
I've just read Patricia Hampl's Blue Arabesque, which I'd bought thinking it was a novel. It's more a memoir, travel journal and her search for beauty and the sublime on trips to the Mediterranean and north Africa, pilgrimages to the places where Matisse painted, where Katherine Mansfield wrote, where a wealthy documentary film maker and St. Paul Minnesota neighbor of hers vacationed, and it's all tied together in intelligently researched fact and dreamy prose worthy of a book. Through her writing you experience again, or in memory, your own felt richness of being a tourist, of posing as a local for even a moment, having all the time in the world to feast your senses with food and flower scent, liesurly observing the seemingly quaint local people doing their ordinary jobs. When I got off the plane in San Diego, I breathed, breathed this new air, this deep breath of scent and warmth and moistness that contrasted to the winter Wisconsin I'd left thirteen hours earlier. The oxygen rich air at near sea level, an atmosphere new and unexpected, savoring while trying to define it, like those moments after being released from a hospital and once outside in real air, breathing, breathing, feeling breeze on the skin of your face and arms, feeling new. If, as a traveler one feels contrast immediately without being able to define it, the wanting to define what is different tugs like loneliness when you hadn't realized you were feeling lonely at all.
I look back on the days when actual loneliness and despair not only tugged me but dragged me though day after day of anguish, resulting in crying jags, drinks to console, a whole bottle of champagne tossed off while momentarily appreciating its lovely color in the glass, but still, aching with unnamed loss and desire for it all to go away so love could return, normalcy could return, the self that aches while yearning to never ache again. And now, here in a lush summer of all green out my windows to the extent that I know if I don't cut back some of this exuberant growth I'll be living not in a house with nice gardens, I'll be living in a jungle. And surprisingly, though alone, I now don't feel lonely at all.
Like Ms. Hampl, I too visited my "saints" in galleries, in poetry readings, in homes that became museums, and imagined for the space of time I visited that I lived there, that the stately home with park-like grounds was where I got up in the morning, walked carpeted stairs and hallways, ate breakfast at a table in a sunny breakfast room, a simple but exquisite feast brought by servants and lovingly prepared by them. With beautiful china and linens, fresh fruit, steaming bread, hot coffee waiting in a silver urn, sunshine on dappled geraniums that never needed deadheading brightening the window boxes outside and one perfect gloxinia on the table as a centerpiece. I visited an exhibit of Mark Rothko in such a house-museum here in Wisconsin, though my exhibit was down in the basement; a more important local portrait painter had the main exhibit upstairs, where I found my uncle as a child in one of the portraits, wearing a blue trimmed white sailor suit. I'd seen that portrait in his home; it was on loan for the exhibit. I went away with the double surprise of seeing a portrait of Uncle Jax aged about eight, and the separate twin but unsettling realization that nobody seemed interested in the beautiful Rothkos downstairs. I sat there for maybe an hour with nobody else around, immersed in the heart depth of all that richness, color fields I wished I'd owned or could have painted. I have a small painting I did in-the-manner-of, a striated Rothko-like color field that starts out blue and ends up purple, and halfway through painting it, I added a lightning strike right through all the colors. I can't paint a Rothko, I'd told myself, or lightning will strike me dead!. As was my custom at the time, I framed each painting and lived with it on my walls until the next ones. So there across my breakfast table of coffee nuked in a microwave, my tarnished silver coffee pot stowed away for "company" was my Rothko with Lightning Strike making me smile and shake my head. In another painting I tried out my dry-brush technique making little squares of color after color, until suddenly I got tired of being so precious and precise and the last squares of red turned oblong or trapezoidal, finishing the painting by haphazardly filling the last available space. I called it Red Wins by Cheating, and again, I hung it on my wall and every time I saw it I smiled. It reminded me of a party, brightly colored confetti or balloons, a celebration. I framed a lot of paintings sequentially in the same frames, recycling them, giving me time to assess what I should have done, what I might do next time. Unlike writing, where one may compose and revise endlessly, when you screw up a painting, you start over; you make a new mistake and again start over; you never quite reach your original intent, or the intent changes. A new painting after several duds lets you be new all over again and let's not even mention the duds.
