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Near the Strange Bust of Guillaume Apollinaire

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Guillaume Apollinaire’s Bust The bust of Guillaume Apollinaire greets those who walk into this vest pocket parc that cuddles up against Saint-Germain-des-PrĆ©s. Russian emigres chatter on the bench next to mine. The back of Apollinaire’s head looks like a baked potato. One does not make vodka from baked potatoes. The Russians take another drink and I can tell the subject has changed, softened. They toss bread to the birds and the man who is doing most of the talking turns to one woman and speaks in English: "You are a tough old lady a tough old girl" I look back at the potato head

That Dancing Machine

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The Dancing Washing Machine The washing machine was agitated, or rather shaking violently, rocking erratically during the spin cycle. It waltzed itself across the laundry room and wedged the door closed. No one was getting in. The machine had left the door ajar just enough so the human could see that this was deliberate. What we had here was a very upset laundry appliance, perhaps over worked and under appreciated. It seemingly mustered its energy into an act of defiance, not realizing that blocking out the human who dumped dirty clothing into its orifice negated its reason for existence. The human was prevented from entering. No amount of pushing against the door succeeded in opening the door. There was no way to pry the door unshut. The human thought of desperate measures, such as getting a chain saw and cutting through the door, climbing through the hole and man handling the bulky machine out of the way. It would mean finding someone with a chainsaw and buying a replacement ...

Everyone You Have Ever Known

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Your Apartment Building Inside you is a towering apartment building. There is always room for everyone. Everyone you know lives here. Everyone you have ever met lives here. No one dies or moves out. But some are forgotten.

Does a Bicycle Need a Fish?

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The Fish Bicycle ”A Woman Needs a Man like a Fish Needs a Bicycle” I saw this message on every self-respecting woman’s refrigerator a long time ago. Sometimes it was handwritten on a notecard and taped to the appliance. I know it was also popular as a refrigerator magnet. The fish + bicycle has been around a very long time. Yet long before I saw the magnet I read and listened to John Cage’s Zen koans about monks (men) and women. Amusing myself, I conflated the well-known refrigerator magnet with one of Cage’s short pieces for my own delight. Perhaps you may find these too silly, annoying, goofy, dumb, or possibly fun. I mashed them together and let the pieces fall as they may. Listen to Cage’s voice: “Kwang-tse points out that a beautiful woman who gives pleasure to men serves only to frighten the fish when she jumps in the water.” ...and now my vandalism: A beautiful fish which gives pleasure to fishermen serves only to frighten the bicycle Whe...

That Girl with the Marble Wings Leads Me There

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Ah, That Girl with Wings I climb the stairs with what always seems like thousands of tourists wanting to see that painted girl who smiles They look for signs or ask guards and they search, only to stand in line for a short glance. I ascend the long wide staircase, the girl with the wings waits at the top, on the stone prow of her ancient ship where she has alighted to signify victory. She greets me and I know where I am From here I take a left and climb more stairs Then enter the gallery of massive canvases Gigantic Engines of Color My personal mission being to view Delacroix's freshly sparkling " Death of Sardanapalus", hence the detail.

On Being Vulnerable

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The Other Side of the Road Too much of the time And far too frequently My feelings are the squirrel Who tried unsuccessfully To make it to the Other side of the road

How To Draw a Chair (in the Jardin du Luxembourg)

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How to Draw a Chair The flint pathways of the Jardin du Luxembourg provide a seemingly endless drawing surface for the numerous chairs which abound in the park. This is a superb place in which to learn how to draw a chair. The chairs are all painted the same pea greenish color. There are several types, some with arm rests, some designed for sunning or napping, all are constructed of hollow metal tubing with slats to sit upon. These slats while not designed for this purpose, also collect pigeon poop. The chairs make delightful drawing gadgets. Unlike a pen or pencil that deposits a single line upon paper, the chairs may make four marks simultaneously with their four legs on the “sketchbook” of the flinty paths. One can draw, aka “drag” a chair with one or both hands, most frequently grasping the back rest. One should avoid lifting a chair to reposition it, one should always drag these chairs to incise or “plow” grooves, cut furrows, into the dust of the path. While drawing ...

