tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31905977225518859452023-11-16T02:48:43.294-08:00FranjournalMy journey through art and literature, photography and travel, music and poetryfranvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.comBlogger126125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-87611195670077710812017-05-06T07:36:00.001-07:002017-05-06T07:36:16.375-07:00East Finchley Open Artists: Exhibition News<a href="http://eastfinchleyopen.blogspot.com/2017/05/exhibition-news.html?spref=bl">East Finchley Open Artists: Exhibition News</a>: EXHIBITION NEWS Howard Hodgkin, Absent Friends, National Portrait Gallery, 23 March-18 June 2017 FRANCESCA ALBINI writes:- W...franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-31311670597349017272017-03-28T06:34:00.001-07:002017-03-28T06:34:54.361-07:00Free Fire - Film reviewFrom <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Fire" target="_blank">Wikipedia</a>: 'Free Fire is a 2016 British <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action-comedy">action-comedy</a> film directed by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Wheatley">Ben Wheatley</a>, from a screenplay by Wheatley and Amy Jump. It stars <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brie_Larson">Brie Larson</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharlto_Copley">Sharlto Copley</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armie_Hammer">Armie Hammer</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cillian_Murphy">Cillian Murphy</a> and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Reynor">Jack Reynor</a>.' It will be released in the UK on 31 March.<br />
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Free Fire. That's pretty much it for the plot. So why should anybody want to sit through 90 minutes of gratuitous violence? Because it's very well orchestrated and compelling. The interweaving of the free-jazzy music with whistling and rumbling gun shots, other sound effects, surround-sound voices, is very clever, and so are the lighting, photography, and location (a shabby warehouse). The characters are quirky, each in their own way, and funny, but not excessively so. In a way, it's like watching a cheap Seventies movie with modern definition of image and sound. A treat if you have bouts of nostalgia... But the question arises: whom is this film for? What is the target audience, what will be the effective audience? Not strong enough to be a cult movie, not Hollywood enough to be a Hollywood movie, it will probably linger in a state of DVD limbo.<br />
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The following is NOT a spoiler. Talking with the projectionist after the screening, he suggested that if it had a different ending, it could appeal better to a Hollywood, mainstream, audience. As he didn't suggest what ending would have worked better, I went through all the possible endings in my head, that would have made it more commercial, but didn't find any convincing ones.<br />
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My verdict: if you want a very pleasant 90 minutes of a well directed and acted mindlessness, if you enjoy well choreographed stunt work and revel in the anxiety of closed spaces, you will love this film. I know I did.<br />
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<br />franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-79756885468162830432017-03-25T07:38:00.001-07:002017-03-25T07:38:42.536-07:00The Sublime Art of Faffing<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><br /><i>As in a dream where our pursuer cannot catch us nor we escape, Achilles could not overtake Hector, nor could Hector shake him off</i>. The Iliad, book 22, ca 760–710 BC</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">The feeling of not getting anywhere, or of running on the spot, or like a headless chicken, is not new. Neither is the desire and the anticipation of getting somewhere, of getting things done, of bettering ourselves in a way or another.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Before apps, google and mobile phones, I had my Mum. When I felt that I wasn't getting anywhere, or that I wasn't solving the problem that I wanted to solve, we would make ourselves a cup of coffee and we would sit on the couch with pen and paper. The only interruptions were my dad, and the phone, that in our house was ringing </span><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">constantly</span><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">. </span><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Apart from that, the process was quite simple. I would state a problem, we would discuss a goal, and organise a plan of action. She would pose questions, I tried to answer, and she would give me suggestions. The feelgood factor was incredible. We were solving everything. Of course, we never had a follow up session on any of my problems, because the next time we sat down there would be a new problem to tackle. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">FORWARD TO NOW: Ah, isn't it great that now, instead of Mum, pen and paper, we have an app for everything, a million ways to be organised, retrieve information, and all the stuff we can set up in order to convey our message! Social media, connectivity. We can set up a blog, set up a website, a Facebook page, a twitter account... Then we can set up an app that connects them all. And, see, everything is set up to receive and distribute our amazing content.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">So why am I feeling like Achilles chasing Hector? Why am I feeling the buzz of all of these apps and connections and opportunities, and find that the only thing that is not flourishing is... content? Because I spend all of my time and energy perfecting the Sublime Art of Faffing. Here is how it works. I discover a new app that can schedule my amazing content across all the different platforms. How exciting. So I register, and then I have to link it up to my various accounts, which proliferate at a frightening rate. It goes without saying that I have forgotten most of my passwords. Easy, I have an app that contains them all, so all I need to do is sign in. Ah, but the app doesn't recognise my location, so it sends me an email to verify that I am who I say I am, although I am not where the app wants me to be (at home). But while I search my email, my email app decides to update, and I have to wait until it's done. While I'm waiting, I do something else, like look something up, which reminds me that I haven't updated my calendar, that I double booked myself, that I have to cancel something. I check my fb page for the latest news and events, get distracted by something else, finally retrieve my email verification code. Connect all the accounts that need to be connected to show my amazing content, and guess what? I had no time to create any.</span></div>
franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0United Kingdom55.378051 -3.4359729999999912.203021 -86.05316049999999 90 79.18121450000001tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-56957264208690311562017-03-20T01:52:00.000-07:002017-03-20T01:52:00.537-07:00The Lost City of Z - my take on<br />
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Quoting from <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lost_City_of_Z_(film)" target="_blank">Wikipedia</a>: 'The Lost City of Z is a 2016 American action adventure biographical film written and directed by James Gray, based on the 2009 book of the same name by David Grann. It describes real events, about British explorer Percy Fawcett who made several attempts to find an ancient lost city in the Amazon and disappeared in 1925 along with his son on an expedition. It stars Charlie Hunnam as Fawcett along with Robert Pattinson as his fellow explorer Henry Costin and Sienna Miller as his wife Nina Fawcett.'<br />
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I'm no film critic, in fact I have very little knowledge of cinema, and never wrote a film review in my life. At the same time, I am very fortunate to be able to attend film previews, every now and then, so I feel sort of an obligation to share my impressions.<br />
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This film is amazing and deserves to be seen on a big screen, so, don't wait for the DVD to come out, like I usually do, go see it big, the bigger the better.<br />