I want to erase everything I've written about growing up. I want to say I had a stereotypically normal childhood, or, like some writers and artists do, leave it a blank; let's assume beige normalcy and be done with it. Let's not ask questions. I got here through all that, but it was so completely normal, it's not even worth mentioning. With an erased and or nonexistent past, I arrived here on a plane to new air, new life and a new self. Breathe.
I look back on the days when actual loneliness and despair not only tugged me but dragged me though day after day of anguish, resulting in crying jags, drinks to console, a whole bottle of champagne tossed off while momentarily appreciating its lovely color in the glass, but still, aching with unnamed loss and desire for it all to go away so love could return, normalcy could return, the self that aches while yearning to never ache again. And now, here in a lush summer of all green out my windows to the extent that I know if I don't cut back some of this exuberant growth I'll be living not in a house with nice gardens, I'll be living in a jungle. And surprisingly, though alone, I now don't feel lonely at all.
Like Ms. Hampl, I too visited my "saints" in galleries, in poetry readings, in homes that became museums, and imagined for the space of time I visited that I lived there, that the stately home with park-like grounds was where I got up in the morning, walked carpeted stairs and hallways, ate breakfast at a table in a sunny breakfast room, a simple but exquisite feast brought by servants and lovingly prepared by them. With beautiful china and linens, fresh fruit, steaming bread, hot coffee waiting in a silver urn, sunshine on dappled geraniums that never needed deadheading brightening the window boxes outside and one perfect gloxinia on the table as a centerpiece. I visited an exhibit of Mark Rothko in such a house-museum here in Wisconsin, though my exhibit was down in the basement; a more important local portrait painter had the main exhibit upstairs, where I found my uncle as a child in one of the portraits, wearing a blue trimmed white sailor suit. I'd seen that portrait in his home; it was on loan for the exhibit. I went away with the double surprise of seeing a portrait of Uncle Jax aged about eight, and the separate twin but unsettling realization that nobody seemed interested in the beautiful Rothkos downstairs. I sat there for maybe an hour with nobody else around, immersed in the heart depth of all that richness, color fields I wished I'd owned or could have painted. I have a small painting I did in-the-manner-of, a striated Rothko-like color field that starts out blue and ends up purple, and halfway through painting it, I added a lightning strike right through all the colors. I can't paint a Rothko, I'd told myself, or lightning will strike me dead!. As was my custom at the time, I framed each painting and lived with it on my walls until the next ones. So there across my breakfast table of coffee nuked in a microwave, my tarnished silver coffee pot stowed away for "company" was my Rothko with Lightning Strike making me smile and shake my head. In another painting I tried out my dry-brush technique making little squares of color after color, until suddenly I got tired of being so precious and precise and the last squares of red turned oblong or trapezoidal, finishing the painting by haphazardly filling the last available space. I called it Red Wins by Cheating, and again, I hung it on my wall and every time I saw it I smiled. It reminded me of a party, brightly colored confetti or balloons, a celebration. I framed a lot of paintings sequentially in the same frames, recycling them, giving me time to assess what I should have done, what I might do next time. Unlike writing, where one may compose and revise endlessly, when you screw up a painting, you start over; you make a new mistake and again start over; you never quite reach your original intent, or the intent changes. A new painting after several duds lets you be new all over again and let's not even mention the duds.
I want to erase everything I've written about growing up. I want to say I had a stereotypically normal childhood, or, like some writers and artists do, leave it a blank; let's assume beige normalcy and be done with it. Let's not ask questions. I got here through all that, but it was so completely normal, it's not even worth mentioning. With an erased and or nonexistent past, I arrived here on a plane to new air, new life and a new self. Breathe.



























