For a time, Philip Guston's work ran parallel to the abstract expressionists. He painted what some called abstract impressionism, taking the big gestures of Pollack and de Kooning and turning them in on themselves.
Recently reissued by Calimari Press Scott Bradfield's The History of Luminous Motion reads as the impressionist book of post-modern hyper-realism, collapsing the psychological novel, the bildungsroman, the novel of ideas, the road novel and the meta-novel into one exquisite, heartbreaking and unsettling paradox. It probes into the problems of postmodernity with high lucidity and intelligence, but reads, nearly, as a standard narrative, using its lacunae to great effect.
The novel begins with a Badlands-esque road trip, but instead of Kit and Holly, the two murderous lovers, we have Philip, our unreliable narrator, and his mother, a dazzling presence, equally unsettled and unsettling in her role as enabler. Taking the perspective of Philip's interior the book presents itself as the site of unsettled reality. Philip is presented as a precocious eight-year old psychotic. His intelligence and range are outside the standard domain of eight-year old precocity and he seems more a medium for the deeper essay of the author's play. Within the confines of literalism, Philip as an eight-year-old would be pursuing subjects equal to the emotional range of a thirty-year-old, let alone the intellectual range-- which isn't to say such a child couldn't exist, it's part of the book's undertaking to make it plausible if not immediately realistic. Counterposed to Padgett Powell's more genuine Simons Manigault in Edisto, where his intellectual precocity is shown to be limited only by the questions he can think to ask at his age, Philip's precocity reads as one of the places the author has given the reader to question the tenacity of its narrator, but also as a place to explore a sense of simultaneity.
The specific type of simultaneity here is usually at play within memoir: the author's voice looking back and inflecting wisdom or giving form where there may not have been on his or her younger self. Parts of Philip may be autobiographical, but it is the quality of the thoughts and perceptions attributed to Philip that comes through as authentic. Philip is the agent that allows the author to pursue a limitless fictional universe, a place where that Dostoyeskian question (Is everything permissable?) can be explored. The paradox of the unreliable narrator is heightened here by the high lucidity and beauty of his voice. With Nabokov's Pale Fire, where a resolution of the meta-plot may be uncovered after following the novel's clues, The History of Luminous Motion seems more interested in allowing the facts of the plot to remain in question. The reality presented is Philip's, which may be all we ever get.
The truth of the particular form of this character may or may not arise from biographical facts from within the author's own life. It is the interest required to make Philip's world elegant in its duality and the capacity to plumb a character that is this intellectually disturbing, as an avatar for moral and perceptual relativism, that makes the book. It is the sadness, imparted in unexpected ways, of Philip's condition, the inherent brokenness, that made this book human. A mediated tragedy, not tragedy as Sophocles would portray, but as felt in the passing wonder of distant lives.
Published in 1989, two years before Brett Easton Ellis's American Psycho, five years before Stephen Wright's Going Native, and seven years before David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest, this book prefigures and quietly implodes a number of tropes that would come to dominate the US media-scape in the 90's.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
It's What They Didn't Say, William H Gass's Middle C
Considering Edward Snowden and Julian Assange, I return to Luc Tuyman’s portrait of Condi Rice, of the greyed-out tones, where the former Secretary of State’s lips are central. To Dick
Cheney’s office not saying not to torture. It’s what strikes me now, a few
weeks after finishing William H. Gass’s Middle C, a document made interesting
by its mistakes and its lacunae, written over the last ten plus years. The narrator,
Joseph Skizzen, shows how carefully he revises a single sentence and yet, all
the while, we are reading a book purportedly by his hand.
How many times must we know better
before we can conclude that all evidence has been doctored or withheld? The
wait places us in the American Midwest, where Joseph admits to small breaches, bureaucratic
infractions to allow himself to get by, to survive in the American middle class
and pass himself off as a music professor at a small college.
At which point are the screams
properly heard? When the quirk of his Museum of Inhumanity appears more like a
balm to the character’s conscience than testimony to the world’s harsh
realities.
And yet, in the uncertainty of this
novel of elision, plowing through its encyclopedic references to music and man’s
inhumanity to man, the character of Skizzen is what’s in play. He presents
himself in such mild terms and comes across as a composite of Kafka, Bartleby,
Wyatt Gwyon and Hazel Motes. His passivity is what we should question. Such a
person is possible, such a person abandoned by a father is certainly possible,
more possible than the alternative. Is his guilt simply that of the survivor? Or
is he his father in disguise? Was his father a Nazi war criminal? Was Grunge
widely available in record shops in the 1960’s?
To the dogmatic reader, one stuck
in faithfulness to the text, Gass has given a paradox and a potential way out
of dogmatism. How deeply should we question what we are reading while Miss Moss,
one of the book’s librarian witches, breaks and manipulates old books? The
writing itself mirrors the high Victorian when Joey is approached sexually. What happens to our innocence
when we start asking questions? With its meter, internal rhyme and sing song,
the writing is gilded, enthralling, enough to pull the reader through even the
drier, small-town gossip portions of
Joey’s story.
And then there’s Gass on the back
cover, looking like the cheerful and encouraging Midwestern author rather than
the deviser of this Cartesian puzzle. Pay attention class, the teacher is
speaking. To connect this too closely to standard politics is to limit its
impact. Gass has created a book precisely to pique and to stimulate, to catch
between, to exist in the textual uncertainty of our time.
