Memoire - Sub Rosa
Transcription
Memoire - Sub Rosa
w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 FORE m emory Think back to your earliest memory. How far into your past does it stretch? What did you find there, in the oft-overlooked recesses of your mind? And why is it still there — taking up valuable space and helping to frame the edges of your personal worldview? Inevitably, amidst the dustbin of our history, we find memories both good and bad, fond and repressed, mono and multi-sensorial. Whatever the form, these recollections, inaccurate as some may be, have long played a role in how we understand ourselves. Over time, our memories degrade. They get offloaded to our devices and journals. They begin to be colored by our perception and morph into near-truths. Amidst these subtle changes in our memories, we lose sight of the actual experience and instead grow new, semi-accurate versions of the facts. Whether this is detrimental or blissful is not for us to decide. It simply is. Let’s begin to remember. Merjin Hos — I’m Ghost 1 l a petite mort l a petite mort for epl ay PLAY l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 XXXTROLOGY Aries Taurus Gemini Cancer Leo Virgo March 21 – April 20 April 21 – May 21 May 22 – June 21 June 22 – July 22 July 23 – August 22 August 23 – September 23 PAST LIFE: Warrior — lived through an era of competition PAST LIFE: Craftsman — lived through an era attached to luxury and material desires PAST LIFE: Translator — lived through an era of substantial cultural exchange PAST LIFE: Dutiful mother — lived through an era which respected tradition CHALLENGE: Combat the ego and embrace the power of partnership CHALLENGE: Remember that mother Earth is your true security CHALLENGE: Set aside knowledge and novelty; it’s time to cultivate your heart CHALLENGE: Seek to understand and nourish yourself PAST LIFE: Nobility — lived through an era which valued elegance, manners and a dignified temperament PAST LIFE: Monk — lived through an era where personal concerns were set aside for a higher purpose CHALLENGE: Find your own sense of purpose COUNT ON THEM: To stand up for you COUNT ON THEM: For their well-developed feminine sensibilities COUNT ON THEM: To know how to talk to people COUNT ON THEM: To understand you COUNT ON THEM: To keep proper decorum CHALLENGE: Resist being the helper; pursue a broader wealth of knowledge and experience DON’T: Rush them DON’T: Give them restrictions DON’T: Underestimate them DON’T: Ignore them CHARMING: Responds to sex and gifts with equal enthusiasm CHARMING: Knocks everything over CHARMING: Is a slut for Doritos CHARMING: They definitely did not wake up like this DON’T: Get in their way CHARMING: Learns a whole rap song LOVEMAKING: Unabashed, even aggressive LOOKING FOR: Instant gratification — omit the preamble, get straight to business LOVEMAKING: Eager to please, but not interested in being the leader LOOKING FOR: You to tease their sense of vulnerability and taboo LOVEMAKING: Seeks love in the form of performance and applause DON’T: Even. Just don’t. CHARMING: Is secretly a kinky freak LOVEMAKING: Technique is the Virgo specialty LOOKING FOR: A little drama to stay aroused LOOKING FOR: Unhurried, undaunted, uncomplicated tantric sex BUT MOSTLY: Wants to feel everything BUT MOSTLY: They can turn it up on a dime BUT MOSTLY: They tenderly and passionately declare love BUT MOSTLY: Have oversized hearts and egos to match BUT MOSTLY: Consistency is actually a huge turn-on PRACTICE RELEASING: Hedonism PRACTICE RELEASING: Control PRACTICE RELEASING: Caretaking PRACTICE RELEASING: Attention-seeking TRY EMBRACING: Mystery TRY EMBRACING: No expectations TRY EMBRACING: Teaching ‘em to fish TRY EMBRACING: Collaboration PRACTICE RELEASING: Doing things the hard way DO IT: In a stairway DO IT: In a taxi DO IT: On a bearskin rug DO IT: In a theme park LIFE AFTER DEATH: Becomes a comet LIFE AFTER DEATH: Starts a new one LIFE AFTER DEATH: The popular clique in heaven LIFE AFTER DEATH: Starts a new life as a god Libra Scorpio Sagittarius Capricorn Aquarius Pisces September 24 – October 23 October 24 – November 22 November 23 – December 21 December 22 – January 20 January 21 – February 19 February 20 – March 20 PAST LIFE: Poet; lived through an art-centric era, where people really paid attention to love and beauty PAST LIFE: Medieval alchemist; lived through an era in which people attempted to divine the secrets of the universe PAST LIFE: Explorer; lived through an era defined by a pioneering spirit PAST LIFE: Native tribesman — lived through a period of family decline, where you were looked to for help in rebuilding community PAST LIFE: Dreamer — lived through the prehistorical space-age civilization of Atlantis PAST LIFE: Healer — lived through an era in which a return to nature was promoted as immensely valuable for human development PRACTICE RELEASING: That winnertakes-all mentality TRY EMBRACING: Spontaneity DO IT: Under the bleachers LIFE AFTER DEATH: Rules hell CHALLENGE: Retain that artistic spirit without over-valorizing your own creative ideals COUNT ON THEM: To make you feel special DON’T: Spook them CHARMING: Googles everything LOVEMAKING: Lavish, lyrical and easily seduced LOOKING FOR: Someone to experiment with BUT MOSTLY: Talk is cheap PRACTICE RELEASING: Taking the comfortable path CHALLENGE: Being upfront and keeping your core values clear COUNT ON THEM: To naturally interrogate the nature of things DON’T: Lie to them CHARMING: Laughs at the most inappropriate time LOVEMAKING: Committed to pleasure, and famously unsqueamish LOOKING FOR: You to play it a little aloof TRY EMBRACING: The rewards of risk BUT MOSTLY: Bondage and blindfolds DO IT: On a cop car PRACTICE RELEASING: Strategy LIFE AFTER DEATH: Stays on Earth as a ghost TRY EMBRACING: Simplicity DO IT: Underwater LIFE AFTER DEATH: Self-elected prince/ princess of the underworld 2 CHALLENGE: Put down roots and blossom COUNT ON THEM: To make you laugh DON’T: Bore them CHARMING: Is really hungry but too lazy to make their own food LOVEMAKING: Cinematic and bizarrely self-voyeuristic LOOKING FOR: Unrestrained and guilt-free spontaneous sexual adventures BUT MOSTLY: Will try anything once PRACTICE RELEASING: Wanderlust TRY EMBRACING: One thing at a time DO IT: On a ski lift LIFE AFTER DEATH: Rules Heaven CHALLENGE: Let go of caution and responsibility — explore methods of release COUNT ON THEM: To cheer you up DON’T: Stress them out CHARMING: Possesses a serious sense of duty LOVEMAKING: Sometimes you have to give them a massage between the legs to get them to sit still LOOKING FOR: Complete domination BUT MOSTLY: In it for the long haul PRACTICE RELEASING: Cool detachment TRY EMBRACING: Homespun sensuality DO IT: On a boardroom table LIFE AFTER DEATH: Becomes a planet CHALLENGE: Maintain your freedom of thought and behavior COUNT ON THEM: To be weird with you DON’T: Pretend with them CHARMING: Believes in aliens LOVEMAKING: Friendly, quirky lovers motivated by mental constructs LOOKING FOR: Just a little bit of sleaze BUT MOSTLY: Use your atomic energy to serve mankind PRACTICE RELEASING: The need to be liked TRY EMBRACING: Self-expression TRY EMBRACING: Creative freedom DO IT: On someone else’s kitchen counter LIFE AFTER DEATH: Demons seem like they have a lot of fun? CHALLENGE: Beware of easy charm and seduction COUNT ON THEM: For amusing banter DON’T: Fake it for them CHARMING: Will make you snacks LOVEMAKING: They like a little pain with their pleasure LOOKING FOR: You to dive deep into the pool of fantasies BUT MOSTLY: Can be the boy, the girl, both, neither DO IT: At your enemy’s wedding PRACTICE RELEASING: The rosecolored glasses LIFE AFTER DEATH: Moves galaxies TRY EMBRACING: Reading the fine print DO IT: In a bounce house LIFE AFTER DEATH: Is the only survivor 3 nata l i e si m s LOOKING FOR: Mood LOOKING FOR: You to tell them clearly what you want to do with them BUT MOSTLY: Charismatic playmates x x xtrology LOVEMAKING: A lavish exploration of their sensual self LOVEMAKING: Must be won over verbally before mouths are used for anything else COUNT ON THEM: To call you on your bullshit l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 Standing in the ocean, you feel the currents of the water gently rocking you back and forth. You see your brain, and wrapped around it is the cancer. You cup your hands beneath the water’s surface and douse yourself. As the water washes over your head, you see it burn off a portion of the cancer cells. With each rinse of the ocean, more and more of the tumor dissolves away. Finally, the tumor is completely gone leaving behind your brain, healthy and clean. You are standing on a beach. You feel the grains of sand rubbing against your feet, beneath your heels, and between your toes. The sound of waves rolling against the sand fades into that of swaying trees. A gentle breeze presses against your body, bringing with it the sweet, salty scent of the ocean. We watch a lot of movies during the day, but it’s almost impossible to tell whether he likes them or not. We’re halfway through one of Sir Ben’s diatribes in Sexy Beast when my mom gets home from work. I can tell that this is not the movie that Mom wants