American Gray-Links To ‘Night Shadows’ By Edward Hopper, Raymond Chandler & James Ellroy, Poems By Frank O’Hara, Robert Frost & An Interview With Belgian Photographer Harry Gruyaert

Harry Gruyaert’s celebrated, but I’d argue he’s still underrated for his mastery of color.

From Kenn Sava, Gruyaert’s not a portraitist, per se:

‘It’s not the person that interests me most. It’s the person in its environment. To me, all the elements are important. I don’t have any particular intention. It’s just what I see.

I think humans have such a great idea about ourselves, but nature is so much more powerful.’

According to the interview, American pop-art influenced Gruyaert, potentially freeing him from elements of European formalism (pushing him into some great color work). If you’re interested in seeing fine color, atmospheric and ‘lived-in’ photography, I’d recommend Rivages.

As for pop-art, it can often be colorful, innovative, intuitive and non-serious…on the surface.

Frank O’Hara’s mid-century American poems are surprisingly visual. The idea of a wild freedom wrapped within casual conversation; a moment to moment associative intensity is achieved through O’Hara’s form. This is often where we long to be, on the edges of possibilities, living intensely with others (even through memory, sometimes especially through nostalgia and memory).

Also, the poem suggests this freedom as a return to our animal natures; which involves a certain view of Nature, functioning as a Romantically primitive return to Nature. Frankly, it’s a pretty good love poem.

Animals

Have you forgotten what we were like then
when we were still first rate
and the day came fat with an apple in its mouth

it’s no use worrying about Time
but we did have a few tricks up our sleeves
and turned some sharp corners

the whole pasture looked like our meal
we didn’t need speedometers
we could manage cocktails out of ice and water

I wouldn’t want to be faster
or greener than now if you were with me O you
were the best of all my days.’

Frank O’Hara.

As for color, perhaps this also doesn’t mean color must be completely abstracted into the ambitious meaning-making mission of Mark Rothko. I mean, the sky is blue, the trees green, and the balloons red and yellow.

Mark Rothko sought to make paintings that would bring people to tears. “I’m interested only in expressing basic human emotions—tragedy, ecstasy, doom, and so on,” he declared. “And the fact that a lot of people break down and cry when confronted with my pictures shows that I can communicate those basic human emotions….If you…are moved only by their color relationships, then you miss the point.”

Seal the compound…I mean chapel. (come to Houston, land of little zoning, fair pilegrim).

Readers will know this blog maintains skepticism for pop-art Neo-dadaism and the consecration of ordinary objects along the Duchamp line (‘American Standard’?). Making Duchampian exceptions rules, even clever rules, can desecrate what’s important.

Everyday people, living right, must keep the important things in view, namely wife/husband/children/parents/death/taxes/health/time; not merely their own impulses nor artistic visions (artists remain acutely aware of such indifference). Meaning is usually to be found within love for another, and this usually means everyday people (& the everyday within us) lives between the sacred and profane: The 9-5 grind and the unexpected conversation about grandma’s death, the enveloping silence afterwards.

Artists, at their best, point towards wisdom, truth and beauty regarding everyday things. All the artists I’m linking to are doing so in one way or another, although ‘how’ and ‘how well’ are endlessly disputed.

I’ve already seen a thousand urinals in my life, Marcel, even a few in my dreams.

The triumph of the conceptual over the actual, the mass-produced over the created; perhaps these aren’t entirely healthy trends. The retreat into (S)elf, and the retreat into irony alongside (A)rt as commodity, perhaps these are dead-ends as much as they are freshly-paved streets. The lamentations of art as (R)eligion could be a leading indicator of a deeper hunger for meaning; a hunger with as many bad as good outcomes for artists and everyday people…

Some food for thought, Dear Reader.

As a contrast, here’s some American art that’s more grounded; some realism with psychological depth, albeit with impressionist influence.

Night Shadows by Edward Hopper:

The black and white was made in 1924.

I think Raymond Chandler’s High Window is among the best of the American detective novel.

Here are some quotations of his, if you’re interested.

“Los Angeles was just a big dry sunny place with ugly homes and no style, but good-hearted and peaceful. It had the climate they yap about now. People used to sleep out on porches. Little groups who thought they were intellectual used to call it the Athens of America.”

Here is the link.   It’s been a long time since they just reviewed the book and not the author.

