Sunday, April 28, 2013

Wayside gems: Megan Cump at Station Independent Projects (LES, NYC)


Megan Cump, Black Moon, installation view, at Station Independent Projects (NYC)


Cump, untitled (fox)


Cump, untitled (white deer)
[All images copyrighted to Megan Cump; non-commercial use intended here]


One of the many joys of New York City is coming upon gems in the less frequented byways.   This morning I came across a lovely small gallery--Station Independent Projects-- nestled among apartment buildings on Suffolk Street just below Houston on the Lower East Side.

Inside, perfectly arranged and curated, is a show called Black Moon by Megan Cump.  The individual images are mesmerizing, and the overall effect leaves one with the sense of having been someplace else, a place you cannot quite remember, while you stand blinking on the side of the road at dawn.

For more on the gallery, click here.    For more on Cump, click here.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Boston: The Polis Unbowed, Undaunted


The "Sacred Cod" That Hangs in the House of Representatives in the Massachusetts State House, in Boston

This week's horror in Boston momentarily stilled our tongue and bruised our carapace, so the Lobster & Canary will be brief.

One thought only: 

The bombs went off right on the doorstep of Old South Church, whose congregation has played a mighty role in the forming of American liberty.  Samuel Sewall was a member, he who wrote the first abolitionist tract, and so was Phyllis Wheatley, and Benjamin Franklin's family. 

The bombs exploded across from the Boston Public Library, the first municipal library in this country, the first to allow patrons to borrow books (and not simply read them on the premises).

The bombs scorched Copley Square and Boylston Street...tore at the heart of the modern plaza, the core of the polis...and the citizens and all good members of civil society responded with swift, selfless love for their fellows, for the values heart-drawn from the deep well of our shared civitas, our commonwealth, our city on a hill. 

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Istvan Anhalt's Symphony of Modules


Istvan Anhalt, Symphony of Modules, sample score notation (1967)

Thinking still about Lebbeus Woods and his architectural forms that were never built, and the imagined libraries of Rauzier, the parrot-towers of Vega (see the two previous entries of Lobster & Canary), I offer another example of hypertrophic vision: the never-performed Symphony of Modules by Istvan Anhalt.  John Cage, in 1969, published some of Anhalt's novel formats for scoring the symphony (see above).  

Reportedly, Anhalt expected that an orchestra would need 50 hours of rehearsal before playing the piece's 28 minutes of music.  

Perhaps somewhere an orchestra is tuning up to give the Symphony of Modules its debut...in one of the winged buildings sketched by Woods, while savants listen in remotely, in a pari-colored library deep in the Brazilian rain forest...

For more on Anhalt, click here.



Sunday, April 7, 2013

"The Inexistent Plausible": Parrot Libraries, Toucan Theaters / J.F. Rauzier; Sergio Vega







J. F. Rauzier, Bibliotheques ideales (two from a series, 2012?) [images copyright Rauzier; non-commercial fair use intended here].

Last Sunday we mulled over the legacy of Lebbeus Woods, the visionary architect of spaces that might-be-but-have-not-yet-been-built.  Riffing further on this theme-- the exploration of the Lands Between, sketching out the vedute ideale, limning what Paulo Herkenhoff calls the "inexistent plausible"-- I offer today samples of Rauzier's "hyperphotos."

For more on Rauzier, click here.

...and then we need to join Sergio Vega on his tireless search for what he calls "the edenic stage," the strange paradise at the heart of an ambiguity just beyond the next curve in the boulevard, proclaimed with buoyant charm on travel brochures and the facings of airline tickets.



Vega, Banana Building (date?)  [Image copyright Vega; non-commercial fair use intended here}

As Vega puts matters during his quest:

"It seems plausible that the next trend in architecture will openly embrace shamanistic strategies. After all, it has already done it in a somewhat restrained manner. In the near future we may come to see a bizarre array of organic buildings acquiring the status of natural specimens. Parrot color-chart architecture, banana institutional buildings, pineapple churches, crocodilian houses, snake promenades, toucan theaters, orchid subway stations, etc. If in the process, all species end up being represented, cities could become entire inventories of the natural kingdom and the whole of the modern world a monumental paradise."

For more by Vega, click here.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

"...if we were free of conventional limits": The Legacy of Lebbeus Woods


Lebbeus Woods, Quake City (1995).

Contemplating and exploring the worlds envisioned by Lebbeus Woods, whose death last October occurred while the lobster & canary were in the grips of Superstorm Sandy here in NYC, i.e., we are still processing his departure and thinking through the impact of the polymathic, iconclastic Woods on art, architecture, urban planning and design.


Woods, Zagreb Free-Zone (c. 2000?)


Woods, Berlin Free-Zone 3-2 (1990)

Very few of his architectural renderings were ever built, though he insisted that they should-- and one day would--be.  A true visionary, who defied convention and walked over boundaries.  

Not enough time or space this morning to delve more deeply, but-- if I had such for a full-length essay--I would think of Woods in terms of other multi-disciplinary, slantwise form-makers: Piranesi, Joseph Michael Gandy, Boullee (The Cenotaph for Newton broods as a possibility over so much of modern architecture), Motherwell, Bontecou, Duchamp, Ernst... Ridley Scott and Giger (Woods is credited with helping them craft the settings for Aliens 3)...

For more on Woods, click here, and here.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Mourning the Loss of Chinua Achebe

We add our voice(s) to the millions of others raised to mourn the passage Friday of Chinua Achebe.

Click here for the obituary in The New York Times.  Achebe is quoted therein:  " 'In the end, I began to understand,' Mr. Achebe later wrote. 'There is such a thing as absolute power over narrative. Those who secure this privilege for themselves can arrange stories about others pretty much where, and as, they like.' ”

The Guardian (Lagos) has a good article today with many quotes from Achebe's family and friends in his hometown of Ogidi in Anambra state.  Click here

THISDAY (Lagos) devotes most of its arts section today to articles on Achebe, with many good insights.   Click here.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Savoring Seventeenth-Century Grapes (And Apples, And ...)


