Sunday, July 20, 2008

leaves speak



NY Times July 20, 2008
ART

Leaves Speak; a Journalist Listens

By KATHRYN SHATTUCK
AS a journalist and critic Janet Malcolm wields prose with the precision of a scalpel, creating studies unflinching in their directness and layered with meaning and metaphor.

But lately Ms. Malcolm has banished traditional vocabulary to produce a different kind of portraiture. Mature, callow, tattered or freshly unfurled, her subjects stare forth from the page, exactly the same yet endlessly varied. Viewed on their own, they might be thought merely beautiful or occasionally odd. But as a group, they reveal a cross-section of diversity, their stories as complex as those of any human upon which Ms. Malcolm has cast her eye.

“Burdock,” a book with 28 photographs and a two-page essay by Ms. Malcolm, is to be released on Aug. 11 by Yale University Press. It can be read in a number of ways. As the next step in an unassuming photographic career. As an ode to the botanical illustrators in whose work Ms. Malcolm finds inspiration. As an essay on nature, and on the self. As a love story.

“After seeing the prints in Janet’s studio, I leapt at the chance to acquire ‘Burdock,’ ” Ileene Smith, editor at large at Yale University Press, wrote in an e-mail message.

“In a way, these leaves are Malcolm’s ultimate biographical subject,” said Ms. Smith, who most recently edited “Two Lives,” Ms. Malcolm’s 2007 examination of Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas. “They are also at some level deeply autobiographical.”

In “Burdock” Ms. Malcolm sets a straightforward tone for her foray into obsession and then allows the images to speak for themselves.

“For three successive summers, on the top-floor landing of a house in the Berkshires, I have been photographing burdock leaves,” she writes in the book’s essay. “I prop them in small glass bottles and photograph them head on, as if they were people facing me. No two leaves of any plant or tree are exactly alike, of course, but burdock leaves are of conspicuous and almost infinite variety. They are also outstandingly large — more than two feet long in some cases — which makes them extraordinarily good photographic subjects.”

On a late-June afternoon Ms. Malcolm, slender and relaxed in jeans and a white shirt, moved through her airy home near Sheffield, Mass., whose gray-shingled patina suggests more history than its 1980s vintage.

Over lunch on a screened porch she chatted easily as Prince, her sturdy 4-year-old cat, sought attention by jumping on the table. Outside, clumps of catnip, yarrow, sage and hollyhocks brightened the expansive lawn, arrived at by way of a wandering driveway cut through the woods. A breeze blew off the face of nearby Mount Everett.

It is difficult — impossible, really — to think of Ms. Malcolm, she of the formidable literary reputation, as just another interview subject. The tricks of the trade are laid bare, and a halting dance begins, with each aware of where the other is about to step.

Like master to apprentice, Ms. Malcolm could not help but ask questions of her own or gently suggest a second glance at information that might give texture to a story. (Several days later she called to offer more thorough responses after worrying that she had been reticent. “I actually came to all this thinking about the leaf quite late,” she said, “and only now after being provoked by the questions.”)

After the meal she headed up two flights of stairs to the small attic room that is her office, home to an aging computer whose cloudy screen causes her consternation. Behind her desk a wide-brimmed straw hat rested on a long table, covering her Leica camera and its close-up lens.

“I wear this in case I need to shade my eyes from the sun,” she said, pulling on the hat and walking into the hallway, where a large skylight cast rays onto the landing. She demonstrated her technique by steadying herself against the wall at the top of the stairs and pointing her camera in the direction of the small table against the opposite wall, on which she places her leaves.

“I’m afraid I’m self-taught and not very well taught,” she said. “I know that I know what to do. It isn’t that I’ve taken some step to become a photographer: I’ve become a photographer of burdock.”

The assessment is perhaps modest. Ms. Malcolm’s portraits of fellow authors grace book jackets. Her criticism of the medium, captured famously in “Diana and Nikon: Essays on Photography,” first published in 1980 and then expanded in 1997, is highly regarded. Somewhere, somehow, much of that knowledge must surely have worked its way in.

“I was always trying to take art photographs,” she said. “But the most interesting pictures were the snapshots. The artsy pictures were boring, always.”