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It's 1.40 minutes of total immersion into a world of adventure, discovery, war, deaths, births, love, envy, friendship and poetry, and what makes it extra magical is that it is a true story. Photography and settings are extremely powerful, and convey more than just a sense of history and place, there are human emotions, fear, horror, the unknown and the totally surreal, like an opera performed on a log stage in a settlement in the middle of the jungle.<br />
Fawcett's journeys to charter uncharted territories are followed at a distance by his wife, whose poems accompany him and his companions. But the strongest piece of poetry is her quotation from John Browning: '...A man's reach should exceed his grasp'. In other words, you never entirely fulfil your dreams.<br />
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I have recently attended a workshop on mobile journalism where the photographic rule of thirds was, maybe rightly so, strongly advised. So, I took special interest in the framing of the scenes, because in most cases it seems to be crossing over to almost centre frame, leaving space between the character and the edge of frame. I think that conveyed a double effect, exposing the character to the unknown surround him, and crowding the centre of the frame to convey the sense of claustrophobia that the jungle gives together with its sense of vastness. Contrasting elements of old world and new world, 'civilized' austere world and dynamic, fluid and terrifying wilderness, snakes, panthers, piranhas, mosquitoes, but, most of all, humans in their might and vulnerability. The end of the story is almost a spiritual transition. Enjoy, be scared, angry, elated and mesmerised.<br />
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And, if you have a spare hour, it's definitely worth watching this talk by David Grann, the author of the book on which the film is based.<br />
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<iframe allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/sTqCMxNvah0" width="560"></iframe>franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0United Kingdom55.378051 -3.4359729999999912.203021 -86.05316049999999 90 79.18121450000001tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-82397783117860559472017-03-17T06:50:00.001-07:002017-03-17T07:37:47.662-07:00Basingstoke <img id="id_1573_2785_c5ab_eed3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4i4oaQ_ZbG6VSaVT-TmID0tRVY_xYGsERRhx5WAm2HnY-ZfDhPZLjjXvVxFpnSFT4bRD343aoFHOirLhxyPOK8ZZloXu7WrLSMBDCGYvm8EZ2tm0RNDQ042tidqLa96vlxSikMMOLBVM//" alt="" title="" tooltip="" style="width: 298px; height: auto;"> franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-30657205891434098272017-03-17T02:09:00.003-07:002017-03-17T02:09:52.774-07:00Ideas and how to retain them<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Where do I get my inspirations from? Easy. I get inspired by a lot of things. I see or read or hear something, and I get an idea. The problem is how to retain it. I might go to an art gallery and see a painting that inspires me. The inspiration I get very often has little to do with the original work. I don’t want to copy a certain painting, I want to retain and work and pass on the inspiration that came to me by looking at that painting. So how do I do that? Taking a picture of that painting doesn’t seem to work. When I look at it later, it doesn’t talk to me in the same way. The other solution is key words, but on their own they also lose strength. I tried different apps, like Evernote, OneNote, google keep. They are definitely useful but what I would need is an app that helps me identify and retain my mental process, that goes from the trigger, i.e. the painting or book or conversation, to the excitement that precedes the idea, to the idea itself. I somewhat think that it would work in columns or panels. Brief description or picture of the work; raw impressions, ways of translating it into my creative world. While I wait for somebody to come up with this ideas app, I might just stick to a notebook, and then read it aloud into google docs and organise it later .</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Why do I find it more useful in retaining ideas than writing on Evernote on my phone? Two reasons: I can’t type as fast as I think, but also in my notes I doodle and also my writing changes with my emotions and so the written note seems to retain more of my mood at the time of writing.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">As I said, I get inspired by a lot of things, so I’m never short of ideas, but still, a lot of thoughts get lost and perhaps some of them are good thoughts.</span></div>
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Originally posted on <a href="https://medium.com/blogclub/ideas-and-how-to-retain-them-9802a4d530f0#.pfex7va8f" target="_blank">medium</a></div>
franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-55768092757127431472017-01-11T04:32:00.001-08:002017-01-11T04:34:50.006-08:00Reflections upon 2016<br /><br /><center><a href='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHZygDL0HZkEpd2PCRYBbbnXwHI_a_mYoZKfjzTiI7pLAoQ2cjW2EDaE-93XuYhKaMey9xBvnWFXgXd24X-Agj2ZpVW2DkuGQb2RCVZ7wmJ0LKrK3NQSx9S9HL08diGetCJEwLLfRRtU0/s288/1.jpg'><img src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHZygDL0HZkEpd2PCRYBbbnXwHI_a_mYoZKfjzTiI7pLAoQ2cjW2EDaE-93XuYhKaMey9xBvnWFXgXd24X-Agj2ZpVW2DkuGQb2RCVZ7wmJ0LKrK3NQSx9S9HL08diGetCJEwLLfRRtU0/s288/1.jpg' border='0' width='640' height='640' style='margin:5px'></a></center><br />I'm at a bloggers meetup, there are about ten people around a white table with colourful jellybeans that I seem to be the only one eating. We are all writing about last year and next year. So, here goes. In January I found it more difficult to walk. In February I went to Malta on a cricket trip with the Eccentrics cricket team. Malta was amazing, like something I've never seen and yet remember. It was medieval and full of imaginary Knights roaming the dusty streets. Hubby injured his ankle at the cricket match and I almost laughed thinking that now I had to help him walk. In April I got a brand new hip, hubby cooked and I spent the days weaving,<br />making jewellery and relearning to walk. I then walked in Italy and in the California desert. 2016 was good. 2017 will be my blogging year, where I won't let validation sickness get in the way of my creativity. I'll keep on growing like a tree, twisted and torn, but with many new branches, a few dead leaves and lots of new green ones. I will be like my cherry tree in the winter. Proud of change.<br />franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-25225860296020576322016-09-29T10:55:00.000-07:002016-09-29T10:55:18.914-07:00Colours<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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We walked into the little hut that is David Hul's Scrimshaw Studio in Julian, Ca. While we were admiring all his decorated skulls and knives and learning about scrimshaw, David said to me, 'You are very colourful!'. I'm not sure it was meant as a compliment, but it made me smile, because the more I travel, the more I tend to accumulate layers of colour, mementos, souvenirs, gifts, in a happy, wild confusion. While I move through space and time, the stationary residents look at me with amusement or, rather, bemusement. When I think of this layering, tattoos of experience and memory, good and bad branding on the skin or the heart or the wrinkles, I think of my long lost copy of Superslave, gone AWOL sometime at the end of the Seventies. I always thought of buying it again, but never did. What I remember of Superslave is that he was going on a lot of adventures. These adventures changed him, his hair was shorter or longer, the clothes different. In most of the adventures Superslave died, and came back to life with a new tattoo that symbolised his new death - if he drowned, he would have a tattoo of waves, etc. He ended up covered in tattoos.<br />
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I didn't ask David Hul what tattoos he might have accumulated in his life as a California scrimshaw artist, but his studio was layered with so many things, bones, pictures, books. I could have spent hours in there, but I didn't. I guess I thought I could just 'look him up later', but David is an off the grid type of guy, so I lost a great opportunity for learning. Perhaps because I was momentarily blinded by protagonism, I forgot how to be an explorer and discover more. All I could find online later was this <a href="https://500px.com/photo/32151889/scrimshaw-dave-by-rob-hammer" target="_blank">amazing picture</a> of him in his studio.</div>