It is True, What John Cage Said

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It is True, What John Cage Said John Cage said that that there is no reason to wait for inspiration. There is no time for it. Writers write, painters paint, and composers compose because that is what they do, it is who they are. It is what we do. Unwind, relax as seven paintings, each fifteen feet wide, ever so slowly reveal themselves.

So, Why the Humble Morning Glory?

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In Praise of Ephemeral Glory There is a simple, and unpoetic I suppose, answer to why the first of my Geometric Kimono Suite was named A Morning Glory . No one has asked, perhaps because the flat disks do not look much like Ipomea purpurea, the common morning glory. The inspiration is that growing up the flowers I most admired were both blue. One could be gathered and brought indoors, Centaurea cyanus, the bachelor button, also called cornflower. They were humble flowers found even in vacant lots. I would often gather a fistful of bachelor buttons to present to my mother who would arrange them in an empty milk bottle. The little blue flowers looked lovely, lasting for days. My other favorite, the brilliant blue morning glories, could not be put into a vase. They had no stems. The cornflower and the morning glory are beautiful, simple flowers, but represented opposite ends of the spectrum when it came to fragility. As an adult I grew both flowers near my studio, how coul...

Musing About Muses

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Where Do You Find Your Muse? For me, a muse is a bang on the ear that dumps fermented apple juice into my brain. Or, if not apple juice, dopamine buzzing like a bad ballast in a flickering fluorescent lamp. In this simile, the urge to paint or write are triggered not by furrowing my brow in deep thought, but by that promise or inkling of a hormone rush that is evoked by an uncommon event. That event may manifest itself through any of my senses. A smell or sound can suggest more than hunger or a desire to dance. I have been disarmed by smiles and frowns, scowls and sighs, or a cluster of startling words, often misread. The beauty of inspiration is that it pumps a taste of the pleasure reward directly into the brain, and a flood of it after the act of creation. Now, there is where the similarity to sexual stimulation and the blessing of orgasm make the comparison credible and not judgmental. I find muses everywhere, or maybe not everywhere, but I have learned to pay attentio...

That Which Lasts a Day

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That Which Lasts a Day Sometimes the ephemeral is the truest reflection of life Everything is fleeting when you think about it Celebrate beauty while you can

Fifteen Minutes of Fame / Ten Plus Years Making a Good Living

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Something Andy Warhol Said I spent my fifteen minutes on handmade paper kimonos and fans shown at galleries run by men who would fall in the first round of a new and deadly affliction. Other galleries also shut their doors long ago, for other reasons. So, my quarter hour slipped away, as it does any way, leaving ghosts of the handmade paper kimonos and fans in the odd museum or on eBay. The art, in small letters, remains in drawers, as old VHS tapes upon a closet shelf. I am transferring my tapes to the Cloud and onto large old-fashioned canvas. Perhaps some curious curator will open a drawer at the Met, or Brooklyn Museum, where my prints snore. There is no iron clad rule that we get but one fifteen minute time slot. It was only something Andy Warhol put into words in 1968.

Which is Your Favorite Muse?

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The Three Muses of Poetry Sometimes he sits quite motionless Blankly pensive trancelike And yet nothing happens Or too much comes all at once And there is no bucket large enough To catch it all In either case, he can always Blame the Muses of Poetry He draws a blank on their names But the really good muse of poetry Carries the attribute of a lyre Which hints at the reciting of poems Rather than their reading Flat on a page in a book The muse of erotic poetry Also carries a lyre, but bigger And more erect This muse and he have fun The muse of short poems hides Behind trees and carries a cell phone Years back she carried a boom box Today there is a shortage of Real authentic muses Or possibly a glut Still nothing interesting Sexy or humorous is destined To be written down this day It was the muse of painting That had him by the balls Again this morning ...

