NIGEL BEALE NOTA BENE BOOKS

Musings on the Book, Literature, Poetry, Literary Criticism, Collecting, Media, Life and the Arts, and Audio Interviews from The Biblio File radio program pertaining to same by a writer, broadcaster, bibliophile.
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Archive for January, 2009

January 24th, 2009 • Posted in Nigel Beale Reviews, etc.

Book Review: Essays by Lilburn, Olding, Rule, Kingwell and others

COMING HOME Essays By Tim Lilburn

Anansi, 200 pages, $21.95

PERSONAL HISTORY By Roo Borson

Pedlar Press, 106 pages, $20

JUST LOOKING And Other Essays By Helen Mclean

Seraphim, 122 pages, $16.95

PATHOLOGIES  By Susan Olding A Life in Essays

Freehand, 272 pages, $24

LOVING THE DIFFICULTY By Jane Rule

Hedgerow, 205 pages, $21.95

OPENING GAMBITS Essays on Art and Philosophy By Mark Kingwell

Key Porter, 293 pages, $29.95

Please find my omnibus review of these books in today’s Globe and Mail. Below, an extended version:

Alanis Morrisette is a talented singer who has written songs with memorable melodies and intriguing, if occasionally syntactically challenged, lyrics. Her voice is powerful, possessing impressive range, and qualities reminiscent of Joni Mitchell. Her person exudes energy and beauty. But despite this, most of what she performed at a concert I attended recently in Ottawa, lacked the clarity and form of her most successful hits. The evening air hummed mostly with an innocuous, though not altogether unpleasant, drone. Opaque “sung therapy” is what, for the most part, played, save for when the hard memorable edges of her early, affecting anthems jutted and rang out. During the long gaps between them, a stoned yet weedless haze seemed to hang over me, mixed with a vague, frustrating urge to grab onto something real.

I relay this story, unrelated as it may seem to the reviewing task, both because it exemplifies how mood and inclination affect the reception of art, and because it best describes my experience with, and response to, Roo Borson’s Personal History and Tim Lilburn’s Going Home. Both authors possess award-winning talent, both have produced essays in well-combed volumes which contain poetry that isn’t prose, prose that isn’t poetry ; fog, in other words, lacking, as Montaigne put it, “speech succulent and sinewy, brief and compressed, not so much dainty … as vehement and brusque.”

In attempting to resuscitate our North American lack of attentiveness and lapsed ability to feed on place, Lilburn weds an erudite if recondite “walk beside a line of texts” with musings on how to “be in” Saskatchewan. Exegeses of the erotics of Plato, the works of John Cassian and “Europe’s true erotic masterwork,” The Cloud of Unknowing, along with “sporadic mulling” of the works on which these books depend, including the Odyssey, are bound in the same book with thoughts on how Buddhist-type contemplative practice can be achieved from the correction and training of desire.

If this sounds difficult, reading the actual essays is even more so. Ekstasis, noesis, alacritous, architectonic, hybritistic, ascesis epektatic, and other such words (the majority accompanied by red underlining from my Word program) lie thick on these pages, as do passages such as: “Odysseus is a philosophical exemplar in his solitary apartness, in his large capacity for travel to extreme places both within himself and the numinous regions, in his burgeoning passivity to divine exigence, in his stripping, in his daimonic affliction, but above all in his affective apokatastatic nostaligia…”

Lilburn is a deep, serious thinker. These essay I’d say, are not going to appeal to most Sunday afternoon readers. They are perhaps best read, studied and contemplated within the confines of a seminary, augmented by the tutelage of an articulate, well meaning scholar. A toke or two mightn’t hurt either.

Speaking of which, Roo Borson’s essays take us too into a world of fuzziness. Hallucinogenic they are, almost. Psychedelic. Here’s a description of southern Ontario: “the abandoned silos and mills, factories and industrial stacks, loom up like shadows of themselves, like grey hulking Chartres in the pre-dawn.” Here’s a painting that “looks at me with its blueness and translucent whiteness until I come into the living room where it hangs on the wall”; and another that brings this on: “Knowledge and light have been equated for a long time now: what would change if we thought of knowledge as darkness? I’m curious about that flash of yellow, the farthest thing from a shadow, in The Whole Light of the Sky – limpid, nothing to it. The most we can honestly say would be ‘Ah! Yellow.’ Words we can carry with us anywhere, but you have to travel to a painting.”