Boy, oh boy, James Ellroy: America’s best current historical crime fiction writer, showing up to entertain, shock and vulgarize:

The poem that most came to mind after looking at Hopper:

Acquainted with the Night

I have been one acquainted with the night.
I have walked out in rain—and back in rain.
I have outwalked the furthest city light.

I have looked down the saddest city lane.
I have passed by the watchman on his beat
And dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain.

I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet
When far away an interrupted cry
Came over houses from another street,

But not to call me back or say good-bye;
And further still at an unearthly height,
One luminary clock against the sky

Proclaimed the time was neither wrong nor right.
I have been one acquainted with the night.

Robert Frost

The Case Of The Five Ties-Chapter Seven

Chapter OneChapter TwoChapter ThreeChapter Four. Chapter Five. Chapter Six.

Red scruffy chin-beard yanked open the roll-up door at the same time the black man flung himself into it, pushing his way out. Redbeard caught him by the neck, dragged him to the ground and pinned his chest.

Harry could make-out a streetlight thirty-feet away, some pavement, and gravel leading up a hillside.

‘Let me the fuck go’

Oliveira appeared, leaning over the man, headset tumbling forwards. He slapped the man’s face loudly.

What is this?’ Oliveira yelled.

‘Get me the fuck outta here I said’

Headlights approached, quickly flashing off. The man in the Prius jumped out and also pinned the man with both knees. The scene was now one of panic.

Oliveira slapped the man again, viciously. Redbeard arose, striding over to the roll-up door and slamming it shut.

In the darkness, seven Mexicans, two Filipinos, one black guy and Harry listened to the commotion outside for a minute; no one saying a word.

I’m listening.‘ Wiley said. ‘We’ll be okay here.’ He’d parked against a slice of curb in a five house cul-de-sac, about a mile from first contact with ‘John.’

‘There is not very much security on this network.’ John said. ‘Regular password. I can’t use my own hotspot. This is not even my device sir. I am like a criminal.’ John leaned over to Wiley, showing him the screen.

‘My company automates existing workflows. Big, global clients. We sync them with AI engines and AI agents. We migrate client data onto our platform for testing, and the client decides what to automate.’

‘Got it.’ Wiley said

Hart International Shipping has offices in China, Venezuela, Brazil, Seattle, Tacoma and Los Angeles. Big ports. They must have granted access to sensitive data during the migration. Financials, internal emails etc. This is normally a compliance issue. We don’t want to know.

‘We informed Hart and they quickly shut off testing. Same day. All data removed. Then, there was almost no contact. This account has been sitting open for six months. Our companies’ lawyers are in some limited communication. I have moved on to other clients.’

‘Clear as a bell.’

Last month, our accountant started receiving phone calls. A man was asking questions about companies in South Seattle. What kind of work does she do? This is not her job at all.

One evening she approached me saying a strange man is in the parking lot, and she does not want to leave the building alone...’

Seattle Photos & A Vignette-Close Encounters Of The Schmaltz Kind

Derek‘I know, but…these…shapes in my head. They’re everywhere. They’re in my dreams.’

Alan–‘You can program your mind to notice anything. You’re making good money. No drinking…no crazy drugs, right?

Derek–‘I know…I know…nothing like that. You’ve been a good friend to me. I’ve got to share this with the world..this is…what I’m supposed to be doing.’

Alan-‘I’ve got a mortgage. You’ve got a mortgage. What about your KIDS? What about Kathy?’

Derek-‘The music. It’s the same five notes again and again. I’ve already booked the tickets. We’re leaving Sunday.

Alan-‘Jesus. I can’t get behind this, Derek. This is crazy.’

Derek‘Notes echo into the blackness, yet the lightboard shines back. We are not alone. The choir was there all along; every note resolving at ONCE.

Alan-Are you at home? Are the girls there with you now?

DerekA TOWER OF ALIEN SCHMALTZ, Alan. You’ve never seen so much SCHMALTZ!

The Case Of The Five Ties-Chapter Six

Chapter OneChapter TwoChapter Three. Chapter Four. Chapter Five.

Where was the data coming from? Who was controlling the flow?

Wiley parked in an unused Microsoft lot, with visibility and cover behind a parked construction crane. He figured he’d have some minutes before he aroused suspicion. Stop #71335 sat halfway down a ramp, towards 520, heading West. About six people milled around, two getting on a bus, then a few more filtering in: Three Indians, two Chinese professional women and a white guy in sweat pants with his belly hanging out in the cold.