Juan Fernandez el Labrador, Still Life With Four Bunches of Grapes (1630; held at the Prado)


Fernandez el Labrador, Still Life With Grapes, Apples, Nuts & Terracotta Pitcher (c. 1633; Prado)

Last week the Prado mounted the first major exhibition of the relatively little-known seventeenth-century still life painter, Juan Fernandez el Labrador (click here for more on the show, and here for more on the painter).  

We have documentation for only seven years of Fernandez's activities; we can only attribute 13 paintings to him with certainty.

The Prado hails him as a (more or less) modern Zeuxis, the Greek painter of the 5th century BCE who--according to Pliny--painted grapes on a wall with such fidelity that birds were deceived and flew down to eat them  (click here for the famous story and its wide impact on art theory and theories of spatial reasoning & cognition).  

Mimetic grace continues to astound and delight us, no matter our professions of modernity and sophistication.  I feel the stirring of hunger, a trace of imagined taste on my tongue, as I contemplate the Fernandez paintings.  (I love that the most common word in Spanish for "still life" is "bodegon," things from the pantry and wine-cellar, a word whose sibling "bodega" is intimately familiar even to Anglophones).  My hands start to lift of their own accord, to pull off a grape, to feel the cool, smooth surface of the fruit contrasting with the roughness of the leaves.

For all the allure of conceptual art, performance art, the art of ideas, the endless parade of 'isms and movements and manifestos, I cannot deny the deeper, more primal attraction of paintings of fruit and other foodstuffs.  

Such older tropes never go away.  Sometimes they resurface in shows like this one, at the major museums of the world.  The rest of the time they pour out daily in advertisements and in the lush and lavish photographs in all the food magazines, the cookbooks, on the cookery shows... 

Eyes to stomach via the tongue...a formula that captures us (without struggle!) even while so much else that proclaims itself as art fades, finding no purchase...

Oh, and now it is time for Sunday brunch...

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Light On The Threshold, Shifting


Canaletto, The Grand Canal and the Church of the Salute [Venice], (1730)


Vermeer, View of Delft, (c. 1660)

Daylight savings time...the clock somersaults, the light streams at a different angle, the motes float lazily in new-remembered shadows...

Everyone out this afternoon enjoying the precursor of spring...I look at the sky, recalling the vernal blue we have otherwise misplaced for half a year...I look at the sky hovering so close above the towers and spires of the city...I am linked in this way back to other springs in other places, a soul wandering back along a track observed and painted by others before me...

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Lee Bontecou: Framing The Age


Lee Bontecou, Untitled, (1980-1998), welded steel, porcelain, wire mesh, canvas, wire (at the MoMA, NYC).  Image uploaded from an article in The Brooklyn Rail online; click here.


Bontecou, Untitled (1959), welded steel, black canvas, wire (at the MoMA).


Bontecou, Untitled, (1997), graphite on paper.

[Fair use rationale:  Lee Bontecou is the copyright holder of these images and the underlying artwork; Lobster & Canary presents them here solely for educational purposes, i.e., as part of commentary on the artwork; the images are low-resolution, uploaded from Wikipedia-- click here.]

Lee Bontecou continues to inspire me, her work to draw me in like that of few other living artists.  

Architecture that floats.  Spirals and swirls that create space.   I think of da Vinci's notebooks, of Tatlin's sculptures, of Miro and Arshile Gorky.   Of Matisse and his cut-outs. 

But above all her work is Bontecovian, not really much like anyone else's.  Bontecou brings me to a world simultaneously jagged and supple that is wholly her own. 

She is now 82, and arguably producing some of her best work ever.   Nationally prominent in the '50s and '60s, she left the NYC art world in 1971, moving to a hamlet in central Pennsylvania (though she continued to teach at Brooklyn College until 1991).   She worked on her own terms for decades before returning to public attention with retrospectives in 2003-'04 in LA, Chicago and NYC and again in 2010 (at the MoMA).  

I love her fierce dedication to her own process and vision.  How many artists have the courage and tenacity to leave the big stage...and then return thirty years later?  How many continue to produce at the highest levels   so late in life (to re-define what we understand about life and its parameters)?

Bontecou is one of the dozen or so artists whose work will come to define our era. 

For more, click here

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Hilma af Klint: The Abstract Modernist You Need To Know


Hilma af Klint, they tens mainstay IV (1907)


The Swan (# 16) (1915


The Ten Largest: # 10, Age (1907)

Hilma af Klint is the abstract modernist you have never heard of, but need to know.  She began experimenting with abstraction c. 1900, and ultimately created around 1,000 paintings and drawings before she died in 1944.   

In other words, she is one of the great pioneers, along side Kandinsky, Malevich, Picasso, and Klee...but, as is all too often the case when the person wielding the brush (pen, horn, baton, etc.) is a woman, af Klint has been largely ignored as the history of modern Western art is told...until now...

The Modern Museum in Stockholm last week opened a major retrospective of af Klint's work (running through May 26th, moving then to the Museum for Contemporary Art, Berlin and the Museo Picasso in Malaga).  Click here for more information.  

Af Klint thus joins Sonia Delaunay-Terk, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Hannah Hoech, Gabriele Muenter, Frida Kahlo, Lee Krasner and many, many other women who played central roles in the creation of the Modern.   How many others have we missed?  Keep re-evaluating and re-arranging the canon!  (*)

Click here for more on af Klint (her mysticism is particularly intriguing, especially as it aligns so much with the transcendentalism of, say, Kandinsky).  

