Saturday, February 15, 2025

Blackouts (4*)

 


I won't pretend to have entirely "gotten" this rather high concept novel, but Justin Torres definitely kept me intrigued over its lyrical course.  Reading it printed on paper would have enhanced the illustrations, of which there are many, including a fascinating, alphabetized glossary of mostly timeless gay slang.

The title refers to words that have been censored by Torres in Sex Variants: A Study of Homosexual Patterns, an actual book published in 1941 based on extensive interviews conducted by Jan Gay, a lesbian pushed aside by the credited author, a man with a medical degree but no real understanding of his topic.  The pages look very much like a heavily redacted Freedom of Information request and while the text in my digital edition was too small to read, I'm pretty sure Torres intended what remains to be meaningful for those who can, adding another dimension to his hybrid work. 

"Blackouts" also allude to gaps in the memory of the older Puerto Rican gay man named Juan who was briefly adopted by Gay and her partner, a whimsical children's book illustrator.  Juan has tasked "nene," the book's anonymous, much younger narrator, to fill his dying wish by setting the historical record straight (oops I mean gay!) about Sex Variants which, despite its serious flaws and prejudices, represents one of the earliest attempts to address homosexuality from a clinical perspective.  Yes, the novel definitely meditates on queer identity, but not so seriously that Torres doesn't leaven it with a little death-bed humor.  

"How old am I?” [Juan] asks. “What do I look like?” “Handsome,” I say. “Distinguished.  Hung.”

I guess size matters even at the end of life!

What resonated most about Blackouts is Torres' recognition of what Ethan Mordden, another gay novelist, calls "the knowledge," which has been passed down orally from one generation to the next.

"You know, nene, in my time, we all prayed to our private idols, some famous woman, usually an actress; we memorized her lines, her looks, practiced throwing ourselves down onto the divan, overcome—all of us old-school sissies, we carried these women inside, or alongside, our consciousness, private icons, whose mannerisms and wit we’d call forth … mimesis, Dionysian imitatio … though I suppose that kind of thing has gone out of style.”

Perhaps not.  Juan's reminiscing vividly recalls a tutorial my Pines housemates and I led for a guest, a generation younger, who had never heard of All About Eve and The Women.  After listening, with interest, to all of us natter on about these and other lodestar gay films, he commented "You guys should start a school."

But the transmission goes both ways.  Juan also encourages "nene" to describe his own past as if it were a movie introduced with a perfectly chosen metaphorical image:  a hand on a knob, opening a door into a different world in each new scene, providing the older man with a vicarious thrill.  

Towards the end of the book, Torres baldly articulates his inarguable and profound thesis statement:

Juan had pushed me to grasp two concepts: (1) the idea that stigmatized persons live in a literarily defined world; and (2) the value of getting lost, or absorbed—sometimes haunted, sometimes enriched—by what’s been said and written about you and your kind, and what’s been erased or suppressed.

It's probably safe to say that few winners of the National Book Award for Fiction have ever been as meta as Blackouts.  Torres has done exactly what Juan requested of "nene," and then some.

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

FLASHBACK: The Gates (2005)

The stars aligned twenty years ago when The Gates opened:  I lived nearby, I had a digital camera (the i-Phone was still two years in the future) and I was in love.  Christo and Jeanne-Claude provided New Yorkers with a unique public art project that turned Central Park into an orange-accented playpen, full of unabashed joy and wonder, just what the city needed in the long, dispiriting wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
 
 
It took weeks and hundreds of laborers to stage The Gates.  I noticed this sign shortly after Christmas 2004. Christo and Jeanne-Claude first had come to my attention, vaguely, a decade earlier when DIFFA, an AIDS organization inspired by their environmental art work, had decorated the beach in Fire Island Pines with pink umbrellas for a memorable fund raiser I couldn't afford. 




Even a dyed-in-the-wool skeptic could see the planning had been meticulous, as it had been for the artists' wrapping of the Reichstag.  An exhibit I'd seen in Berlin documenting that event had blown me away three years earlier.




Delivery of the frames really began to heighten the sense of anticipation that had been building during a cold winter.





Florian and I biked to Central Park for the official unfurling on a Saturday morning.





Dozens of friendly young guides used tennis balls atop long poles to release the banners.  



They wore custom vests.


When I spotted a black limo on Park Drive, I shouted "It's them!" and we chased the vehicle like paparazzi to the top of Cherry Hill where Christo and the chain-smoking, flame-haired Jeanne-Claude held a brief press conference.




We had to ask ourselves: how could something like this--which required the approvals of the Bloomberg administration and the Central Park Conservancy--have gone so right?









And then it snowed!









The tennis ball poles came in handy when the wind tangled the banners.



For a little more than two weeks, the ordinary became extraordinary.






Never ever was I a less jaded New Yorker.  Happy, happy days.

Thursday, February 6, 2025

FLASHBACK: Shore Beauty (2004)

Digital photography encouraged me to look more closely at nature than ever before.  I spent a lot of time on the Fire Island National Seashore with my Nikon E3700, my first automatic-focus camera.  Nature appeared more beautiful than ever before now that it could be captured and appreciated at home.

 











Waves occasionally threw up Rorschach tests.  I saw a fish in one
 

. . . and a malevolent pig in another.


Did this soggy rose have a back story?


Even plastic flotsam and jetsam could be appealing.  




To say nothing of the man-made tableaux.  It helped to be high, of course!