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<br />franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-35066190810964916722016-09-03T04:34:00.001-07:002016-09-03T06:48:28.288-07:00Interesting <br />
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Others have an otherness that seems so perfect. Otherness is the only thing I cannot achieve. I wonder if others can achieve it. Or if it's the limit of being self that you can never quite surprise yourself as novelty can. There is a mystery in other that I don't quite find in self. A new dress before it is worn promises things that dissipate once worn. I guess that, although I am a very curious person, I don't seem to have much curiosity for self, I don't believe there is a mystery about me, just a work in progress. Hence, I have to move on, all the time. Other, well, other cannot but move all the time, blurred like trees from a train. I want to stop the blur, I want to remember, but as soon as I do, it becomes self.</span><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjo7IzUgiu9CK3N_wNhThE7g7hHOWzdQqTCZ0XiSNyu4roDipYICsqSJQQsrswyNqgkitxPyJbMNbY_cnXeT1nmZwDf7M52z3Dotro9sInYg6ovDCo30w1dR4ee5egsVtXJ_x3b55otkeo/s288/iphone_photo.jpg"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjo7IzUgiu9CK3N_wNhThE7g7hHOWzdQqTCZ0XiSNyu4roDipYICsqSJQQsrswyNqgkitxPyJbMNbY_cnXeT1nmZwDf7M52z3Dotro9sInYg6ovDCo30w1dR4ee5egsVtXJ_x3b55otkeo/s400/iphone_photo.jpg" style="margin: 5px;" width="400" /></a></center>
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Location:<a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Deal,%20Kent&z=10">Deal, Kent</a></div>
franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-41720207840877895802016-07-03T07:34:00.001-07:002016-07-03T07:34:51.920-07:00On identity, value and more <br /><br /><br /><center><a href='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8FgQelcL7Kz3wB4n9vG2EMgTOpi77wcLif-ljzlDODvjr_DxCyCjKahhZG4VIgEX9f8cF-krTo6LBgRu2o6OnDGiUgdvJDfHOAQEgnTo7SvQmvaNF6C4A10lB43LzNz6HseE0Q0wkefA/s288/iphone_photo.jpg'><img src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8FgQelcL7Kz3wB4n9vG2EMgTOpi77wcLif-ljzlDODvjr_DxCyCjKahhZG4VIgEX9f8cF-krTo6LBgRu2o6OnDGiUgdvJDfHOAQEgnTo7SvQmvaNF6C4A10lB43LzNz6HseE0Q0wkefA/s288/iphone_photo.jpg' border='0' width='280' height='210' style='margin:5px'></a></center><br />First of all, this is not one of my works, it's Bernard Meadows. I believe. In a way it could be my work. I spend my days looking for mirrors, stories that could be my stories, I collect, to save memories, mine and others', in pleasant confusion, happy to lose my boundaries between me and my story. I don't remember the titles of the books I read. I don't remember where that pebble or that trinket comes from. But I do remember that everything I collect is there because it's important to me, it informs who I am. I'd like to think that others might be collecting me as part of blurring their own boundaries. Sometimes I feel that it's so hard to be collected, one pebble on a shingle beach. That makes me sad and makes me question my collection and my value. And then I start losing things, moments, creations. Because the round peg doesn't fit in the square hole I feel like giving up to avoid bashing it in. But perhaps the solution is to leave the peg sitting on the box with the holes and let others try to make it fit or not, while I keep on collecting. <br /><p class='blogpress_location'>Location:<a href='http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Mayfair&z=10'>Mayfair</a></p>franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-90284100026136431522016-05-04T00:30:00.001-07:002016-05-04T00:30:16.212-07:00On weaving and other stories<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhL-oIFKmq4y20-5UHyaMvLQh-zam-3NkXwrKPF4LJJS7yBoIoMyPRHJhrqEVfjdGjtRpagEk_ipB3PloJ_YfGe9Xvu1ifymPUr_ybMpzdbKrf6kvZU4i8XPk33NlvkaWCEO5yM8gPv_b4/s1600/bag.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="366" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhL-oIFKmq4y20-5UHyaMvLQh-zam-3NkXwrKPF4LJJS7yBoIoMyPRHJhrqEVfjdGjtRpagEk_ipB3PloJ_YfGe9Xvu1ifymPUr_ybMpzdbKrf6kvZU4i8XPk33NlvkaWCEO5yM8gPv_b4/s400/bag.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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The word 'trama' in Italian means both weft and plot. Perhaps because of that, I have always associated weaving with narrative. Perhaps, also, because I was thinking of Penelope's web which seemed to unravel parallel to Odysseus's journey. I don't know if weft and plot have etymological affinities in English, but the word 'thread' for instance is used to describe a continuity in a situation or story. Stories have been woven and embroidered throughout times and cultures. But it was only when I started weaving that I understood why at a deeper level. Everything gets woven into your fabric, the music you are listening to, your thoughts, your memories. It also becomes a way of making sense of things, 'string' them together. My interest for weaving, and, more generally, for fibre art, I think started from a passion for upcycling, repurposing, finding ways to use scraps of anything, paper, cardboard, and, of course, fabric and yarn. For some reason, this journey kept on taking me back to Japan, where recycling is not just a modern buzzword, a concept used to soothe the consumer's sense of guilt. Creative reuse of material has existed in Japan for hundreds of years. At the basis of it is the concept of 'mottainai', a regret for waste. 'Mottainai' is an old Buddhist word, linked to the Shinto idea that objects have souls. 'Boro' is the clothing used by peasants and artisans between the 17th and the 19th century. Basically they are garments made of rags, often in indigo shades, stitched together, patches to repair old clothes. And because of that, they are also journals, memoires, mementos of clothes once belonged to parents and grandparents. The other word that inspired the little handbag I made, is 'sakiori', narrow strips of worn out fabric weaved into new fabric. Which is what I did here, with and old piece of lining fabric. I also used my very primitive version of 'sashiko', a functional embroidery used to reinforce fabric. The world of Japanese textile art is amazingly inspiring, and I have only scraped the surface here. But this handbag I made, while waiting for my hip to heal, was a great experience, completely sewn by hand, with recycled materials, it contains a little part of my soul.</div>
<br />franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-17718282282680868672016-05-01T00:23:00.000-07:002016-05-01T00:26:21.937-07:00Living the 'hippy' life<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<img height="239" src="https://mail-attachment.googleusercontent.com/attachment/u/0/?view=att&th=1546aebcceccac68&attid=0.1&disp=inline&safe=1&zw&saddbat=ANGjdJ8yw93gCzOsbQxkol_Km3l2Ha__j66fWiI15cAB9DKrubbXT_yXY0oJd8mBjSxk-T8hruFvsPntwLuLHCobMMMOHCo5EDsU4FgAuGP3aIGrHM4de8szNg1psgPvCFOapNcY30p7uvDEssYzKN6A_e1ackYD8CRi2Kbxx724zxYQuD1oPYvRC-tC5vN2dCWxZxuu7xDmGlKw_kbpXw63Li5dgrINcLN-iyS_hUqhkyMtsxkWvmNNG09RmY89pY8GDChv9zZZ3QCHNukJmrBnRetFHEOyYv6Jr3dH-C8dlCoSd8zdH-wdxhOU_10WaoohB8YPUx5uar08Gg_MLljqlwTATSv10DUskwHa_tzp_SSUggrXDkZyy_W71950wHF2EsPU44yRGVbJztCaaTmdxPQLi86Q8q-9gaDBUhQYckFh8HKOTDaKXBAFu2WGntKfNtng7Q9txL-lJYr3l5SoatarTg5g1yP8Ip3DgCZ0zFEDlfZabWBZzy1Woi96T720rrfMMdtRXty_HsVfP7KVlIjTwQedzOXtNBl7D9B-vyBlU5DygsOFII-x2lcMwm4rgJ255qI50YoNGYx81rcFjfmK141X_5DfvMBOOjIkHgVaCL-VJlh1FCHabMKE2fPqwT5uQRi3vxyhnIgZ" width="320" /></div>
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Being the proud owner of the most awkward furniture in the world, I resorted to the teachings of the princess on the pea, and piled up all sorts of cushions, pillows, throws and towels to prop myself up into a bearable position. On one side of this chair there's a stereo, on the other a table full of my weaving junk. That weird instrument with a yellow handle is a reacher. So, I sit on my chair, listen to music and weave on a children's lap loom. And the mind explores whatever it wants, enjoying the no-pressure zone allowed by the general reduced functionality. So, here goes. I was listening to a radio station algorithmed to match my musical tastes and, surprisingly, it did. Although it had a stronger inclination towards Delta blues than I would naturally have, but I didn't mind. Weaving and dreaming, I ended up in a trailer on the Mississippi river, where a number of different gigantic ladies in crutches were pirohuetting with extreme agility around their environment. Cooking pie, playing acoustic guitar, then getting inside their battered car to go have a drink in some remote run down bar with an analogue clock. And I sang a funeral dirge in my head, for old metal analogue clocks, that are now bought only by hipstery craftbeerers, as a statement.<br />
