin) was there and could read, and did so, impeccably, leaving us wanting more. And finally Lionel (Kearns), who I bumped into on the way and walked with, his funny scotty dog Maggie beside us. Lionel had the shortest poems (even shorter than fellow contributor Rae Armantrout's, who unfortunately couldn't make it in either form, either), but read the longest.


Saturday, September 9, 2023

Art Opening Equinox Gallery 2pm-4pm


Ben Reeves came to attention a few years ago (maybe more than that) for urban landscape paintings overlayed with impasto patterns. The patterns often entered the painting or became naturalized by it through weather "systems" -- conditions like rain (beading on a window) or snow (falling). More recently these patterns have subsided and, as of today, Reeves opens a show of seascapes -- some of them sunny, a couple dark or darkened. 

The image up top is a larger painting hung on its own wall at the northwest corner of the Equinox's main gallery. Maybe the last painting of the grouping you'll see upon entering, most of which feature high and higher horizon lines, reminding me of my own times at sea, the claustrophobia/nausea that comes from prolonged exposure to rising swells. But this painting up top is clearly made from the shore, where things are supposed to be calm. So what conditions were present to allow this view?

Are these the times? A time when the shore is no longer a sanctuary? Where no landscape (natural) is safe from portraiture's aggressive enthusiasm (interweb)? When I first saw Reeves painting I thought of what Aschenbach saw in Death in Venice; more Viscontini's filmic reading of it (1971) than Mann's source novel (1912). No longer a frolicking Tadzio (Aschenburg's youthful self and/or an object of his desire), but in my case, life's horizon, rising ever higher, becoming the wall that signals our end, and on the other side of that wall, an eternity -- with no horizon in sight. 

Friday, September 8, 2023

Authoritarian Regimes


Northern Ireland and the The Troubles, Ethiopia in the last days of Haile Selassie, a history of South Africa from its first colonists to its liberation in 1994, and before that, the former Yugoslavia -- why is it that I have been drawn to books and films on authoritarian states this past year? What's guiding this interest? What am I ... feeling?

Last night I finished Hochschild's book on South Africa, a book that grew stronger as it went along. I say "grew stronger," but it had more to do with me setting aside the bias ledger, stop concerning myself with what side Hochschild is on and start dipping into his extensive annotated bibliography. For this is a journalist who, though he has a white man's connection to a past South Africa, doesn't trust what he remembers of it, nor what lies behind what many of us take for granted.

Hochschild's chapter on the town of Mogopa is devastating, yet hopeful. So to is his 23-page 2007 "Epilogue", where he talks about the pillaged conditions the African National Congress inherited from its sons of Apartheid predecessors: how the ANC is in fact two parties (a welfare state faction at one end and a neoliberal business-first faction at the other), but because it presents as one, its internal discussions are hidden from the public, as opposed to shared through the parliamentary process.

Is a liberal democracy possible in a society where there is only one possible choice for over ninety-percent of the population? Only in South Africa -- at least for an another generation or two. But at the rate things are changing -- not just the climate, but our global (political) economy -- one wonders if South Africa will have time to realize that change, become the Wakanda many thought it could be.


Thursday, September 7, 2023

A Living Rage


And so the trial phase begins for the "key organizers" of this largely white trucker "Freedom Convoy" that sat on Ottawa streets for weeks, blowing their horns, threatening locals, spouting all sorts of racist crap that never does anybody any good.

Arguments about free speech will take up much of this 16-day trial. Same too with what constitutes an "absolute."

Albertan Tamara Lich has a high-profile celebrity lawyer making yet another bid to become a Canadian household name, while Albertan Chris Barber's counsel is adamant that her client was in fact trying to work with Ottawa police to elevate the congestion that comes with trucks gridded together, its drivers BBQing burgers, kid's jumping on trampolines and splashing in inflatable pools, not exacerbate it, as the prosecution will argue. This is a brilliant ploy on the defence's part, given the shit show that occurred at all three levels of government. Indeed, in an effort to make its case, prosecution will have to reveal even more about what all three levels of government don't want us to know about how uncoordinated they are when it comes to this convey's wolf rolling into town in sheep's clothing.

Something else: defence is attempting to block Ottawa residents from taking the stand, presumably to give victim impact statements describing what a living hell it was to be on the edge of this Grate Trek's laager, like the museum curator who woke up one night to find someone having a bowel movement outside her bedroom window, while the BM'ers husband sat in the darkened cab of their semi -- one hand pointing a flashlight up underneath his chin, the other pulling down on an airhorn.

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Belfast (2021)


Kenneth Branagh's Belfast looked good to me when I saw a clip of it during the pandemic. Stark black-and-white photography, late-60s clothes that had The Troubles written all over them, handsome parents and older faces like Judi Dench and Ciarín Hinds. I'd like to see that, I thought to myself. Yesterday I saw the DVD at the KCC VPL, so I borrowed it. 

The opening scene is a stagey neighbourhood idyll, more ballet than mosh pit, with a weirdly balletic transition to an angry mob of Catholics smashing windows and demanding that the Protestants behind them Move on! Go live with your own!

Fortunately, or unfortunately if violence is your thing, that's the worst of it. What remains of this nicely structured coming-of-ager are nose to nose threats from an extortion-seeking Protestant thug who targets the father for "cash or commitment" ("You're-either-with-us-or-against-us!"), and somewhat more gently, discussions between the same father who wants to emigrate and a mother who doesn't, because the neighbourhood is all she knows.