Wood Butcher / Word Butcher

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Wood Butcher I butcher words with all the flare and thoughtlessness of a concrete worker setting wooden forms slathered with steric acid, release goo that separates the wood from the concrete as it mutates chemically from a fluid to a solid. My father was a carpenter whose skill spanned the spectrum of activities of that class of worker who builds forms for the foundation of an ice arena to cutting dovetail joints for jewelry boxes made from a hickory tree he’d harvested. His collection of saws and hammers were never displayed on pegboard like trophies or some hobby workshop other dads would vanish into on weekends. Dad’s tools were jumbled in a toolbox he’d made out of scrap lumber. All his tools bore the scars of use and the abuse of being hauled in the back of an old pickup truck on a bare metal bed, bouncing over dirt roads to a job site, which is not to say he didn’t care for them, he just worked the hell out of them. Dad’s hammers made it clear to me as a kid ...

Distributing Stale Bread

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On the Feeding of Parisian Birds Ecoute bien mes petites oisoux Like the cat who does not live with me You cannot count on me to feed you To toss stale bread or offer bowls of water As I am only passing through your life as you Pass through mine If you catch my eye by the way you flutter past And I reward you with a morsel, or don't, That is just the way it is for us both

Tea Leaves and the Age Old Search

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Big Blue Miracle Machine Clouds, puffs of smoke, Creamer swirling in coffee, Tea leaves in an empty cup, A face in the flames, Visions in a crystal ball. When we catch sight of serendipitous patterns We are looking into a miracle machine. How completely predictable is our world. How completely random is our world. When one defines “miracle” it is usually said To be a once in a million occurrence, The unexpected. Something that shouldn’t happen. Examples cited are usually big miracles, Such as the dead come back to life. Smaller events, such as a snowflake falling In the Sahara, are every bit as miraculous. Take a quarter out of your pocket. Toss it into the air. Probability tells us that it will land On either the "heads" side or the "tails" side. If you flip the coin ten times it is supposed To land on heads five times and tails The other five times. This usually doesn't happen in a small test. But after a few hundre...

The Alignments Revisited with Jars of Paint

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Fantasies on a Carnac Theme The Continuity of My Painted Carnac Series While I long ago walked amongst the standing stones in Carnac, it is not these erect boulders that spur me to depict them. It is the underlying concept of the creation of these row upon row of rocks pointing unexpectedly skyward that provokes me to my two dimensional fugue. Sixty-five hundred years ago huge boulders were dug from the earth and dragged some sixty kilometers to the site of modern day Carnac, in Brittany. Upon reaching their destination they were set into the ground in an unnatural manner. Gravity wants stones to fall flat, not point to the heavens. More than three thousand rocks stand in eleven rows. They are known as The Alignments. As with all prehistory, no recorded story exists. How long it took the massive boulders to be set in place is unknown. The task must have lasted generations, massive undertakings of long duration and cultural importance, predating such communal structures a...

Young Helen Frankenthaler Draws a Very Long Chalk Line

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The Parson Weems Tale of Helen Frankenthaler You remember Parson Weems Who placed a hatchet In George’s mitt Helen chopped no cherry tree In Central Park I cannot tell a lie Yet took her box of colored chalk Clutched with baby fingers Drawing one line One continuous colored line All the way home On sidewalks and streets From the front steps of the Metropolitan Museum At Fifth and 82nd To the canopy of her Park avenue home At 74th Young Helen scrawled That single line Point six miles long Did her tiny back ache From bending over to draw? Eight skinny NYC blocks 82nd street along Fifth avenue To 74th where she made a right angle Then two lengthy blocks between Fifth across Madison And ending at Park avenue Would her parents have asked Where her new box Of chalk had gone? Parson Weems might tell us She used one piece of chalk Or the entire box But anyone who has used chalk On a sidewalk would know This tale is chalk poetry .......

