Archive for January, 2006

The Wedding of Hassan Fattah Part Two: Meanwhile,…

January 31, 2006


The Wedding of Hassan Fattah
Part Two: Meanwhile, Still in The States…

A perfect day is spent in New York’s fabled Chelsea Hotel; Kara and Vanx wrestle with the Isatnbul question; and other paintings insinuate themselves.

(full series table of contents)

The time between Hassan and Layla’s visit in March and the wedding in July was not wasted. Neither was the money, although it was spent.

You’ll recall that Kara S. and I were the two who rose to the invite to Istanbul. And why not? Neither of us could afford it and terrorists were blowing up banks there. On my end, the decision was even more complicated. Would Maureen and I leave the kids behind and go to Istanbul, or would I trot off alone with my little backpack? Maureen didn’t like either of these ideas very much—the exploding banks and our imploding bank account made her a little uncomfortable. I pitched her the Vanx-goes-solo trip, promising I would work very hard there making sketches to paint from when I got home. (That nearly blew it for me.) What put me in the catbird seat, I think, was the beaming face of Hassan, which will forever mesmerize Maureen. She met him once for about ten minutes and was permanently charmed. She would let me go for his sake (and, she’d have to admit, for my sake as well). Cool, huh?

Too cool, maybe. And how do I repay her? By spending a weekend in May at the Chelsea Hotel in New York City with Kara and our friend Nancy. Hey, I was painting them! Maureen understood completely!

She also knew that the Chelsea is a kind of touchstone for me—my old kick-about J.T. Gibson and I lived there for several months in 1981, shortly after that whole Sid and Nancy scene. I had been having a good enough year in the art business in 2004 to cover the cost of the room, and I needed a “studio” for a project. A little extravagant, but you only live once—that was my motto in 2004.

The project was a double portrait of Kara and Nancy. A portrait of friends. The bond between them was obvious to me, having worked with them for several years. Kara, somewhat older than Nancy and a more experienced journalist, is a kind of mentor to her friend, and Nancy’s wit, intelligence, and wry cynicism are perfectly in sync with Kara’s. Of course, female chumship, especially the really close kind, is inaccessible and more or less incomprehensible to men. But I’d had it in my mind for years to plumb such friendships in a series of double portraits. And I was calling “go-time.”

The Chelsea exists partly for the kind of Saturday I had planned with Kara and Nancy. It was built in the 1880s by a New Orleans financier/impresario as a place for musicians to live and practice. The walls are famously thick. When I lived there with J.T., Virgil Thompson inhabited the entire tenth floor. We used to ride the elevator with him. I can’t think of many early 20th century writers that didn’t live there or stay the weekend. And the artists—John Sloan comes to mind immediately. There is a plaque in front of the place commemorating the fact that Arthur C. Clarke wrote 2001: A Space Odyssey in that grand old building with its wrought iron stair case and art-strewn halls and stair well. For years, resident artists paid their rent with their work.

For a great idea of what the hotel is like, rent the movie Chelsea Walls. As a film, it’s kind of a mess, but as a love song to a hotel, it’s great. There is one haunting shot that I love of the manager and head desk clerk, who have been there forever. Nicole Burdette wrote and Ethan Hawk directed the film. It features Uma Thurman, Kris Kristofferson, Tuesday Weld, Little Jimmy Scott, other big names, and Wilco as the club band in the bar in the basement—Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy composed the music.

I checked into the Chelsea on Friday afternoon and prepared the room as a studio early Saturday morning, putting down tarps and covering things with newspaper. Kara and Nancy were due at about 9:30 am. At about 8:30, I realized I had no yellow ochre in my sack of 150 ml tubes of paint. I hopped a cab to Utrecht Art Supplies on 4th avenue, a 10-minute ride. I ran in to buy the paint, asking the driver to wait for me—you don’t see that famous street full of yellow NYC cabs on 4th Ave and 12th Street at 9:00 a.m. on a Saturday.

I made it back in time, and the models showed shortly afterward. I set up an easel in front of the big armchair by the window. Nancy, dressed in a black skirt and green shirt, sat in the chair. Kara, in jeans and a white blouse, sat on the arm. Both had their hair tied up and a bit tousled. As I started, I put Beethoven’s Symphony No 1 on my CD player and began mixing colors.

We talked about work, about the hotel. And then we discussed Istanbul. Kara was iffy. At one point she and I were discussing it during a short morning break in the ancient hotel elevator. It got stuck for a few minutes—a little anxiety.

Travel. It’s kind of pathetic, really. I have been all over Europe, and Kara tours Latin America constantly (she speaks very good Spanish and Portuguese for a native Cape Codder). But nearly all such travel has been on The Man’s dime. Travel, in fact, is the only glamour to our jobs. An international pharmaceutical chemicals convention in Amsterdam? Bam—I get a weekend on the Prinsengracht! When it comes to underwriting our own trips, however, we’re usually hoping to be able to re-up our Metrocards. Well, Kara was not sure about getting the time off and wasn’t sure she could afford it. I told her that it was totally reckless of me, but that I was going.