Getting back to my large lady on crutches, I admire her dexterity. My crutches fall all the time, or they end up miles away from me, or they slip off my arm. The reacher, well, that's another story, it basically has the lamest clamp, and loses grip on heavy objects. Trying to lift a bottle of water from the floor yesterday was almost comical. Ir reminded me of people trying to start a fire with flint. You can either freak out, turn your husband into a full time butler or nurse, or get back to a time in which things took time. That was how it was, and it was not questioned. If it takes half an hour to lift a bottle of water, than that be it. To slow right down like that is actually not bad, it's a humbling, spiritual experience. In the end you feel very calm, and wonder why you ever rushed.<br />
My reacher has a magnetic tip, and I was wondering why, until I dropped all my needles.<br />
Summary of first week with new hip: I spend most of my time dropping things and picking them up, misplacing the crutches, remembering things that I need only once I'm sitting down. Weaving, lots of weaving. I will explore this subject in the next few days, and take you on a dream journey of ancient Japan...franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-15556738164246437422016-04-26T02:27:00.000-07:002016-04-26T02:27:06.331-07:00Hip hip hurray<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiL5tt1uZQ1XnAjGp-YBc4mIg5Bx-qy3cunw6pMp9Trueo3RTCuqZnQp21Co7uP3O_6hVnP_AWo2HZr2J26ygPRvbvikTfzfhjgKU9OmBOhKss3swze9AyV-hFPEBmjpINk63GxK8DVGFs/s1600/floozie.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiL5tt1uZQ1XnAjGp-YBc4mIg5Bx-qy3cunw6pMp9Trueo3RTCuqZnQp21Co7uP3O_6hVnP_AWo2HZr2J26ygPRvbvikTfzfhjgKU9OmBOhKss3swze9AyV-hFPEBmjpINk63GxK8DVGFs/s400/floozie.jpg" width="300" /></a></div>
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I am home. For the second time. I went back to hospital by ambulance in the middle of the night. Fever, palpitations. Paramedics were young, skinny, wide-eyed, full of passion and dedication. And that is what I saw over and over in hospital. People with a passion, tough yet delicate. They dream, they hope, they do really care. When you are a patient in hospital, very quickly you lose your dignity, you do things that you would not dare do in the presence of your most intimate partner. But the dignity you lose, is it very important? We are there with a different form of dignity, that of getting better, it doesn' matter much that we make funny noises, that we smell funny, that we have a rather unappealing shade of green to our complexion. Your values change so quickly, your priorities, your tolerance. An old guy called Patrick, full of tattoos and bruises was parked outside my door. He wanted to go home. There was only one problem: nobody knew where his home was. He had some form of dementia, yet he was there, now part of my life. The pretty nurses with their wide eyes, smooth faces and hours of unrelenting work were telling him that everything was okay, the ambulance was coming, he would be home soon. "All I need is a pound for the bus", he replied. </div>
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I cried at some point, waiting for tests, x-rays. But I cried because I was lying on my back, and I don't like lying on my back. I had faith that everything else, the important stuff, would be looked after. This morning, having regained enough strength to even make my cup of coffee and ponder upon puzzles like, how do you carry a cup of coffee with two crutches? I sat again at my computer to resume my surfing, fidgeting, faffing life. And I came across, by total coincidence, some footage of Frida Khalo painting in hospital. She looked gorgeous in her amazing clothes, perfect hair, jewellery. I felt a pang of envy, or probably just a great deal of admiration. Because she never lost her spirit. Ever. She was always a work of art. And I want to do the same. Out of this simple but intense operation, I want to create beauty, to spread beauty. </div>
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And also, as a footnote, to those of you who complain about the NHS: they are pretty good. </div>
<br />franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-59963531298798262112016-03-07T13:31:00.000-08:002016-03-07T13:31:40.785-08:00Scava ombre profonde<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj-t1QfUGQxmj8YW7M5y75cuyNR-QH7lFr2VhkXWM-jiLvKq6Z3ViS-9t_F2PaWjmPJ4woPDiSDVTPRHPv4dsuVeE24X0ezv8MXeIfXY5bcRdv24VnAhgFAE5BFABVjw7eoj1Fi3UhzOkw/s1600/IMG_3439.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj-t1QfUGQxmj8YW7M5y75cuyNR-QH7lFr2VhkXWM-jiLvKq6Z3ViS-9t_F2PaWjmPJ4woPDiSDVTPRHPv4dsuVeE24X0ezv8MXeIfXY5bcRdv24VnAhgFAE5BFABVjw7eoj1Fi3UhzOkw/s400/IMG_3439.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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I was thinking, while doing an ECG for my new hip, I was thinking that the ECG was similar to my moods, little peaks and lows, smaller, wider, higher, lower. I was also thinking of how polarised my mood peaks are, with a high = collect, and low = discard. In the high peaks I get excited about collecting everything, creating, reading, watching, doing, a magical whirlwind of stuff. In the lows, I entrust my memory with all the work, and believe that anything written, anything physical, will choke me more than give me joy. All of these waves are as frequent as the ECG, it's the rough sea of my life, and the more I sail it, the less I seem to know the way. I spend quite some time in these ruminations, trying to convince myself that collecting, keeping, writing down, making, is always good, even when the belief wavers. And I get a shiver of happiness thinking of Leonardo writing about his soup becoming cold, and Tolstoy's diaries, so many that nobody will ever accomplish the task of translating them all. Yet Tolstoy didn't write his diaries for 15 years. 15. OK, he was writing War and Peace, in the meantime, and maybe then watching football on TV (I know what you are thinking). But for 15 years his ECG must have changed. And Leonardo was not always happy, or hardly ever, for that matter. So, it's not about happiness, most things aren't. Perhaps it's about sharing. You collect, you preserve, you share. But then, in the lows, I wonder whether it really is important to share, whether it is even possible. And all the work that goes in it, self promotion, the effort (not much) to be understandable, or just to be present. But in the highs of travel, the exploration of new, old, rediscovered, reframed, there is so much, so much wonderful stuff, that quickly leaks away through the sieve of memory, and it's lost forever. Or not. I'm not sure. Did writing about soup help Leonardo fly?franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-38725367030736174772016-02-21T09:39:00.000-08:002016-02-21T09:39:33.300-08:00Junk<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWP31SWZr51xdiA-RJQ2Xi2_YrZps8y5H1Vi8ZIoIesg01VQMT7PMJjkQxE-kugDJTLVbRBZ81q3Hxxf-9jW41w46cTDiuMok7xkRceSxnG320gzLobTpeymRRnJRfHvito4cH4XuXPuM/s1600/IMG_3817.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="239" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWP31SWZr51xdiA-RJQ2Xi2_YrZps8y5H1Vi8ZIoIesg01VQMT7PMJjkQxE-kugDJTLVbRBZ81q3Hxxf-9jW41w46cTDiuMok7xkRceSxnG320gzLobTpeymRRnJRfHvito4cH4XuXPuM/s320/IMG_3817.JPG" width="320" /></a></div>
