The following florid prelude written in a style meant to do affectionate
(if given the impossibility of reproducing it, inevitably ironic) homage to the
late manner of Henry James — with which you may understandably not decide to put up for long — and in which
I usually employ a liberal use (although not here, it’s only used once at the end)
of the distanced and distancing pronoun "one" and the occasional interspersed
gratuitous phrase française, all to throw up a wall of steam (the pretense of
subtlety, nonetheless subtle) over a topic which in fact I find intrinsically
threatening in some way I can’t explain -- introduces a visual tutorial I
believe will make self-evident what I have only this moment found I must claim
as certainty: that it is impossible to photograph close-ups of packed
shiny black plastic garbage bags day or night, rain or shine, and not have each
reveal itself as mesmerizingly inimitably beautiful. Their sculpted surfaces
and implied landscapes (mountainous ravines, many of them!) may even edge out Sycamore
trees as Existence’s most dependable source of beauty.
How many other categories of potential esthetic wonder are ignored
because we find their function too ubiquitously common (ergo boring) and/or
uninspiring/distasteful to think of as anything but ‘there’? Look at these
glories - qu’il me semble mes frères, mes
semblables! - and consider the question.
.
I’m thinking of investigating asphalt up-close next, bringing to
bear on the phenomenon of its startling diamond-cut black-jeweled tiny edged
surfaces Quentin Crisp’s near dictum of implied suggestion which may profitably
govern our approach to the experience of any aversion or reflex dismissal based
on what amounts to bias: ‘I shall try to think of it in this new way.’ If you
learn of my demise through the news that I’ve been run over by a New Jersey-plated
car on a Manhattan street, this will probably be why. (Which I should count as a
fine way to die.)
.
With regard to which (not my demise, but Quentin Crisp’s implied invitation
“to think of it in this new way”): of the gratifying number of viewers who have
kindly indicated their approval on Facebook (via the ever-serviceable LIKE
& even a few red heart LOVEs) of another category of esthetic wonder I have
recently not infrequently mined for what seem to me to be among the more
striking kaleidograms Instagram’s layout function creates by robotic accident --
-- I’m curious what these kind viewers individually believe
constitute the myriad small kaleidogrammed components they are looking at. I’ve
inserted a quartet of these symmetrical baroque arrangements of pale gold
translucence just above – samples of which you'll already have seen hovering over the beginning of this text, in geometric
concert with the garbage bags’ dramatically shadowed shiny black beauties, and I invite you to guess the pale gold translucent components’ identity.
.
One shan’t reveal if your surmise
is right or wrong, however.
.
Oh, and I looked down into the texture of the asphalt surface of First
Avenue as I walked upon it just now and was drawn to photograph a little square
of it wet from crushed slush which I then kaleidogrammed thrice. Here are the parent
(upper left quadrant) and its three children affixed to one another in a quartet.
There’s no pretense in these subtleties.
.
.
No comments:
Post a Comment