(*)  Always seem to be running in place; haven't we been here before, forced to storm the walls over and over again?...from Hypatia through Christine de Pizan...and on and on.   Didn't Judy Chicago make these points decades ago?   Follow the scholarly & curatorial work of Linda Nochlin, Griselda Pollock, Faith Ringgold, Lucy Lippard.  

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Multimedia A Century Past: Sonia Delaunay-Terk & Blaise Cendrars, and Duncan Grant



Front Cover and Final Section of "La prose du Transsiberien et de la Petite Jehanne de France,"
A Collaboration By Sonia Delaunay-Terk and Blaise Cendrars, 1913

The MoMA's magisterial "Inventing Abstraction 1910-1925" (up through April 15th) reminds us that everything old is new again.  (Click here for the MoMA site for the exhibition).   No matter how hard we strain to create the New New Thing, the rupture that abstraction caused a century ago is still rippling and rending its way through our own time-- a Newness that we still struggle to get past, to overcome.  

Oh, and for all our emphasis on multimedia today, the Modernists beat us to that punch as well.  Most arresting for me- in the midst of so many familiar and iconic images- were the inventive mash-ups, the collaborative hybrids such as "La prose du Transsiberien..."-- a work inspired in part by a trip across Russia in the year of the first revolution, 1905.  (Click here for more on this revolutionary illustrated text).  

Collage is born at this time, Picasso runs headlong into African art, Klee takes the line for a walk, geometry is exploded and dissected, color leaps and somersaults, splashing into radial circles, costumes striped and hued, warping and expanding the human form...deliberately matched with atonal experiments in music, and the flickering motion of the new-born cinema.

The greatest revelation was Duncan Grant's "Abstract Kinetic Collage Painting With Sound," from 1914, which I had not seen before (it is on loan from the Tate).  Grant painted a series of abstract shapes on a roll c. ten feet long.   According to the Tate site:  "The artist made ["Abstract Kinetic..."] with the intention that it should be viewed through a rectangular aperture 24 in. (61 cm.) wide and of the same height—11 in. (28 cm.)— as the painting. As the painting was viewed, it was to be in continuous slow movement across the aperture, moving from left to right. Movement was to be effected by the scroll’s being mounted on twin spools, one on each side of the aperture and hidden from the spectator’s view, which would be turned by mechanical means. The artist intended that as the painting passed across the aperture the spectator should hear slow music by J. S. Bach." 

The piece has never been displayed as intended-- it is wall-mounted in one long band at the MoMA, with a film of how it would appear with the planned movement.   I could gaze for hours into the slow parade of perfectly aligned shapes, their colors a stately, transcendental expression of somber joy, the music a measured accompaniment.

Yet, at the time, no less than D.H. Lawrence (who saw the piece at Grant's workshop, and who liked Grant personally) derided it, saying "Tell him not to make silly experiments in the futuristic line with bits of colour on moving paper."

To see "Abstract Kinetic Collage...," click here.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Fairy Tale/ Folklore / Mythology: Passing Along a Call for Submissions

Natalia Andrievskikh (Binghamton University) contacted Lobster & Canary this week to say that she is guest-editing a special issue of Yellow Medicine Review devoted to fairy tale/ folklore/ mythology. 

She says: "We are not looking for stories and fairy-tales written for children: rather, we would like to see writing that appeals to broader audiences, while playing with fairy-tale motifs and aesthetics and tapping into the oral traditions of indigenous communities. Such works can blend the magic and the real, take a modern twist on a classic tale, or revisit the rich heritage of half-forgotten folk legends. Think Angela Carter, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Italo Calvino, Haruki Murakami, Marina Warner, Kate Bernheimer, and Neil Gaiman, among others. We are especially interested in multi-national submissions across marginalized cultures and ethnicities."

Submissions due March 1, 2013. Sub link:http://www.yellowmedicinereview.com/id12.html   Click here.

Yellow Medicine Review is new to Lobster & Canary-- here is how they describe themselves on their website: "Thanks to a generous grant from the Ford Foundation, on behalf of the Difficult Dialogues Initiative on the campus of Southwest Minnesota State University, a new publication, Yellow Medicine Review: A Journal of Indigenous Literature, Art, and Thought came into being.

The title Yellow Medicine Review is significant in that it incorporates the name of a river in Southwest Minnesota. The Dakota came together at the river to dig the yellow root of a special plant that was used for medicinal purposes, for healing. Such is the spirit of Yellow Medicine Review.

Yellow Medicine Review: A Journal of Indigenous Literature, Art, and Thought opens a new pathway for scholarly and creative expression. New paths lead to new places, into the territory where emerging voices and visions are beginning to take their places among already established indigenous writers, artists and scholars.

At this time, we encourage submissions from indigenous perspectives in the area of fiction, poetry, scholarly essays, and art. We define indigenous universally as representative of all pre-colonial peoples.

Contact us at: editor [at] yellowmedicinereview [dot] com"

Sunday, January 27, 2013

"Stepping Away From Reality In Order To Avoid Falsehood": Interview with Marina Korenfeld


Marina Korenfeld, "Abraxas"  
(Copyright in all images in this post held by Marina Korenfeld).

Today Lobster & Canary features rising star Marina Korenfeld.   We own a copy of "Abraxas," which is the last picture we see every day as we leave our apartment, hanging as it does right by the door.


"City of Creaking Statues"
Lobster & Canary Question One:  Marina, your work reminds me of Paul Klee’s early etchings (for instance, "Two Men Meet, Each Believing The Other To Be Of Higher Rank”) and his illustrations for Candide. And also his iconic "Golden Fish". You mention elsewhere that Klee is indeed an inspiration—tell us more about that. What in particular inspires you from Klee’s work?
Korenfeld:  "I once read how Paul Klee marveled and envied children’s ability to create a polymorphous art free of conformed concept of what is called 'beautiful, recognizable and understandable'. He also found inspirational their use of colors, unhesitant line work and the ability to invent symbols and signs. I’m pretty sure he studied children’s drawings and paintings to pick up on those skills. Looking at his art I see precisely these interests of his, but not in the form of dry scientific research; rather, its a game – mysterious, promising, dynamic and always fun. The Spirit of Childhood never left Klee, it allowed him to turn into a unique (but likable) artist full of inner light.