I blocked out the canvas with a palate knife until lunch, at which time I dismissed the models for an hour and a half. Outside, there was a street fair going on. I ate a falafel on the front steps of the El Quijote, a great Spanish restaurant next door to the hotel and connected to the lobby. At one point, I saw Kara and Nancy in the crowd looking at me. I’m kind of in my own world when I’m in the middle of a painting. They gave me a little space (and after a morning of being told how to sit by some paint-crusted guy who keeps cursing at himself, they were probably happy to do so).

Back in the studio, we were up to Symphony No 5. As I warmed up the colors, I listen to the models laugh at how Kara’s hand in its lunch-break-state on the canvas looked like a lobster claw. We kept the door to the room open for most of the time. The woman in the room next door, a long-haul resident, poked her head in once and left. We were busy, and it was just another art scene at the Chelsea.

I had a great afternoon as the painting fell together. I had Kara and Nancy in a good place on the canvas as I started scraping in the rooftops outside the window. The ladies were great to work with, and they did a lot of work. Nancy stayed awake in the comfortable chair. Kara ballanced for hours on the arm. Like our buddy Hassan, Kara has a wonderful level of interest in what people do, and I think she was really interested in the whole painting thing. Much the same can be said of Nancy. Both of them liked my paint-slopped shoes. I was honored that they thought them more legit than the color-smudged schmatas one sees walking around Chelsea in flagrant art pretense. Those shoes really are legit in that sense—I wouldn’t be caught dead wearing them in public.

Here’s magic: I ended up putting the final marks on the canvas during the Ode to Joy at the end of Symphony No. 9 with late afternoon sun slanting across the rooftops and through the window. Freude, Schoner Gotterfunken indeed! Fin!

Kara and Nancy helped me bail up the tarps and waited in the lobby for Miller Time at the El Quixote. I popped a Wilco CD in the player and showered, doing a little victory dance. It would have been a rather daunting drag if, after “renting” this “studio” and kidnapping my friends, the painting flopped. It didn’t! Nancy stares directly from the canvas, no-nonsense, a bit reserved with her arms and legs crossed. Kara, more relaxed, stares off to the side. She is more distracted. Her back is to Nancy. In fact, she is very distracted. They are in their own thoughts, yet comfortable together, Kara giving Nancy the chair. A kind of deference. A dual portrait. Friends.

A little later, over beers at the El Quijote and more at the club under the hotel (no Wilco, damn it), I started to get the feeling that Kara would opt out of Istanbul. This, of course, raised my level of anxiety about going. Then Kara left. Nancy and I went to the movies—Coffee and Cigarettes by Jim Jarmusch. I fell asleep in the theater.

It was a perfect day. Well, almost perfect. About two months after our session, Utrecht opened a second NYC store–right across the street from the hotel! Skipping that hectic cab ride to 4th Avenue would have made it completely perfect. But, as any Persian rug will attest, nothing’s perfect.

Tochter aus Elysium,
Vanx

__________________

Up Next: I arrive in Istanbul… But where the Hell is Hassan?

__________

Meanwhile, down in the basementTwo guys on the groom’s side:


Hassan’s uncle (left) andfather
(click to enlarge /see sketch)

___________
Photos
Famously Thick: The Chelsea Hotel
Lobby of the Chelsea Hotel: Oil on canvas, 2004
Another Perfect Day: John Sloan and his wife at the Chelsea
Chelsea Walls: The stairwell gallery
Too Legit: Das gefussen schmatas
Lunch!: Lobster Claw
Kara and Nancy at the Chelsea Hotel: Oil on canvas, 2004
Finish Line: Our models await beer call in the fabulous lobby. Next stop, El Quijote, Coffee, and Cigarettes.
(all photos Verb-Ops, except the Sloans–John Sloan Manuscript Collection-Delaware Art Museum)

The Hermit A Friday New York Times article on th…

January 29, 2006


The Hermit

A Friday New York Times article on the Cezanne exhibit at the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. is illustrated with a photo that recently came to light. Taken by Gertrude Osthaus, wife of the museum director Karl Ernst Osthaus, it shows the notorious Hermit of Aix en Provence as host, pulling up a chair for a guest.

This rare shot is a great pendant to another famous photo, which I can’t get my hands or browser on at the moment. It shows Cezanne walking out to the “motif,” as he called it–to some desired vista in the chalky, pine-studded hills around the Bay of Marseilles. In that photo, he has his gear on his back. He looks the curmudgeon, stalking away from the camera. In this “new” photo, he is still less-than-beaming. Perhaps the southern sun is in his eyes. He wears his signature soft brimmed hat, stepping from the door of his studio in Les Lauves in 1906. What a find. Compare it to his late self portraits!

And I must say that I can always count on the Times critics to bring out the curmudgeon in me. Here is Roberta Smith’s summation: “Cezanne’s work reminds us that a bond with the natural world is often an essential aspect of great art, regardless of style. Even more valuable, his achievement confirms that artists must change painting in a basic, physical way to be truly innovative.”