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Contrary to public assumptions, I'm not a hoarder. I don't keep 'just in case' things or 'you never know when you might' things. Everything that doesn't have an immediate or obvious purpose goes straight in the bin, black or green accordingly. So when I decide that it would be nice to do a project with cereal boxes, or plastic bags, or cardboard... well, I don't have any. But junk seems to accumulate so fast, I cannot really keep it 'just in case'. So here is my solution - a small art junk box next to the recycling bin. When it's full, I rummage through it and try to make stuff. What doesn't get used goes into the recycling bin, and the box no doubt will be full again with new junk in a couple of days. Now, the content of this box is rather uninviting (unless you like garden peas). Will I succeed in making interesting things out of it? I'll keep you posted. I am also tired of buying stuff. It seems like everyday I can think of something that I NEED to have. So, I'm taking a break from buying and I'm developing better problem solving skills instead. I use what I have or find what I don't have in creative ways. What's the meaning of it all? None, really. It's just a game, a challenge, a puzzle. When I'm bored of it, I'll stop. But something tells me I won't be bored for a while. It's nice to be back at blogging, too. Sometimes life is gentler.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-25769415074220213222016-01-12T01:53:00.000-08:002016-01-12T01:53:28.355-08:00My life with Bowie and mirrors<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh9kJ5HVgk6eUOwME6P5Mc7p_ajcgiZu7FFxcNlwJ67amJibECz3o3CSq6sXvKtxPAVbY72isJ-82OhsNz9rJEkaRoQglrViptLPMLG7PXLehACDNXYhl_SVB14IWKx5EAejzzmR8QYw7A/s1600/meme.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh9kJ5HVgk6eUOwME6P5Mc7p_ajcgiZu7FFxcNlwJ67amJibECz3o3CSq6sXvKtxPAVbY72isJ-82OhsNz9rJEkaRoQglrViptLPMLG7PXLehACDNXYhl_SVB14IWKx5EAejzzmR8QYw7A/s400/meme.jpg" width="297" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Me in my Bowie days, age 18</td></tr>
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One day, when I was a kid, I found a discarded, tattered journal. And in every page there was a picture of a creature who cultivated, or had, an odd and profound beauty. To me, already obsessed with fragility and ephemerality, this young and old, male and female ker with orange hair, who sings My Death Waits, who know Jacques Brel, like my father knows Jacques Brel, like he actually is Jacques Brel, and the other Jacques, a whirlwind of feullies mortes in Paris. To me, he becomes the key to a mirror maze, where history repeats itself with so many minute variations that you find yourself lost and so far away, seeing reflections that don't see each other, and walls that are not really there. I needed to hear him, though, not just look at pictures glued in somebody's book. A friend goes to London and I ask her to bring him back to me, his voice, his words, a piece of his stage. And she comes back with the Man who Sold the World. And I stand in front of my wall, of course, and stare at it so deeply that it melts into the other side. The night side, the blurred boundaries. And my own mirror where I practise to kiss, wrapping myself in a feather boa. The street is silent, the room mine to play with, the shackles still in place. But the boundaries have become blurred. And this is Genoa, not too spiritually far from the Port of Amsterdam. Genoa, with its streets of decadence, struggle, red light prostitution with creatures of all ages and sizes and multiple variations of sexes. Was that not a stage? A play of mirrors where the red light smooths your skin, where the too young seem old enough, and the too old are still good for a night, or to hide you under their beds until your crimes are forgotten. Crimes, I had committed none, I preferred dreams. And then Jean Genie was another piece of the puzzle, although the roofs were a mixture of Florence, Paris, the greyness of the Genoa slates, and not so much of New York. And it was Jean Genet that I followed, not yet Iggy, through the meanders of his Lady of the Flowers, his bizarre films, his castling in prison. While my father tried to point out that the lumpenproletariat didn't even know (or care) about the Nazis. One little twist of the mirror and the scenario behind is totally changed. I found my Lady of the Flowers, called Cinzia, who liked to embarrass me by comparing freckles. She wasn't interested in girls, and her world was so remote from mine. Then aliens came, and 1984, that my father said it had been safely written or published in 1948, not during the war. And the game continued, where he knew my every move, from a slightly different angle, and introduced me to a world of real cabaret, Paolo Poli, who called me Grillino (little cricket). And not White Duchess. I am, after all, still a Grillino much more than I have ever been a creature of the night. Bowie taught me about different worlds, the flimsiness of self definition, the constant search, the slight changes that become rifts, that become slight changes, and that eventually melt into one marvellous, harmonious, if dissonant, melody.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-14862393259696602012015-05-30T12:00:00.001-07:002015-05-30T12:00:53.499-07:00Inertia and other revelations<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="float: left; margin-right: 1em; text-align: left;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNKb7JvXr9amI0UqfZBtMz-712PnEWKydujrp0WTgjbVRSZN2afUmllimVw7fxb7OJfwgh5mzTBqEOcDK39ytBTf8i7AbH_MzvzuVawtRYeJp2xjG1sI7jMog3jUthEWxBQPeaQiIcM1s/s1600/lies.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNKb7JvXr9amI0UqfZBtMz-712PnEWKydujrp0WTgjbVRSZN2afUmllimVw7fxb7OJfwgh5mzTBqEOcDK39ytBTf8i7AbH_MzvzuVawtRYeJp2xjG1sI7jMog3jUthEWxBQPeaQiIcM1s/s400/lies.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
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<span style="font-size: 12.8000001907349px;">What does 'LIES' mean? Was it written by a disgruntled passenger </span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12.8000001907349px;">with no room for his suitcase? Is it the name of a kid with an unfaithful parent?</span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12.8000001907349px;">Was it a comment to a conversation?</span></div>
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While I was on the train today, I noticed this intriguing graffito. A battle immediately ensued in my head between Adventure and Inertia. Inertia suggesting that I could photograph it another day (?), or, better still, never. But because today was a day filled with revelations, Adventure prevailed. Inertia was talking with a voice very similar to Depression, 'Why should I bother taking this picture? What's the point? Is it consistent with my unity, is it in line with my consistency as an artist, as a poet, as a brand, as a friend, as me? Is it revealing, unveiling, understandable, useful, progressive?' One of today's revelations is that Inertia is the force that stops you from overcoming imaginary obstacles. The obstacles can be summarised as the difference between who we are striving to be and who we are. In most cases we are striving for acceptance, hence we are striving for whatever image of adulthood we've had in our head since the age of four. We look up to people we are incapable of emulating, as we see them as real adults, while we see ourselves as promising kids. As we keep on failing to become like the adults we admire, we hope at least in their benevolence, in their acknowledgement that eventually we'll get there too. Of course, when the kid in question is older than the accomplished adult he/she wants to impress, or when the admired adult is already dead and cannot validate you anymore, Inertia steps in to save the unity or integrity of the dream. It protects the dream from shattering into a million imperfect, immature, pieces. The faulty logic is that, in our solipsistic nature, we project ourselves into others, and look back at ourselves with disdain for having failed to reach all those goals that are, ultimately, only known or important to us. Until today, I thought that my goal was to please my dad and Pablo Picasso, and I tried so hard to speak a language and follow a path that were not natural or even possible for me. It's a lie, I didn't try hard at all, I just listened more to Inertia than to Adventure, because, in order to impress my dead heroes I thought I had to be deliberate, know my destination before embarking on the journey. Who I really am, though, is a vagabond, led by an insatiable curiosity and a relentless <i>douleur de vivre</i>. Wherever my mind takes me, there is where I need to go, no matter how winding the path, how many real and imaginary obstacles, how uncertain or far away my destination. When I see it at the horizon, I am sure I will recognise it.