On the way out the door he would remark
to himself, though you could overhear him, "That particular step. That
lamppost. That clot of dirt." I would follow after him closely to hear
the levity of what caught his soul. "That azalea, the way the wind
rustles the drapes, our footsteps quieted by the rug."
He imagined he was working with a team,
silent, along a path, in a line, standing together, through the trees,
staring at a distant light source.
He interested me in general, there was no particular activity that drew me.
He wasn’t ego-less, far from it. He observed
himself! He lived in his third person actively: speaking of himself as
"Him." He would say to his friends, "Do you know what he did
today?"
This served two purposes: by saying "him" or even "it", at times, he
would
surround himself in mystery and celebrity, become famous in his own
language;
and secondly, it was the only way he could be close to himself: it was
the only way he was himself. But deep down he must have doubted this;
saw
it as mere, thin strategy; a gimmick of his soul; an intellectual
stupidity.
When he saw me to the door and moments
before I was to see my own ghost in the hallway, he whispered, "The
disproportion
between the greatness of my task and the smallness of my contemporaries
has found expression in the fact that one has neither heard nor even
seen
me."
He told me about his experiments, "A
point
sticks out, becomes a landmark, erodes, passes on. A life as landscape
making: hoping that around this turn, a more dramatic view will take
place."
"I make my life art. At first this led
to a state of amazement, an eye opening: everything glowed; in the
corner
of my eye flickers of movement, static objects transmuted, wiggled,
twitched;
I constantly spun about, trying to see it in action; to catch it and
safely
watch the change."
"I felt in control, endowed with a
special
and great power. I could bend things to my will. From afar I could
clutch
things, rotate them, inspect, heat one part, cool another, vaporize a
portion,
separate the gases, transmute the whole into wood to plastic to lead
then
have it disappear."
"I obsessed with finding a great drama
in my tastes, sensations, thoughts, in all my ways. Now, I don’t
bother.
I want much more. At the time, my power was enough. But it cured
itself.
The more I dramatized my life; the quicker the sensational aspects
faded;
bored, my mind wandered. I would continue sweating, trying to focus but
on what? What it was? On the faint remembrance of a flicker? Now, I am
entirely different and open to much subtler things. For example, I only
want to sink faster. The trouble is I am only up to my knees in mud,
there’s
not enough of it around to cover my body.
Later he explained, "I tell you, you
cannot
help but sink into the mud since it is all around us. Still, when the
foot
hits the soil, almost immediately there are vines of blue and green
silk
that curl up around the ankle. It is so incredible! Each step
brings
me deeper. I gave up breathing long ago. My gills have adapted to
removing
the impure air and water and to taking in only the dirt from the mud.
And
it feels good!"
Walking with him, he wanders. Stops,
backs
up, goes forward. Down one block then back up again, then down again.
Then
he says, "You know, I always move forward, I never take even a single
step
back. More precisely, I advance to the side."
The work was easier for me, floating
along
as I do, but his feet began to tire so we rested and ate in some
underground
garage where everyone wore suites and was silent together.
Deep inside, at what would be his core
if he had one, he said, "I have no core, you see. I have no center. At
my deepest, I am a tangent. The closest I come is to the edge. But what
good is this? When I chop an onion I cry, not because of the chemistry
but because of the crime of penetrating the layers. And I weep because
the layers turn out to be finite. Still I must eat.
"Inside I am a pot of mud. I advance
and
hit the wall, then the pot of mud in me sloshes forward and I am shoved
further forward a second time."
"I am good for a while. I advance
strongly
at first then I sink. I don’t sink fast enough, though. That is my
problem.
I sink too slowly.
I told him I wanted to sit
face-to-face,
silent, looking at each other, drinking shots of vodka. He said, "Your
thoughts are so grim and angry. Can’t you see we must pull colored
scarves
over our heads? Such timidity! I am not your teacher! Get on with it!"
He said, "You should know about my
researches.
I have investigated certain subtleties. I say ‘investigate’ but I am
not
speaking of techniques or methods. I wouldn’t degrade myself so."
"Much of my time has been spent looking
at the details. I have focused my eyes millimeters from fabrics, cloths
and weaves of various kinds. Saffron, cotton, red rayon, plastic
chintz,
paisley, rich brocade, needlepoint embroidery, lace white and black,
silks,
hemps, burlaps, flannels, wools. My pointed nose would push into them
and
I could taste mustiness, freshness, perfumed scents or the mix
absorbed."
He showed me how to travel sideways,
lengthwise,
against and skew to the weave. Sometimes I would rip through, rending
the
cloth.
Because of him, I hovered over a white
Styrofoam ball on snow and caressed it with white ripstop nylon and
white
lace. I brought cloth to the desert-electric yellows and crimson
cottons
and nylon flowery chintz and I wore a women’s gold rayon shirt the
while.
I traced my black shrouded feet crunching through the windy cold snow.
The microphone picking up air shifts, my breath, camera rubbing against
chest. I crumpled up cloth and held it to my belly. In my apartment, I
practiced hand gesture studies in a mirror listening to Indian ragas
and
Van Gogh dramatized on television, slightly drunk and with made-up
dances
on the spot all framed for video upside down. I painted myself black
and
danced to Monk. I spun round in the middle of a circular building,
strode
straight through corridors, jimmied along sidewalks, ran aimlessly
through
Monument Valley kicking a blue ball.