So the reason my work might remind you of some of Paul Klee’s art is because in the line of my work (art teacher) I am subjected to viewing, discussing and helping to create a lot of awesome masterpieces by 5 – 12 year old artists. Very attentively I listen to their judgments, associations, and trends – for no one can feel and experience the fabric of reality with the subtlety of those who haven’t yet turned 21. For an artist hardly creates anything herself; like a child hunting dragonflies, she snatches forms and ideas drifting in the ether…Paul Klee reminds me to never lose an inner child to continue being an artist."



"Bahamut"

Question Two: I also see hints of Klimt, Schiele, Chagall in your figures. Any comments to that observation?
Korenfeld:  "In his 'Blue Beard,' Kurt Vonnegut writes about an artist who creates a perfect world on his canvas, walks into it and eventually disappears in its reality. In my etchings I create portals into the reality of my own ideal world and I ask myself if I’d be willing to step into the world I create and be seduced into staying there.

I see the works by Klimt, Schiele and Chagall as these wonderful windows I’d love to walk into. And after contemplating the amazing beauty and passion and unlimited fantasy of these worlds I’d dress my figures in gold and stunning ornaments or undress and brand them with the intricate tattoos that could mean something to Yaqui Indians or J.L. Borges (who else teaches us to encrypt and decipher better than him?).

After absorbing Schiele with all the fibers of my soul, I’d play 'If You Were In My Movie' and make my figures stand, dance, fly, fall in the most expressive way, in the way that spoken language is pointless and weak and body language is most vivid, eloquent and truthful in the slightest details.

And Chagall’s tenderness and nostalgia helps my characters to manifest their hidden desires and dreams; it defies gravity and turns other laws of Nature into a joke or a hoax."



"Fish and Ram"

Question Three: You majored in puppetry at Odessa’s Theater & Art College. I sense your early training in the way you pose and articulate the figures in your work—they are graceful, seemingly poised in deliberation, delicate, elegantly moving through the space of the composition, limber. Do you draw on puppetry in your visual art?
Korenfeld:  "I get a lot of comments about my theatrical background showing throughout my pieces. Not only did my college education center on theater and drama, but my family life did too: my father was an accordion teacher and my mom was a drama professor. Our house was visited by their students, artists, musicians, actors, comedians, and poets. Often I did my school homework sitting somewhere in the orchestra pit during the numerous rehearsals my mom was directing. And so the theatrical atmosphere was just naturally absorbed by my developing sense of reality. Hence the stage-like compositions of my etchings. Theater proved to me how magical and persuasive its ways are. Being at Theater Art College had taught me another valuable trade – stylizing, artifice, a stepping away from reality in order to avoid falsehood  [highlighting by Lobster & Canary; we love this phrase] and to achieve a deeper physiological effect. I still remember when our teacher wreaked all havoc when one of the students used real human hair for her marionette. And as a result instead of a beautiful wild fairy it turned out a human mannequin, creepy and dead.
Question Four: You are self-consciously aiming to find the heart of our mythologies, to construe the symbolism of our deepest dreams. You evoke the mystic and limn the enigmatic. Talk please about the quest you undertake as you create, and the quest you presumably hope your viewers will take along with you.
Korenfeld:  "There is a very specific perspective I want my viewers and myself to have, of the wondrous labyrinth of the soul, the marvelous invisible cities the spirit lives in, the fantastic imaginary creatures who fill our inner world. My eternal question is 'Who am I?' The complexity and the mystical powers of the human psyche never cease to amaze/amuse me. One of the examples of such mystical powers is our belief mechanism, which defines who we are: if we love ourselves, then people love us. What occurs to us in our life actually depends on us – I don’t mean the plans we make and the goals we accomplish. Rather, I’m talking about serendipity, wondrous coincidences, unexpected changes in the trajectory of life. I think that we attract certain events into the orbit of our life and thus construct our own reality. Someone who believes in aliens, God, the devil, love or in a conspiracy theory will find all kinds of evidence and supporting material for her belief; someone who believes that he is generally unlucky will always find evidence of that as well. And what about the mantra 'Think positive?' Who doubts the power of that? Seriously, I lament that we’re spending such gigantic sums of money on exploring space. The most remote — mysterious — incomprehensible cosmos is the inner world of each and every one of us and the unexplored mystical powers that reside within each and every one of us."
Question Five: You mention as literary influences authors such as Borges, Marquez, Eco and Hesse. (You remind me also of Blake, Rilke, Montale, Angela Carter). How does the written word affect your creative process, your painting?
Korenfeld:  "Reading books has always been an alternative to drugs for me (to the bitter disappointment of some of my fans and fellow artists, I don’t do drugs and to my utter amazement was booed and looked down upon for breaking the stereotype a couple of times). Apart from entertainment and education books change my perception of the world. A good book is always a trigger, it creates the particularity of the moment. And I love and cherish those moments which lead to a new dimension of reality: when life is no longer routine because you start to pay attention and notice something interesting or particular about your surroundings. Once you alter your mindset and break out of habitual patterns of perception, you notice a child in an amusing hat, a woman impossibly tall, a bearded man clutching an unusual case. But the most valuable of these 'profane illuminations' occur when I notice how often the details of my own life coincide with the private stories of the literary characters in the book I’m currently reading. These coincidences really amuse me: if I read a description of a room and it mentions a clock, most likely this clock will show the hour of my present moment.