Shouldn’t there be more people? These buses are leaving campus, heading towards Seattle. Is this the wrong stop? Was it the stop heading East? As these thoughts flashed across Wiley’s mind, someone knocked on the window.

Startled, Wiley’s hand reached for his sidearm under his shirt. ‘No, no!’ the man said, backing away. ‘Please it is me’. He was wearing a red coat with a pea-green hat.

‘I’m sorry. I have to be careful’ his arms dropping to his sides. ‘So careful. This is very bad now. You are Wiley and I will present everything. Let’s turn off our phones off and drive.’

Wiley nodded and motioned the man around the car. He appeared to be in his late twenties, thin with glasses. Wiley scanned and saw no one else around. So much for ‘Emerald City Investigations offers top-notch surveillance skills.’

‘Call me John.’ the man said climbing in. A laptop was under his arm as he placed his backpack between his legs. ‘Thank you for coming. It is me. Please head away from here through the neighborhoods. Your phone must be off. We will find a network.’

Tuesday Poem-Spring Oak

Spring Oak

Call it a granite moon
which fills the fields
beyond the light
of a neighbor’s barn.

The first spring calf stood
today. on tufted grass
alive, bundled by the wind.
Its stillborn twin

we found nearby.
The barn steeple rises
up, as it must,
the stars like salt in my eyes.

The Case Of The Five Ties-Chapter Five

Chapter One. Chapter Two. Chapter Three. Chapter Four.

Harry hadn’t noticed a teal Prius sitting thirty-feet away. The driver was staring at his phone. Harry saw two open laptops inside.

One of the two men, thin-shouldered with wingtips, began pacing while speaking into a headset. The left side of his face was scarred.

A tall man with sunken eyes lifted the roll-up door of the Penske truck, motioning the group inside. He wore a scruffy, red chin-beard.

Harry counted seven Mexicans (one under five feet), two filipinos (Tagalog), and two black guys as everyone piled in. Only a coiled length of rope lay coiled in the corner. No tools. No other equipment.

Mexican patter began to fill the stuffy box. The truck did a half-turn in the gravel lot, exiting on Marginal. Left.

8:37 pm.–The smell was horrendous. One of Harry’s group began to whistle. Clear, high, bird calls. A little unhinged. Now, the man was rocking back and forth, intense and agitated.

‘Stop the goddamn truck.’

Harry and another man grabbed his shoulders.

‘This is easy money, come on motherfucker

Get me out’ Stop the goddamn truck!’

A few Mexicans began whistling their disapproval. The man was standing in the middle of the truck, swinging his arms wildly.

‘Get me the fuck outta here!’

The truck slowly rolled to a stop…

The Figure 5-A Weekend Poem By William Carlos Williams & Photos Of What I’ve Seen Lately In The Lonely Parts Of Town

The Great Figure

Among the rain
and lights
I saw the figure 5
in gold
on a red
firetruck
moving
tense
unheeded
to gong clangs
siren howls
and wheels rumbling
through the dark city.

William Carlos Williams

I like Charles Demuth’s fidelity to the original, and use of imagist-imagination. The figure 5 comprises such an important part of the poem.

A little more broadly…

Imagism was a sub-genre of Modernism concerned with creating clear imagery with sharp language. The essential idea was to re-create the physical experience of an object through words. As with all of Modernism, Imagism implicitly rejected Victorian poetry, which tended toward narrative.

And:

The most exemplified phase of Modernism, referred to as “High Modernism,” occurred during the inter-war years (1918-1939). This was the time when writers synonymous with Modernism, such as Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and D.H. Lawrence, thrived. While Victorians typically concerned themselves with rendering reality as they understood it into fiction, Modernists recognized that reality was subjective, and instead strove to represent human psychology in fiction.

In response: I don’t believe reality to be subjective, though I’ve met a lot of people who seem to.

Where’s the proof for such a claim?

For my part, I believe reality is there, and that my senses are giving me evidence and essential elements of reality. One of the strengths of the camera is the ability to move faster than the eye and brain (stuff I’m too slow to notice and process…lots of randomness).

While I’m inspired deeply by much modern art, and was raised in a postmodern milieu, I’ve not been persuaded by postmodern truth and knowledge claims. Postmodernism seems like a game with unclear rules, a few admirable people, and a lot of weirdos answering to Nehru-jacket-wearing authorities spewing gobbledy-gook.