Well, I shouldn’t pick on Smith. Her’s is really the New York School’s take things, in which style and innovation trump the real purpose of art—creativity and self expression. I’m sure that a 19th century Parisian version of this kind of thinking was part of what that kept Cezanne down by the bay. Painters need no reassurance that the feeling they have before nature is what painting is all about. If a painter innovates, that’s great. That usually means he or she feels something deep and personal and manages to express it in his or her own voice. It’s not about technique. It’s not about paint. Forget about that pressure to “shock” with “the new.” Try, instead, to communicate feeling.

The rest of Smith’s review is…ah, it’s pretty good. She goes into Cezanne’s connection to the landscape, which is the main thing that kept Cezanne in Provence. He’s evocation of the region did change art and set the stage for the Modernists. And what an ideal life he led there. That studio in the crags. All that wonderful still life paraphernalia inside. He would use those much-loved items to design his own in-door landscapes in still life.

And what a way to go. Cezanne basically died with his boots on, collapsing at the motif, as Smith reminds us, a few months after the newly-found photo was taken. He lay in the rain for several hours until someone brought him home in a laundry wagon. He died on October 23, 1906 in Aix.

I’m going to devise a reason to have to visit the day-job home office in D.C. soon so I can get to the exhibit.

Curmudgeonly,
Vanx

Speak Ghost…. Tarzan on the Moon This one goe…

January 29, 2006


Speak Ghost….
Tarzan on the Moon

This one goes out, by request, to Chimpo in Chatham [see comment one on previous post: ed]




Graphic novella by Robert “Roger” Pitcher, black magic marker on pilfered notebook, 1981. This is up for us, but please enjoy.

Bon Voyage, Jungle Goon~ Vanx

Guy from Jersey Walks Into a Comedy Club in Manha…

January 28, 2006


Guy from Jersey Walks Into a Comedy Club in Manhattan..

Or, how to paint a garage in Chatham when you’re dead

Last night Roger Pitcher debuted his stand-up act at Stand-Up New York.

To tell you the truth, Roger and his friends were a little on edge. A stand-up routine implies a whole lot of structure. And Roger, one of the most spontaneously funny people I know, can turn off in structured situations. Like a lot of funny people, he has a hard time when asked to “be funny now,” or to “be funny for five minutes at 7:15 pm on Friday. “

Going into the club, seeing that stage and that crowd and that microphone, I thought what I knew Roger was thinking…this could go either way. In public. How exciting!

Well, it went the good way big time. He was one in a show of twelve comedians, some seasoned, others, like Roger, taking their first shot. And the crowd (including the other performers) loved him. Not that I’m really surprised.

Roger, who’s done voice-over, delivered somewhere in a range between Jack Nicholson and Steven Wright, steering clear of the latter’s deadpan. His five minutes routine, a stream of hilarious observations about living in “one of the poor houses” in super-affluent Chatham, N.J., had our pal Larry Fix and me howling, wiping tears from our eyes with the beach towels we brought along just in case.

Highlight one: “I got a contractor’s estimate for painting my garage. $12,000. If I’m going to pay $12,000 to get my garage painted, I want it painted by Picasso. I know he’s dead. Just strap his remains to Derek Jeter.”

Highlight two: The annual Salute to Money at the Short Hills Mall. It includes a children’s costume pageant called, The Parade of Currency. “The Euro looked a little trashy.”

Most of the acts were pretty good. Everyone had a kind of shtick or angle–fat guy, single mom, black guy, epileptic gay guy, neurotic opera singer. I must say “Cynical Schmemberg in an Affluent New Jersey Suburb” was easier for me to relate to than a lot of the others (though one guy did a good run on teenage daughters).

So, our boy was in the big league, and he shone. You didn’t have to be there, but you should try to be next time–you’ll be alerted.

I knew him when–
Vanx

Editor’s note: Of the group, Roger is one of only two that didn’t work blue. As such, he and the other guy had to work harder, and it paid off.

The Wedding of Hassan Fattah Part One: Stateside …

January 27, 2006


The Wedding of Hassan Fattah
Part One: Stateside

In which we start the last painting, rehash the invitation to Istanbul, and meet Hassan Fattah

(full series table of contents)

Tonight, I started the last painting of the Istanbul series. And it’s high time, given that I exhibited the series last July. Well, this last painting is kind of special—if it works out right, it will stand apart from the others. (I’ll admit I’ve been a little intimidated by this one, and that’s why I held off.) I am crossing my cadmium-smeared fingers.

It is titled, simply, “The Wedding of Hassan Fattah.”

Hassan is a very good friend of mine, and I don’t mind bragging about him at all! He’s a reporter for the New York Times, currently based in Dubai. Years ago, he and I wrote about paint and glue for a chemical industry publication in New York. Last Friday, he wrote the article in the Times about Osama Bin-Laden’s latest recorded message. There was Hassan’s by-line right up there in the Amen Corner on page one, just like on the day that Rafiq al-Hariri was assassinated in Beirut. (Last Friday I think I was writing about monoclonal antibodies–they kicked me up to drugs).

Anyway…we were talking about paint. I’m painting a picture from a sketch I made at his wedding two summers ago in Istanbul. “The Wedding of Hassan Fattah”… to Layla.