I know many whose families emigrated from Ireland in the 1960s, mostly from the Republic. Those who left the North had an advantage because Commonwealth countries (née the British Empire) were looking for skilled workers in all professions. The scene where emigration is introduced comes not in words but in images, when the father drops two pamphlets on the table: one for Sydney, the other for Vancouver


Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Three Poems If Not Sent As Texts



Shhh, just my breath on your neck. That's what woke you. That and a touch of spittle.

*

In the dream we're seated at a giant table that revolves while the centrepiece stays put. With each revolution we grow further apart, until the centrepiece, your teenage daughter, receives my telepathic message and turns the table our way, leaving us side-by-side.

*

Your first day back at school.

Oh, no reason.


Monday, September 4, 2023

Standing at the Corner of Community and Nation


Adam Hochschild's The Mirror at Midnight: a South African Journey (1990; 2007) continues to bear fruit, uncomfortably strange as it is at times. I would say the same of the 1992 Misha Glenny book I read last year, on the former Yugoslavia, and what followed from that country's dissolution after the fall of Soviet Communism. Two countries with more than a couple of nations tucked into them. 

The Mirror at Midnight settles into a pattern of alternating past and present chapters, culminating in a specific retelling of the 1838 Battle of Blood River, where the invading Dutch Voortrekkers' war with the Zulus ended in a combination of conquest and coalition. In a sentence: 464 Voortrekkers led by Andries Pretorius took a stand at the Ncome River in what is now KwaZulu-Natal and killed approximately 3, 000 attacking Zulus from an army of between 10, 000 - 15, 000, led by King Dingane.

Hochschild is strong on the topic of Voortrekker mythology. For example, we learn that the "pledge" taken by those 464 Voortrekkers in the days leading up to the battle -- to "forever honour the day," should they survive it -- was more or less forgotten for several decades after what later became known as "the Vow". Only near the end of the 19th century, when the Voortrekkers were more commonly known as Afrikaners or Boers, was the Vow activated in the face of the same competing British interests that caused them to push north decades earlier, in search of new, tax-free lands on which to farm. The difference now was not the land, per se, but what lay under it: gold. And the British, whose currency was based on it, wanted it. All of it.

In the double-colonial Canadian province of British Columbia, the narrative is more commonly seen as a binary: you're either Indigenous or a non-Indigenous settler. Doesn't matter how you or your family came to Canada -- on a slave ship, as a refugee, as a well-intentioned farmer -- you're a settler, first, and you have no moral rights to land that was never taken from you or your people in the first place. Doesn't matter if you are a Finn-dian who left the coal camps of Dunsmuir's feudal Nanaimo in the late-19th century to found Sointula on Malcolm Island, or a Black person who identifies with the Black families who, with Chinese, Italian, Portuguese and Jewish families, lived beside the Pacific Central train station in what was known as Hogan's Alley, until its demolition in the later-1960s to build the Georgia Viaduct. What matters is that amidst all binaries there are resonant exceptions, both "good" and "bad", communities based on shared experience, meaning. Within three years of the Battle of Blood River, the Boers, as pledged, built a church, re-named Church of the Vow near the end of the 19th century, even later to become part of a larger commercial complex, only to be taken back as the Voortrekker Museum at a time of rising Black nationalism, and now a more progressive museum -- the uMsunduzi Museum -- with a larger, more inclusive mandate.  


Sunday, September 3, 2023

In Advance of a Fallen Plum


Earlier this summer, or even earlier, I was called upon by my neighbour two doors west, the Widow Voellm, to help with her plum. This was the same plum her recently-deceased husband fell out of 28 years earlier, though the tree was under eight feet back then, not eighteen. 


With one foot wedged in the tree's "V" and the other on the ladder, I'd call out, "What about this limb, Jane?" and from her garden lounger below, binoculars in hand, she would more often than not call back, "Off with it!" By the time we were done, I thought we'd taken off too much, but Jane reminded me that the dead stuff doesn't apply when it comes to the never-more-than-one-third rule.

Saturday, September 2, 2023

Fire


The death toll keeps rising on that five-story apartment block fire in Johannesburg, South Africa. The building is described as "run-down," owned by "municipal authorities" and is known to house "criminal gangs." Definitely more questions than answers.

By coincidence, exactly 35 years ago to the day (August 31st), another Johannesburg building (this one six-story) suffered a similar fate. Khoso House, according to Adam Hochschild's The Mirror Midnight (1989), "provided office space for a wide variety of other opposition organizations, from women's groups to a multi-racial photographers' collective," (143) Unlike the more recent fire, this one began as an explosion: a car bomb parked beside the building's elevator shaft.

No mention of the 1988 explosion in any of the reporting on this recent fire. Funny how that happens. If no one remembers it, does that mean it doesn't exist, even if someone says it did?

South Africa's past is a horrific intersection of male chauvinism, racialization and punitive class politics, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't still be talking about it, that we have a more progressive present to distract us. If anyone thinks our progressive present is any better, read History, and read it widely.

Friday, September 1, 2023

The Rest Is History


Nothing absent about sleep anymore. No more curtain falling and the body rolling over eight hours later, refreshed. Sleep these days is a journey whose dreams have turned from the occasional pastoral into a cascade of lurid epics -- too many for me to feel rested. Let this be a warning. Let this be a lesson. Let this repetition represent a formal gearing down -- in advance of an inert conclusion. Zzzzzzzzkwzzzgrrrrzzz ... huh?