For my co-creators in the Conscious Writers Collective
“Evaluation is creation,” as Nietzsche noted.
MIRROR IMAGES
The concave mirror, the convex mirror: variations on visibility.
The shadow’s relation the self as a sheer, a texture that speaks to the density of a physical body in relation to light.
A poem by Cole Swensen titled “Connote” . . . in its entirety:
I wonder if you can use words in such a way that only their connotations and not their denotations get activated. To connotate as one might cogitate or contemplate a state chosen for its particular relation to thought so that its not the definition (always restrictive) of the word that comes into play, but its fields of association, its overtones and undertones, those always expansive, radiating zones of suggestion and implication, in the middle of which gapes the strangely blinding blind spot of the impossibility of precise literal meaning, suggesting, in turn, that language, at heart, is always an absence.
An excerpt from Nicholas Delbanco’s short story, “What We Carry”:
The sky is of a bright whiteness, and she wears dark glasses. There is what might be a boat in the background, or a structure that evokes one; water blends with the horizon so that he is not certain if she stands by an inlet, a river, or the sea. There is a brown shingled wall to the left.
It is her smile he examines, however, the mouth both expansive and pinched. She is smiling at Simon— from the pleasure of the occasion, perhaps, or the beauty of place, or because of something someone said. It would not have been Simon, however; this is a smile of assent at something more amusing than a request that she smile. Kenneth grows certain, suddenly, that there was a third party present— someone at the edge of things, beyond the lens or range of his remembrance, some business associate of Simon's with a camera, or someone passing through who made his mother laugh. A gull preens on a railing by the wall.
The photo introduces a third party; a presence is always in dialogue with an absence.
TWO BY NAN GOLDIN
Both images come from her book, The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, titled after a song in Bertolt Brecht’s The Threepenny Opera. Both photos are held in collections at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. Both are cibachrome prints. Both are shot in public spaces and present ways of thinking about spacing and relationality. Both provoke us to consider how dimension implicates its subjects.
The first image places us on Coney Island, likely in the fall or early spring. Two humans on a bench with a large gap between them. Sometimes a gap implies an erotic possibility. In this photo, the sun seems to have set behind the camera— the sky is pink near the horizon where it meets a harder, dark edge, a deep blue that is the ocean, a blue that snags the blue sweater of the woman on the bench.
The woman, Suzanne, is looking towards the man, Brian, and he seems to be looking downwards, perhaps at his hands— but not up towards the beach or the water, and not diagonally towards the other person. The brightest part of this image is Brian’s white tshirt. We can read the muscles in his back beneath it; Brian is more available to us as a human body than Suzanne. But Suzanne’s face is more available to us as a figuration of feeling.
If I stand back a bit, I notice the vastness, and how vastness is emphasized by the presence of the horizon. And how the horizons multiply, giving us the metal bars along the walkaway as well as thick horizontal slats of the bench. Three horizons, and one of them is inhabited by two humans sitting. The space between them seems insurmountable. They share the same space but live in different planes, this is what the direction of the gaze suggests.
(What is Brian holding? I can’t stop wondering about this…)
The second image is a park in New York City. (I keep looking for birds— pigeons, the peckpeckpeck of convivial urban life. Entanglement.) A portrait of entanglement: the subjects’ faces held back from us by the angle. Two people on a bench, though the bench is facing us. The park is sparsely populated and yet it feels full; the shadows of the tree leaves ornament the sidewalks and surfaces. A conspiracy of intimacy in which the space colludes with the lovers and seems to hold them close. Their outfits match: both are wearing white shirts and jeans. Trash under his boot, the way sunlight colludes with the shaping of shoulders.
A/SIDE ON CONEY ISLAND
Not a gull or horizon in sight.
Aside on the isle of Coney. What’s in a name? What does Coney Island carry?
Space, this locus of potential in which things can influence each other, is our reality.
TRAIN BETWEEN
Returning to Suzanne and Phillipe as the subjects of a photo by Nan Goldin… the way green smudges the seen.
Afterimages matter. Afterimages are material.
I’m thinking of a moment in Rainer Maria Rilke’s The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge, that calls upon the images of childhood. In that novel, the afterimages reconnect Malte to the beloved red crayon of his childhood. He remembers seeing the crayon on the table and reaching towards it, watching in dismay as it rolls off the table and falls into the thick fur of the carpet below. Undeterred, with a reading lamp shining straight into his eyes, the young Malte runs his fingers blindly through the carpet looking for the crayon.