setting the tone for the evening. “Dad, we can finish this later.” He looks confused. Maybe this was one he liked? “Tek-shee!” We grab a cab and jump in. As we ride to the hospital in Songpa-Gu, the drive slowly makes me drowsy. Cab drivers in Seoul are mostly trustworthy, but falling asleep in the backseat of a taxicab is an invitation to get ripped off. I know that my dad won’t be able to keep the driver in line, but I also can’t for the life of me keep my eyes open. As I drift into a deep sleep, I desperately tell my dad to watch the driver, and he responds, “Okay.” I wake up as the cab pulls into the hospital and find that the fare is the same as always; 12,000 won. Dad took care of it. When we arrive at his office, it’s clear that no one knows quite how to address my father. His mere presence is encouraging, but his appearance — how different he looks — is unsettling. For one, he has gained a bit of weight, or maybe everything is just swollen. And then there’s the gray newsboy cap he’s started wearing to cover his shaven head and the prominent surgical scar. Either way his staff is determined to take this as a sign of good things to come. The design staff enthusiastically greet him as if nothing were different. My dad responds with a nervous grin. Fresh bread for breakfast. If it was a particularly grueling day at the office for Dad, there would be freshly baked bread in the morning; he liked to take his stress out on the dough. The crumpled up bread recipe had earned a permanent place on our fridge. Dad would get home late, usually 1 or 2 in the morning, pull out the flour, add the water, salt, and yeast, knead the hell out of it and let it rise overnight. It would have been in and out of the oven before I woke up to find it waiting for me on the dining table. A bit of cheese, maybe butter, was all it ever needed. “Why are we here?” I wonder to myself. We’re either early or late. No one knows what to do with us, my dad who should be running this place and me, a teenager who should be in class somewhere. Mr. Kim finds us wandering around and pulls us into the conference room. Mr. Kim, the man who handles the logistics of my dad’s design store, explains to me that we need to be there in order to show one of our import suppliers just how sick Dad is. After some silent waiting, the supplier arrives and the conversation very quickly escalates into a violent shouting match. Apparently, we owe him more money. I abruptly find myself separating the two men as their shouting gives way to shoving. You move toward the water. As you draw closer, the small waves roll over your feet and slide back into the ocean. You continue to walk toward the water. Your feet are now 4 When we learned that he had 6 to 8 months to live, my two brothers and I decided that we should do whatever we needed to help my mom take care of him and to be able to share his final moments. For me, that meant putting off college and moving back home to Korea. For us three brothers it meant sharing a bedroom, with a weekly rotation of who got top bunk. This was our final chance to all be together. When his business partners insisted that he stay at home — weeks after he lost his ability to form coherent sentences — we were the ones who had to keep him there. We had to physically block the door, while he tried to push through. It took him many days to fully accept that he was no longer needed and that he could only make things worse by going to the office, a crushing realization for someone who defined himself by the work he did. He had no hobbies and certainly couldn’t pick up any new ones now. Routines, however, found their place in our daily lives. Mom would be with him in the morning. The three of us would take turns helping him bathe. We helped him get dressed. Meds with every meal. Afternoon walk around the apartment complex and a cappuccino from our very own espresso machine. Dinner together and the evening would end with one of the three of us performing the guided meditation. Visualizing away my dad’s cancer seemed as likely as anything else to be the most effective treatment. Lucas Chung — Untitled I look around and my dad is nowhere to be found. The supplier storms out of the office. Was this what Mr. Kim wanted? Did we achieve our desired effect? Somehow the way the meeting ended suggests otherwise. I find my dad looking through cupboards in the breakroom. He finds what he’s looking for: a large can of Folger’s. This can is important to him. He tries to steal it by stuffing it into to his shirt, which is already snug. When we started performing the guided meditation — one of the few really useful suggestions we gleaned from the bookshelf of cancer books we bought — it was strange, unnatural and awkward. Even though we were never sure whether it had really worked, we could see that he liked it. The story shifted a little each night, but the essence stayed the same. Months after we’d started doing it, we realized that each of us had a completely different narrative. One of us had our dad holding his brain in his hands, while mine had a possibly disembodied brain walking into the ocean. “What are you doing?!” I say, panicked. He realizes the can won’t fit, and puts it back. As I recall the time we spent during that year, I find the meditation has formed an anchor in my mind that ties together all of the insanity we witnessed. These nightly meditations became some of the most meaningful moments each of us spent with our dad. Before he had cancer, it was hard to find any time to have meaningful conversation with him. It was a daily reprise that gave us perspective beyond the neverending fires we had to keep putting out. In addition to the memories of those little catastrophes, we also have the memories we crafted together, the shared yet individualized dream that we made every night together with our dad. I stood on the beach with my dad, and I walked into the ocean with him. “Cooking is all about timing.” Stir fry was a specialty of my dad’s. Every time I find our beloved giant wok rusted in someone else’s kitchen, I think of him. Marinate the meat. Chop all the vegetables into uniformly sized pieces. Measure and set aside sauces and condiments. Start by heating the oil. Add the garlic. Then the meat. Add the heartier vegetables like carrots and cabbage, giving them their moment. Next the vegetables that cook faster. As the pieces finish cooking, slide them up the sides of the wok making space for new ones closer to the heat. Serve immediately. Dad was obsessive about technique. If the process is performed correctly, everything else falls into place. 5 luca s chu ng completely submerged. With each step you take, the water rises higher and higher up your thighs, waist and chest until you are submerged up to your neck. The water had felt cold at first as you entered, but it now feels warm and comforting. My dad and I are on the way to the hospital for his weekly check-in. He can walk slowly, and sometimes he can participate in a conversation with one-word responses, but overall he’s a shadow of his former self. Someone needs to be with him always. I could say that helping him bathe, dressing him or keeping a full stock of Depends makes it clear that our roles have flipped, but actually those brief moments where he feels like my old dad are what most remind me things have changed. you a r e sta n di ng on a be ac h I remember my dad working a lot. Late nights every night, and maybe he would take Sunday off. Most of the time we spent together was at the breakfast table, Bahá’i gatherings, vacations or our Sunday evening dinners with his mother. I wish I could say more about how he ran his design agency. He was different in each place. When he was at work, he spoke Korean, and when he was with us, it was English. What aspects of his character were common to both? Did his silly sense of humor translate? Was he funnier in Korean? luca s chu ng you a r e sta n di ng on a be ac h YOU ARE STANDING ON A BEACH l a petite mort G H O w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 S T P U E B L O ghost pu eblo ghost pu eblo m a rgot a n d c l ay coff e y m a rgot a n d c l ay coff e y Memory Through Mirage In the desert, things appear differently. A sunrise hovering eternally on the horizon blinds you. The wind shapes a suffocating sandstorm that envelopes you. The Ghost Pueblo is a constructed mirage that uses the extreme elements of the desert landscape to test us. It hovers between real and illusion; a memory of a place or people, projected by our mind’s eye. 6 The Ghost Pueblo is an installation to honor our country’s ancient civilizations and the Native American cultures that keep them alive. Many native cultures have been marginalized in society’s collective memory. Yet they hold a profound past that deserves to be resurfaced and retold. Their memory is one where the natural world is God and home is built of its elements. The Ghost Pueblo uses the natural world to conjure that memory, first, through illusion, and then through discovery and reflection. The Anasazi or “Ancient Outsiders” are one of the biggest mysteries of our native cultures. After establishing sophisticated agricultural systems and building