Tuesday 25 June 2013

Writing



Here are some definitions of writing that are not found in the dictionary:

Writing is the gathering of our language and our wits into a cause.

Writing is not neutral in its intentions, is not a text or document of letterings, but comes carrying freight, it carries weight and meaning and purpose and effect.

Writing is something we learn at school and some of us go on learning for the rest of our lives.

Writing abounds as our thinking abounds, as our breathing expands and contracts, as our body moves and stays.

Writing employs grounded clunky words to fly through the air like a dancer.

Writing goes into places you wouldn’t read about.

Writing enlivens words every day, affirms words and can make new even the oldest words in our vocabulary.

Writing wants to stop time while being itself a product of time.

Writing involves people who spend half a lifetime writing a book that no one reads and people who spend one day writing something that is read by everyone generation after generation; and vice versa, involves people who spend half a lifetime writing something everyone reads and someone who spent a day writing something that no one will ever read.

Writing makes the mark you hope you will never wish to cross out.

Writing usually knows how to start, almost invariably has to figure out how to continue, and sometimes doesn’t know how to stop.

Writing is the voice by another means.

Writing is a rational way of going beyond the rational.

Writing deals in transparency, objectification, reason, logic and singularity, but with equal facility deals with contradiction, paradox, incompatibility, inexplicableness and plurality, sometimes on the same page.

Writing uses tangible elements to present intangible realities.

Writing is sometimes the only way out, sometimes the only way in.

Writing is created in the light and we wish writing acknowledged this more often than it does.

This is part 4 of my opening night paper, originally called ‘Mapping the Terrain’, given at the Writers Retreat at Santa Casa, Queenscliff, on Thursday the 20th of June 2013, under the aegis of the Carmelite Centre.

Friday 14 June 2013

Metafiction








Three photographs by Philip Harvey of Bridget Harvey's booktree of 'Metafiction' by Patricia Waugh (Methuen, 1984)

Saturday 8 June 2013

Found (Sze No. 4)



Sze No. 4

the emergency exit


gravity-defying structures
photograph of rock printed on tyvek
 trees
 moss
 rocks aluminium

wood steel bricks stone sandbags outdoor pump

 outdoor lights mixed media
a teetering structure
models machines
salt water stone string projector

 video pendulum mixed media

archaeological remnants
experiments
photographs of stone architectural materials

 Venice
tickets from the local water taxis
black tape
points enough information
 drawings sculpture
the tape is made of sticks
 movable tables
 engineering project
a ball of grass
explosion
 sticks
 a 3-D line rendering of rectangles
the disco ball
 a tripod the paper ball
 landscape snapshots
 a maze of disparate materials  arrangements
realization of form
elaborately arranged sculpture
 a swinging pendulum
 a walk-through
 workbenches the wall  fake tools
plasticine D-rings nails
eraser shavings
the room
 a wall of mirrors
echo chamber
installations
intricate sculptures the minutiae
domestic detritus
 office supplies
 fantastical  fractal-like installations
 architecture  electric lights
 fans
 water systems
houseplants


aluminium plastic
 photograph of rock printed on tyvek
photo
wood steel plastic stone string fans overhead projectors photograph of rock printed on tyvek
 mixed media
simulations of rocks and boulders
 rooftops balconies shop windows
toothpicks sponges light bulbs
 plastic bottles
paint cans  ladders sticks
 aluminium rods
 branches  espresso cups tape measures
 bags of sand
 gaffer’s tape
 lamps screw drivers
 clay  plastic tubs napkins  a sleeping bag
Italian stone existing shelves
 found materials exhibition catalogs napkins stone string clay mixed media
teetering scaffolding sticks ladders tape
mass-produced ephemera

the emergency exit

Found words for Found objects on blogs and reports of Sarah Sze’s installation in and around the United States Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2013

Saturday 1 June 2013

Embankment (Sze No. 3)


Sze No. 3


As the express train comes round the Jolimont tunnel and out onto the magnificent nineteenth century embankment that extends a mile and more from Richmond north to Clifton Hill, inner Melbourne is seen shining through the rain, standing bright against the darkness of night, squares and filaments of light.

Through the windows can be seen the walls of lit windows that constitute the appearance afar of the lost dreams of twentieth century architects, keen to construct buildings of thirty and forty storeys they had learnt about in architecture school, the wall cladding gone grungy and replaced by new luminescent cladding.

Over to the left glare the rings and batteries of highpower lights above the greatest football ground in the Antipodes, for a game is in progress and the glow of the ground in the dark afar is a sign that roaring and cheering will go on for some time, and the results will be unimportant.

