Sunday, August 17, 2014

Reduced

This must have been the second chapter I worked on.

Looking on the dates when I made these work, I think I was either suffering from insomnia or just manically working non-stop day and night.

When I was at MacDowell, I typically worked in the printmaking studio during the day, and worked on installation in another large studio in the afternoon and evening. All these book pages were done at night. My cottage where I slept was quite far from my studio. I had to walk through the woods. There was no lights outside except the lights from other fellow residents' studios. I carried a flashlight to walk through the woods. There was a bed in the studio, so sometimes I just slept there.

Sixteen years later, I'm looking back at these words I chose. At the time of making, I really wasn't reading any of these stories. As a matter of fact, I don't know any of these stories to this day. Yet, I feel like I know these stories so intimately, because I made them into my own. I had the most intimate and strangely engaging experience with this book without actually reading the stories. When I opened each page, certain words just jumped at me, and those were the words I "saved."

I didn't have to think. These words simply began to float on the page, and I painted around these words. I almost could't keep up with "their" speed. It sounds bizarre, I know, but I felt a close kinship with the author, Elizabeth Bowen who was an Anglo-Irish novelist.

Maybe I lost words of my own. Maybe I had to borrow someone else's.



"Reduced" from Dear John



no chair invited you.

                 A pretty September day


                                                                                    married at
nineteen.


she was twenty-seven or –eight

         reputation of being the most unpopular man

                                    He was careful, savagely careful, about
money and not careful enough about seeing



            anxious to “settle”






                        bought reduced coats and shoes for the little
girls
        the girls’ education would be a heavy expense.




                             She was a shiftless woman.






                   The house looked dedicated to a perpetual
January





            The nicest woman like having unattached men.
Around, “She must be full of brains.”






                        after one more forbidden




                                    our darling should leave

                        black chill of
                                                The schoolroom had a
faded sea-blue wallpaper







                                                                        “Have you
stopped painting?”


                       
                                                            on such a fine day
there would be shadows.”


    wash that blue off your paint-brush.”





The little girls were alike,









             part of her power
                 they prayed she might die


                 unwound the skipping-ropes




                                    skipped seventy-eight     her toes
bounced
out of her head. At last the rope caught her toe. “That’s
the record.”




            ‘Surely                                                at last.
               know                                         “I’ve


“She was accused of murder.”

                                    So she disappeared, hoping to be
forgotten





            Children,
                        They sat stone-still, clasped hands.


                                                            she will play games









                                                                                    My
own children are strangers;




                                                It’s rude to look at each other
when mother speaks!”
























From "Dear John" series.