complex cliffside pueblos — some still in existence — they vanished entirely. Many legends live on in their memory to reason how or why they disappeared. One belief says the Anasazi have crossed over into a new, fourth dimension of time and space; wherein our ruins and artifacts are, for them, complete and whole communities and tools. Three different native cultures have shaped the Ghost Pueblo’s image. The Hopi are some of the oldest native people still settled. They were often called the “Pueblo People” by Spanish settlers who found their large-scale villages fascinating. They are intensely spiritual people who undertake a complex series of annual ceremonies involving hundreds of Kachina spirits — invisible life forces they believe deeply in. There is a saying in the Hopi culture that explains their unique and ancient wisdom as a keen and ever-present openness. They claim that the “door on top of their heads” remains the most open, giving them an ability to access meaning and purpose. The Paiute people of the Black Rock Desert were nomads. They did not live in pueblos, but they were known as a moral and peaceful people with few possessions and a strong belief in the interconnectedness of all things in the universe. It was the Northern Paiute spiritual leader, Wovoka, who began a new religious movement that was eventually incorporated into nearly all Native American belief systems. Called the Ghost Dance, it is held that proper practice of the dance would reunite the living with spirits of the dead, bring the spirits of the dead to fight on their behalf and, ultimately, bring peace, prosperity, and unity to native people across the region. 7 l a petite mort Building a Ruin A Place of Reflection The Ghost Pueblo is therefore a modest, symbolic temple built to remember these peoples. It is an imperfect and eroding place of our collective American past; our memories. The Ghost Pueblo experience relies on its natural desert environment. It’s the hazy burning sunrise; it’s the blurred edge of the horizon and the chaos of a sandstorm; it’s the shimmer in a heat wave. A pueblo is a desert dwelling that came into being when native cultures left nomadic beginnings and developed sustainable agricultural systems. These new agrarian communities were defined by these geometric adobe structures. Where pueblos are geometries made of the desert from the desert, the Ghost Pueblo is a geometric reflection of the desert, envisioned to be a space built for meditation on the past and its roots grounded in the natural world. The Ghost Pueblo is built of reflective surfaces. Set in the distance at the edge of the deep desert, it operates as a transitional structure wherein one can move from high stimulation to calm contemplation and natural terrain. When approaching the Ghost Pueblo, the discovery that the mirage is real and not imagined extends our perception of reality and heightens memory. It is an illusion come to life; a pueblo on the horizon of the desert, creating a place for reflection on the natural world and those who first lived here. w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 In a talk by Hawane Rios I once heard, she asked the group to become the place that raised us each. Do you know the name of the wind that raised you? What is the name of the waters that raised you? What is the name of your mountain? What is the name of your land that raised you? Who are the first people who lived on that land? One of the pueblo’s most defining characteristics is the kiva, a central, sunken chamber used for spiritual ceremonies and religious rituals. A temple within a dwelling, the kiva has many variations, but most These are the questions the Ghost Pueblo asks of its visitors. ghost pu eblo ghost pu eblo m a rgot a n d c l ay coff e y m a rgot a n d c l ay coff e y can be defined as an enclosed, circular room with a built-in bench and a packed earth floor (although some floors were hollow, perhaps for foot drums). Many are underground with an entrance through a roof hatchway by ladder, a design that may have originated from a pithouse structure. All kivas have a fire pit at the center and a vent in the wall to provide fresh air, as well as a small hole in the floor, called a Sipapu, which symbolizes the portal through which ancient ancestors first emerged into the present world. The walls are often decorated with murals of hidden symbolic significance. In the middle of the night, reflecting the dark skies, the Ghost Pueblo is again a home to the people of the desert. The fire pit glows and the Ghost Dance beats on. The Ghost Pueblo’s expression of the kiva is a central space in open air. Instead of underground, the pueblo’s ruinous aesthetic as well as its built geometry is continued in this open space. It is an unexpressed cube symbolizing a lost past, a collective memory worth saving. Within this cubic void, a circular kiva with a glowing firepit and symbolic Sipapu is impressed. In this spirit, the Ghost Pueblo provides a shelter for group meditation in the desert. Here is where the Hopi perform their annual ceremonies. Here is where the Paiute dance around the fire pit. Here is where the Anasazi paint across the walls. 8 9 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 ONCE, IT WAS A ROCK Once, it was a rock, held fast in the blackness, undistinguished from the earthy mass. Once, it was a rock, high beyond the others, standing guard in a hostile land. They too were rocks, more precious than most, sought by those in unknown lands. j o n o ’c o n n e r o n c e , i t wa s a r o c k Once, they were rocks, swift and free across the crust, destined to roam eternally. It had been a giant, bathing deep in a cool murk, until a rock struck another, and Death clung to its fatty bulk, only to ease, once it was a rock. It was still a rock, though crushed and sieved, pressed and creased, beveled and burnished. And it was still a rock, cradled in fleshy folds, when an ancestral urge, demanded its safe return. And it was still a rock, cold and still among the others, pining for the time, when it had no name, and it was just a rock. 10 11 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 LIVING THE DREAM liv ing the dr ea m Through my twenties and thirties, I became increasingly fascinated by the content and narrative of my dreams. I have subconsciously learned, through intense and upsetting dreams, techniques to exhibit control from within my sleep state. Today, I have found I can exercise enough control to refuse a nightmare. To see that a dream is moving in a direction of fear and anxiety and take appropriate charge to land the out-of-control plane, or pull myself out of any deepening hole with a well-positioned rope ladder. I’ve unlocked a rich repository of dream-state stories and acquired the freedom that lies in the ability to govern them. They now serve as a personal treasure box of curated and recorded fantasy. By exercising this heightened cognizance, dreaming has even helped me in my professional and personal life. Professionally, dream control is helpful for the rehearsal of scenarios. My dreams become meeting preruns, allowing me to test approaches and problemsolve. Unleashing creativity and letting my imagination fly is one of the most invigorating and relaxing dream states. I also find myself most creatively inspired after a night of wild dreaming; my morning showers become my studio for generating ideas I use throughout the day. Perhaps the most visceral link between my memory and my dream-state occurs when I use a most personal exercise of control to heal from intense grief. Through the construction of my dreams, I am able to connect with those who have left life and, once again, to feel the closeness and comfort of conversations held with them. These moments forge an intimate pathway from my deep memory and the pain of the past, and comfort me. Petra Börner — Back Room, Memory There is a difference between sleeping and dreaming while asleep. Sleeping can be described as the lack of conscious awareness of the outside world, meaning the large portions of the brain that are typically responsible for receiving and interpreting external signals are deactivated during this time. However, studies of dreaming in a specific ‘state of sleep’ have revealed enhanced brain activity during this time. This quote from Harvard University psychiatrist John Allan Hobson who studied dream consciousness resonates with me. “Dreaming may be our most creative conscious state, one in which the chaotic, spontaneous recombination of cognitive elements produces novel configurations of information: new ideas. While many, or even most, of these ideas may be nonsensical, if even a few of its fanciful products are truly useful, our dream time will not have been wasted” (1999). As human beings, our state of consciousness is constructed through primary and secondary conditions. It could be said that the primary consciousness (the ability to integrate observed events with memory to create an awareness of the present and immediate past of the world surrounding) could be active within the dream-state without external stimulation. If this is true then we can have conscious awareness of our surroundings