I met Layla only once prior to the wedding, and I haven’t seen her since those five days in Istanbul, during which time she was busy being the bride at her wedding. She is lovely, brilliant, serious, and, to me, still a little mysterious. I learned in Istanbul that Layla has a battery of fabulous friends and family. As does Hassan.

Hassan and Layla, in fact, have similar back-stories. Both are Iraqi. Both of their families got out of Iraq when Saddam Hussein came to power in the 60’s, their parents being the kind of well-educated professionals that make a guy like Saddam squeamish and nasty. Hassan’s family went to California, Layla’s family went to England.

The wedding invitation

It arrived via e-mail in early March, 2004–about a year after Hassan’s New York friends saw him off to the Arab Peninsula in the immediate run-up to the war. He had landed a job working for the Associated Press in the Gaza Strip—Hassan, a devout Muslim, speaks Arabic languages fluently, and had been to the region on and off for months working on a documentary about Egypt for PBS. AP eagerly snapped him up. This job, it turned out, put him in an ideal position to go back to Baghdad, his birthplace, as soon as it was possible.

Baghdad–a place he hadn’t seen since he left it at something like the age of four.

By about the time President Bush was on deck under the Mission Accomplished banner, Hassan was back in Baghdad. There, he did an amazing thing. He launched a newspaper called Iraq Today, an English language publication written by Iraqis. It was not politically aligned. It was not pro-Coalition-of-the-Willing. It was an independent newspaper covering a city and country at war. He was doing an incredibly brave thing. He became a talking head on CNN. He befriended Thomas L. Friedman at the Times, who wrote about him. He was arrested by nervous young Marines more than once for showing up late to press conferences (just like in his paint and glue days) with a name like Hassan Fattah. He had the bag on his head. He received no apologies from the Coalition of the Willing.

And he invited me to his wedding in Istanbul! What was I gonna do, say no?

Hassan brought Layla to New York in March of 2004, right before Fallujah hit the front page stateside. Right before Abu Gharib. We had dinner at a Moroccan restaurant with crimson plaster walls near the Bowery. We were with our old colleagues Kara Sissell and Robert Westervelet. Hassan invited other friends (when you are with Hassan, you meet people–wait until we get to Turkey!). We ate great food and smoked a Hookah in flagrant violation of NYC smoking laws. Apple flavored.

Mmmmmm….Istanbul. Kara said she was in. So did I.

At dinner that night, I asked Hassan a version of the obvious question—how Hellish is it in Baghdad? Well, he told me, it was not nearly as Hellish as it is in the Gaza Strip. In Iraq, there was hope, said Hassan, despite an unpopular occupation in March 2004 and an actual hard-action war. The monster was gone. In Gaza, however, there was hopelessness, poverty, and the constant threat of terror and violence. I thought about that. It isn’t the level of actual gun-firing warfare that matters most. It’s the level of hope that makes the difference.

And Hassan was just elated to be in Baghdad, living with friends and family, spending his evenings in a garden, talking about news, politics, and the future. About life. Again, he got me thinking. Home—a vaguely remembered place, in his case, though I’m sure his parents kept it alive in the minds of Hassan and his four older brothers. It’s a powerful thing. The hook to the Wizard of Oz, as I recall.

Well, Hassan went back to Baghdad and Layla to England. Then things got bad in Baghdad. Very bad. Hassan had to close down the paper. He had to get in a car and not stop driving until he got to Turkey. He can’t go back to Baghdad, where certain individuals have a problem with a free press.

There are a lot of details—many I don’t feel I can share. I just, again, want to emphasize what a brave and fascinating guy Hassan is. And what a great journalist. His empathy is Chaplain-like. His interest in others is almost pathological. So is his tendency to be talking to three people–on a cell phone, a laptop, and in the flesh–at any given moment, usually with severe technical difficulties on the cell phone and computer connections, which heightens the Chaplain effect. He is compelled to ask a lot of questions in a way that makes you want to answer. All of these are the hallmarks of a great journalists. He’d be at the Times even if he didn’t have the deep knowledge and language skills needed to make connections and cover the news in that rather newsy part of the world. He even has what it takes to put up with the people at the Times. He’s smart and good-natured. For God’s sake, look at this guy!

That’s Hassan. You’re gonna love him. Believe me. Tonight I started painting him, Layla, the Imam, and Layla’s dad. (Hey, listen, I’m not in the flattery business. Let’s get that straight!).

Well, it’s a good start—I am trying to keep in tune with the spontaneity of a lightning sketch in a notebook done in the back of a small banquet room at the Swissotel on the Bosphorous River in a failed attempt not to draw attention to myself. I’m using the palate knife and, out of necessity, painting in what my friend Andrey calls “carpet method” in his thick Russian accent. By this he means working out from small areas, loom-like, rather than working the whole canvas at once as you are taught to at the finer schools–(those would be the schools where you have more than an hour or two to paint at any one time.) Nothing wrong with the carpet method, as long as you get a carpet in the end. Andrey agrees, and I’ve seen him do it!