She cited Richard Avedon’s portraits of celebrities, their scars and barnacles exposed, as an inspiration for her own portraits of common leaves. “Avedon radically extended photography’s capacity for cruelty,” she writes. “The ravages of time and circumstances on the faces he photographed were mercilessly, sometimes gruesomely, recorded. As Avedon sought out faces on which life had left its mark, so I prefer older, flawed leaves to young, unblemished specimens — leaves to which something has happened.”

Ms. Malcolm suggested an excursion to the town dump — one part utility, the other artistry. A week’s worth of garbage and a bucket of water in which to put cuttings loaded into the back of her yellow Toyota pickup, she maneuvered the manual-transmission truck with the expertise of a farmhand.

Garbage delivered, she headed down a dirt road with shaggy ditches, the kind of unkempt place burdock likes to grow. A pair of garden shears in hand, she sifted through vines and brambles, lingering over and then clipping those leaves that looked promising, usually the larger, drooping ones at the bottom of the plant.

Chekhov and Hawthorne used burdock to denote ruin and desolation in their writings. But burdock has medicinal and culinary purposes as well. In the wild the root is eaten by the larva of the ghost moth; in Asia it is julienned and braised with carrots and soy sauce. Herbalists use dried burdock as a diuretic and a blood-purifying agent. Oil derived from the root is thought to promote hair growth.

Still, when asked to define what makes a burdock leaf worthy of being photographed, Ms. Malcolm faltered.

“Some of the best-looking leaves turn out to be poor photographic subjects,” she said later. “When you take their picture, they come out looking kind of mousy and diminished.

“Then there are leaves that come out looking like some amazing new thing. It’s impossible to predict which leaf will, so to speak, pass its screen test and show itself to have the qualities of a star. But over time I have come to have a sense of which leaves have some possibility of stardom and which leaves are not even worth giving a screen test to.”

“I want an image that has some strangeness, even grotesqueness,” she said. “I can often tell after putting a leaf into the jar that it is going to fail the screen test — that the photograph will be uninteresting — and discontinue its sitting.”

Ms. Malcolm dedicated her book “To the memory of Gardner,” and it is on her long drives with Gardner Botsford, her husband and her editor at The New Yorker, that her affection for the ordinary weed began. It was the summer of 2004, his last.

In the garden, as on the page, Mr. Botsford pruned.

As a writer, “I always felt extremely fortunate to have the benefit of his ear and taste,” Ms. Malcolm said, acknowledging that some of her colleagues didn’t share her view and contended that he ruined the rhythm of their sentences. One called Mr. Botsford “the Ripper.”

“I knew I wouldn’t disgrace myself after he had edited a manuscript,” she said.

But at their Massachusetts home Ms. Malcolm pleaded with Mr. Botsford to lay down his loppers.

“Here in the country Gardner would, in his phrase, ‘edit the woods’ that surround the fields,” Ms. Malcolm said. “He made trails for walks. He made clearings for ferns to grow in. He liberated trees from the bittersweet vines that are threatening the New England landscape. My objection to his editing of the wisteria vine that shaded the porch may have been like the objections of the writers whose rhythm had been ruined.”

Finally Mr. Botsford declared a cease-fire, the evidence of which is tacked to the inside of a kitchen-closet door. The note reads:

“I G.B. will not prune wisteria or other vines on front porch for one year as of now 5/27/95. G. Botsford.”

Ms. Malcolm too eventually acquiesced. “I have come to understand that the wisteria has to be pruned if there is to be a ray of light on the porch,” she said. “I do it at least twice every summer.”

Rifling through an unbound copy of “Burdock,” she assessed the physical aspects of the leaves she has immortalized — the frayed edges and dusty veins of a leaf long on the stalk; the insect holes rendering another as fragile as lace; the healthy young one, gorgeously flushed and only faintly marred, like a rosy-cheeked child with scraped knees.

“If these leaves saw these pictures, I don’t know what they would think,” Ms. Malcolm said. “There is beauty in flaws.”

Thursday, July 17, 2008

determination


Chavez Memorial Solar Calendar Project


The past two weeks have been a bit of a step back for the project.