Following recently deceased literary critic John Leonard’s practice of writing not about how “good or bad” a book is, but on how it is best read: In this case, I’d say – in a wide bath of patience. Although at times beautiful (berries weighing their canes in “graceful arcs,” and the like), a preponderance of deep unanswerable questions about art (Does it dwell in the humanly, intentionally created object, or the eye of the beholder? What is it that makes great writing unbearable? ) plus palettes full of ethereal descriptives, submerge many of these essays, suffocating and ultimately rendering unsuccessful this reader’s search for substance. Despite or perhaps because of their poetic elegance, they suffer from a lack of tangible definition. The experience is like reading Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now. You know something important is being said, but damned if the words express it.

In contrast, little guesswork is required in Helen McLean’s Just Looking. She tells us exactly what she thinks about art, and life, and aging, and looking. Over-cerebralizing, she says early on, diminishes the direct perception of what is before one’s eyes. “Becoming aware of oneself as observer is the death of observation. Oh, I can still see the landscape, but it has separated itself into parts that can’t be put together again. The scene has ceased to be a whole. I have particularized it to death.”

The only way she has been able to un-fracture the fractured, McLean tells us, is by translating it into paint and canvas; in so doing, she experiences feelings both of timelessness and loss of self. When you are addicted to looking, she says, you are forever being thrown off balance, shaken up, transported.

Her essays go on to describe the unsettling influence artist Pierre Bonnard has had on her work, the strengths of her heroines Margaret Laurence and Carolyn Heilbrun, life’s brevity and time’s irrelevance. They discuss too the importance of quality over quantity of life, the wisdom of C..S. Lewis, Paul Tillich and Seneca, and lessons such as: “Living well means staying awake, and listening, looking and noticing things. It’s the entrenched routines, the fixed opinions and attitudes which eliminate the need for thought or decision that will find us rearing bolt upright on our deathbeds, belatedly aware that we’ve spent this precious gift of time sleepwalking.”

Finally, for one resonating observation alone, McLean’s sweet, wise little book, reminiscent at times of Winston Churchill’s Painting as Pastime, is very much worth reading: “I am convinced that many, if not most of us, live with an unexamined awareness in some deep level of our hearts that our place of birth was arbitrary and home is elsewhere.”

Wise, too, is Susan Olding’s Pathologies, filled as it is with honest reflection on the relationship between a daughter and her father. There is no ether here, just raw, in some instances, literal, sinew. For example, Olding’s father, the pathologist, has just brought home a human heart: “The heart looked different, somehow, than I’d imagined. Bigger and smaller, both. Hard and soft at the same time, the ventricles like open eyes. I watched as he dried the thing off, wrapped it in a plastic bag and an old towel and placed it in a sturdy cardboard box.” The book is filled with this kind of well wrought, pithy observation about life, pain, parenting, illness and other essential components of human existence.

B.C. writer and social commentator Jane Rule, who died in 2007, also observes existence, here from a gay perspective, in her collection of beautifully lyrical essays, Loving the Difficult. In the title essay, she frames the rest by informing us that “However hard it is, however frightening, however dubious the worldly rewards, I have lived my life doing what I want and love to do, practising in private, performing in public, offering the gifts I have against the silencing odds.”

Hers are heartfelt writings filled with conviction and charming personal detail – Indian Baskets, one-sided records, fishing rods, tea cups, needle point covered chairs, books and paintings – all culled from a lifetime of accomplishment. There are also lessons to be learned. Book critics for example, are encouraged to use their knowledge to give readers greater access to the works they review.

Finally, after swinging from the soft and hard branches found within these collections, we land on ground tilled by Mark Kingwell. In Opening Gambit, he delivers what I think is the most substantive, engaging book of the lot by taking us into a clearing and rooting in logic of many of the slippery questions raised by the other essayists.