There are priceless nuances and key words in the books mentioned in the question – 'encyclopedia', 'imaginary being', 'Abraxas', 'changed reality', 'archetype', 'solitude', 'journey'… These words evoke a certain chain of particular associations that lead you to explore a pathway in an imaginary world."
Question Six: Which comes first for you: the form and the line, or the field and the color?
Korenfeld:  "Since my primarily used medium is etching, where the artist has to express her ideas through the use of light and shadows and the lines of the drawing, I say form and line are the decisive principals of the work. But I love adding a bit of color and especially love using some gold leaf to add zest and to contrast the minimalism of the color palette."

The lobster and the canary thank Marina Korenfeld for her insights into her work...and for the magical work itself.  For more images and a bio on Korenfeld, click here.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Interview with Tania Alvarez

Today Lobster & Canary is especially delighted to interview one of our favorite up-&-coming artists, Tania Alvarez.  We met Tania two years ago during an open studio tour in Long Island City, and were entranced with her work immediately.   You can learn more about Tania at her website:  www.taniaalvarez.com.  (All images reproduced here below in the blog courtesy of and copyrighted to Tania Alvarez).



Sorry, by Tania Alvarez (2005; charcoal on folio)

Lobster & Canary Question One:  "Many collages are ostentatious, calling attention to their own construction and materials-- your collages distinguish themselves with their subtlety, their understated cleverness and lyrical movement.  Talk about what inspires you as you create your collages, what led you into this kind of art."

Tania Alvarez:  "As cliché as it may sound, it started with a dream I had during my last year of college.  In the dream, I recall creating a piece using charcoal with the word "sorry " repeated over and over again, until almost in a fog of charcoal dust appeared a vague representation of a human heart. This was of course stemmed from a loss that I had experienced the previous year. The imagery was so strong in my mind that I couldn't stop thinking about it. Although hesitant, I re-drew what I had created in the dream and felt a very strong sense of attachment to the subject matter.  Ever since, this type of work has become a necessity for me to create. From that point on, I began to collect lots of notes, photographs, or anything associated with my memories and collage became a means of putting all the pieces back together."


Numerical Family Portrait, by Tania Alvarez (2012, Acrylic, Wax Crayon, Collage and Battery Operated Pendulum Clock Movement on MDF). 

         Question Two:  "Clocks!  I happily bought one of your clock-paintings (directly from you in your studio, at the first Long Island City Open Studio Day a year or two ago; the pleasure of meeting its creator imbues an art-object with special meaning)-- and would love to know more about these whimsical creations."

"Now that you know where I began, I can tell you how I stumbled upon creating clocks. I remember thinking about loss, and the typical things people would say to make you feel better.  One of the more common quotes I was never able to relate to, is the phrase, " Time heals all wounds ".  I feel like the more time that passes, a wound can easily worsen without discovering the true root of the pain. I began playing with this idea while researching the basics of clock making, finding it to be quite an interesting, yet relative process.  It has always been an interest of mine to combine sculpture and painting.  In many ways, I feel like I am beginning to do so."

         Question Three:  "Your work is gestural, calligraphic, seemingly spontaneous.  It acknowledges the performance of painting-- I am tickled to see a paintbrush, trailing its paint-stroke, painted into your "It Doesn't Get Better" from 2010.  Your fluid style reminds me of (among others) Twombly, Motherwell, and the tachistes.   Are these, in fact, influences, or are you inspired by other sources?"

"I absolutely adore the work of Cy Twombly. His work has inspired me since I was first introduced to it in my early 20's. I also find inspiration in the works of Robert Rauschenberg, Jim Dine, and Basquiat. Aside from these artists, I seek a lot of my references from the streets of NYC. I am obsessed with photographing old deteriorating walls from industrial areas where there are layers upon layers of street art and chipped paint. I find nothing more enjoyable than seeking out a new part of the city to photograph and use as inspiration."


March 3rd, by Tania Alvarez (2012, mixed media on MDF)

         Question Four:  "You ground your gestures in chalky washes and layers.  Talk about how you orient your strokes on the field, how the ground interacts with the line, and vice versa.  Any comments on your muted palette?"

"There is always an idea I am trying to convey through each piece I create.  As each work evolves, my initial thought process begins to change and layers of chalky washes and marks begin to instinctively form.  It is interesting because I always begin my work in an obnoxiously bright color as an attempt to not have such dark paintings. As you can see, they never stay that way.  For example, my more recent piece, "Untitled", 2012, made on a found door, started off as bright pink. Now it barely shows a trace of the color. I guess it partly has to do with my love of charcoal and black Liquitex ink, but aside from that, I am just much more aesthetically drawn to a more muted/neutral color palette. Also, when I envision loss, bright colors are not the first to come to mind, as they would not due the piece justice."

         Question Five:  "Your titles are poetic.  Do you create the visual art and then search for an apt title, or do you have snippets of language stored in your mind for possible pairing with a future painting or drawing?"

"I don't think I have ever created a title before starting a piece.  I have sketchbooks filled with random streams of thought that are usually associated to a dream or a moving experience.  From there, I go back and review what I wrote, circle words or phrases that jump out, make sketches based on what I highlight, and begin from there.  The title is always the last thing that comes to mind."

The Lobster & Canary says:  "Thank you Tania!"

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Hair Side, Flesh Side: An Interview with Helen Marshall


Lobster & Canary is proud to present an interview with our fellow ChiZine author, Helen Marshall.  Without further ado:

Lobster & Canary, question 1.  Your debut collection of short stories-- Hair Side, Flesh Side (ChiZine Publications, 2012)-- is extraordinary.  How should we categorize it?  Ruminative horror?  Intellectual horror?  Actually, let's start with "horror," which is a misnomer for what you are doing.  Certainly, horrific images and acts present themselves in your tales, quite memorably indeed.  But the overall effect-- for this reader, at least-- is more subtle, more rarefied even.  We're in the realm rather of the uncanny, the disturbing and unsettling, in the rooms and streets painted by Magritte, in the tableaux created by Ernst in Une semaine de bonte, the collages of Hannah Hoech, or the atmospheres of Leonora Carrington.  Does my statement accord with you?  If not, tell us otherwise.

