Saturday, February 18, 2023

#504 La Belle Lurette

The bilboquet is monocular, a
cyclops in an uninhabited land-
scape whose presence does not

change the land around even if 
it does add some life to its sur-
rounds, even if the addition of

a cloak brings more humanity. Elsewhere, the ruined watch- tower is in the act of changing, those roots insinuating a future tree, even if il y a belle lurette, even if that started a long time ago.

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

#503 Jeunesse

From Amazon in Belgium 
I can order this as a "Canvas 
Wall Art Print for Living Room 
Home Decor Ready to Hang
(90 x 117 cm (31.5 x 46.1 in)), 
Framed" for just €191.26. I 
think of buying it, to see if 
it does for me what another 
portrait did for Dorian Gray. 

But then, but then. At 81 
it's probably too late to weave 
any magic it might have had 
on me, even though the web-
site says it's a great gift idea 
for Valentine's Day which 
just happens to be today. 
What finally turns me away 
is a sudden vision of the 

aging process occuring — 
since we have no attic — in 
the back garden shed, the 
teeth at first, then the lungs, 
the hearing, the knees. It's 
not the actual deterioration, 
rather the caveat from the 
vendor: that spare parts are 
not available nor provided.

Saturday, January 21, 2023

#502 La Bonne Foi (2)


For once the tie's knot fills the collar. The pipe, more merlot than the indian red of the tie, still manages — through the medium of the lips — to blend in with it. It's taken sixty or so years; but the man's finally got some dress sense.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

#501 Memory of a Journey


Without the feather, the tower
would fall down. Without the

tower, the building blocks of
the universe would have no-

thing to hold them in place. 
Without the building blocks of

the universe, Magritte would not
exist. Without Magritte, the invis-

ible would never be rendered 
visible & we would never know

what direction we should follow. 

Friday, November 11, 2022

#500 L'Ovation





Begin with the bowler hat. It doesn't have the ebullience displayed by Astaire in his rendition of that Irving Berlin song but can be relied upon to fill its allotted rôle with some semblance of style. Re- ceives an appropriate round of applause. Then come the birds. Brought on early be- cause they're flighty & might take off at any moment. (Save for that eagle in a stony pose somewhere in the Pyrenees.) The bit players follow — weight- lifters, lions, fish, rocks floating in space, dogs, lost jockeys, the odd unicorn. Elsewhere invisible, but here most definitely on show. Now the cloud chorus steps for- ward to take their bow, bringing with them one of the many scenes in which they appear. This one repeated often, with different colors & different media, usually with a different name, La Joconde, the happy one, the Mona Lisa. Which is a hint of what's to follow. Tension builds as we wait for the muse. So many aspects & images of her life depicted across so many years & now awaiting her final curtain call. Georgette, sine qua non.

Sunday, November 06, 2022

#499 The Organs of the Night



This time the jockey isn't lost, just perplexed to find a set of wellworn curtains standing upright on the sand. As is the horse, paused midstep in its littoral dressage routine. All up an unexpected tableau, made more complex by the fact the sun seems to be falling rather than setting. Loss of gravity; & everything is red-cast as the human condition deteriorates. Organ failure ensues. Night will not see the light of day again.

Sunday, October 30, 2022

#498 La Gâcheuse







Strange to find such an image in 
a book on healing; but Magritte's
purloining of the anatomical 
illustration lacks the layering that
Dr. F.E. Bilz included, where the
face could be folded back to dis-
play a skull, & the internal organs
similarly displayed by a slight
manipulation of the body. None
of that shown here. Instead—dare
we say it?—a combination of
bare bones & bare breasts to offer 
up a simulacrum of age & youth
conjoined. Though left intact upon
the head some residual skin, a re- 
minder that memento mori might
sometimes come back to bite us.  

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

#497 Seasickness



I am bemused that the 1950s 
saccharine pop song A White 
Sport Coat & A Pink Carnation 
that resides somewhere in 
that ‘songs you grew up with’ 
drawer jumps immediately to 
mind. & yet what else comes 
close to a gaudy sport coat & 
a cut of ham laid out to fester 
beneath a burning sun. They
both provoke a nauseous re-
action, one intentional, the
other not. As Magritte says,
we “live in a very unpleasant 
world … that’s why my 
painting is a battle, or rather a 
counteroffensive.” So, no need 
to be all at sea even though 
the sea is nowhere to be seen.

Saturday, September 10, 2022

#496 The Pilgrim






Decide on what faces 
to take along. Set out 
on the road to Zion 

or Mecca or Ayodhya 
or Lumbini. Which one 
you choose will depend 

on the face you have 
chosen for the day. 
Wear a clean shirt & 

a new tie — they will
be accepted everywhere. 
The best excuse to offer

for the hat is the old sun-
in-the-eyes routine. That
seems to work most places.

Sunday, August 21, 2022

#495 Melmoth


I sold my soul for
150 extra years of
life; but after filling
much of that time
with a variety of

troubled wanderings,
this is where I end up —
riding a road bike tot-
ally unsuited to the
barren mountain trails

I’m fated to finish my
years trapped upon, &
all the while looking so
ridiculous that even the
owls seem sorry for me.

Thursday, August 18, 2022

#494 Le Monde Familier



Place the bell, le grelot, firmly
on the ground. No need to
anchor it — unlike the artist’s 
elsewhere use of it, this time 
it does not float. A solid
reality keeps it where it is

intended to be. Then lower
the horizon & not only bring 
the cloud down with it but
also shift it forward so it seems 
out of place but perfectly posit-
ioned above the bell. Now, to 

ensure it doesn’t float away, 
flatten the sky behind & call
upon that peripatetic rock to
actually do something, anchor
the column from above, act 
as a counterweight to entropy.