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-9385177264017968582015-02-27T04:49:00.000-08:002015-02-27T04:49:06.510-08:00To hell and back<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I've always been intrigued by different realities, different states of consciousness, and the idea that, armed with your accumulated wisdom and the right mental tools and training, you could just close your eyes and astral travel. I was sure that the umbilical chord that keeps the astral you attached to the awake, "normal" you, would snap you right back in place with no effort at all. I thought I knew a lot, and why shouldn't I? I have a first degree in philosophy, a PhD in ancient philosophy, and I spent my entire life studying religions, spirituality, psychology, anything to do with the mind, the exploration of the mind, and the mysterious Universe. Which to me, of course, held virtually no mystery... So, what exactly happened on the night of October 15th, when I closed my eyes and suddenly fell from a state of joy into a world of utter terror? When, from a place of certainty, I ended up on quicksands? When, instead of one umbilical chord linking me to me, I found dozens, and didn't know which was the right one? We shall never know. Because you cannot really understand a state of consciousness when you are in another. It's either or. Either sane or insane, happy or unhappy, dead or alive. Of course, you can tell stories, anecdotes, recall images, try to relive (or forget) the emotions, even, to a degree, describe them, but you cannot be in two places, you cannot reconstruct the dynamics, the feel of that other place, most of all its logic. The climb back out of the hole is still going on, but today I felt like putting some of it in writing, creating a distance between today me and the me in the hole. I've learnt a few things in this journey: we are not always in charge, we don't know very much at all, we are vulnerable, yet the force that holds us together is pretty strong. And we mean to others much more than we think. Time, patience, faith and our internal guiding system, for how confused or blurry it may seem, will eventually takes us back into the light.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-6973817526655676842014-10-15T01:58:00.000-07:002014-10-15T01:58:08.294-07:00What travels<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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You are here. Your senses tell you so with certainty. You can touch the surfaces and taste that scrambled egg you just cooked. You sit in the hot-tub wondering if a big black bear is going to climb over the fence. You hear the fountain trickle. You are here. But not in a permanent, historic sense. No time continuum has brought you here, a job or family in Tahoe, a cabin for sale. No, you are here, but only in the moment. Now. You are here NOW. But if now is all that ever exists, then, if you really, really, relaxed into this immense feeling of belonging, you would perhaps find the KEY that shifts you into a different continuum, the one with the past and the future you always wanted. In this expanded windy morning, out in the desert, in a later now, you try to imagine what kind of act of rebellion or enlightenment would have brought you to live here, in that other life, of which you are only living, intensely, the now. Later still, you look in the mirror, the same mirror you looked into last year, and the year before. You have more wrinkles, you are skinnier, fatter, fitter, less fit than before. You discover that now, as you are not protected by your continuum. You are naked. You also find that you are not as flexible, nice and funny as you thought you were. Divided as you are between fear and bliss.<br />
As you travel, you morph into a new person, you shed some resentment and grow jewellery, new t-shirts and hats, sunglasses and a tan. All of these things, you think, will keep me here. Time is slow at first, and during the walks on the beach with your travelling companion, the now and the future of here seem so permanent, so exciting, so infinite. And your past, really, doesn't feel that real. It's a remote blue planet seen from space, round and simple, easy to conquer. Your life seems easy to conquer. As the journey progresses and time suddenly accelerates into shorter and shorter nows, the walks and talks on the beach change intensity, not so much about future adventures, but on ways to bring back all of this, to pack this light, this sun, the funny dogs that lick your knees, the chollas, the desert, the swimming pools, how to pack all of this in your 23kg suitcase. And, in the safety of distance, you approach conversations based on change, on solving, on climbing mountains, conquering the universe. But the very last night, while emptying bins full of your discarded bottles, hiding in the shelves the books you thought you might want to read and now are not so sure. While you pack all your knick-knacks, bits of stones and driftwood, the pain of separation becomes overwhelming, the light seems to dim, and you find yourself walking with your partner on a dark beach, staring at the stars, and feeling that you are now torn even from him. Because you've failed. You failed to find the KEY.<br />
Silence on the plane. You try to sleep but your eyes are full of images going faster and faster. And then. Then you are here. For real. Although, it doesn't seem real at all. The key fits the lock. You slip back into your continuum. But it doesn't feel right, at all. You sit on what you rationally know is your couch, and think, I can't cope. I WILL NEVER COPE AGAIN. You open the suitcase, pull out all your knick-knacks and new t-shirts and put them on the floor. They are all dead. You take your socks off, and there is sand between your feet. You look at your partner, shyly, "We are still there, aren't we?". We are still there, where we belong. In a life without continuum and just an expanded intense magical now. You realise that all the stuff you put in your suitcase, the sun, the rented car, the museum tickets, has lost its fizz, like imported champagne. You are here, again, naked.<br />
Too much sleep or not enough sleep, images flitting, tan fading, bills paying, going for local walks, slowly, some of your cachinas end up on the TV shelf, some new recipes sneak into your cooking routine, and a sense of achievement, peace and expansion slowly takes over. We were there, you say. We were there, together.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-7024587324292032462014-09-27T15:32:00.000-07:002014-09-27T15:32:45.491-07:00Want what you findI have been blessed lately by lack of internet access. Of course it doesn't feel like a blessing at first, like when you find a lot of acorns and wonder if they are edible, but, alas, you can't "look it up". So you start writing your little or long "look up" lists with everything that you would like to read, make, find out. Find out how mad Mark Twain really was, so that you can enjoy Roughing it a bit more. Without google or wikipedia telling you what to think, well, you have to make up your own mind. You also suddenly have a lot of free time to surf the world instead of the screen. To look around instead of up. And things start serendipitoulsy to appear, like a book on zen philosophy ( The way of zen) that tells you that rational thinking is not that rational, that after we have weighed all our information scientifically we still make decisions based on a hunch. The same book also explains i-ching as divining the lines on tortoise shells, but, should you not have a tortoise handy, you can just look around (not up), because signs are everywhere, they are there to show you your path, to give you solutions. But by now your look up list is so long you need about 10 starbucks cappuccinos to find out how to make books out of brown paperbags, how to recycle old books to use as photo albums and whatever other creative ideas you need a bit of visual inspiration for. And that is when you remember how tedious it is to try and find what you want , how many dead ends, how many digressions, how lost you get, how full your stomach with frothy milk. And this is when you finally realise the secret for a happy life: don't try and find what you want, just want and treasure what you find. Serendipity will help you (and save you from cappuccino overdose).franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-20201602336720470562014-08-24T04:38:00.001-07:002014-08-24T04:43:19.839-07:00Beryl Bainbridge, envy or not at all, just