We’re off!
Vanx
_______

Coming Soon:

Bachelor’s party
at the
Galatasaray Hamami




Fabulous Wedding
Guests on the
Bosphorus River
Reception Cruise


The world’s
very worst
ice cream




The Exhibit at
the Cornelia Street
Cafe in New York

____________________________
Main Story Photos
In Country: Hassan Fattah in the Gaza Strip
Meet Layla: Hassan and Layla in the Moroccan restaurant in NYC, March 2004
Lightnin’: Wedding sketch
Carpet Style: Bride and groom in the basement
Swissotel: “Vanxy, my friend, please join me in Istanbul. It’s very beautiful…”

Click here for an article on four journalists in Baghdad, including Hassan, written in 2004.

Unopened Bottle– Blamelessly keep on ..sleeping…

January 26, 2006


Unopened Bottle–
Blamelessly keep on
..sleeping
Through dark winter
..rain



Photo by Rose at The Nutmeg Grater

Welcome to Mood-Swing Wednesday! ____________ K…

January 25, 2006


Welcome to Mood-Swing Wednesday!
____________

Kind of Red
.
As it turns out…
The World is Slightly Sharp!


(Photo: WFMU, Jersey City)

Coin d’Atelier Kind of Orange (ph…

January 25, 2006

Coin d’Atelier
Kind of Orange

(photo by Verb-Ops)

Van Gogh, Whitman, and Darwin in New York I, t…

January 22, 2006


Van Gogh, Whitman,
and Darwin in New York

I, too, minister a deity
–Walt Whitman

New York City recently hosted a grand convergence—simultaneous exhibits on three 19th Century men who still have a profound effect on how we perceive nature, God, and ourselves. Still running at the American Museum of Natural History, we have “Darwin” through May 29. “Vincent Van Gogh: The Drawings” wrapped up on December 31 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and “‘I Am With You’: Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass” closed on January 8 at the main branch of the New York Public Library. In December, you could have seen all three.

Vincent Van Gogh, Walt Whitman, and Charles Darwin. Two artists and a scientist. A Dutchman, an American, and an Englishman. They were very different people in many ways. They never met. Van Gogh no doubt read Whitman, though, and he and Whitman probably read Darwin.

They were also similar in very important ways. All three were outsiders who, by following their own path, changed and improved their disciplines. They absorbed nature. Their achievements are such that anyone with an eighth grade education knows them, yet their works are a constant playground for discovery. They set the highest of standards. And all three, luckily, wrote incessantly about themselves and their work. I will go easy on the bios here, given most folks know them and know where to get them.

So, let’s play December and visit all three exhibits, starting on the upper East side…

“Drawing is the Root of Everything”
Vincent Van Gogh

The Van Gogh exhibit is a chronological survey that begins with his earliest student drawings and shifts quickly into his more distinctive work. It opens with “The Entrance to the Pawn Bank,” a city street scene done when he began his formal studies. This picture is an attempt on Vincent’s part to render a setting in “correct scale and proportion” using a perspective frame that organized his view while sketching into a boxed grid. It is fastidiously and efficiently executed. Student work: A.

He went on to follow the student manual, picking more and more desolate scenes to draw, always exercising the rules of perspective, doing very competent academic work. His touch is unremarkable. Somewhat light.

Soon things changed. Half way through the first room of displays, we come to the drawings he did when he lived with a prostitute, Sien Hoornik, and her five-year-old daughter. There is a drawing of the girl, a portrait that he obviously prized. He framed it in a wide black charcoal line going around the edge. We see angular tension in the figure. It is a drawing done from the eye with emotion, freed from the mechanical, cerebral interference of academic perspective. It conveys poverty and humanity. Van Gogh is finding himself—his most important discovery as an artist.

Before long, the dark, soulful portrait studies of the Dutch farm families start to pile up leading to his early masterpiece, The Potato Eaters. These are “clumsy,” lumpen figures in portraits that changed art. Steeped in Rembrandt, they introduce the psychological content that set the stage for Egon Schiele, Edvard Munch, and many others. Van Gogh is also the direct forebear to the Fauves, including Matisse, Braque, and arguably Picasso.

Van Gogh actively sought the company of the great artists that were convening in Paris where his supportive brother, Theo, was an art dealer. From what we know, Vincent got a lot of help from the likes of Pissarro, the generous dean of the impressionists. He befriended pointillists and experimented in their métier. We all know about the Gauguin experiment in Arles. Still Van Gogh followed his own course, mostly alone in nature, working incessantly.

He is best known for his paintings, but he often wrote in his letters of the primacy of drawing. Sometimes he mentioned its healing, restorative powers. The level of psychological tension in Van Gogh’s work is not surprising, given his own psychological problems, about which there is much speculation—there are people that have gone so far as to analyze how he rendered clouds in given periods in order to track his state of mind. He claimed, however, that drawing calmed him like nothing else. Anyone who draws can relate. It is a primal human instinct to stand before nature and reproduce our experience in drawing. When we do it, we are immersed into an enormous pool of timeless well-being that will make us miss our next appointment. I know of no greater spiritual immersion. It is truly prayer-like.

And it was obviously vital to Van Gogh’s craft. The exhibit, which includes some paintings, shows that a preparatory sketch exists for nearly all of Van Gogh’s major paintings. They are expertly and uniquely executed with fast flowing lines and nervous stippling, the latter a remnant of his pointillist experiments. None but the earliest are encumbered with an academic eye to perspective. The eye, in fact, seems to have circumvented the brain in guiding the hand across the paper.