in dreams, perception of space, environment and emotion. In terms of our secondary consciousness (being self-reflective, looking back on the past, imagining the future and accessing more abstract thoughts), this is more frequently present in states of lucid dreaming wherein the individual is able to exhibit some level of control. Knowing and understanding this, I continue to ponder my nightly adventures. I feel these experiences of memory contrasted with the sense of immediate presence are more than electrical brain impulses, pulling random thoughts and images from my memory then playing them back in random sequence. They are beautiful and authentic memories of a time and place, but also moments of immediate now, curated by the magic of subconscious. One day I hope to better understand the relationship between the emotional memory and the rational present. For now, the answer must remain a wonderful and mystical biological secret, guarded deep within the walls of my memory, and I will continue to navigate these adventures with curious and active participation. Hvass&Hannibal — Nostalgi 12 13 est h er d ow n ton Since I was 10 years old, all of my dreams remain securely vaulted in memory. est h er d ow n ton I have suffered a concussion through a particularly active ‘dream swim’ through stormy waters. I have been awoken by my husband who tolerated a face slap as I contended with a cloud of dream bats. liv ing the dr ea m As far back as my memory will take me, I have dreamt, and remembered, a vast catalog of wonderful, curious and terrifying dreams. I seem to have a strong propensity for dream recall. In my dream history I have fought in great battles, survived plane crashes, swum oceans and lived to tell. l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 I open the drawers of memory, One…then another I remember the horse-drawn carts… And the sellers of prickly pears… And the cafés of al-Rubwa I remember the Damascene houses With their copper doorknobs; And their ceilings decorated with glazed tiles And their interior courtyards That remind you of descriptions of heaven… r i m a m a ssa sat i Place, space and time are all fleeting things. They are ingredients of memory. And though we may try to hold onto these elements, things will fade; and time will change things. Gradual change is welcome, but forceful change is not. Now, as Syria is being ripped apart by brutal war, many are traumatized and nearly two million people have fled, seeking refuge in foreign countries — an unwelcome change. As buildings crumble, memories of places that no longer exist will remain. Explore the memories of Saleh, Ahmad, and Dylan — individuals who remember a place that no longer exists. a pl ac e t h at no l onge r e x i sts — Dylan – Nizar Qabbani The Build Rose Jam I was a quiet teenager who grew up in the ‘burbs of New Orleans. In the summer, I would usually stay home and play Sega or build jumbo jets out of Legos. However, the summer of 1995 was unlike any other. My parents bought me a ticket to visit my family in Damascus, Syria. I had never met my Syrian family and found out quickly that I had a lot of them. When I met my youngest uncle who was only 14 years older than me, I felt I had met Rico Suave, himself. He was everything I wanted to be, a successful and witty veterinarian-turned-businessman — a driven man who care for two things: taking cared of animals and making money. He bought and owned a quaint chicken farm on the skirts of Mezzah. It needed to be fixed up and I was appointed his right-hand man, helping him build the farm. Now, instead of building with Legos, I was building with bricks. It was rewarding. Once the work was done we would prepare tea and play cards. It was in these moments that I felt understood. It was within the walls I helped build that I came to realize my confidence. In 2014, I received news that the farm was shelled. The place that played such a definitive role in my personal growth was now rubble. Last I heard, my uncle had bought a broom and was ready to build again. When I was 12 years old, there was nothing like going to my aunt’s house in the countryside of Aleppo. We spent afternoons picking roses and making jam. The glutton in me was impatient; I would tickle my tongue with the velvety petals and eat them raw. Once we gathered enough flowers we would return to my aunt’s home, an old romantic Syrian courtyard house. We set the flowers on an unstable mosaic table and sorted them, picking the petals. The fragrance tangoed throughout the space. In the center of the house was the so-called forbidden fountain. The kids in the family were always tempted to jump in and splash around. Once grown-ups were out of sight we gave into our temptation. And when the sun went to bed, so did we. My cousins and I would spread our mattresses on the cool marble ground and star-gaze. We were told that if we saw a shooting star, it was a genie coming to take us away. Once everyone had fallen asleep I would look up at the stars, never trying to count them, but instead trying to talk to them — I let go and simply looked. My aunt’s house was looted and later hit by a shell. I didn’t want to believe it. Her home was a memory that brought me comfort. I still have that rickety table, but rose jam will never taste the same. — Saleh 14 On the long drive to Palmyra, we stopped at the Baghdad Café, essentially a tourist gift shop — not a restaurant, like I had hoped. We got to talking with the owner, and before I knew it, he had set a table in a back room with a delicious brunch of scrambled eggs, olives, cheese, bread, and of course, tea. There’s nothing quite like Syrian hospitality. So after a satisfying meal, we headed to Palmyra, which is unlike any ancient Roman site I have been to. As a student of Roman history, I’ve been to quite a few. I specifically recall walking in an underground room and noticing how one man depicted on a tomb was dressed in a Roman tunic and yet was wearing Persian footwear — a unique mix of cultures. I remember the incredible temple of Ba’al with well-preserved wall paintings, another display of the cross-cultural city. As I walked back to the van I looked around at the warm sculptures. Their eyes bade me farewell. It had never occurred to me that I wouldn’t be able to visit again. Now, this historic ancient city of amber stones that once rose out of the Syrian Desert is a casualty of war. r i m a m a ssa sat i a pl ac e t h at no l onge r e x i sts A PLACE THAT NO LONGER EXISTS Amber Stones — Ahmad 15 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 H U M A N S : THE NEW GOLDFISH saving as memory. However, we cannot accept a patent denial of the experiences that create our cultural memory, because our experiences become our truth. Accept or reject; they happen and inform us, and our families, friends and peers. As a producer of all media types, I am not advocating for a world in which the current landscape is suppressed, censored or otherwise edited by mandate. What is being suggested is an educational position that is designed to inform the coming generation on the twin skills of media production and comprehension. In other words: how can we determine for ourselves, through critical thought, what is worth saving and sharing to create memories and culture? The human brain contains four lobes, one of which is the temporal lobe. The temporal lobe connects long-term memory and is the primary engine for the senses of sight and sound — components used to accept and process the information that we convert into memories. Goldfish, needless to say, have a less complex system. h va s s & h a n n i b a l The bedrock of human cultures is built on sharing, the trigger of empathy. Sharing can be manifested in language; in art, music or literature, or customs. What is familiar to a group is what binds them and memories are the root of this. Without them, we would suffer from a fate similar to that of a goldfish — living a completely present existence empowered by the blissful ignorance of living only in the “now.” a ddi s on o’de a hum a ns: th e n ew goldfish We are in the winter of our existence-long affair with memories. det u tilr egn elige sin n We are in the winter of our existence-long affair with memories. The democratization of production technology is what has created the onus of shared responsibility in media. Recording and publishing into the public record is no longer the strict purview of the few. We are all broadcasters now. And, as such, we operate with a similar mentality; educate or entertain while building and maintaining an audience. Forgetting our long-term Jules Julien — Blackout memories happens when synaptic connections in our neural network are weakened or, more critically, when a new network is created and is superimposed upon the existing one. Throughout civilization, many customs and traditions have passed through memory as part of this natural cycle of evolution. Although the exponential expansion of media in the last two decades could be dealing cultures a coup-de-grace that we never expected. The operative difference between the individual and the business is the modus operandi. A lion’s share of individuals are not programming