In short, this porridge is served at just the right temperature. Kingwell examines, and puts into perspective, much of the most interesting art, and many of the most challenging artists and topical issues, of our time. Whether quoting the late David Foster Wallace on popular culture (“the symbolic representation of what people already believe”), determining if photographer Edward Burtynsky is a crusader for sustainability or an unwitting purveyor of eco-porn’ or explaining how the whole of painter David Bierk’s works are intimately related to their parts, these essays not only intrigue and stimulate, they confer on their readers a chicness of being au courant.

Their philosophic and linguistic underpinnings help to convey and contextualize the depth and profundity of works by featured artists. Makes me wish I’d studied these disciplines, so deftly do they harness notions of art and language and interpretation. In providing the wisdom of perspective – an intellectual grounding to the conversation – Kingwell make sharp the innately fuzzy.

Here we pick up the jagged melodies sought at the outset of this article. Not answers, because they simply aren’t forthcoming, but concrete definition. Explanation we can grip onto when surrounded by haze. Despite the occasional dead end and vexing presence of one too many “I will explore this position in a moment, later, in the next section,” Open Gambits renders what is often excruciating into something as close to satisfying as can be found in the heedless run many of us make “from one longing to another.”

 

 

January 22nd, 2009 • Posted in Bookstores

The Seminary Co-op Bookstore Photos; Red is for Lit Crit

Whist in Chicago recently I had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing Levi Stahl (of University of Chicago Press fame). Our conversation should be up on the site shortly. Levi supplied me with the addresses of a number of bookstores for me to photograph, including the not to be missed Seminary Co-op. I notice that Scott Esposito has a post on the Co-op today, in which he tells us that "The Co-op has now " premiered a feature called UpFront. They have "asked our friends from University Presses to highlight for you their favorite upcoming books." Here are their recommendations for February and March. And if you do find something worthwhile on their list, I’m sure they’d appreciate if you bought it through their online store."

Here’s what we came up with on the photo front: Quite an unassuming place it is:


Down in the basement (reminds me a bit of the movie Brazil) of an old, yes, seminary, near the University of Chicago.


Notice the yellow stripe on the floor.


Follow it and you get to the section it represents. For future reference: Red takes you to Literary Criticism:

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January 22nd, 2009 • Posted in Authors and Books

Brick Books triggers Biggar, Smart and The Guess Who

Just received Brick Book’s Spring 09 catalogue in the mail. It calls to mind two things. I note that their address is 19 Biggar Avenue in Toronto:

Image from here.

Biggar is a small town located outside of Saskatoon. I recall witnessing one of the most spectacular Northern light (aurora borealis) shows I’ve ever seen in my life standing out on the highway near Biggar, ‘running back to Saskatoon’ (one of Canada’s greatest rock songs) from Calgary when I was in my early twenties. The fact I was drunk at the time didn’t seem to dull its brilliant dance, or crackling song, one bit.

I also note that Hooked, seven poems, by Carolyn Smart, is promoted on the inside front cover of the Brick Catalogue. I’m quite certain I met Carolyn in the 1980s. She’s the step mother of a friend I went to Queen’s with, who, coincidentally enough, just contacted me on Facebook after many years of silence between us. Hooked launches in Kingston, soon, if it hasn’t already done so.

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January 22nd, 2009 • Posted in Uncategorized

Cranes holding little Stones

Aberdeen Bestiary Project

Cranes

Cranes divide the night into sentry-duties
and they make up the sequence of the watches
by order of rank, holding little stones in their
claws to ward off sleep. When there is danger
they make a loud cry

The Peterborough Bestiary, quoted on page 47 of The Bedside Book of Birds: an Avian Miscellany by Graeme Gibson

Listen to my interview with the designer of this beautiful Bedside Book, C.S. Richardson, here.

January 21st, 2009 • Posted in On Life

The Ice Cream Urge

Hard to resist the siren call of a Cold Stone Ice Cream retail outlet, especially after an intense several hours of frantic factory outlet shopping, and when the  person dishing the goods is so welcoming and jovial.