sunshine<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Looking at a slither of Thames from the back cofee tables at Somerset House with the sun playing hide and seek with the clouds and with the temperature, and me putting my jacket on and off at all the wrong intervals, while pondering whether I still feel envy, my friend asks me if I am still writing my blog. "Of course I am", I reply lying. Well, not exactly lying, it's just that instead of writing first and thinking after, or as I go along, I wait for that ephemeral thing called inspiration. And, as inspiration comes at the most awkward times, like when you don't have a pen, a computer, it's raining, you are standing on a bus. Then of course you can repeat what you want to write over and over as a mantra, but by the time you get home, you are already sick of it. So that's what happened to last week's skipped blog. I was going to write about the Italian P.E.N. Club, on how becoming a member in 2007 was/could have been a life changing experience. How it wasn't so, for various sad personal circumstances. And how I had thought about that upon receiving a copy of the magazine and reading about Mario Luzi, the Italian poet. The articles about him were describing his sunny apartment in Florence, the gentleness of his person and thoughts, his long walks even when in his eighties. And I felt something, something that in the past perhaps would have been envy. But it was a softer feeling. I had been myself in his sunny flat in Florence to interview him when I was a rebellious young radio presenter. And yes, everything seemed gentle to me too. And the bright light was there, just as described in these articles about him. If you are a human being that has touched the heart of a number of other humans, they will collect little precious memories of you, they will remember how the sun shone on you. That, I guess, is what saddens me, more than makes me jealous. When I'll be gone, everything will be put into a pile for the recycling centre, all my dreams, all my little collections of stones, all my many collaged journals. And a similar emotion I felt looking at the Bainbridge art exhibition. Look at this woman, I was thinking, she did what she enjoyed, was successful at it, and had the space and confidence to paint, draw, write and doodle on journals during her travels. Everything preserved, because she touched the heart of many. She had the life I wanted to have, so I could be envious. But she didn't, did she? She didn't live a life that I could have lived. Because I'm different, doing different things. So what exactly should I be jealous or envious of? Because everything she had was a reaction or interaction with her circumstances, which are not mine, and what I do or not do is an interplay with my own circumstances. That's why I am not capable of envy anymore, only of dreams of getting where I want to go, or strategies to be as happy here as I would be up there at the top of that success that opens your world to time, connections and people who will preserve your treasures. It's all good, even down here, sipping cappuccino and reminiscing, looking at the Thames, the sun, the clouds and the end of another summer.</div>
franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-47989717118599143122014-08-05T04:27:00.001-07:002014-08-05T04:34:19.874-07:00Malevich and me<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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At the Malevich exhibition half of me flies out of my body, leaves the Tate, London, and ends up, old, in a dark an sparsely furnished apartment in Genoa - an artist, finally, telling a story. My story, or my father's story, I am not sure. But something that seems to make a lot of sense. "However confusedly and meaninglessly our way may deviate from our desires, after all it does lead us inevitably to out invisible goal.", says Stefan Zweig in The World of Yesterday. Suddenly the tense muscles of exile relax and I feel the purpose, the continuity, the explanation for it all, for my journey, my suffering, my search. It's all very beautiful. Except for one thing. It's an impossibility. I cannot tell my story, or my father's story, or his father's story in a dark flat in Genoa. Because we are all dead. My ancestors, as they really are not here to influence or take part in the events, and I, because there is no "back" to go to. This is not how it's done. The only people I can talk to are the living or the not as yet living. While the only people I want to talk to, the only people I want validation from, are the dead. I want to be a Russian suprematist, yet think that the graph paper I am sketching on should be already tanned with age. It is, indeed, a senseless proposition. The game has to be played in a different way. But which? The past always makes more sense than the future. Anxiety flies out of the past. About ten years ago I was asked to translate Pirandello's Henry IV into English for Tom Stoppard. I read Pirandello as a kid, but found him claustrophobic. Something to do with his nose, while I had just discovered at the age of 12, that I had a nose between my eyes that blurred somewhat my vision. Pirandello came back many years later, this time in an apt text, because longing for home is often longing for our roots, in other words for the comfort of the past. "Whatever happens has happened, however painful the events and brutal the battles, they're history and nothing can change them... so you can sit back and admire how every cause leads obediently to its effect, with perfect logic...", says Henry IV. In the present, the past is safe, yet, when it was present it was uncomfortable and insecure and as illogical as the present is now. What we really want is logic, the logic that seems so clear when we look at the past - cause and effect - so linear. There is where home is, the comfortable place of logic. This whole exile thing feels more and more like Schrödinger's cat. I can only go home if I don't exist anymore. I can only go home if I am already there and have never left. But perhaps I should be grateful for that. The beauty of travel, the beauty of the present and the future is, ultimately, the lack of certainty. ZAUM = Beyond reason. ZAUM = Beyond logic. ZAUM. How peaceful Malevich's anxiety feels today.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-71624076663828747862014-07-18T12:40:00.001-07:002014-07-18T12:40:40.285-07:00Identity, belonging & cheap hotels<br />
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I was a film extra for fifteen years and did a lot of costume drama, period and sci-fi. What was fascinating was how the costumes - and to a lesser degree the settings - changed our personality. We identified with the clothes, we became our characters. To the point, even, that all the guards, all the uniformed characters, would sit together at the same table for lunch. We all have our rituals, and these rituals give some roots and solidity to our sense of identity. We make tea or coffee in a certain way, drink it from our favourite cup. We have our breakfast in a certain way, in a certain place in the house, we even dress in a certain order. And, obviously, we also surround ourselves with things that are of our choice, that are familiar and make us know, without a doubt, that we are who we are, and are where we are at. But when we stay in a hotel room, or are guests in someone's house, all of that goes out the window. I am choosing here to talk about cheap or average accommodations and not luxury hotels, because I am interested in the quirks and in how we adapt or react. For instance, last week I was in a hotel room. It wasn't too bad, quite decent and clean. But the sheets felt damp. Why? Were they really damp? I touched the walls and they were dry. And it was cold. I am always cold, but at home I have all my blankets and central heating. Here, I found a heater and after a mighty struggle I managed to turn it on. Then I proceeded to make myself a cup of tea. I had brought my own tea, just in case. The kettle didn't fit under the tap, so I filled it with tiny glasses of water, one at a time. The cups were tiny too. I felt really clumsy in my attempts to create a routine that fitted all this stuff that wasn't mine with my personality. But my personality was already changing. The irrational part of me was trying to figure out, "Who am I? How did I end up in a room with damp sheets, silver wallpaper, and very small cups? Am I this room? Is this room a result of me? And what sad