Wednesday, August 25, 2021

"What Do You Do with Your Photographs?"


I read today that Josephine Baker was the first Black woman to be buried at the Parthenon.  I took this photo many years ago.  I thought of it when I read the headline.  I think the photo pretty groovy.  But tonight, sitting with my mother in the garage drinking our pre-dinner cocktails in our usual places with our usual demeanors, I told her of my day.  After the morning ablutions, I went to the gym, then rushed back to shower and dress and get her to her physical therapy by noon, after which we came back to her home where I warmed up some lunch in a pan from the night before.  Both.  I mean both the dinner and the pan. But I don't pay attention and her burners are very quirky, and I ended up burning the beans.  She was put off because I burned the pot, too. 

But that was not what I spoke of.  What I told her about was developing my negatives from the day before, of scanning the negatives that had virtually no image due to underexposure, of making something of them anyway re digital magic, etc.  

That was when she asked me the simplest but most injurious question.  

"What do you do with your photos after you make them?"

What a simple question, right?  It jarred me to my very core.  

"Well," I stumbled. . . "what does a guy who carves ducks in his garage do with them when he is done?  What does the stamp collector do with his books when they are full?  What does the fellow who builds miniature boats in bottles do. . . ?"  

She had me flummoxed.  But yea. . . what do I do with them.  

Sometimes I text them to friends who look at them on their phones and give them the tapback "thumbs up" but generally give no feedback at all.  I put some on nerdy photo sites where they are largely ignored.  Oh. . . back in the good old days I could get them published in online sites.  I used to trade photos with other, better photographers, too.  But now?  I don't know.  

It was a blow to the heart, for sure.  Was she being intentionally cruel?  I doubt it.  I mean, my hillbilly cousin paints discarded cabinets she finds on the side of the road or at garage sales and sells them for pretty good money.  Sometimes she'll cover them in seashells she collects on vacation and sells them for more.  Such things are obviously more valuable than my photographs.  

I almost took all my cameras out of my car and dumped them in the trash.  Really and truly.  But just then, and I mean in the millisecond before I trashed them all, I thought of Vivian Maier, and it saved me.  Really.  Who gives a shit what I do with them.  It was an evil question whether intended or not.  

I have been at my mother's house for two months now, and she is taking me to the grave with her.  She doesn't do it consciously, I believe, but that does not mitigate the fact.  My movements have slowed, my mind has ossified.  I cannot watch the things I want, documentaries on artists and philosophers and writers.  I cannot watch the simplest things.  I've abandoned hope.  As I write, she is watching noise.  I can hear it.  She hops from channel to channel, Fox to Dylan to Frazier to Weather on the Ones.  Really, mom?  Has the weather changed in the last ten minutes?  

And there is Dr. Pimple Popper.  

My dreams are nightmares.  I have no purpose in this life.  

"What do you do with you pictures when you make them?"  

Noise.  This life is nothing but noise.  

I am evil, I know.  One should not say such things.  But nobody I know has done this.  Brando let his parents die without much attention.  Others I know had parents who went to places where they were cared for unto death.  A friend I spoke with today has a mother the same age as mine.  She has 24/7 in home care.  I am a hillbilly with hillbilly money from a hillbilly family.  I know people who call their elderly parents from time to time.  They all "sympathize."  But they have other lives, other concerns.  

I am crawling to the grave in so many ways I can't enumerate.  

"You are sooooo lucky," my mother's friends say.  Sure am, she agrees while she watches three more episodes of "Gunsmoke."  

I'm a cad to say this, a lout to complain.  

Still, somebody please do me a favor and throw some dirt on me.  Put some pennies on my eyes. 

My back is broken, my hips are done.  I cannot move at any pace.  

Tomorrow I am having lunch with a woman I used to work with.  None of this will matter.  I will chatter like I always do, upbeat and delighted.  She will tell me of her coming new employment, and I will be excited for her.  