And look at his paintings. The primary element is the drawing. He worked large canvases with small brushes, drawing as he painted. The drawing can outshines the color. But what shines most is his soul–his spirit, which, to paraphrase Whitman, was brother to God’s spirit.

There were many famous crises of faith in the 19th Century, and Van Gogh had his. He was not conventionally devout. His rebellion against his father, a Dutch Protestant minister who rejected his son’s Christian radicalism, was a rebellion against the Church. But Van Gogh internalized Christianity. His paintings have overt and personal Christian symbols, such as the sower and the sun in the painting at the top. He certainly saw God in nature and he practiced charity to a fault.*

Here is a stretch from a letter to Theo: “I think that everything that is really good and beautiful, the inner, moral, spiritual and sublime beauty in men and their works, comes from God, and everything that is bad and evil in the works of men and in men is not from God, and God does not approve of it. But I cannot help thinking that the best way of knowing God is to love many things. Love this friend, this person, this thing, whatever you like, and you will be on the right road to understanding Him better, that is what I keep telling myself. “ This was written in 1880, when he was just starting to draw and paint. His paintings indicate to me that this basic thought, which has nothing to do with an established Church, stayed with him.

I will not add to the speculation as to why Van Gogh killed himself, other than to note that this man, so obviously filled with love for mankind, working as a preacher, a teacher, and an artist, was impossible to deal with and an enormous handful to anyone that made the effort to be his friend. He was hard on himself and others. Van Gogh was overwhelmed by both society and nature. His work is his testimony, his confession. As an artist, he never sought to dissect and explain nature. He was compelled, instead, to report its effect on him, how it made him feel, where in it he found himself.

He left us the legacy of his solitary effort to reach the sublime with no certainty that the work would receive the appropriate regard, or that anyone would care about it at all.

We have Theo to thank.

“I resist anything better than my own diversity”
Walt Whitman

All right. Let’s swing around the park on the way to Darwin on the Upper West Side. But let’s swing wide south and stop first at the Library on 42nd Street for Whitman.

The Whitman exhibit is in a small room off of the lobby. It is a chapel of relics—manuscripts, photographs, and other documents related to the publication of Leaves of Grass. There are a few anecdotes about his stellar self-promotion, and a wonderful description of his visit to an insane asylum where he is described as making friends with doctors and patients in such a way that it is not clear whether he made any distinction between the two at all. This reminds me of Van Gogh in the poor Belgian coal mining towns, living with a prostitute in Holland, drinking with the Impressionists in Paris. It even reminds me of Darwin with Jenny the Orangutan in the London Zoo. Open-heartedness that paves the way for Ginsberg.

I haven’t much more to write about the exhibit. Whitman speaks for himself. Here is a poem from Children of Adam , Book II of Leaves of Grass.

One Hour to Madness and Joy

One hour to madness and joy! O furious! O confine me not!
(What is this that frees me so in storms?
What do my shouts amid lightnings and raging winds mean?)

O to drink the mystic deliria deeper than any other man!
O savage and tender achings! (I bequeath them to you my children,
I tell them to you, for reasons, O bridegroom and bride.)

O to be yielded to you whoever you are, and you to be yielded to me
in defiance of the world!
O to return to Paradise! O bashful and feminine!
O to draw you to me, to plant on you for the first time the lips of
a determin’d man.


O the puzzle, the thrice-tied knot, the deep and dark pool, all
untied and illumin’d!

O to speed where there is space enough and air enough at last!
To be absolv’d from previous ties and conventions, I from mine and
you from yours!

To find a new unthought-of nonchalance with the best of Nature!
To have the gag remov’d from one’s mouth!
To have the feeling to-day or any day I am sufficient as I am.

O something unprov’d! something in a trance!
To escape utterly from others’ anchors and holds!
To drive free! to love free! to dash reckless and dangerous!
To court destruction with taunts, with invitations!

To ascend, to leap to the heavens of the love indicated to me!
To rise thither with my inebriate soul!
To be lost if it must be so!

To feed the remainder of life with one hour of fullness and freedom!
With one brief hour of madness and joy.

To be lost if it must be so….

OK, let’s get a cab up to the Museum of Natural History and check out Darwin. And when we get there, don’t dare anyone mention Adam!

“Disbelief crept over me at a very slow rate”
Charles Darwin

Darwin might be the best known of the city’s three December guests of honor. The attack on his theory of natural selection has hardly let up since the publication of On the Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection (or The Preservatoin of the Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life) in 1859. It’s kept him in the news for over about 150 years. One of the really brilliant things at the Darwin exhibit, by the way, is that it simply ignores the current ruckus over intelligent design. It is a straightforward survey of his life and work that leaves appropriate room for questions.

And there are questions—let me do a flashback. It sets the stage for my take on Darwin at the Museum

In 2003,I attended a black tie dinner in New York. The guest speaker was Dr. Benjamin Carson, a surgeon renowned for his track record in operating on conjoined twins. Carson’s back-story is interesting. He is an African American who grew up in the inner city, succeeding against rather steep odds along the way.