During the post-war years, the confessional poets, with a fair amount of free and blank verse became dominant, with a kind of feelings-first, psychological exploration of the (S)elf. We’re now seeing many downstream effects in our culture (I’ll leave this to your imagination…for good and ill).

The Straussian truth and knowledge claims, as one example, pushes back to a kind of classicist revival, an embrace of tradition, and rejection of much modern and postmodern thinking.

And now for something…somewhat related…

What I’ve Seen Lately In The Lonely Parts Of Town. I like abstraction, and certain shapes I see. I like arranging photos in series/sequences to highlight certain shared variables (color, light, shape etc.). This attraction starts with my senses out in the world, but ultimately must answer to my physical limitations, limitations of my technique/skill and limitations of the camera. It must answer to limitations of time, weather and light conditions, and the wishes of other people.

I’m usually behind reality, or in the wrong position, or I just missed what was a lovely, serendipitous moment. There are the known knowns I missed, the known unknowns, and also the unknown unknowns (stuff I’ll never see, but for example, I can admire in the work of other photographers).

Anyways, what a long-winded ass I’ve become. I hope you find something of value in this short four-photo-sequence.

Silver & Blue-A Poem, A Photo & A Nocturne By Chopin

Through fog,
remembering the day’s words, true and untrue,
the ships must all go now

to sea, spreading
their news. Gazing down the wells
of the afternoon,

the sunlight turns silvery-blue.

Give me one minute and your mind. 1. Please read the poem aloud. 2. Take a closer look at the photo 3. Play the first 30 seconds of Chopin’s Nocturne in B-flat minor, Op 9, No. 1. (past the 00:26 mark).

The goal: Create a dreamy, contemplative experience before you move on.

Thanks to all.

One-Day-Late Poem-Robert Hayden

Those Winter Sundays

Sundays too my father got up early
and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,
then with cracked hands that ached
from labor in the weekday weather made
banked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.

I’d wake and hear the cold splintering,breaking.
When the rooms were warm, he’d call,
and slowly I would rise and dress,
fearing the chronic angers of that house,

speaking indifferently to him,
who had driven out the cold
and polished my good shoes as well.
What did I know, what did I know
of love’s austere and lonely offices?

Robert Hayden

The Case Of The Five Ties-Chapter Four

Chapter One. Chapter Two. Chapter Three.

8:24 pm Friday night: Agressive mist and wind pelted Harry’s face. The asphalt under 99 was slick; a series of rented scooters abandoned along the way.

He wore a dirty hoodie, the oldest jeans he could find, and Wylie’s boots (one size too small).

He’d approached the only person near the stadium; doubled-over, coming down from a fentanyl high. The man lifted his face, shuffled back into a pillar; slumping down into a sitting position.

‘What do you want?’

‘Warner told me to meet’

‘You got junk? You got money, man?’

‘You alright?’ Harry said, crouching down.

‘I’m alright.’ the man said staring vacantly ahead. A smile grew on his face. A healthy mistrust hung in the air: ‘Warner’s got a girl up on the hill. Probably where he is.’

Harry appreciated the effort.

I’m looking for work’ Harry said, holding out a $50. ‘for the night.’

Ronnie’s hand was bloated and cold.

‘Yeah they got that shit locked down. I’m sleepy. Warner ain’t here so I ain’t going nowhere.

Harry handed him another $50. Both man stared into the darkness.

The knife place. 8:30 pm.’

Off Spokane?

‘Yeah’

‘Tell Warner to call me. Harry said. ‘Look me up.’

‘Yeah, he told me about you. I didn’t send you and I don’t fuckin’ know you.

Harry walked down 3rd, texting Kathy. ‘Near Epicurean Knife Store. 8:30 pm. No Warner.

He remembered seeing a bank of bikes and turned West on Atlantic. He started slow-jogging. ‘Shit.’

The phone buzzed. ‘Be careful. No Oliveira info. Wylie not back. Wendell unclear.

Harry got to Alaskan in about five minutes. There were no bikes, only two scooters…

Soon, Harry was trundling along at twelve miles per hour. He reached the corner of an industrial building. He set the scooter down, tapping ‘end ride’ on his phone. It chimed way too loudly.

As he rounded the corner, ten or eleven men stood in a semi-circle, between a set of train-tracks and a graffiti-covered wall. Most had hoodies. There was a mid-size box truck parked fifty-feet away, under a curving overpass where two men stood.

Harry shuffled towards the group casually…