Helen Marshall:  This is a question I’ve certainly been struggling with (particularly at family dinner parties when I’m called upon to explain what it is that I’m writing—but then again, I think family dinner parties are probably the bane of every writer’s existence!). “Ruminative horror” is a lovely phrase, though whether my stories are horror…I don’t know. I like the idea of horror as the art of going too far (to paraphrase Kim Newman); I like the idea of horror as an emotion. But I think the sort of literary game I try to play is one closer to magic realism in which the characters themselves react to the strange as if it were normal, thereby opening up a space for the reader to feel the “disjunct” between their own expectations and the uncanny. For me, I like the sense of being off-balance. Of breaking the rules. And horror as a “genre”—as something codified—tends to have a rather concrete set of rules for how to scare someone. But I find when you normalize the strange, then suddenly you can cast a new spotlight on what initially seems normal. So the horror of a story like “Blessed” (which you can read here) where a girl is given the body of a dead saint for her seventh birthday isn’t so much in the moment when she discovers the dead body wrapped up special for her, as it is in the ideals of martyring love and self-sacrifice that play out in the girl’s relationship to her mother. The oddity of the world is a kind of sleight of hand that allows me to distract the reader from a deeper game.

2.  Corollary to the above: your work feels much closer in spirit to that of, say, Kelly Link or Aimee Bender, M. Rickert, Karen Russell or Steven Millhauser, than to authors more commonly shelved under "horror" in the bookstore.  "New Weird," "slipstream," "paraspheric"...so many attempts to corral what is inherently a slippery, tricksy creature!   Do you read the authors just named?  Do you feel the kinship?  Here is another one:  as I read your stories, I kept thinking of Vandana Singh's The Woman Who Thought She Was A Planet.  

For about two years the majority of what I was reading (because of my position as Managing Editor at ChiZine Publications) was offbeat horror, so there was certainly an influence there (Cf. David Nickle, Tim Lebbon, Gemma Files, Claude Lalumière and others, but also Neil Gaiman, obviously, and Peter Beagle whom  I adore): it was only when I was in England and I first read Robert Shearman’s collection Love Songs for the Shy and Cynical that I was introduced to a very different style of “genre” writing. For some reason, that kind of writing felt much more natural—perhaps because of my background in poetry where voice and mood are privileged over linearity and plot. But in the rapid phase of reading I’ve done over the last couple of years I’ve found so many writers who I feel kinship with. Kelly Link was one of my instructors at Clarion West, and, God, what can you say about her? She’s one of the smartest, funniest, most insightful people I know. Her writing is brilliant—definitely you can find something of an influence on some of the more recent stories I’ve written. Other people I’ve found I’ve really enjoyed are Dave Eggers, Karin Tidbeck, Johanna Sinisalo, Audrey Niffeneger, Yann Martel, Michael Chabon…well, I could certainly go on. I still find poetry one of my keenest sources of inspiration, particularly for “paraspheric” material (because in poetry, metaphors govern the world and so you never need to ask if something is real or not), and there I’ve fallen in love with Anne Carson, Sandra Kasturi, David Day, Lorna Crozier (my long time love!), Anne Sexton and others.

3.  Uncanny and eerie does not mean, well, nice...in fact, there is a streak of elegant cruelty running through your stories, as hard-edged as that in any authentic fairy tale.  (Again, calls to mind Magritte...and also Bunuel, Kokoschka, Kirchner, Schiele).  How do you balance the cruelty with the love?  How can pain be described in humane ways?

This really puts the finger on where horror comes into my stories (at least in my own head). There are horrible things that happen in my stories, but most of them are the things that are done by people who ostensibly love each other. The reason is simple: it’s easiest to hurt the people we love. It’s easiest to disappoint them. It’s easier to break them a little. To want them to be something they are not. Loving someone is a constant process of tiny injuries. But, at the same time, there’s beauty and there’s kindness and there are moments when selfishness slips away—and the injury is part of that. I think, deep down, I try to find ways to forgive all my characters—that’s both rather daunting and sometimes rather heartbreaking in and of itself. But there’s something glorious and redemptive that comes at the moment in which you say, “Yes, you’ve hurt me, and you’re a little bit broken, and I’m a little bit broken…but there’s something there, and it’s love.” One of my stories that comes to mind is “Dead White Men” (which you can read here)—in which a young man falls for a girl who has the strange power of summoning dead authors to inhabit his body when they have sex. And in the story, Ernie knows that Celia doesn’t love him, she’s just using him for a moment of communion with someone else. But he changes for her, and he becomes a great author himself. And when he dies, she brings him back by use of some other poor soul as a medium. I don’t know if that’s sweet. I don’t know if that’s a happy ending. I don’t know if that’s a sad ending. I don’t know if that’s a cruel ending. It’s just two people bending a little bit more towards each other.

4.  You have a great ear for dialogue, which makes your plots all the more jarring.   You give us seemingly ordinary people, speaking as ordinary folk do, suddenly doing or thinking the most extreme things...what could be more discordant?   Talk about how you use this technique.