He spoke, in part, about a crisis in science. A crisis of faith. He challenged the nonchalant agnosticism and atheism that holds sway in a climate where a scientist is as likely to express personal religious faith as a U.S. military officer would be to contradict Donald Rumsfeld. He talked about his own faith. And he talked about Darwin, expressing some astonishment that the man, whose theory is held by many, including many scientists, to be a kind of religious belief system, had a crisis of faith when his daughter died at the age of 10. I thought it was a tough-minded talk, and I liked that it challenged the audience. But not until I heard of award-winning scientists in attendance chastising their hosts for allowing this man to “speak to a serious audience of scientists” did I decide it was my second favorite black tie event of all time.

Flash forward.

It’s a wonderful exhibit. Like most things presented at the Museum of Natural History, it targets a young audience. There are a lot of middle school students and enthusiastic teachers. The atmosphere is vibrant—everyone is absorbed by the displays of animals, tools, and souvenirs from Darwin’s magnificent world travels. Probably the best exhibit I’ve seen at this museum.

The stage is set early on with a description of 19th Century ideas about man and nature. The century was one in which knowledge was organized, compartmentalized, classified, and systematized. This resulted in tremendous tools for understanding–the periodic table of the elements, Kirchel’s Motzart catalog. In this environment, the notion that life on earth evolved from a common ancestor was fairly widely held by naturalists who collected and classified specimens of plant and animal life. Jean Baptiste Lamarck was among those espousing a theory of evolution. So was Darwin’s grandfather. The exhibit makes clear that Darwin did not come up, as is widely believed, with the concept of evolution–some of the basic tenants of evolution harkens back to Plato. His accomplishment was the formulation of a plausible theory of how evolution works—the concept of natural selection by survival of the fittest.

The exhibit also explains that in Darwin’s time, man was not considered “part of nature,” that man was not considered an animal. Darwin, we are led to believe, cleared this up for us.

We are told that Darwin—a nephew of Josiah Wedgewood on his mother’s side–was an indifferent student who nonetheless collected natural specimens, beetles especially, with near obsession. He never tired of studying details. He hated the stifling discipline of his boarding school, and his father is said to have accused him of caring, “for nothing but shooting, dogs, and rat catching.” He predicting that the boy would disgrace the family. Darwin’s boyhood was very much like the boyhoods of Van Gogh and Whitman. (Whitman, who was sent to a schoolhouse in Brooklyn in which all grades were taught by one teacher, used to skip out to go to lectures in Manhattan).

Darwin’s study of evolution was inspired largely by the Reverend Thomas Malthus, a social theorist of the utmost pessimism. Malthus detailed future food shortages and a world where only the strongest survive. Darwin’s theory of natural selection is deeply routed in Malthus, whose thinking generally latched onto the Victorian mind quite voraciously. In a way, survival of the fittest makes Darwin’s work rather straightforwardly Malthusian. Darwin called his theory an application of the doctrines of Malthus in an area without the complicating factor of human intelligence (from Wikipedia entry on Malthus-ed.). If I understand this, I disagree—like all scientific theory, natural selection is a triumph of invention, quite a cerebral affair.

Of course, Darwin did reams of original research, sailing around the world on the HMS Beagle. His book, The Voyage of The Beagle, can be opened at any page and enthrall with its 19th century-style anthropological accounts of “native peoples” and its wonderful depictions of nature. (The seed of an idea for February’s Fun With Literature just hit the garden—watch this space. ed). His collecting and note-taking achieved heroic proportions. This was act one his great work.

Act two took place after he debarked in London, the center of the 19th century universe. His London years were “feverishly creative,” according to signage at the museum. Darwin composed his theory, and sat on it, knowing only too well how it would offend society at large, specifically the Church. [Quite a divergence from Van Gogh and Whitman, who sat on very little and didn't mind stirring things up.] Not until it was apparent that Alfred Russell Wallace was about to publish a similar theory did Darwin move to publish On the Origin of Species.

Throughout the exhibit are displays such as a bat wing shown in comparison to a human hand. There are giant sloth models, and a model of an armadillo not much smaller that the cab that drove us to the museum. One of the quirkier displays is a drawing by his son, Francis, included in the exhibit as a peon to human imagination. It is done on the back of a discarded sheet of Darwin’s manuscript paper.

At one point we are told about how Darwin systematically worked out the answer to the question of whether to marry, listing pros and cons and coming down finally on the side of “a nice wife on a sofa.” (It must be said that Van Gogh and Whitman were a little more sensitive to any protofeminists that may have been around. And those guys fell in love without making lists–they wrote poems and proposed to strangers in supermarkets.)

Then we come to the stuff that Carson talked about. The death of Darwin’s daughter of tuberculosis at the age of 10 and Darwin’s loss of faith. It is described how Darwin’s wife could not reconcile her ability to visualize her daughter’s soul in heaven with her husband’s absolute black-out on an afterlife.