for profit, so there is no onus to appease advertisers or distributors. Therefore, the standards of quality are rarely upheld creating the detritus. We will all bear witness to moments in our lives, whether they are globally profound, or profoundly personal, it does not matter. How can culture die if we are producing more cultural artifacts than ever? Simply said; quantity now far exceeds quality. New neural networks are at the tsunami-level. And in our want to consume, we have not been educated to think critically about modern media. Participation has become unavoidable as we swim like goldfish in the sea of social media and cable bundles. There is an obligation to ensure that we all have the knowledge to make a worthwhile contribution to the global brain so our memories are accurate, worthwhile, informative, (hopefully) entertaining, and, most of all, timeless. Given the detritus of photographic and design-based media, it is easy to argue that very little of what is produced is worth sharing, much less Winter, after all, is but a season in the cycle of life. 16 17 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 AUTOMATIC WRITING These writings came about through my participation in group-meditative exercises of slow movement. While doing these exercises I was in a state of deep silence, and I noticed that when focusing on moving my hands extremely slowly, my right hand looked like it belonged to an ancient master. I wondered what it would be like to write down questions while my hand had this ancient quality. au t o m a t i c w r i t i n g These memories included my connection to Ancient Egypt. When I traveled to Egypt and went inside the Great Pyramid of Giza, everything felt familiar. I sat on the ground of the King’s Chamber, leaned against a wall, and felt myself move through the wall and become part of an elaborate procession in Ancient Egypt. pa m e l a k r a f t Over time, I began to have memories of ancient knowledge. I call them memories rather than imaginings because memories have deep roots. When you recollect something in its entirety, it has three dimensions. It has an appearance, sound, even a sense of smell. It’s something you have participated in. pa m e l a k r a f t I had crossed a line into this other realm, this other reality. I was able to access a deeper intelligence, a channel to my ancient mind. I believe I was given access to the highest form of myself, the oracle acting as a bridge. au t o m a t i c w r i t i n g The questions that arose had the quality of questions you might pose to an oracle such as, “What is the space between life and death?” and “Will my ailing father live or die?” This quality is reflected in the way these writings were written, not only in the content of the words but also in their appearance. The writings happened suddenly and looked very beautiful to me. I believe I remembered my life beyond the veil of time; I was no longer limited by my linear experience within it. I understood that my life history went well beyond this lifetime. I believe that these writings are records of conversations with eternal memory, a memory that is circular, stretching into the past as well as into the future. 18 19 pa m e l a k r a f t 20 au t o m a t i c w r i t i n g pa m e l a k r a f t au t o m a t i c w r i t i n g l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 21 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 A FULL CIRCLE MOMENT a fu ll circle mom ent This show officially launched the opening of Rough Trade in Williamsburg as not only a record store, but also a music venue. Every fan dreams of this moment. Earlier that evening, while waiting in line to get in, I saw Charles Bradley step out of his gypsy cab, and cheerfully say, “Hello!” as he walked by. He spun around and with the biggest smile swooned, “Hey, baby girl.” During his encore, he began to shake every hand in the front row, and when he arrived at mine, he did a double take, remembering me from earlier that night. He blew me two kisses while walking backwards, hand-to-heart beaming at the crowd. Phosphorescent Acoustic ballads washed the crowd with powerful serenity. Seemed fitting to hone in on the incense and faint blur of flowers behind. The stage was transformed into an altar for the senses. A spiritual journey into sound enraptured you in an immersive all-senses-on experience. No photo can do this acoustic performance justice. I had never imagined a stage coming to life like this one. The smell of incense and flowers mixed with dim romantic lighting carried just as much weight as the music. Big Freedia One of the most exciting shows to shoot, for obvious reasons. It’s difficult to assume only the role of photographer with all that twerk happening onstage. Brooklyn Bowl turned into an open invitation for all to join in on a hot-and-heavy love fest. Anamamanguchi Through a series of meanderings, I landed on what seemed like richer territory, a marriage if you will, of two creative dabblings near and dear to my heart from an early age: music and photography. Eager for new experiences, I chased that excitement by wiping the dust off my DSLR and getting to it. I’ve been a serial creative dabbler for as long as I can remember. As an artist, I’ve courted a range of creative outlets always in the hopes that I’ll find “the one.” Time and time again, I’ve come back to creating music and composing images. There was only one rule growing up: you must play a musical instrument. It took me a few years of wandering the keys of a piano and the strings of a viola to finally land on the drums — an instrument that is sonically inconvenient having grown up in a sleepy suburban town where the loudest thing you’ll hear after eight o’clock at night are crickets and maybe the occasional barking dog. As soon as we — the drums and I — got into a solid groove, I went away to college. Sadly, the drums stayed behind. What happened over the next eight months happens to all of us in due time — a reconnection to the source, that thing your memory holds and carries, that thing that never gets away. It’s a subconscious layer of memory that sits deep in our DNA, a place that spans past and present — home. And herein lies the profundity of memory. If we pay close enough attention, it points to our most natural and honest connection to self. This show packed a raucous crowd of sweaty, tattooed movers and shakers. The energy was all about moshing, crowd surfing and constant body-to-body contact, feeding the equally feisty musicians. The whole experience was much like being inside a videogame. I climbed onstage mostly to escape the unwanted weight of sweaty crowd surfers. Being onstage was not as scary as I thought; in fact, I loved it so much that I walked behind the drummer to get a different vantage point. At that moment, he turned around and stared for a few seconds too long. Reggie Watts There is nothing this musical genius cannot do. With Reggie, you just don’t know what you’re going to get and when. I remember crawling on all fours through the attentive crowd as a couple of other cameras wove in and out of aisles. Fact: You’ll never capture a bad photo of Reggie Watts. A silent film of Reggie’s face would be just as entertaining as his music. You can’t see it from here, but he was wearing an oversized sweater with black Santa’s face on it. So Reggie. These photographic meanderings reveal memories of my youth come full circle. This is not a story of love lost, but rather one of finding an eternal passion that has simply had to take a backseat as life has become ever more complex. I moved on, but never far, from music. 22 23 t i f fa n y w e n t i f fa n y w e n a fu ll circle mom ent Charles Bradley l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 a mode r n day m e m e n to mor i stephen di x a mode r n day m e m e n to mor i A MODERN DAY MEMENTO MORI Thinking back to my school days, I can clearly remember how much I’d enjoy practicing my handwriting. Carefully perfecting uniform rows of alphabet letters was my idea of heaven. Around this same time, my grandfather (Bernard) introduced me to his workshop — the place where he’d hand paint signs for local shops and businesses. Inspired by his genius for typeform (and perhaps the heady aroma of paint thinner), I began practicing my penmanship with increased enthusiasm. As the years have gone by, I’ve kept a notebook of interesting things that have happened to me. Things I’ve experienced, heard or seen. Over time, my note-taking has gathered momentum and my style has evolved. To date, my handwritten recollections fill several dozen notebooks — the latter of which have become increasingly intricate. Reproduced here are a few of my most recent pages. I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I did writing them. If you do, keep a beady eye out for my soon-to-be-published book and accompanying art exhibition. It’s going to be nothing short of Funkenskatt. When my grandfather passed away at the turn of the century, I started keeping a book. I don’t really know why — maybe it was permanency I was seeking: the thought of leaving something lasting behind, a memento of some sort. After all, aside from several faded signs still swinging around town, there was little left to show that my grandfather had even existed. 