Together we hung cloth in trees in mild
winds. Lace in prickly mesquite. Cotton on dry cracked riverbed clay
and
drew feather boa over the roots of a desert bush, licking its bark.
"This will have no ordinary risk: a
cool
risk...I ask nothing of you. You can slip out easily. Why should you be
affected? I offer you nothing. It is up to you to do the work...It is
our
occasion to do what we need to do...perhaps I will need your
help...perhaps
I can help...perhaps I will stand aside for you."
"Listen," over the phone he says,
"They’re
burning in my kitchen."
"What is burning?"
"Remember the leaves I collected last
autumn
and dumped in the corner of my room? They’re on my stove now, and I’ve
turned the burner on low and there is a terrific fire." And he hung up.
"Do this carefully," he told me, and he
gave me a series of instructions. I felt uncertain: what was I supposed
to get from this? Still, they were clean, precise...I was so attracted
to the orderliness.
We traced and documented our steps,
sometimes
with levity but more often with a formulaic and lard-like heaviness. We
sought the moment as if stalking our lives would let us grasp hold of
it,
and we succeeded, gasping for breath, our fingers on our own
throats.
He sat me at the table. "Just sit." He covered it with black velvet. "I do this for you." Then he placed in from of me:
- stone, pebble, pea
- brick, chair, table.
- horse, cow, plastic chairs.
- bricks, small houses, huge pebbles, giant peas.
- shoes, socks, small plastic cows & a rabbit.
- spotlight, humus, hourglass, puppet.
- flame, cloth, fur, steel.
- retread, sand, asphalt, pencils, tomatoes.
- skin, fleas, roaches, hairs, potatoes.
- urine, feces, accident, remorse, hairdo-on fire.
- birds, air in bottle, red earth, clay, muddy water.
- key chain, locks, battle sores, coughing, (moving hand in front of head, palm in front of chin, to forehead, looking forward.)
- rain water in jar, alcohol in low flat container with black screw-top, cheese on wood.
- box of nuts & bolts, leather, hammer, flame.
He said, "OK...Listen to my
instructions:
Roll on your back and scream. Roll to the left not right...do it again.
Now, you’re nervous. Now, you’re trying to look relaxed but your
shoulders
are tight. Now, you’re smiling...stop smiling. Grip your shoulders
hard.
Now, smile...Now, bare your teeth...Face away, to your left...Ok, but
you’ve
clenched your shoulders again...so stamp your right foot...And, grimace
again...
He lead me to the forest, put me on my
knees, and pushed my head almost to the soil. My nose grazed the wet
leaves.
I was cold, bent, and water was soaking into my pants. "Are you
comfortable?"
"It’s OK, go on." So he guided me, pushing my head, my shoulders, so
that
my eyes floated over the ground. I floated over the brown and wet, then
a patch of sheer, dark blue cloth so thin that I could see it doubling
over, rippling, curtaining with black-green moss below. Then a fabric
of
the same quality but a paler, sky blue. Then a series of arabesque book
etchings and filigree, then up and over a rotted stump, then back to
pine
needled earth. When he finally pushed my lips to the soil, I rested
there
feeling and tasting the cool.
Still, other times he was more open,
less
controlling: "Come with me." He gave me string and knife. We went out
to
the park and wandered, and now and then, when we felt it was right, we
cut a length of string, tied it into a circle, a loop, and dropped it.
Again and again, here and there just as we felt. And eventually we
wandered
back and found a loop we’d left at the start which he balled up and put
it into his jacket saying, "We’ll need this later."
He said, "Look for something to clean
and
clean it as fast as possible. I thought I’d clean the gutter. "You’re
using
your left hand to scrape the dirt out of the gutter...you’re
grimacing...it
doesn’t look any cleaner...how can you clean a gutter?"
We went outside together, touching
walls,
fire hydrants, loading docks, asphalt, sidewalk, beer cans, newspaper,
store windows, garbage cans, elevator shafts, parked cars, street
lamps,
manhole covers, curbs, door handles...silently.
"Talk wildly, expressively,
incoherently
and simultaneously."
I want to conclusively comment on our
activities
but they feel vaporous and fictitious to me though they are, without
exception,
real. Often when we’re done and even though there is a drama in their
plan
and in their telling, the actual sensation is flat. And that is
precisely
their power! They are entirely lacking a romantic conclusion or grand
statement.
Their importance derives from the way they color our lives--that we
found
a way to do these acts. I struggle to remember them, for they dissolve
inseparable into my past: some were self-conscious decisions on our
part,
others we simply did and forgot while doing them. We cannot even refer
to them between ourselves; I only construct them for my benefit. Our
"activities",
begin and end in our friendship.
We drive to a cliff by the ocean at
twilight.
We eat oranges and bananas, some decorated with dots along their
length,
others with stripes around their circumference. It is warm and windy
and
there are evergreens. We go to one and, facing the setting sun, pour
tequila
over our fists, dripping down our arms and flowing onto our pants and
the
dry brush.
Over a meal he says, "Go and look into
the mirror and blow as if fanning embers into a flame."