Sunday, October 25, 2009

Gravity's Pull

An arch is thrown. Apex reached, it falls again. It can never transcend. Thrown at a building, with apex and wall in mutual support, the buttress is said to fly, though with obvious imperfection. The Romans too threw arch from column, allowing it to fall within a second column, then perhaps a third and more. They piled layers of arches over the first to raise the structure to a level at which a smooth, continuous motion could be maintained from one end of the aquaduct to the other. Long series of stacked interjections still fly over European valleys: failure latticed into glory, irresistibly flawed.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

From the Staffordshire Hoard



Its elements forever twined, interlocked, forcibly bent into a static social beauty, this and like stylings ring tragic with me. They bespeak not only the necessity of relation, but necessary relations. With those, the individual is made a node, and his creation, like the metalsmith’s, an accident of immanent utility. At least polyphony can be groaned, panted, beaten out in the subject’s precious time, even improvised. This bird cannot sing.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Of Course

“So wild it was when first we settled here” –Thomas Hardy, Domicilium




I think of nature as whatever lives and happens in the absence of human agency. Culture at root refers to husbandry, the care of living, growing things. Somehow, the moment we cultivate them, things cease to be natural. People, the most artificial, the most cultivated, of beings, can go native, but this consists of no more than doing in Rome whatever Romans do. Unable to decide what to do, we are encouraged to do what comes naturally, meaning what occurs to us unbidden and without calculation. We answer nature’s call, on the other hand, with manufactured paper, molded porcelain and plumbed water. Where I come from, bidets are expensive and optional.



Not only does nature host our several growths, but each growth is said to have a nature. Yet not a single one of us can begin to describe what we were born to be, unless it were a howling, helpless infant. Paradoxically, human nature involves an element of indeterminacy. Adequately cultured, we might fulfill our better natures by actively and consciously shaping what we are, husbanding ourselves into what we want to be. People who manage this feat easily however, without paroxysm or paralysis, are said to be naturals. Maybe they're not people at all.



Sunday, October 4, 2009

Theme


speak unspoken
break unbroken
close and open
still in motion