One day between 1974 and 1978, apparently, I walked around with my camera and took pictures of people in their cars. Why? I guess I was trying something. It didn't work, whatever, but I still want to post them because they are old and they are mine. If you look carefully at the first image, you'll see that the girl in the passenger's seat is photographing me back. Everyone lThose were different times.
I wonder where that picture of me is now?
I visited one of the satellite factories a couple days ago where I used to spend two days a week. People all know I'm leaving the firm, so I got to experience a sort of hero's welcome. I made a nice impression, I guess. I think it is because no matter what they were getting chastised for, they could always say, "Yea. . . but C.S.!" I set the standard for "acceptable" behavior there, I think.
More than one person asked me, "What are you going to do? Have you made plans?"
"No," I'd answer, "I've never make plans. Sort of my M.O."
"What about your photography?"
"Yea," I told one woman, "I'll make photographs, and I'll have the time to try to get them shown, but, you know, it is making them for me that matters. None of us knows if our stuff is any good or not, but we think it is and we enjoy making it and we put it up on the refrigerator with pride. That's sort of it."
The "sort of," is right. It is torture if you hope to be any good at all. It is best to give up on that.
I don't really remember making these photographs. I know I never showed any of them. They had no currency. That's the right word. They are only interesting now because they are older. I wonder about the people in these photos now. What were their lives like? What happened to them?
Things don't change so much, though, do they. The old ones, they don't look so happy. It must be something programed into the genes. Maybe we all end up like Grumpy Grandpa Bernie Sanders.
Maybe. If we're lucky.
I'm writing this from the hipster coffee house in the middle of the afternoon. They are playing music that reminds me of my life, that sad, longing, spare, acoustic stuff that has always pulled so hard at my longings and my melancholic heartstrings. Mandolin Orange, I'm sure. They just about fuck me up every time.
ReplyDeleteHa. They'd be cool hung on a huge wall - as a series tho.
My Grandpa - on my father's side - a very interesting man - whose family was murdered by the Nazis in Austria - he had already come to the US - was a motorcycle riding artist/inventor/ womanizer. He actually even attempted to pick up my mother - his son's wife - so the stories go.
Anyway - I have several of his artworks and a few inventions - one of my favorite series is a pen and ink on transportation . He was eventually murdered in NYC (I probably told you this somewhere along the years). Newspaper article says he had $1.10 in his pocket.
I also am the conservator of a painting of his father - Wolfgang - by a dutchess in Belgium. He was a handsome man and the artist was good - a beautiful soft face with barely there glasses. You can see my brother Roland in his face.
He was gone long before I was born - he has always been one of the giant ghosts of a life. Known only by photographs and stories.
See? It was your cars that took me there.