Some Dislike My Stories, Others Abhor My Visual Art

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Some Frown Upon My Stories Some dislike my stories Yet they admire my paintings Others look away from my visual art And prefer the words Rarely do others appreciate both The word jumbles and the colored splotches There surely is a numberless gang that Cannot stand anything I do Still, far and away are those countless beings Whom I have shared nothing with While he is appreciative of neither My cat likes being petted But, nobody doesn't like Sara Lee...

Dead Folk Talking About Painting

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Dead Folk Talking About Painting Long dead and recently gone painters wave to me as I walk through galleries in this city each wanting to say something Their messages enter my eyes and I take from them what strikes me and always it goes into my pocket for future reference I look and in a sense listen with my non-hearing parts and each time note that I might or will make my own reply to these old painters I have just ordered rolls of heavy duck canvas to paint upon, unsized, big ass rolls, the same rough canvas used for sailing ships Perhaps one might in this century be painting on some aerospace fiber or on the air itself It might seem so old fashioned to consider applying ideas to unfurled cotton, as if painting on cave walls Yet, I ordered, via the internet, the thickest and widest roll of cotton duck as tactile and substantial as canvas can be and yes, it had been years since I rolled out a painting surface beneath my feet on the concrete wareh...

Drawing Inside the Box: Nothing to See Until You See It

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In the Back of the Local Pottery Barn His latest one-man exhibition was held in the rather large storage room of the local Pottery Barn. Refreshments were served during the opening. Lunchables and boxed wine were available at cost, in the alley, as the Pottery Barn had no liquor license. The Drawings and collages he had created were produced directly upon the kraft cartons circling the room, floor to ceiling. All sides of the cardboard boxes, not only those facing the center of the room, had been decorated, marked, painted, or drawn upon. Perhaps the number of boxes was more than a hundred. No attempt was made to obscure the lettering: MADE IN CHINA. The cartons were not empty, but heavy. Inside these decorated cartons remained the articles, goods, and saleable wares. Black stenciled labels indicated the contents. I picked up several boxes and peeked at the drawings on the underside. The value of each artwork included the cost of the enclosed products, at retail price...

Quiet Time (In the Atelier), Part Two

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This Quiet This is one of those moments when I am surprised at how peaceful the world can be How rare to not open my mouth and fill the air with the sound of my own voice I can spend these rare moments with my brain switched off, as it is when I am in the studio hovering over a blank sheet of paper begging to be touched Waiting patiently for those particular marks that may happen when The world hushes itself and I am looking

Alone in the Studio, Part One

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Laying Down Paint Hard Yes, high energy Like a performance Afterward Feeling drained But smiling inside Laying down colors During the output Of energy, you are Caught up in the flow You are not thinking About doing the dishes Or paying bills

Day Painting Five Days a Week, Loose Pages Gathered

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Loose Pages Gathered by the Housekeeper I probably seem to be hung up on Pollock, right? The more I dive into his work the deeper the dive. That is due to several issues that Pollock created himself. For an artist of his time making fifty paintings in one year was being prolific. In most other years he did not produce many. So, fifty was his peak year of production. If one makes so few it would seem you could line up all fifty artworks and place them in order of creation. Then, once in the sequence of creation one might better appreciate his changes, his thought pattern, his growth, his development, his creative evolution. That should be easy, one would mistakenly think. One looks at Pollock and thinks there is nothing much to learn, it’s only about drips. Ha! Pollock made decisions that makes it difficult to grasp this sequence of creation. He stopped giving his works titles as they were an obstacle to looking at the painting. They blocked the viewer, by suggesting...