me would end up living here?" As a foreigner in a foreign land for nearly 30 years, I have always been very interested in the feeling of belonging. What makes you feel that you belong? Familiarity? Purpose? Acceptance? In that hotel room, I started feeling that belonging is when your rituals feel right. I was learning my environment already, adapting to it, and transforming it, so that my rituals felt more real and familiar. I quickly adapted to the kettle and the small cups. I put my ipod with guitar jazz radio in an empty drawer to amplify it, and wrote. Writing always feels comfortable, and profoundly me. "This hotel room," I started to think, "is not my story, but it will become my history, part of my past, yet it's not an interaction on equal grounds. My input, the music, the tea, cannot quite overcome the old blue carpet, the damp sheets, the small cups." I wondered if in order to feel that we belong we need to be on equal grounds in the giving and taking. Because my irrational me could not make sense of how I ended up there, I lost part of my history, and started fresh, like an explorer. I tried to find more ways to personalise my space, I bought a vintage dolly and a small red penguin that I put on her lap, almost like a Mexican apparition, and then started making some very rough collages (I had no scissors) of the stuff I had come across during the day, gluing everything on paper shopping bags. I would then hang the handle on the bathroom door or the closet's. Soon, a bizarre sense of belonging formed, not the me who is writing in my flat now, but another me, with less history, who had blended into an affinity with the place, and struck a decent compromise between mild squalor and creativity. Perhaps creativity is the number one ingredient that makes you belong.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-22054480191423348462014-07-06T23:02:00.001-07:002014-07-06T23:02:25.687-07:00Points of view<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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By chance, I came across an article my father wrote in 2002 about the view from our Genoa flat. The view was indeed amazing, over the greenhouse with its palm trees, the whole city and, on a clear day, the sea. To the left there was a castle. Throughout my youth, I used to look from the window, at the grey slate roofs and the castle, which, against the setting sun, sometimes looked like a skull. I loved that flat, and it will always be in my heart. So, holding back the tears, I read my dad's article, curious and scared to learn how he felt about the place. It turned out - and actually I should have remembered - that, while I, in my room, was looking ahead, at the buildings, the castle, and the sea, my father, in his study, was looking through his bay window at the winding road. And while he was looking and thinking of all the years gone by, of his ghosts from the war, he was also waiting for me to come home. This image, this different point of view, the looking ahead and the looking to the side, made me suddenly see a different person, not my father, the all-knowing, the powerful, the wise, the giant, but a man, a mortal, with all his insecurities, fears, and sorrows. As I don't have children, I never really think of what it must be like to be a parent, of how mysterious a young life must appear. Mysterious and worrisome, fragile, yet in need of space and trust in order to grow. Being a rebellious, exploratory and dreamy child, I must have appeared particularly mysterious to him, while he pondered on how to be a good father, looking at the winding road from the bay window. Sometimes, out of desperation, he would make me sit on the couch and read to me from the Ecclesiastes, 'To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:, A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted...' He was hoping to slow me down, to make me wait until I was more prepared. But the time was right, it was the right time for me. Now, I like to think of this sense of time as an intuitive clock, that has its natural speed, its right time for things. Even though my fast clock was cause of concern for my father, back then, I followed its rhythm, like a dog on a walk, sometimes running, sometimes stopping to investigate a scent or a movement. It was only later in life that I started fighting against my clock, wanting to learn things faster, to work harder, more and more, in order to get to that place that is supposed to be my destination. But my intuitive clock thinks otherwise, 'To everything there is a season... a time to get and a time to lose.' The journey will take the time it needs to take, for how valiantly I fight against windmills. I am glad I didn't know that my father was not omniscient when I was a child and needed to think it was possible to have control over our own lives. And I am glad that my intuitive clock has shown me a different version of my father today, today that I am the same age he was then, when he sat on his chair and read me from the Ecclesiastes. There is indeed a time for everything.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3190597722551885945.post-90765742540836536932014-06-29T22:48:00.000-07:002014-06-29T23:02:41.557-07:00Stuff<br />
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In my caravan I have no tv, no wi-fi, just a few books, old illustrated maps of the continents, and a couple of my jazz bottles with Queen Ida and a blue Miles Davis. I also have silence. A silence so deep, sometimes it's almost scary. But mostly beautiful. I can stare at the flowery curtains and drift away into a natural meditative state. I also have a few pens and colours and paper. Sometimes I draw, sometimes I just sit outside reading travel books and feeling the grass with my bare feet. Everything is perfect. Then I come back home, open the door, and I am immediately overwhelmed by... stuff. I've accumulated so much stuff, books, cds, gadgets, art supplies, cameras, nick-knacks, pictures, canvasses, art magazines, sketchbooks, full and blank. I sit on my couch, shoving some of the fluffy toys and cushions out of the way and I stare at the blank tv with a sense of dismay and anxiety. Why? Because every single object requires a decision - namely, should I use it or not. And it entails further decisions to make, such as how to use it and why. The other source of anxiety is the fear of losing what I've got. Apart from physically losing something, there is the retrieving form of losing. I flicked through a Tate magazine that had an article on Malevich, and when I put the magazine into the recycling bin, I thought, "Now I am not going to remember Malevich, his work, his theories, his sputniks and planits." And that made me incredibly sad. I write, sometimes I write a lot, in notebooks, in my computer, on my phone. But where does all the stuff I write end up? How do I archive it for retrieval? The simple caravan life is lost in the city, with its deluge of information and stuff that should be used, retained, accessed, retrieved, remembered. And a flowery curtain is not enough to induce meditation under the bombardment of phone calls, emails, post, bills, magazines, tv. And then there are art galleries, exhibitions, sketching and photography outings. A sea of stuff.<br />
I often wondered why monks choose gardens, ponds, rocks, mountains or the sea to meditate. I thought that was cheating. Too easy to go to a beautiful place, sit on a solitary bench in the sun and watch kois glide by in the pond, perhaps with dreamy wind chimes and birds singing in the background. Because then you go back to all your stuff, and your heartbeat is raised, by millions of stimuli and a sense of guilt and powerlessness. But someone explained to me that the more you expose yourself to calm, meditative environments, the easier it becomes to access that state, to remember it when you are surrounded by stuff. So here is what I learnt in two days on my caravan. I don't NEED stuff. I don't need to retrieve or archive anything apart from what gets automatically stored and catalogued in my memory. I will remember Malevich when I need to. Or not, and then I'll do without his sputniks and black paintings, because I will be engaged in something equally valuable. As to my writings, it will be a constant journey of rediscovery, like a goldfish in a bowl swimming past a castle. Oh what a beautiful castle.franvisionshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10762444259006600040noreply@blogger.com0