I went through a phase where I got very interested in stage plays, particularly the works of Tom Stoppard. (I still contend that Arcadia is one of the most beautiful, heart-breaking plays I’ve ever seen.) Plays tend to work quite differently from stories. In a play, people talk around and around the thing that they are trying to say. In a play, you never mean “I love you” if you say it right off—you mean something else, or you mean it ironically, or you say it as a way to convince the other person it’s true. It establishes a kind of rhythm or patter that’s almost hypnotic, but the more you hear it, the more you start hearing the way people step around things. The refusal to name what they are afraid of. The refusal to ask the question that’s most important because they don’t want to know the answer.
Listen to any of Aaron Sorkin’s dialogue. It repeats and it repeats and it repeats like a kind of litany or call-and-response. But always, always, always the thing that gets repeated is turned on its head in the final act. It’s brilliant! The audience has been lulled into forgetting the thing, the “hook” of the story because it’s repeated so often.
That works extraordinarily well for the kinds of stories I like to tell in which I don’t want to the reader to ask certain questions while they are reading—questions like, “Yes, but why are you giving your daughter the body of Joan of Arc?” or “Why aren’t you reacting with hysteria—or even curiosity—when you discover the lost manuscript of Jane Austen written on the inside of your skin?” Because those questions sort of dismantle that feeling of discord. So Hanna in “Sanditon” asks Gavin about the doctor he’s promised to bring her, but he always deflects her, and she always lets him do it. Because we’re willing to accept deflection from a character like Gavin. Their relationship is entirely about deflection. It works a little bit like a magician’s patter—they speak to draw your attention away from the mechanism of the trick, to lull you, to keep your eyes where they want them. And it means that when you suddenly want a character to speak honestly and directly, it has so much more force. It stops the reader dead because it breaks the patter.


5.  Your work is visceral-- from the title to the sub-titles, from the themes to the images.  Bodies, bones, teeth, skin...  What drives this?

The title Hair Side, Flesh Side came early on, emerging directly out of my work as a medieval book historian. Parchment was quite literally made from the skins of dead sheep and goats, and so one of themes that my adviser, Alexandra Gillespie, returned to again and again in her lectures was the physicality of books. How they were encountered viscerally. And so, the idea of the book as a physical body represented in Chris Roberts’ amazing artwork for the Table of Contents felt like a gorgeous way of bringing that out. People become books in Hair Side, Flesh Side; history becomes a very physical, very tangible thing. And bodies are horrific. They seem like the most stable point of identity, but we know that they aren’t, we know that we have so little control over our bodies but they define us completely. It makes the body a great site to explore the uncanny.




6.  Hunger underlies much of what your characters experience, a hunger for love, a hunger that takes them to the bleak edges of (often forbidden or, at the least, difficult) love, to the potential for pain and a hollow ending.  Talk about the role hunger plays in your fiction.

One of the strongest contrasts I find myself perceiving in the book now is between the very deep hunger that seems to drive the characters and their almost observer-like quality. They aren’t characters who act to pursue their own desires, for the most part; they are characters who get pushed into situations where they seem to deliberately repress their hunger until it threatens to consume them or it manifests itself so profoundly and so physically that it can’t be ignored any longer. I think, on a personal level, I wrote the stories at a time at which I felt very much caught between those two poles; it’s clear to me that “Eternal Things”, in which a young academic meets the ghost of Chaucer comes rather directly out of a sudden loss of intellectual momentum I found in my own research. (This comes, I believe, to most people making the transition into the thesis-writing stage of their dissertation.) But I think it might be more generally reflective of the trouble my generation faces coming, often massively over-educated and loaded with student debt, into a workforce for which there isn’t very much room for us. We all feel hungry to use our skills and to do something, but most of us get sidelined into careers we never quite expected and didn’t train for because we can’t get the career we want. So I think that sense of hunger is maybe a reflection of that kind of dissatisfaction you face as you close in on thirty and realize you’re still a ways off from where you wanted to be: stalled relationships, wrong turns on your career path, all of the things that growing up delivers. But. Even though that carries with it a certain bleakness, I think that there is something redemptive about the stories. People find ways to accommodate the disappointments. To make small steps to move forward. Most of the stories hinge on characters whom have been acted upon coming to make a choice for themselves and taking a new path.

7.  Your most arresting image, stemming in part from the very title of your collection, is that of the word incarnating, the lost work of Jane Austen appearing inside the body of your heroine, unspooling as she starts to flay herself.  A Borgesian turn, a nod to Bradbury's Illustrated Man,  Vinculus in Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, who has the "King's Letters" inscribed on his body as an infant and becomes a living book... As a deep, devout reader and writer, do you sometimes feel that we have literally become the texts we love?  

Of course! I think the stories we tell ourselves shape us very deeply. And one of the things you find about growing older is how much your decisions get inscribed on your body, whether it's pregnancy stretch marks or old injuries which never quite heal properly. When I was young I thought I could, essentially, make myself anew whenever I wanted to. But the older you get, the more you discover that identity isn’t really as malleable as you want it to be; you carry things with you for a long time. One of my earliest stories (never published) was about a kid whom Lucifer fashions to be a repository for his sins, so that he doesn’t need to carry them around with him anymore. And that’s an idea as old as the mark God leaves on Cain so that all will recognize and know his story simply by looking at him. And it was certainly something I struggled with as an editor: getting filled up with other people’s stories when you are trying to come up with something of your own. That’s what Hanna’s up against in “Sanditon”. But it’s also what Gavin’s up against as well—he wants to publish the material, but suddenly he’s in a position where he’s become famous for discovering someone else’s book even though he’s quite a good novelist in his own right. As writers, we all live in the shadow of other people’s work. That’s both terribly wonderful and terribly daunting. And, mostly, you just deal with it by eventually saying, “Well, f*ck it, I’m going to write this story anyway.”

8.  As a deep, devout reader and writer...one who is an editor and works in publishing...what most excites you about fiction as we move into 2013, what most disappoints?