24 25 stephen di x 26 a mode r n day m e m e n to mor i stephen di x a mode r n day m e m e n to mor i l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 27 stephen di x 28 a mode r n day m e m e n to mor i stephen di x a mode r n day m e m e n to mor i l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 29 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 Re/View Figure 3 To review is to examine with the possibility of instituting change. By blowing up aspects of a face, searching for more detail by looking deeper into the pixels, the clarity is lost, but perhaps the essence is found. RE-COLLECT Re/Store Figure 1 & 4 The forgetting curve of retention shows how a memory is lost over time. Studies show that humans lose information rapidly at first, but then the loss transitions to a more gradual erasure. Transience is one of the seven kinds of memory failures, which is the process of forgetting due to the passage of time. “The photograph is literally an emanation of the referent. From a real body, which was there, proceed radiations which ultimately touch me, who am here; the duration of the transmission is insignificant; the photograph of the missing being, as Sontag says, will touch me like the delayed rays of a star.” Figure 3: Re/View — Her lips — Roland Barthes Memory is something we all experience — whether we feel lost in it, anxious to preserve it or simply enjoy the stories we keep. Particularly in this age of reliance on technology to store our memory artifacts, we are becoming documentarians of our lives. Re/Color Figure 2 & 7 The modes of documentation on computers and smartphones all give a false sense of truthfully preserving the past. To retrieve a memory, all one has to do is scroll and find the image captured in that moment. With the growing ubiquity of technology-aided documentation, sometimes we find ourselves capturing scenes rather than living in them. By reviewing my iPhone photographs, organizing them by month and compressing them into these swatches, I can get a sense of the colors of these memories. The amount of compression also shows the quantity of moments I felt inclined to capture. Throughout cultural and scientific history humans have conceptualized the act of recalling past events via metaphor. At first, a filing cabinet, later replaced by a reel of film available for instant playback. That model was superceded by our current understanding of memory as a complex web of cells and networks within our brain that assemble our past. The nature of memory is that it is an impermanent, malleable record of an event. Each time one recalls a memory, the details that stand out depend on the current context. The present and the past mix as we restructure a new story. Some details recede, some dominate, others are entirely fabricated and woven in as the truth. The way we document affects how we frame an experience. Some people feel the compulsive need to document their lives through photography. Though these may be imprecise copies, they are somehow more perfect than our own fallible recollections of an event. With the introduction of social media, these private forms of documentation can now be publicly shared with the internet community. When are we living through documentation versus actually living? Does the idea of creating a memory reduce our ability to experience the actual moment? Perhaps the concerns over new forms of documentation will be viewed like Socrates’ worries about the invention of writing weakening the human memory. Figure 4: Re/Store — Greenway Re/Press Figure 5 For memories that are best not to recall and do not instigate the desire to document with photographs. From the awkward to the painful, Re/Pression compresses written accounts of moments. As the unpleasant edges of a memory smoothen over time, the ugly words transform into something more beautiful. The progression of technology has brought new ways of recording and storing fragments of an event. How has the computer altered the way we conceptualize and remember memories? In what ways our dependence on our devices freeing, and in what ways detrimental? When memory is outsourced to computers, mobile devices and the cloud, does this enhance or disrupt our perception of our life narrative? See more at re-collect.co michelle a ndo re-collect Figure 1: Re/Store — Blue Ridge Figure 5: Re/Press — Spring 2013 Figure 2: Re/Color — August 30 31 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 Re/Tell Re/Member Figure 6 Figure 10 A memory is not simply retold by thinking of the original event. The narrative blurs with each prior retelling. The contributors to this series sent me an image from their photo archives. After some time, they were asked to write about the photograph without looking at it. By reflecting on one image and describing it without reference, the photograph becomes the memory rather than the event itself. Memories of a face are not static images until aided by a photo that freezes a person in time. This series aims to recreate this effect. Strips of each individual are layered so that more pixel information can be held within one JPG. Despite the multiple viewpoints, the resulting photograph fails to reproduce a coherent rendering of the person. Figure 6: Re/Tell — Sofia’s Figure 10: Re/Member — Tian re-collect michelle a ndo Figure 9: Re/Fill — Wickenden St. Re/Fill Figure 9 & 11 Figure 7: Re/Color — January The brain tends to fill in the blanks in our memory based on contextual signifiers. Similarly, the computer is left to fill in the blanks through the content aware function. As memories are replayed multiple times, false facts implanted and details mixed around, the original memory of an event is no longer retrievable. Re/Code Figure 8 Our experiences are encoded by our brains so that later they may be mentally recreated. Similarly, digital photos are made up by lines of code that the computer reads to arrange pixels and recreate the image. This is a series of the exposed lines of code sourced from Instagram photos tagged with #memory. Figure 11: Re/Fill — Snow Jump Figure 8: Re/Code 32 33 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 I think it’s called “history.” But I don’t want to bury my memories, I want to be able to retrieve the one I want, anytime I want. Back in the 90s, when I was in a club date band, I had a wedding gig at the St. Regis Hotel, arrived early, and found the trombone player already there. We bantered back and forth as we were setting up, while the photographer positioned bridal party members for portraits on the far side of the banquet hall. “Hey,” said the trombone player, “You see that girl getting her picture taken? What do you think she does for a living?” RAM IN THE CLOUD We’d been exchanging witticisms for the past ten minutes. I knew he wanted me to say something funny. My mind went blank. All the jokes, one-liners and verbal rim-shots I’d accumulated over years of being a professional musician were suddenly lost in a back room of my mind. The front room was completely empty. I looked at the girl and had a vision. I “saw” her, in my mind’s eye, wearing a white medical lab coat. I turned to the trombone player. “She’s a radiologist,” I said. He stared at me, mouth open. “Before you came in I was talking to her,” he said. “She’s graduating from Cornell next week with a degree in radiology. But how did you know that?” “You are like this cup,” replied the Master. “You come with your questions, but your cup is already full. Even if I were to give you the answers you seek, you would not be able to receive them. Like this cup that can hold no more tea, you have no more room inside yourself. Before your cup can be filled, it must first be emptied.” Every experience, bit of knowledge, impression, book, piece of music, person, becomes part of memory when it departs from our senses. But we try to hold onto these memories as if they were physical possessions. Oh, sure, we can always read the book again. But every time we read a book, it’s a different book. Every time we see a movie, it’s a different movie, in terms of what we remember afterwards. Obviously, we can’t keep experiences, we can only keep the memory of them. What could have been taking up all that space in the man’s mind? If his mind was anything like mine and probably yours, it was full of all kinds of stuff, especially those nuggets called “memories.” Memories aren’t physical things, but they are still things. The shelves we build to store them are in the mind. Like your computer, your mind can only hold so much memory. Thus, in order for new memories to be stored, some must be deleted. A bunch of wise masters of all stripes, over millennia have repeatedly urged humanity to stop living in the mind and switch to living in the moment. And while we are living in the moment — or “being here now,” as Ram Dass put it — every single interaction is duly recorded and subsequently stored in various quadrants of brain/mind. We don’t have to do a thing, it’s automatic. My aging relatives and acquaintances can’t remember what they had for breakfast — but they can tell you about