Richmond, with its bends of little lights and highrise glitter, comes to view and with it the tangle of unpolled trees, the broken down walls of ephemeral graffiti, and below them the trash along the backlanes, the cars that were picked up and dumped down again in vacant lots, windows fractured.

The carriage itself is a Sarah Sze, old MX newspapers strewn in order across seats, a can of something rolls across the floor, and an empty packet of headache caplets has been lain carefully with a mineral water bottle packet against the soft seat upholstery, an abstract design of colourful oblongs, zigzags and streak lines.

The embankment is built of consolidated earth, but who knows what else down there below the tracks, bricks, crockery, boulders, whatever was solid enough to be ground into ground, rests there now, and then bluestone chips hold the sleepers in place above ground, and the steel rails riveted by nails thicker than thumbs.

Skyline of supermarket packets topshelf in the dark, streets lined with boxes of fertile imagination down there in the shadows, a townhall clock that hasn’t told the right time for years, a police station cordoned off with plastic orange tape like it were a crime scene but is in fact (only) a workmen’s site, impinge on the solid fragility of the retina.

Streetlights with their cones of glow, amidst tree branches bare, and the wires upon wires linking and lifting and drifting from one pole to the next and into recesses toward the river, or up the air toward the heavy-housed slopes of old Fitzroy in the dark.

Impossible sometimes not to notice how all of the buildings serve the coated bodies going past, buildings for travel, buildings for rest, buildings of drugs, buildings of food, buildings made for analysis, buildings made for reverence, and so forth for the bodies at ease in the carriages warm and mobile, express speeding along the embankment.

Dark outlines of the hills of Kew are invisible in the rain and closer, halogen lights grip the park paths and feature the speeding raindrops, while hands rummage inside through a brand carrybag for a biro, a book, a packet of throat lozenges, and meanwhile reflections of lights and shapes change in the spacious windows.

Except even if the train were to stop the movements continue, even when the traffic comes to a red light in Hoddle Street other traffic is turning with the green arrow, or reversing to park, or idling behind the bus, and as the train goes over the iron bridge not stopping for the thousandth time, it’s that time of the week again.

Inevitably, as they say, half-lit gravel yards are empty in the drizzle so that, now gates are closed, working machinery cannot be differentiated from obsolete machinery, and great funnels and conveyor belts, if they are conveyor belts in fact, lose their hardness.

The freeway too goes under us, a pattern of permanent need as cars their red lights their dark interiors maintain perfect straight lines and perfect veers both ways, forever it seems, and no one knows when it will end or what will happen when it ends, not even the wealthy designers of those shiny wet machines.

Past the foursquare heritage warehouse of Victoriana, its shelves of wrought iron objects and porcelain doorknobs and encaustic tiles all quiet now that the lights are out and everyone’s gone home, thence up Clifton Hill past the yards of timber fragrant in the rain, and the Darling Gardens, speckled with litter of different sizes.

Objects (Sze No. 2)


Sze No. 2

Sarah Sze, up in the air, over by the window, locked into place, free as a bird. All those wires like thoughts we never had before. All those empty containers, the ones we left behind that we could have enjoyed for what they are. All those colours, humouring us like new found witticisms. An internet we can see in one room. Connections that make us want to go out and do it ourselves.

Sarah Sze, right at home with Miro. Prevert in the stationery shop. What happens when Cornell's boxes are turned inside out. 3D medieval Persian calligraphy floating near the ceiling. Sesame Street on acid. The siesta daydreams of Frank Lloyd Wright. What Alice Liddell might have said to Lewis Carroll, translated into objects.

Sarah Sze, the takeoff of biomechanics, the shimmer of the alkalines and acids. A thousand faux pas outside the playground in the playground of a skyscraper atrium. The Oldenbourg faux pas of a flaccid toothpaste tube. The recommended blog at the end of a million hardwires.

Sarah Sze, Sesame Street on a Sunday afternoon. Sesame Street for the millions of newyorkers going over the curvy bridges to the cereal boxes of Manhattan. Sesame Street today was brought to you by the letter S and the number Millions. S like a great loop up through the the the the the the the the mezzanine and out into the night. Million like the impossibility of anyone ever imagining what a million people could be. Sesame Street, somewhere between Haight-Ashbury and Occupy Wall Street.

Sarah Sze, sponges up poles and cables through ducts and fixtures down manholes and tapes between windows and orange plastic fencing around workzones. Bollocks that seep where we sleep, that rest where they ride, that itch and require a response. Every day like the art world that parallels the desire in our hearts.