Everything about the fiction itself excites me. Everything! I still have these wonderful moments when I pick up a new book and I think, “Yeah, that’s why we are all doing this! Because people are out there making some kind of magic happening.” Right now, there are some of the most vibrant literary communities managing to thrive, many of them centred around small presses like ChiZine Publications or Small Beer Press—people who are out there taking a tremendous risk and doing a ridiculous amount of work because they think it is work worth doing. There’s a lot of bravery in the industry; there’s also a lot of fear. All I can wish for 2013 is that fortune favours the brave…

9.  If you could ask any artists (living or dead, working in whatever genre, medium, style, etc.) to dinner, whom would you ask, and why?

Neil Gaiman, dead. But only recently dead. I think he’d have a heck of a perspective on what you might find on the other side; I’m not sure there’s anyone better suited right now to be a literary psychopomp…

(Too far dead, though, and I think the smell would probably put me off my appetite…)

10.  What are you working on now, and when can we expect to see it in print?

I’m currently working on a second as-yet-unnamed (or, named-too-often) collection of short stories that will feature some wicked prophesying, a disappearing silk top hat, what lies on the other side of a mother’s bellybutton, a floating bull shark who may or may not be the angel of Death, a very sad can of tomato soup, a telescope that can reveal the past, a phantom thumb, and at least one happy ending. I hope. The first of the stories, “The Hanging Game” will be published on Tor.com some time early 2013. As for the others? They remain in the lap of the gods.

Also, a dissertation on medieval book production in the early fourteenth century. That should be along any day now.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Enchanting Spaces, Part I: People (Or, The IKEA Catalog as Cousin to The Hobbit)


--Samuel van Hoogstraten, Perspective Box With Views of the Interior of Dutch House
c. 1655-'60 (The National Gallery, London)


--van Hoogstraten, Les Paouffles, 1658 (The Louvre)

Who lives in this house?  (I can smell the pannekoeken in the pan, butter browning, with cinnamon...)

Here Bachelard's "poetics of space" meets Tolkien's "elvish craft of Enchantment, the sub-creation of a Secondary World."  Calvino's sixth principle, Visibility, merges with Benjamin's "panoramas, dioramas, cosmoramas...phantasmagorical and fantasmaparastatic experiences, picturesque journeys in a room."


--Ulla von Brandenburg, Mephisto/ Angel/ Krawatten, abgeschnitten, 2010 (installation at The Common Guild, Glasgow)

Who lives here?  (Travelers from afar perhaps, with the heads of dolphins, who speak in hieroglyphics).


--- A Tony Duquette interior, mid-20th-century.

Who lives here?  (A family of connoisseurs I think, with soft velvet paws and eyes that gleam like rubies).

Narnia entered through a wardrobe in a spare room.  The endless battery of rooms and passages that constitutes Gormenghast, the world-castle.  The rooms that mutate, move and cannot be accurately measured in Danielewski's House of Leaves (like Dr. Who's TARDIS, the interior is much larger than the exterior).  Down a rabbit-hole Alice fell, one lined "with cupboards and bookshelves; here and there she saw maps and pictures hung upon pegs."  A hobbit-hole ("and that means comfort"), with its "panelled walls, and floors tiled and carpeted, provided with polished chairs."  The "miniature, perfect Palladian house...with its sweet, retiring melancholy grace" in Angela Carter's "The Courtship of Mr. Lyon."

C

---Anne Hardy, Cipher, 2007

Who lives here?  (A retirement home for Arlecchino and other characters from the Commedia dell'Arte?)

Worlds described within four walls in the novels of Dickens, Proust, Henry James, and Edith Wharton (who made her name first with The Decoration of Houses, published in 1897).  Proust again, on the hotel in Doncieres:  "an assembly of rooms as real as a colony of people."  The famous opening chapter of Balzac's Pere Goriot, describing in the most minute, sociological detail the situation and outfitting of the Maison Vauquer and its peculiar inhabitants ("Nothing can be more depressing than the sight of that sitting room.  The furniture is covered with horse hair woven in alternate dull and glossy stripes.  There is a round table in the middle, with a purplish-red marble top, on which there stands, by way of ornament, the inevitable white china tea-service, covered with a half-effaced gilt network.")  The care with which Mann describes the house of the Buddenbrooks, with which Stefan Zweig recalls elements of architecture in his boyhood Vienna.

Each of us now elvish enchanters in our own small spaces, creating secondary worlds for ourselves.  ("Domestic," with root to "home," filiated with "to build," allied with "domination.")   The IKEA catalog as a cousin to The Hobbit; Pottery Barn, Crate & Barrel, Restoration Hardware... names of realms as potent and perilous as Faerie itself-- maybe these are the latest outposts, in fact, of Faerie on mortal terrain.  Rizzoli and Abrams the names of conjurors akin to Gandalf.  

The two images below are by Laurie Simmons, from her Black Series, 1978-'79.

Detail Image

Detail Image

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Painting the Text: Memory's Architecture



Orhan Pamuk realized a remarkable long-time dream in 2012 when he opened in Istanbul his Museum of Innocence-- the physical expression and repository of the story Pamuk tells in his 2009 novel of the same title. 

A museum containing the artifacts described in the novel; a novel based on the objects that epitomize the lives of the characters; a house of fictional memories made real, the fictive as authentic as the reality; the Proustian desire come to life, a mansion of arcades on Sebaldian borderlands.

Pamuk, in an interview with Sameer Rahim, says:  “When people read a novel 600 pages long, six months pass and all they will remember are five pages. They don’t remember the text – instead they remember the sensations the text gives them. In The Museum of Innocence, we are trying to give illustrations to those emotions. The layout of the museum is based on the chapters of the novel: the novel has 83 chapters so the museum has 83 display cabinets, and each box corresponds to the emotion of that chapter.” 

Who can be surprised that Pamuk studied architecture and yearned to be a painter before becoming a writer of fiction?

(Click here and here for more). 

Lobster & Canary wants to take up residence in a museum like this one.  We want to build an annex of our own.  We are apparently not alone in this: over the next week, we'll highlight other artists with similar visions.   Down the rabbit-hole indeed!