every car they ever owned, the names of all their childhood pets, their first love, that vacation in Switzerland in 1978. They’ve held those memories in mind for so long they’ve built up on top of each other like a Manhattan high-rise. That’s why there’s no room for the remembrance of other things past, like breakfast. The old memories are entrenched like rent-controlled tenants. Helen Keller is reputed to have said, “What we have once enjoyed we can never lose. All that we love deeply becomes a part of us.” This wisdom suggests that when we fully engage with life, our experiences fuse with our being, and thus can never be forgotten even if the mind is not thinking about them. Action, rather than thought, is the way toward emptying the cup. Talk is cheap, while actions take effort. Putting in effort has a way of opening a trap door for excess brain baggage. No, don’t tell me the only solution is eviction! I love my memories. Some I cherish, some I revile, some I feel neutral about — but I love that I have them. Of course, maybe my memories are not even mine. Maybe they were planted in my mind by others, vis a vis The Manchurian Candidate, Total Recall, or The Truman Show. Even if that’s the case though, the memories are in my mind, and possession is nine-tenths of the law. One young man of my acquaintance told me he enjoyed going to vintage shops looking for the videogames he used to play as a kid. He would buy them again (his old ones were long since gone) and take them back to his apartment. He’d play the games, expecting to be transformed into the carefree youth he once was — free of job stress, debts, girlfriend worries, and all the unpleasantries that seemed to be accompanying him as he matured. If we were to encapsulate the Buddhist tea tale in a three-word mnemonic phrase, “empty your cup” would do just fine. A big part of everybody’s filled cup is memories. If we were to dump some of those 34 r a m in th e clou d “Master, stop!” cried the man. “The cup is already full!” That extraordinary ESP event stayed in the forefront of my mind for twenty years as I puzzled over how it possibly could have happened. Now I know. The information was simply downloaded from the cloud! Why didn’t I think of this before? The “cloud” that stores everyone’s mp3s, photos, videos and documents is merely imitating the natural, organic, Akashic Record-type cloud existing in the astral, or etheric, plane and described by Rudolf Steiner, Alice Bailey, Edgar Cayce and many others! Noah Rabinowitz — Blackhawk “How’s that working for you?” I asked. At last, a solution: allow old memories to float out of the mind and into the astral cloud. (I’m sure the people at Google are working on this as we speak. But I’m going au natural because I can’t stand the idea of buying another gadget or piece of software.) Regardless of method, potentially, each of us can have RAM like an elephant...like Google...like my cousin Larry, who won’t let me forget my humble beginnings of a messy bedroom and lack of culinary skills. “It’s not,” he replied. I wanted to suggest to the young man that his actions were misdirected, so I told him a story about Carl Jung, who knew a thing or two about memories. Jung reached a point in mid-life where he wished to re-connect with what he truly loved doing as a child. He remembered that he used to love playing with stones and building structures with them. Since he was now a big boy who could play with big stones, he decided to build himself a house on some land he purchased at Lake Zurich. He began building Bollingen Tower in 1923 and finished it in 1935. Drink in the experiences, and the friendships, and the love, then give them back. Receive, give, receive, give, in an endless cycle that spirals outward in all directions. The creative process is very handy for expunging memories. Anytime I can’t get a song out of my head, I write an arrangement of it. That serves to remove the song from my head and send it back into the world, where it came from. So much for emptying. What about filling? It certainly would be judicious of us to monitor everything that seeps in through the chink in the old armor, but dear one, it is not possible. I suggest a more organic approach: empty and fill the cup in a continuous cycle. The filling happens by itself. It’s the emptying that needs practice. Soon virtually everything will be in digital format, maybe even people. This is not a new idea. Early adopters faced insurmountable challenges, however. In the movie The Fly, the guy being molecularly dis and re-assembled ended up sporting the head of a Musca domestica stowaway. With the advent of Star Trek came a new and improved OS. Beam me up, Scotty, to that great Dropbox in the sky. Drink your fill. Drink in your pleasure and your pain. Drink in all the beauty of this earth. Drink in the experiences, and the friendships, and the love, then give them back. Receive, give, receive, give, in an endless cycle that spirals outward in all directions. Some say the spiral has no beginning, and no end, that it extends beyond birth and death. We can drink it all, and let it all go. But what about those memories? They are so valuable. We don’t want to lose them. No need to hold onto those precious memories of yours. Store them in the cloud, where they can be downloaded or streamed on-demand! Empty your cup. That way you can drink your fill of this beautiful world, and you’ll have room to remember where you put your keys. If we are going to dump old memories to make room for new ones, where can we put them? Is there a “memory landfill” somewhere? Yes, 35 su ter ry memories, we’d have more mind-space for new things we’d like to recollect. Since I am a former resident of Brooklyn, I choose an even simpler mnemonic consisting of one word: “fuggedaboutit.” “I don’t know,” I said. su ter ry r a m in th e clou d There is an oft-told tale in Buddhist circles of a man who traveled to the other side of the world seeking a wise guru who would be able to tell him the secret of life. After finally reaching the mountaintop where the Wise One resided, the man was invited into the master’s hut for a cup of tea. The man plied the Master with all his questions as the tea was poured into his cup. The tea filled the cup to the brim, and the Master kept on pouring, even as the tea ran over the top and down the sides, spilling onto the floor. l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 36 untitled sa nttu muston en vivian lee m emories of m e MEMORIES OF ME 37 l a petite mort THE FAMILY ACID w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d I’m a bit of a prankster, and when I show this picture to folks for the first time, I say, “This is my friend Clare, shortly before she fell to her death.” Leave just enough pause for shock, and then I laugh, “Naw — she landed right below her feet on the top of the ridge.” It’s taken at Point Lobos at the northern end of Big Sur, with a bizarre sandstone topography that Robert Louis Stevenson used to describe “Treasure Island.” Clare is a graphic designer and still very much alive these days. This is a double of Ibis Pitts shot at the home of Bob Marley’s Mother, Cedella Marley Booker, in Miami. In 1969, when Bob was 24 and staying that summer with his mother at her home in Wilmington, Delaware, he told Ibis that he was going to die at 36, a tragically true prophecy, one of Bob’s many. 38 39 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 GIs in Saigon in front of a movie theater showing a film about the decisive 1954 battle at which the French troops were soundly defeated, or forced to leave the country, allowing free national elections to be held. Two years later, President Eisenhower, aware that the communist leader Ho Chi Minh would win the elections, forbade them to be held, setting the stage for the final Vietnam War. t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d Generations of memories crowded the home in Racine, Wisconsin, in which actress Lise Hilboldt sat beneath a painting of Grandma Nash, wife of the founder of Nash-Rambler. Nash’s granddaughter lived there, married to George Wheary, founder of Wheary luggage, which made millions of the bags and suitcases that GIs carried. Filling the frame with a pre-filled frame in outback New Mexico in 1985. I have a very similar shot in Auckland, New Zealand, from 2007. It seems some people want to define how you encode your memories. 40 41 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 I learned a lot about preparedness from Tim Page, my roommate for two years after the war. He had been a Life magazine photographer in Nam, blown up four times, and barely survived. Dennis Hopper plays him in Apocalypse Now. Tim himself was trained by the great WWII shooter, Larry Burroughs. In all my shooting, everything was set by hand — f-stops, time, focus. Burroughs taught that you must constantly be adjusting your camera(s) as the light changes and always be prepared for a split-second opportunity. This shot comes from a trip to Baja, Mexico. We had just come through a narrow canyon with very low light and as we emerged from it into brilliant sun I changed my readings just as the driver slammed on his breaks and a wild horse leapt in front of the car. I jerked up my camera and caught this truly lucky image of a life narrowly spared. 