Victor Steinbrueck Park has been removed from the Mayor's proposed Market Levy proposal and its fate in terms of funding is now tied to its potential incorporation into a renewed Parks Levy. Which, we've discovered, may be linked to whether Sound Transit decides to put a new bond up for vote. The knee bone's connected to the...

Nevertheless, we push onward.

The design team will present options for Victor Steinbrueck to Tim Gallagher of Parks next week. Stay tuned.

Monday, July 14, 2008

the powerful emotion of light

















Artists, like other professionals, sometimes hit key turning points in the development of their work. Such is the case right now for Mischa Kuball, who has built an impressive practice by “generating a certain awareness about streams of interaction in terms of a psychological dimension in urban space and structure.” Working with visual properties of light and manipulations of space, Kuball creates works that, beneath their coolness and academically oriented phrasing, are driven by the heart. His recent projects reveal a need to promote social and political change via “the powerful emotion of light,” best exemplified by the emotion-packed Refraction House (1994).

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

a place for art


cloudgate2.jpg

Though Anish Kapoor's Cloud Gate for Chicago's Millennium Park may seem a bit fetched as a model for Victor Steinbrueck, there's something in its sculptural magnetism that seems potentially instructive.

Beyond all the other 'solutions' for Victor Steinbrueck Park's problems lies the basic human issues of meaning & connection. As it exists now, Victor Steinbrueck Park represents a cultural cul de sac, a sort of 'end of the road' or dead end where enclaves of tourists, homeless, recent immigrants and neighborhood denizens stake out various 'turfs'. People seem to observe each other but rarely interact outside their own group. There is no 'icebreaker' so to say.

Could an artwork that invites engagement help provide such socializing function? Could art help reshape people's behavior?

safety concerns
















I took this photo a few minutes before the melee broke out Sunday evening.  Three men were shot (none seriously wounded) after a larger fight erupted involving up to ten people.  

The issue that keeps surfacing with Victor Steinbrueck is crime: drug dealing, assault, robbery, rape. These are concerns everyone at all the meetings share about this place.

The question, it seems, is how to reclaim it.  

Several have cited the need for increased surveillance and a larger police presence.  Others have focused on the berms and lack of visibility within the park.  While others have mentioned the desire for more amenities and vendors.  While still others have said the problem isn't the park but rather its a larger socio-political problem that requires attention. 

While all these are factors, and that certainly the problem is bigger than Victor Steinbrueck Park, this is no reason to dismiss plans to make improvements to the site.  The two objectives are not mutually exclusive.  In fact, I would argue site and situation are inextricably linked.
 
Anyone with eyes can see Victor Steinbrueck could use some refurbishment.  The benches are rotting, plantings are sparse or non-existent, surfaces worn, lighting inadequate, corners reek of urine, etc. The whole place has a sort of 'stuck in the 70's faux 20's' feel to it. Besides the view, it's not terribly inviting. 

There's a theory/practice known as Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) that may be useful here.  It's a multi-disciplinary approach to deterring criminal behavior that has its roots in Jane Jacobs' ground-breaking work The Death and Life of Great American Cities.  In it she challenged the urban planner orthodoxy of 'progress' as it was practiced in the 60s, critiquing the mindset that placed precedence on car culture, suburban development, bland facades and empty streets.

Schlomo Angel was an early pioneer of CPTED and studied under noted planner Christopher Alexander. Angel's Ph.D. thesis, Discouraging Crime Through City Planning, (1968) was a study of street crime in Oakland, CA. In it he states "The physical environment can exert a direct influence on crime settings by delineating territories, reducing or increasing accessibility by the creation or elimination of boundaries and circulation networks, and by facilitating surveillanceby the citizenry and the police." He asserted that crime was inversely related to the level of activity on the street, and that the commercial strip environment was particularly vulnerable to crime because it thinned out activity, making it easier for individuals to commit street crime.

While Victor Steinbrueck Park doesn't totally ignore the principles of CPTED, there is room for improvement. Creating better sightlines would be one thing. Another would be inviting appropriately scaled vendors into the park (not huge tents & garish concession booths). Improved seating and lighting is another. In fact anything that can be done to nurture the precepts of natural surveillance, natural access control and natural territorial reinforcement might help the situation.