Not looking — the light makes it impossible to see – but seeking.
Seeking the crayon.
Looking and not looking.
Seeing a strange blur when a series of afterimages appear on his retina. The afterimages dissipate, enabling him to perceive his own hand, its fingers outstretched, its trunk stirring as if disconnected from his body and scurrying quietly across an ocean floor. Then, the wall at the rear of the room secretes a much larger hand — a hand with long slender fingers also seeking something from the floor.
Malte watches the two hands move ominously across the carpet as if driven to meet, or driven to encounter each other accidentally. Fascination morphs to fear as Malte wills the hand that he considers his own, the hand he claims and feels responsible for, to withdraw from its search. Still shaken, he sits alone in the armchair, shivering, pallid, estranged from the room's familiar quietude and safety. When his companion looks up from her reading, Malte says nothing. He is white as a ghost. His companion kneels near his knees and begins shaking him desperately, calling out his name. Malte: the most familiar author of all. His lips tremble: he cannot find a single word.
Perhaps the sole comfort of this nameless event lies in Rilke’s decision to describe it. For, as William Gass observed, “that description will bide its time,” those “ghostwords will wait their moment – and they will return, forcing him to relive the fall of the crayon, and his vision of two hands blindly searching the carpet for it, as if the color belonged to both crayon and account, and was therefore equally missed.”
As if the absence of one is tied to the other.
SPECTRAL “LIKE-NESS”
“These photos, in which the bodies are absent, and the eroticism is only represented by the abandoned clothes, were a reminder of my possible, permanent absence,” Annie Ernaux said the book she co-wrote with her lover, Marc Marie, a book that they titled The Use of Photography.
The layers in Hélène Amouzou’s “Autoportrait” – a term that sidles alongside “autofiction” somehow, as if to suggest the image wants to enact a theory of representation that includes absences. The wallpaper peeling from the wood surface, blurring the line between paper and fabric. The part of the wallpaper visible through the subject’s right calf. This idea of sheerness in a person challenges how I think about “visibility” or what it means to be seen. The suitcase as a story of origin.
The spectral blur in Christina Sharpe’s “Note 139”:
Ghosts are the most faithful beings in the universe: they don’t believe in time or impossibility.
Ghosts don’t give a damn about the conditions we have set on their existence. I admire this a lot in them.
In the sidereal: Marcel Proust’s “spectral” magic lantern in Jean Santeiul.
COSMOLOGIES
“It all begins with a photo I found one day of three men on a roof.”
— Ian Penman, Erik Satie Three Pieces Suite
Penman accounts for the origin of the obsession that turned into a book on Erik Satie.
Larry Rivers, O'Hara Reading, 1967
The story of origins is the light that brings us to the page with the hope of illumination. The cosmology creates the conditions of possibility for the world we are inventing or writing.
“The poet’s metaphorical activity puts him in a contrafactual relation to the world of other people and ordinary speech,” Anne Carson observed in Economy of the Unlost.
Unequivocally.
VARYING TERMS OF ADDRESS
When I listen to music, gardens open out around me, and the melody becomes a flower I hear with my eyes.
— Mahmoud Darwish, as translated by Catherine Cobham
*
Annie Ernaux and Marc Marie, The Use of Photography trans. by Alison Strayer (Seven Stories Press)
Brian Eno, A Year with Swollen Appendices
Brian Eno and David Byrne, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts
Christina Sharpe, Ordinary Notes (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Cole SwensEn, AND AND AND (Free Poetry Press)
Collin Marshall, “When Erik Satie Took a Picture of Debussy & Stravinsky June 1910” (Open Culture)
Hélène Amouzou, Autoportrait (2009)
Ian Penman, Erik Satie Three Piece Suite (Semiotexte)
Marcel Proust, “Chardin: The Essence of Things”
Nan Goldin, The Ballad of Sexual Dependency at MOMA
Nan Goldin, “Suzanne and Brian on the bench, Coney Island, 1982” at MOCA
Nan Goldin, “Suzanne and Philippe on the bench, Tompkins Square Park, New York City, 1983” at MOCA
Nan Goldin, “Suzanne and Philippe on the train, Long Island, 1985” at MOCA
Nicholas Delbanco, Reprise: The Collected Short Stories of Nicholas Delbanco (Dalkey Archive)
Rainer Maria Rilke, The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge
Vivian Maier’s gallery of self-portraits


