No Expected Income, Part Three

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Paint Job The nice part of no Regular paycheck is: No confines No deadlines Sometimes the Only reward Is the way the Colors dry

The Sledgehammer and the Paintbrush

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The Ready Hammer “It takes two to make a painting One to paint The other To hit the painter over the head When it's done.” This quote was supposed to be Or so I thought Attributed to Renoir William Merrit Chase, the American Painter is quoted similarily "It takes two to paint. One to paint, the other to stand By with an axe to kill him Before he spoils it." I’ve never found the Renoir Quote in print It is possibly A fiction Concocted by an art dealer Or curator wishing to claim A role in the creative process The gist of the assertion Is that a painter applies paint And a second entity Genie or genius or Fiction Tells him when to cease What a curious sweet fantasy An artist creates something Out of thin air There is no one nearby No critic, no curator No hammer No hachet No axe No Muse swinging a club I paint alone in the studio A brush in one hand My other fist firmly grasping A rubber mallet

The Bunny and the Squirt Gun: Don't Aim That Thing at Me

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The Bunny and the Squirt Gun He was only four years old, holding grandma’s big puffy hand as they walked through the gigantic, yellow, canvas tent at the annual parish carnival. Outside were rides- a Ferris wheel, a merry go round, and small roller coaster. Oh, do not forget the pony rides. Ah, the aroma of ponies. Inside the tent were games - cake walk, ring toss, balloons and darts, and the game where he would soon win a live black baby bunny: the fishpond. The fishpond was a game of skill for little kids or maybe chance or was not even a game. Grown people never seemed to try their luck. Yet, he found it to be worthwhile. A woman put a bamboo pole into his small hands. He grasped it tightly. He had been fishing before. On the business end of the pole was a fishing line, really just a piece of string with a loop where a hook should be. He knew that real fishhooks could go through your finger and come out the other side covered with blood. This was kid-safe fishing, no d...

Table Skirts - A Visual Survey of the Use of Oilcloth in Paris Street Markets

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Oilcloth, Mainly Striped, Says: LOOK AT ME!........... LOOK AT ME!......... BUY MY FRUIT! Leaving Not So Empty Handed While I only occasionally buy anything at the street market I always walk away with something. However, I am disappointed, this season, to have found none of the Rambo Franc apples. I have not left the market with a Rambo Franc in hand. Only the apples with the big names, but that’s fine. My focus is upon the striped oilcloth of the booths, how it buckles and parts. I like how light sometimes passes through it and how the old, much-used cloth ages and wrinkles, turning darker where it cracks. I love the red and white, the green and white, the blue and white, the yellow and white of the oilcloth. Colors are paired with white. There is never a red and green nor blue and yellow table skirt or apron. The potatoes come and go. Fish laid out on melting ice are as transient as the ice. Apples vary as weeks pass. Only the striped oilcloth is a ...

She Was a French Carrot

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There has Never Been a Deader Carrot Leaving the Parisian Street Market Along Boulevard Raspail I saw On the sidewalk before me This sad squashed vegetable A flattened orange root In an unappetizing state I did not recall if the French gender The carrot feminine or masculine Sans doubt this vegetable is past tense ungendered I took this miserable picture What else was I to do? The word CAROTTE turns out to be feminine I just verified it: La Carotte C'est une carotte morte She is a dead carrot She is the deadest carrot ever Elle est la carotte la plus morte jamais photographiƩe Millet's Gleaners wouldn't give her a second look

Concerning Lampshades and My Issue with Kimonos

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Concerning Lampshades and My Problem with Kimonos While I was born in the town where Thomas Alva Edison grew up and my babysitter had a convoluted connection with Edison by marriage, my seeming fascination with lampshades has nothing to do with lightbulbs. Yet it is interesting to point out that the invention of the lampshade is perhaps the first secondary contrivance to follow the birth of the electric lightbulb. A lampshade is a simple contraption and serves a limited purpose. Edison’s initial version of the lightbulb, was either on or off. It was an uncomplicated choice of very bright light or no light. The lampshade, not an Edison “invention”, modulated that light. Let me leave the subject of the bulb and its brightness and cut to the lampshade and its shape. The usual shape of a lampshade is a truncated cone. A smaller opening on top and a larger diameter ring on the bottom. The smaller ring allowed the heat generated by the bulb to escape. The larger diamet...