Monday, September 15, 2008

Recital

















"Lake Water Drawing"  by Vicki Sher, pencil on paper, 22" x 18", 2008.




I came across  the Poem "Lake Water" by David Ferry in the New Yorker last summer (2007).  I liked it, but filed it away in the back of my mind.  The longer the poem stayed with me, the more I realized its perfection.   I'm making drawings by copying the poem over and over.








Lake Water Drawing, 2008.






Lake Water Drawings, (installation view of progression of first 4).


LAKE WATER

by David Ferry


It is a summer afternoon in October.

I am sitting on a wooden bench, looking out

At the lake through a tall screen of evergreens,

Or rather, looking out across the plane of the lake,

Seeing the light shaking upon the water

As if it were a shimmering of heat.

Yesterday, when I sat here, it was the same,

The same displaced out-of-season effect.

Seen twice it seemed a truth was being told.

Some of the trees I can see across the lake

Have begun to change, but it is as if the air

Had entirely given itself over to summer,

With the intention of denying its own proper nature.

 

There is a breeze perfectly steady and persistent

Blowing in toward shore from the other side

Or from the world beyond the other side.

The mild sound of the little tapping waves

The breeze has caused—there’s something infantile

About it, a baby at the breast. The light

Is moving and not moving upon the water.

 

The breeze picks up slightly but still steadily,

The increase in the breeze becomes the mild

Dominant event, compelling with sweet oblivious

Authority alterations in light and shadow,

Alterations in the light of the sun on the water,

Which becomes at once denser and more quietly

Excited, like a concentration of emotions

That had been dispersed and scattered and now were not.

Then there’s the mitigation of the shadow of a cloud,

And the light subsides a little, into itself.

 

Although this is a lake it is as if

A tide were running mildly into shore.

The sound of the water so softly battering

Against the shore is decidedly sexual,

In its liquidity, its regularity,

Its persistence, its infantile obliviousness.

It is as if it had come back to being

A beginning, an origination of life.

 

The plane of the water is like a page on which

Phrases and even sentences are written,

But because of the breeze, and the turning of the year,

And the sense that this lake water, as it is being

Experienced on a particular day, comes from

Some source somewhere, beneath, within, itself,

Or from somewhere else, nearby, a spring, a brook,

Its pure origination somewhere else,

It is like an idea for a poem not yet written

And maybe never to be completed, because

The surface of the page is like lake water,

That takes back what is written on its surface,

And all my language about the lake and its

Emotions or its sweet obliviousness,

Or even its being like an origination,

Is all erased with the changing of the breeze

Or because of the heedless passing of a cloud.

 

When, moments after she died, I looked into

Her face, it was as untelling as something natural,

A lake, say, the surface of it unreadable,

Its sources of meaning unfindable anymore.

Her mouth was open as if she had something to say;

 

But maybe my saying so is a figure of speech.

You Don't Know Jack



 

You Don’t Know Jack” is a group of drawings that incorporate bits of short accompanying narrative.  The title of the series challenges the viewer to a game of figuring out Jack’s identity.  But Jack’s story changes in the process of telling it.  The collage of words gives the sense that Jack is not only a man of many possible narratives, but he is an elusive and maddeningly unspecific subject.  The words have been changed, the face has been modified, we are presented with conflicting stories, so what can we know to be true?   In the end, we’re forced to admit that representation presents an interesting conundrum.  Pictures are static, but people are not; perceptions change, stories change, nothing is ever exactly as it seems.  And, this shifting landscape of knowing/not knowing is ultimately familiar, a better representation of human experience because it presents a territory of shaky and insufficient knowledge that we can recognize as our own.  So even though we know what we know, we still don’t know Jack. 

















The text reads "Jack loves Women", but "Women"  has been collaged over, making it read "Jack loves - French Films"
















Text Reads : "Jack smoked a little [Hash] in the Eighties".  "Hash" is collage.





















The text reads: "Jack is a Total Heartthrob, Liar, Heartthrob, Liar".







Detail of above.



















The text reads: "Jack thinks he looks pretty sexy holding this fish, but he doesn't realize not everyone goes for his particular brand of macho".