Wednesday, February 22, 2012

a day in a life


The town I live in is…well…pleasant enough though not much of anything.  One of those rather limited college towns with surprisingly few (multi)cultural amenities and no restaurants to speak of.  It is also, due to its mild winters, a retirement community; a fact of which I am physically made aware every time I go swimming and have to pant my way through a workout because the pool is kept at a minimum of 83 degrees to avoid complaints from the “retired” who fool themselves into thinking they are doing water aerobics when in fact they basically loll around draped over foam tubes jabbering to each other.  But I digress…

As I was walking out of the gym the other day, an older gentleman asked me if I knew anyone from The Downs.  At this point, one unfamiliar with it might wonder what exactly is The Downs.  No, it is not a race track as the name could indicate, but one of the many retirement habitations around here.  That being said, every time I see the sign, yes, I smile, riff on the name, and wonder who on earth thought it was a good idea to name a retirement community The Downs.   

Like I said, the gentleman asked me if I knew someone from The Downs...  I told him that I didn’t and asked him if he needed a ride; and that if so, I would gladly take him if he didn’t mind my filthy and cramped car.  He said he didn’t, told me his name, made a pun about mine, and off we walked into the midday sun.  As soon as I opened my car door, I remembered that I had forgotten about the plastic magnetic penis poking out of my dashboard.  One might wonder why it’s there.  The short story is that a friend had it hanging off of his refrigerator and gave it to me when he and his wife had their first child and he decided he had to become an adult.  Having no children of my own, I feel no such compunction.  The long story is why he chose me to give it to…  And there it was, my pink plastic penis staring at the nice southern gentlemen I had just offered a ride to. Oh well, by then it was too late to remove it, so off we all went….

I had also forgotten that I wanted to get gas on the way home because my gas gauge was acting unpredictably; and as I drove off, I noticed its needle was on empty and asked the gentleman if he didn’t mind my stopping at the gas station on the way to The Downs.  He said no problem.  And as I was getting out of the car to “fill ‘er up”, though clearly my car is a “he”, I saw the gentleman taking out his wallet from his back pocket...  I filled up the car and off again we went, this time straight for The Downs.  We made small talk, I found out where he was from, about his daughter and her husband, and also how much it costs to rent an apartment at The Downs.  I asked him about that in case, one day, after having failed to put a bullet through my head, I had to choose to live in a retirement community. I am not, as it were, putting down The Downs and firmly do believe in "à chacun son gout", it's just not mon gout.  But I digress once more...

Without further incident we arrived at his apartment complex.  As he was thanking me and getting out of the car, he told me he had had a car once until his daughter made him stop driving it, and that he knew it took money to maintain them.  And indeed if you took a look at my car and at the tattered way I dress around here (plus, of course, the plastic penis sticking out of the dashboard: a clear indication of instability), you would think I am in serious need of money to maintain it and myself, though he did not say so.  What he did say was that he had left me a little something in the compartment next to the penis.  Okay, he did not say that either; but that's where he left me two bucks which I tried mighty hard to give back to him.  He refused to take the money back and wished me a Godly day.  And off I went to have one.


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

one awesome review











An awesome review by David Joselit of Carsten Höller’s show at the New Museum.  Work whose premise I have questioned since reading about it years ago.  Not only do I agree with Joselit's view, I also find the whole thing so very dated.

I was a teenager in the 70’s in São Paulo, when/where I used to attend the Bienais when they came to town (bienais: Portuguese plural for Biannual).  Biannuals still carry an air of the carnivalesque, but these days the funhouse atmosphere is infused with all kinds of sociological baggage, if not always apparent in the actual art work, then in its explanation, contextualization, and coverage.  As a teenager, I did not pay attention to the “coverage”; and maybe my memory has embellished things with time, but those old bienais were a lot of fun. They were all about sensation and perception.  The exhibits felt like wondrous funhouses, especially for a teenager just starting to experiment with life and art.

I do like Joselit's "whole picture" approach to interpreting his experience at the New Museum, even if the work is not at all about that.  Again, to me Höller’s work just feels, well, dated, tired, rehashed, distanced, cold, out of place and time.  If one were to happen upon it haphazardly while walking down a street (certainly an impossibility in our litigious world), maybe then, the encounter might actually become an experience that somehow puts something about perception in perspective… though partaking in psychedelics might get you there faster and without having to sign a legal waiver …

disclaimer: I am advocating neither.

Read the review soon before the link disappears at the end of the month.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Ambivalence


After 8 years of working on what has felt like an abacus for the last few, I have a new computer; and, in many ways, I love it.  I love its speed.  But mostly I love the fact that except for a data dump from my old computer stored in a file I can delete with one click of a mouse, it has no "memories".  It is an empty black box; its disk space unencumbered by my daily tapping of keys.  Now I have to decide whether to import my Outlook files and addresses.  I feel no compulsion to do it; most of it won't be missed.  A metaphor for life...?