42 t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d t h e fa m i ly a c i d I emceed a reggae festival in Ladysmith, Vancouver Island in 1993, where a walking soft-serve prowled the parking lot. My first wife, war correspondent Cynthia Copple, resting along the coast of Southern Spain. It’s a wistful image, and a bit surrealistic, as befits that country’s history. Fela Anikulapo Kuti (“He who carries death in his pouch”), newly released from prison, on his first tour of California in 1986. I emceed his concert and interviewed him on my TV show. “You must have been so glad to return to your 27 wives,” I said. “Oh, no,” he demurred, shaking his head sadly. “When I got out of prison, I divorced them all.” “Why?!” I asked, shocked. “Ahhh,” he sighed, “Marriage is too confining.” Here he is playing his saxophone without a sling on purpose, making his focus even more intense as he seeks its perfect balance. 43 jesse joh a n ning 44 t h i ngs t h at i forg ot a b ou t jesse joh a n ning t h i ngs t h at i forg ot a b ou t l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 45 l a petite mort w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 ABCDEFGHIJKLM m emoir e MEMOIRE IS A TYPEFACE THAT DEGRADES WITH EACH USE MEMOIRE WAS DESIGNED SPECIALLY FOR THIS ISSUE OF LA PETITE MORT. EACH TIME YOU RECALL A MEMORY, DETAILS MORPH AND BLUR. IN THE SAME WAY, THIS TYPEFACE MEETS A NEW LEVEL OF DECAY EACH TIME IT IS SET. THE MANNER IN WHICH IT WEARS IS INFORMED BY THAT OF METAL TYPE; SHARPNESS DULLS AND CORNERS FILL IN. THE FORMS ARE BASED ON DE VINNE, CUT IN THE LATE NINETEENTH CENTURY BY GUSTAV SCHROEDER. THE SHARP QUALITY OF THE SOURCE SPECIMEN WAS HARNESSED TO PROVIDE A CRISP FOUNDATION FOR THE TRANSFORMATION. DESIGN: RYAN BUGDEN ART DIRECTION: MICHELLE ANDO 46 47 rya n bugden j e s s e au e r s a l o r e c r e a t i o n i i , h o l d m e i n y o u r a r m s ( a n d n e v e r l e t m e g o) NOPQRSTUVWXYZ l a petite mort Jules Julien: Living and working in Amsterdam, Jules Julien is an artist whose illustrative work questions the reality of the world that surrounds us. He begins his process with a personal research project through drawings and design. Natalie Sims: Natalie is an armchair astrologer, the Design Director at Sub Rosa, a professor at Pratt and an aspiring optimist. Merijn Hos: Merijn Hos is an illustrator and visual artist based in Utrecht, the Netherlands. He divides his time between working as a illustrator and working on personal projects. Lucas Chung: Lucas is exploring life after architecture with Sub Rosa as his guide and hopes to find a great cheeseburger along the way. Clay Coffey: Clay loves color; the structural kind, like the iridescence of a fish scale, or an insect wing. He’s an architect, and the designer and founder of Isaac Rae studio where he builds modern places, spaces and things that keep the surrounding natural environment in mind. Hvass&Hannibal: Hvass&Hannibal is a multi-disciplinary art and design studio based in Copenhagen. Nan Na Hvass and Sofie Hannibal have worked in close collaborative partnership with illustrative and conceptual design in a number of different fields for clients in Europe, Asia, and the U.S. Margot Coffey: Margot is a Creative Strategist at Sub Rosa and a writer of design narrative at her and her husband’s architecture studio, Isaac Rae. She enjoys a good ghost dance under the moon. Petra Börner: Petra is an artist and illustrator based in London. Infused with warmth and bold character, her artful handcrafts and paper-cut creations exude a modernist charm. Jon O’Conner: Jon is a Strategist at Sub Rosa moonlighting as a product designer who enjoys Coltrane, people-watching and direct sunlight. Noah Rabinowitz: Noah is a photographer/ writer/filmmaker based in NYC. Santtu Mustonen: Santtu is a Finnish illustrator living and working in New York City. Organic patterns, natural science and movement inspire his work, which combines handcrafted and analog textures in a digital space. Esther Downton: Esther is primarily a lover of wine and Sub Rosa’s Production Director. Rima Massasati: Rima is a crazy cat lady. She enjoys gazing at the moon, surreal art and sipping on bubble tea with a scoop of extra bubbles. The Family Acid: The Family Acid is Roger, Mary, Kate and Devon Steffens. They are based in Los Angeles. Roger Steffens is a photographer, archivist, author, actor, editor, DJ and lecturer. Kate Steffens is an editor, digital archivist, writer and artist. Devon Steffens is a musician and artist. Mary Steffens is the heart of The Family Acid, providing stories, memories and inspiration. Addison O’Dea: Addison is a guy with a pulse. As such, he feels obligated to makes the most of every beat. Thankfully, the rhythm he lacks on the dance floor, he makes up for at the keyboard. Pamela Kraft: Pamela is an artist focusing on the intersection between magic and art. She is the founder and director of Tribal Link Foundation, which advocates for the rights of indigenous peoples, supporting their efforts to preserve their cultures, languages and communities. special thanks Michael Ventura Audrey Schomer Lindsey Andon Arnava Asen Jonathan Bailey Jessi Brattengeier Rosie Cardozo-Weingarten Rae Cohen Bernamoff Jeremiah Clancy Tony Cornelious Josh Davis Gabbie De Lara Anne Dong Lisa Hardgrove Ira Kantsurova Jeff Kempler Landy Kosmitis Kris Kowal Ellie Lammer Christine Lane Alejandra Lima Matt Lower Lucy Matchett Lauren Mann Devin McGrath Emily Metro Michael Oporto Robert Patrick Benjamin Porter Julie Puccio Grace Remington Marcella Rodriguez Camille Ross Laurel Smyth Darryl Ventura Carolina Ventura design Natalie Sims Michelle Ando production Hanna Boyd contributors Michelle Ando Jesse Auersalo Petra Börner Ryan Bugden Lucas Chung Clay Coffey Margot Coffey Stephen Dix Esther Downton Hvass&Hannibal Merijn Hos MVM Jesse Johanning Jules Julien Pamela Kraft Vivian Lee Rima Massasati Santtu Mustonen Jon O’Conner Addison O’Dea Noah Rabinowitz Natalie Sims Su Terry The Family Acid Michael Ventura Tiffany Wen front cover art Jules Julien — Bust 1 back cover art Jesse Auersalo — Border, Hold Me In Your Arms (And Never Let Me Go) Jesse Auersalo: Jesse is a Finnish illustrator, designer and art director known for his signature style of beautifully crafted and often macabre digital paintings. Ryan Bugden: Ryan is a graphic and type designer living and twerking in the greatest NY area. His work primarily revolves around and around. Reach out to him and he’ll take your hand. Tiffany Wen: Tiffany is a Producer at Sub Rosa who is equally likely to be found organizing her life on a spreadsheet as she is to be traveling the world without a map. untitled Michael Ventura: Michael wants you to know that I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together. Coo coo, ka-choo. editing mvm COLOPHON artists colophon issue 5 in order of appearance w i n t e r s o l s t i c e 2 0 15 MVM: MVM is a graphic design studio established by Norwegian graphic designer and illustrator Magnus Voll Mathiassen in 2009. Magnus was a co-founder of the studio Grandpeople, which received worldwide design acclaim. Stephen Dix: Dix is a wordsmith. He enjoys wordplay in all its forms — particularly when fineliner pens are involved. Michelle Ando: Michelle is a designer at Sub Rosa. Fueled by tea and her interest in the intersection of mind and technology, she is constantly at war with Google Chrome’s allotted space for tabs. Su Terry: Su is the author of The Blog That Ate Brooklyn: Inside the Mind of a Musician, and For The Curious (www.suterry.com). Vivian Lee: Vivian is the People and Learning Director at Sub Rosa and is a people person. She is originally from a French Canadian nickel mining town. Jesse Johanning: Jesse is a designer at Sub Rosa from the Midwest who still doesn’t know what he wants to be when he grows up. The materials in this publication reflect the views of its individual contributor and may or may not reflect the views of Sub Rosa. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photography, recording, or any information and storage and retrieval systems, without prior written permission from the publisher. Unless otherwise expressly noted, Sub Rosa disclaims any copyright interest in any of the images included in this publication, and the uses thereof herein are solely as is necessary for academic and/or social or political commentary. 48 La Petite Mort is published by Seed Communications LLC d.b.a. Sub Rosa in the U.S.A. © Seed Communications LLC d.b.a. Sub Rosa Please send all inquiries to lapetitemort@wearesubrosa.com 49 l a petite mort F O R E P L AY — X X X T R O L O G Y — Y O U A R E S TA N D I N G O N A B E A C H GHOST PUEBLO — ONCE , I WAS A ROCK — LIVING THE DREAM A P L A C E T H AT N O LO N G E R E X I S T S — H U M A N S : T H E N E W G O L D F I S H ? A U T O M AT I C W R I T I N G S — A F U L L C I R C L E M O M E N T — A M O D E R N D AY M E M E N T O M O R I R E - C O L L E C T — R A M I N T H E C L O U D — M E M O R I E S O F M E — T H E FA M I LY A C I D T H I N G S T H AT I F O R G OT A B O U T — M E M O I R E