Yes. I’ll take one of your Chocolate Devotion creations…the large…

Can’t be that big. We’ll share.

Yummy. This looks so good, I’m gonna put a picture of it, and you, up on

My blog. You okay with that?

Ten minutes later: both feeling ill. In the car on the way to Chicago Shakespeare. I place the remaining 1/4 tub of ice cream on the passenger side floor. Three hours later: still feeling sick. Tub has tipped over…melted and soiled the rug. Permanently. No more of this. Ever again.

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January 21st, 2009 • Posted in On Poetry

Obama’s Speech: A tonic for the ‘bitter swill’

Photo by: Master Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo, U.S. Air Force

Comparing Obama’s speech to Lincoln’s and Reagan’s, Kathleen Hill Jamieson, an authority on political rhetoric at the University of Pennsylvania  tells us in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette that "There are points at which you can hear the speechwriter saying ‘whoops, I’m overwriting this’ and pulling back,"  She thought Obama’s reference to "the bitter swill of civil war and segregation" was one of those clunker moments.

Funny. As a lover of literature and poetry, and an admirer of the well wrought phrase,  "the bitter swill" stood out for me as one of the highlights in Obama’s speech. Brilliant appeal to the inner senses I’d say. An invitation for the listener to use imagination, experience the bad taste that war and prejudice leaves.

January 20th, 2009 • Posted in AUDIO The Book Arts

Audio Interview with Walker Arts Center Librarian Rosemary Furtak by Nigel Beale: On Artist Books

Rosemary Furtak has been librarian at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis for 25 year. She is co-curator of ‘Text Messages’, an exhibit on artist’s books currently showing (until April 2009) at the Center. We talk here about her early championing of the artist book genre (her definition being: "a book that refuses to behave like a book (like the 35,000 books that sit in the stacks"), the line between books and art, and words and art, and librarians and curators…and how to go about collecting artist books. We talk too about the challenges of cataloguing artist Ed Ruscha’s 26 Gasoline Stations,about the prolific and surprising Dieter Roth, inexpensive materials and Richard Tuttle, and Lawrence Weiner, his Statements and his art making process. The works of these four are highlighted in the exhibition.

Please listen here:

Copyright © 2009 by Nigel Beale. www.nigelbeale.com

January 20th, 2009 • Posted in On Life

Big Doin’s at Tropicana

They’ve changed

the lid tops

to make them look like

oranges.

January 19th, 2009 • Posted in Nigel Beale Bookstore Photos

Nigel Beale’s Bookshop Photo of the whatever…

Intriguing business model.

January 18th, 2009 • Posted in Nigel Beale Reviews, etc.

Sunday Salon: “What Good are the Arts” by John Carey: Some musings Part 2

Cy Twombly, artnet

About the only  good John Carey can find flowing from the Arts is the self respect that prisoners gain by practicing and being taught painting, playing musical instruments, and/or writing. Even this though, is fleeting, because, as Carey points out, the opportunities to practice art, so common in prison, are lacking on the outside. Other than the escape that bibliotherapy offers depressives, and the joy and fulfillment that participation in arts programming provides children of school age, Carey can’t find much of substance to say about the benefits that Art, High Art, gifts its patrons.  Research, he shows us, has, to date, found no reliable connection between artistic appreciation and behavior.

What then is a work of art? Certainly not what people who study and spend their lives involved or working in the field, say it is. Rather, "Art is anything that anyone has ever considered a work of art, thought it may be a work of art only for that one person." If Britney Spears says it’s art, and Kenneth Clark disagrees, guess what: Britney, according to Carey, wins the argument. There are no such things as  ‘true’ objectively determinable works of art. Subjectivity will always rule.There are no objective aesthetic criteria. It is impossible to prove that what I like is better than what you like and that my feelings are more important than yours. The "absence of any God-given absolutes, together with the impossibility of accessing other people’s consciousness, prevents us – or should prevent us – from pronouncing other people’s aesthetic judgements right or wrong."