Sarah Sze, super special, so so something sensational. Sarah Sze, drawing the streets of my city with a ton of stuff from the hardware shop. Sarah Sze, reorganising the stray micro objects of my house into patterns and projects. Out into the garden, where lengths of wool tie trees together and the birds are a mystery. Sarah Sze, spectacularly simple

Sarah Sze, older and wiser? Who knows. Take the detritus and make it a feature. See these offcuts of a civilsation running on empty? Put them in the public square, beautiful like they were meant to be from an inventor who spent his whole life perfecting them, back in 1953. Sarah Sze knows better? Better than who? Alice? Going down the rabbit hole?

Sarah Sze, is she an American? America, land of the free download, land of the freeway. For example, isn't it funny watching a grown man like Calder kneeling on the ground winding up toy trains? Or hanging oblong shapes in space so they look like peak hour at an airport? Or painting his huge country house black? Decades of turning wires and joining dots and cracking open spheres so they look like galaxies of solar systems. In this respect it's not altogether different in New Zealand.

Sarah Sze, seriously is not me. Sarah Sze is a woman who lives most times on the eastern side of the New Found Land. Never met her, never spoken to her. Hundreds of lugubrious cables down the street and over the hills and bipping off satellites are how I know the twisty lady who nails stuff to the ceiling. Nor am I Sparta Rotterdam. Never been to Rotterdam. Never been to New York. We make up Sarah Sze stuff at home: coat hangers from cootamundras, vaulting boxes down the path.

Sarah Sze, the microcosm of our delusion, not. She points accusatory fingers, um maybe not sure, sometimes possibly. She makes the world a better place, you should see our front garden. Sarah Sze chose a career path and no one can do what she does, not that that's important. Doing it is important. She forgot to live a low-impact existence. She doesn't leave any footprints. Not sure she even leaves a signature. I guess sometime she discovered that lego is more fun than 24 hour news services.

Sarah Sze works with twigs. Twigs tied together into warped Buckminster Fuller walk-throughs that hang from a fountain of tubes. Twigs in the form of paint brushes, stomach pills, chewing gum wrappers. Maybe they fell from the gruesome trees of consumerism, anyway she has picked them up and placed them in lines like in some musuem of natural history. Twigs and petals of rampant consumerism fall to the ground and she notices them. These days though she seems to buy more stuff herself.

Sarah Sze is apparently going to Venice, the serene home of installations. Great curtains across rooms and in cul-de-sacs paintings of glistening princes or stodgy hunting scenes. Lacquered tables covered in cards and underneath the creaky floorboards held in place with 9 inch nails surges of lagoon water are a permanent Eno loop. Sarah Sze's object reflections in the clumsy canals near the ghetto. And have you noticed how many ladders and steps there are?

Sarah Sze, being a bit of a doer helps a bit too. Being a bit of a 24 hour worker. Knowing the right people never put ladders up skyscrapers. Getting reviewed didn't make the next work happen. Being a bit of a visionary helps a bit too. Knowing the right people might be a highway to hell. Climbing a ladder to the stars is not what you do if you are the right people.

Sarah Sze, my kitchen looks different. My passageway of homebound presents takes on a life of its own. That's just inside. When Christo put his curtain across California he wasn't thinking of the walls and walls and walls that line every freeway of the world now. Christo had to bargain with the authorities and justify the expense. Now those curtains are paid for with our taxes, that run across the country keeping up with speed heads. Song sung, Sarah Sze, fourteen bloggy lines, time for tea.

First appeared as a series of blogs (“The recommended blog at the end of a million hardwires.”) in an English newspaper, June 2012


Fragile (Sze No. 1)


Sze No. 1


Fragile
Like an encyclopedia
The work is fragile
Out of date
The minute you complete it
It’s fragile
Out of date

So the important thing
Important
Is that they are fragile
Remnants of that fragile ambition
Rather than themselves
Themselves
The success of that ambition

They’re all important
All very fragile
So fragile
I hope to reflect
The absurdity
The very important absurdity
Of the idea
The fragile idea
As well

Remnants
Like a dated encyclopedia
The work is a minute
A fragile date
The minute you complete it
It’s remnants
Out there

So the important ambition
Important
Is that they are an absurdity
Remnants of that fragile ambition
Rather than themselves
Themselves rather than
Success
The success of that ambition

They’re all ideas
All very fragile
So fragile reflections
Remnants of
A very important reflection
Of the idea
The fragile idea
As well

From the remnants
of a fragile encyclopedia
The minute is
Out of date
So the important thing
Important
Is that they are fragile
Remnants of a fragile ambition
Rather than success
I hope to reflect


Found text in Sarah Sze interview (Artforum, Summer 2013): “Like an encyclopedia, the work is out of date the minute you complete it. So the important thing is that they are remnants of that ambition rather than themselves the success of that ambition. They’re all very fragile, so I hope to reflect the absurdity of the idea as well.”