Of course, the fix was in long before his daughter was born. Darwin, like most scientists of his day, believed in a Designer up until he arrived at his breakthrough on natural selection. An essay in today’s New York Times Book Review by Judith Shulevitz** describes how this led him to a kind of Deiism, belief in a non-meddling “impersonal” God. After his daughter’s death, he became an agnostic–an agnostic whose spiritual jouney began with a fascination with nature informed by an enthusiasm for the pessimist Malthus.

I found myself wondering as I left the museum about the same thing that baffled Carson. How can Darwin, a man so immersed in nature, with such insight and hands-on experience with the mechanics of life, be left destitute—spiritually wiped out—by the death of his daughter? Massive grief and permanent sorrow, of course, but a rejection of the notion of higher spiritual order? He liked lists—didn’t statistics on child mortality in the 19th century cross his desk at any point prior to his daughter’s death? Yes, it is a personal matter, but we are all involved because Darwin’s thinking on spiritual matters has informed the thinking of scientists and the public at large. Perhaps Carson has some insight here. He noted that Darwin tried diligently to cure his daughter, taking her to spas, keeping detailed records on her condition. This is also mentioned at the museum. When Darwin is shown the inevitable limits to the rationalist’s control over nature, he has a spiritual hissy-fit. It’s hubris.

Ultimately, I can’t help seeing Darwin’s crisis of faith as born of a blind side to the part of nature that can’t be measured–the world that faces down the failed promise of better-living-through-chemistry. His intellectual journey strikes a hard blow to that subjugation to the unknown and the sublime that inspired Plato and Aquinas–to that surrendering awe before nature that is so central to Van Gogh and Whitman.

Ironically, as I’ve mentioned, Darwin is a kind of priest in science and in secular society. The best illustration of this is the tailgate fish wars. A few years after evangelical Christians put the little silver fish-shaped loops on their cars, the cheeky secularists put on similar fish that had evolved legs and letters, spelling Darwin. The counter attack, brilliantly ironic, is the Christian fish coming back bigger and swallowing the Darwin fish—survival of the fittest! Is Darwin hoist by his own petard? The silliness of all this reminds me that evolution by natural selection and religious faith are not mutually exclusive. Indeed, scientists with a healthy attitude toward Darwin treat his work as scientific theory. An elegant theory that has withstood all scientific challenges–but one that needs not compete with religious philosophy. Shulevitz reminds us of how Jay Gould puts it—science and religion are “non-overlapping magisteria.”

Finally, I’m left wondering about survival of the fittest in the broader social and political sense in which it is constatly applied. Isn’t it strange that in the cases of Darwin, Van Gogh, and Whitman, we have individuals that basically rejected the stricutres and mores of society at large, set off on their own to experience the world, and returned to successfully change the course of science, art, and society? It is telling, really, given the Malthusian/Darwinian worldview of western society, that the most innovative minds—indeed Darwin himself—existed on the perifery of mainstream society. Strength not in numbers, it seems, but in genius.

Let’s head back across the Hudson to New Jersey. Through Manhattan, Whitman’s landscape. The greatest city in the most powerful country in the world–the center of the 20th century universe with little credible challenge going into the 21st. It is still a great country, despite its current leadership. And it throws its weight around quite a bit. Survival at the top through brute strength? At this point, perhaps. But it wasn’t always that way. If, in fact, there was anything like survival of the physically fittest in the 18th century, London would still be the center of the universe.

I’ll end with the following words written to Thomas Jefferson by John Page in a letter dated July 20, 1776:

“We know the Race is not to the Swift nor the Battle to the Strong. Do you not think an Angel rides in the Whirlwind and directs this Storm?”***

Regards,
Vanx
_______________________
* I noticed a book on Amazon, Eternity’s Gate: The Spiritual Vision of Vincent Van Gogh, that deals with this issue. It is described as rather counter to the obviously flawed understanding that Van Gogh rejected God.

** Shulevitz writes an essay commenting on two new books, Evolution vs Creationism by Eugenie C Scott, and The Evolution-Creation Struggle, by Michael Ruse. Must be something in the air!

*** I saw Munich Saturday night. One of the characters recites a verse that Page used in his letter to Jefferson: “We know the race is not to the swift nor the battle to the strong. Time and change happen to them all.”
_______
Illustrations, top to bottom
Sower with Setting Sun, Vincent Van Gogh
Self Portrait, Van Gogh
Field in Provence, Van Gogh
The Zouave, Van Gogh
Cypresses, Van Gogh
Angel After Rembrandt Van Gogh
Early Autumn, George Inness
Eighth Avenue, NYC
Human evolution
Smoking Skull, Van Gogh
Route of The HMS Beagle
Bat skeleton
Flying Fox, Van Gogh
Giant armadillo
Swathmore club poster
Photo by Marguerite Mullin

Winter Sunset by Andrey Tamarchenko …

January 20, 2006

Winter Sunset
by Andrey Tamarchenko

We’ve had no real sustained winter in New Jersey this year. I ran across this painting by my friend Andrey Tamarchenko today, and it reminded me of what we’re missing. Do it, February!

Andrey is a latter-day impressionist and a big-hearted Russian mystic. Take the time to see more of his work: http://www.nandiart.com/andreytamarchenko/