In Part ll of What Good are the Arts?, he makes a ‘subjective’ case for the superiority of literature over the other arts. At its beginning, Carey says of literary moralizing that ‘ it doesn’t just moralize, it disagrees and argues.’ Part l of his book doesn’t just disagree, it grasps every conceivable argument that extols and favours ‘High’ Art, tears it from its rational moorings, and shreds it to pieces. Similar to how Christopher Hitchens has humiliated defenders of God and religion, Carey crucifies all those who consider ‘high’ art somehow better than ‘low,’ or who believe that art can make us better people, or that art holds some kind of sacred, spiritual, religious place in life, or, with philosopher David Hume, that a true standard of taste is ‘what has been universally found to please in all countries and in all ages." Carey summarily dismisses these claims, typically with simple cold logic, and humour, as witnessed here in his  response to Hume: "Unfortunately a moment’s thought will tell us that there is nothing on earth that meets this criterion, except perhaps sexual intercourse and eating." 

With a hunter’s eye, Carey finds and presents summaries of all arguments which contradict his relativist contentions, and decisively shoots each down, one at a time, like skeats in the sky. He takes no prisoners. Which explains why his book is one of the most exhilarating, persuasive, enjoyable I’ve ever read on the topic of art and criticism.

 Starting at the beginning, with Kant, who believed that the beautiful object must be admired in and of itself, free of emotional and practical considerations, and that there is a fundamental bond between beauty and moral goodness, Carey muses on how strange it is that this "farrago of superstition and unsubstantiated assertion should have achieved a position of dominance in Western thought." Those who believe that art is ‘special,’ that there is some kind of ‘transhistorical essence in art, everywhere and always the same;’ and that the correct meaning of a work of art is the one the artist intends, are, according to our man, simply mistaken. For the vast majority of art, we have no access whatever, he says, to the creator’s intention. Different people respond differently to the same work. To answer the question why, your knowledge, says Carey, would have to be virtually infinite; to range over an immeasurably large diversity of variables: perceptual, cognitive, emotional and other personality characteristics, also biographical data, personal experience, past encounters with art, and individual memories and associations. Dissing biologist Edward O. Wilson, Carey tells us:  "If there were indeed certain identifiable works that appealed to everyone in every age and culture, then it would be reasonable to conclude that they correspond to something universally human. But the reality is that no such works exist, except in Wilson’s imagination."

In answer to the leaders of abstract art, notably Kandinsky who maintained that art reveals ultimate spiritual truths beyond the material works…connects identity with the universe, and provides ecstatic aesthetic experience which can result in profound knowledge…Carey says " Far from being a benefit, experiences that reveal ‘truths’ contrary to reason are pathological. They can easily be induced by chemical interference with the brain."  Research, Carey concludes, does not support the conventional belief that exposure to the arts makes people better. In the most aggressive chapter in his polemic, he dismisses the contention that art provides an ‘inspiration by which to live’ as Clive Bell once put it, by marching out art-worshipper Adolf Hitler, and his disregard for the fate of humanity, his treatment of art as religion, and his devaluation of ordinary human life and people in comparison.

Carey’s are convincing arguments, which, as he admits, leaves us in a quagmire of relativism, with everyone’s opinions counting equally; no truth, no right or wrong. Which is fine I suppose, but what to do about intelligent, mind-expanding conversation? Surely, if this is to be had, some study of processes, philosophies and practitioners is required? Some effort to understand and articulate the rationale behind the personal feelings too…otherwise you’re left with a void…non-communication between those with knowledge and those without; those with perspective and those with opinions alone. No one can prove that my taste is bad…but if I can’t justify it, isn’t this just as weak, and ultimately unsatisfying, and useless, as having none at all?

Carey’s book highlights the importance of meshing right and left brain activity…of  thinking seriously and rationally about gut instinct and feeling; of arguing your case. Taste may well be indisputable, however, opinions in favour or against the merits of particular works, or categories of art, can be weighed and ranked; and isn’t this the essense of artistic/literary criticism? I wonder if there exists a persuasive, spirited reply to Carey’s powerful, truculent, ‘red necked’ argument.

 

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