If I can only get the Liberator to work for me.  I can't.  I haven't.  I can't even get the focus right.  Is it me, or is it the camera?  I wrote to the fellow who made it tonight to ask him.  He was very much not interested.  What happened?  I thought we were buddies?  

As they say. . . I am on my own.  

"What do you do with your pictures. . . ."  

Tonight I feel as big a loser as I have ever felt--contrary to my horoscope.  I should be on fire.  I should be on top of the world.  

I'll suffer through another night, and I will be here in the morning.  Outside are vicious storms.  I've already drunk much too much.  Soon it will be nine. 

3 comments:



  1. It's a v. good Josephine Baker. She is proud and beautiful and not afraid of showing it. Maybe that wasn't the initial intent of the photo - but that is what she is telling me and I think she's super. Look at her -- she'd be great on a wall.

    Wonder what those people were thinking when they went and decided to paint on walls inside deep caves.

    Don't think they were planning an exhibition or a museum.

    Maybe they were attempting to order their world. Make some sense out of that crazy ball in the night sky - or that yellow fire-like one. Maybe they wanted to share - what was around them.

    To tell stories of who they/we were/are.


    Hey! You know what T. used to say? He was sorta broke when he got here, in more ways than one, and got broker in the body (healed - it is my one wish - in spirit) but he'd say "Honey, will you promise to knock me over the head when it's time?"

    I didn't get the chance.

    No pennies for your eyes (yet) you've got more living and making to do.

    Oh, we had a ride me and that Poet. I've been thinking about the last few years these last few weeks.

    You helped me process all that grief, ya know. You gave me space - here - where you hang your pictures for free.

    There were/are few places that felt safe enough to "unpack" my lost love/disbelief/sudden aloneness than here.

    But I could come here - and participate in your makings. And unfasten myself some. Oh, I know it was messy. But of course it was. My person up and died one October Friday around dinner time.

    So your pictures helped do that. Get me through - see something new - that I had never looked upon before - argue with it or adore it. Take my mind either to or away from my own sad life.

    Your pictures helped me to understand the art of photography (which I'm not sure I truly believed in all these many years ago now).

    It isn't a bazillion dollars - and maybe it is difficult for you to even realize what all that meant to me. And maybe it doesn't matter to you all that much either. It matters to me.

    I'm grateful that there is a you - humping your cameras around, wearing your clothes from China, taking pictures of what you "see" and then daily, posting them, here, for anyone who comes by to have a look - and participate in.

    Even though the interaction on the blog slowed - I have always felt like I was "in communication" with a people that cared about the value of art to heal, soothe, startle, annoy - and with you - a person - who was willing to share their makings - even the "mistakes."

    Oh I know. You want the glory. To be seen by the masses and adored. Of course.

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  2. It's like you (and all the makers I adore) are Jacob wrestling with God. (You may or may not recall my delve into Art = Love = God = Art = Love).

    Personally, for this viewer, you couldn't put a dollar amount on what your blog/writing/pictures/space gave to me - for the million years I've been coming here - and for the last few in which I've struggled & yes, suffered.

    So tell Ma, what you do with your pictures is - well give her my story - tell her your pictures helped with the healing of a broken heart.




    But, I've never believed it is a makers job to "do anything" with their pictures, really. Unless they want to.

    It is the viewers job (or pleasure) to "do something" with the work when bumping into it or seeking it out.

    Of course, one must "get it to the people." But that's a different animal- and you've done that consistently for how long.

    There is nothing like a little crisis of faith - of belief to jump start the next project. Well, I shouldn't say that as a general - maybe it's just me.

    “Some of my pictures are poem-like in the sense that they are very condensed, haiku-lik. There are others that, if they were poetry, would be more like Ezra Pound. There is a lot of information in most of my pictures, but not the kind of information you see in documentary photography. There is emotional information in my photographs.” – Sally Mann


    I just really like the terminology "emotional information" to describe a picture (of any kind).

    I'm not going back to read this. It's from my heart. And I'm sorry if it too much for Cowboy Batman - all that emotion. Say "thank you ma'am" and ride out into the heat and humidity to take more pictures.

    x

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