Labels:
1960's Grunge,
Assange,
Bartleby,
Gass,
Hazel Motes,
Kafka,
Luc Tuyman,
Middle C,
Rice,
Snowden,
Sonic Youth,
Wyatt Gwyon
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Barry Hannah, the Playboy Dinosaurs and the Southern Baroque
There's an art to extinction. Reading Barry Hannah, it doesn't seem like that much time has passed since he was active, alive, and working, but how out-of-date and slapdash, inconsistent, drunken, hilarious and surprisingly tender are his stories? Tooling around the internet, one notices the cult of personality that seemed to creep after him. Guns, motorcycles, booze, etc. Fun. The bottom line to most of his stories appears to be the ever present author's creed to give the reader a good time, so even in his bad stories, he's knocking himself out to make them entertaining.
There is in this collection an absolutely perfect story, settled in amongst a number of great shorter works, whiz-bang sentences and some fall-apart call-the-editor wheezing notions. Testimony of Pilot may be one of the best paced stories I've ever read. The details are meted out in Elastic-man prose, the plot is expansive though focused, the images are unique, the characters and the setting are enthralling. It is terrifying to see that story jammed up against some of the other pieces in this collection.
I came across Hannah as well as some other excellent work through this site: http://gordonlisheditedthis.wordpress.com/2011/05/18/airships-barry-hannah/.
Talent spends. Hannah had gobs of the stuff. Reading this collection, I get a sense of its wastes. I also get the sense of the importance of a good editor, someone who can point a writer to the good vein. The other stand-outs were Water Liars, Love Too Long, and Our Secret Home.
Read Hannah and you get the humanity of all those southern dinosaurs, spitting their epithets and chuckling at the comics in Playboy. Feather those bangs and place this one beside The Bushwhacked Piano for a good time.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Writing from the Darkest Shadows in the Room: a Quickie for Christine Schutt
Sebastien Tellier, the french electronic musician, issued a set of instructions for the way in which he wanted his first album, L'Incroyable Vérité, to be heard: with the lights off and by candle.
Nightwork makes a similar mood, except the light is made by burning the Freudian furniture and the writing comes from the darkest shadows in the room. The copy I read from the library came pre-highlighted with each of the favored stories in the table of contents accompanied by a highlighter star. Incest, frail and flawed mothers, women in decline, disturbed sons, and wealth. The sentences are mystifying, in places elegant in places vague. Admire the precipitous architecture of this piece of the first sentence in the collection and you'll get a sense of the spaces she's playing in:
She brought him what she had promised, and they did it in his car, on the top floor of the car park, looking down onto the black flat roofs of buildings, and she said, or she thought she said, "I like your skin," when what she really liked was the color of her father's skin...
As a reader, there's work to be done to track back the referent and attempt to sort through the strata of impressions to see if there's a core, if the narrator is in the car with her father simply preferred her father's skin and was absorbed by the idea. Schutt gives us both, she doesn't let us off the hook, in the best of her stories here she asks us to carry the baggage for the narrators. By the end of the collection, I felt that shock, something big and ugly was removed and my body reeled from it.
Saturday, May 11, 2013
Reading a Never Read
Prompted by an imminent capacity purge, I read a never-read, or read a portion. I was reminded of past presumed never-reads that I read and felt something near the hygienic satisfaction of an attic cleaned by toothbrush or what John Baldessari writes about in his pencil piece. Something inert, weighted, on the edge of oblivion, recalled and now found to be momentarily satisfying. I flipped through a journal given by a friend who had assistant-edited the thing. I found a piece that I enjoyed, "List of 50 (31 of 50): You Could Never Finish Stretching" by Blake Butler. The piece, registered as non fiction in the journal's ToC, is a list of cascading memories and impressions given by the author to a specific prompt. It's clean, honest and engrossing and works within the spare limits of its four-page mostly-single sentenced list to evoke a good portion of the strange parts of the author's childhood.
Recently, I was turned onto gordonlisheditedthis.wordpress.com/ , which is an experiment in mining the lost works edited by Gordon Lish. Having engaged with the idea, I logged onto my library's portal (to avoid further, permanent shelf-occupation) and kindly requested the archivist pull a few of these pieces out of storage. They arrived at my local branch and I read. I am apparently late to the Barry Hannah party, but the crazed discomfiting pace of The Tennis Handsome is sending me back to the stacks for more. Another, Campfires of the Dead by Peter Christopher, is partially through and I found the title story gorgeous and haunting, following a tack near Amy Hempel's world of ordinary days with their echoes.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Immaterialism Revisted




The Times profile on Tino Sehgal, in discussing his pure detachment from object based art, places the artist in a place near altruism. There's a broad difference between objectless and selfless art. This is not life without headstones. It is formal withholding, anal retention as art, a form that thrives by word of mouth. It counts on interaction, like the work of Rirkrit Tiravanija. Vanessa Beecroft, who, as a young bulimic, color coded her meals to ensure complete purgation. Less minimal than Erik Satie, who only ate white foods.
Food and waste occupy similar social concerns as those presented by most conceptual art. Though like Manzoni, most conceptual artists seem to regard the art object as waste. This is different from the confusion of what was once deemed high and low present in Warhol and Jeff Koons. This is an assertion about mortality. Chris Burden, aka Joe the Lion or Johnny Knoxville's illegitimate uncle,confronts that assertion directly.
Linguistic conceptualists, like Bruce Nauman, while object bound, manage to address the social position of the artist and the social dysfunction at heart in the issues of creation and illumination. Nauman in particular does this with a whit and detachment that keeps a viewer from confusing the art with the artist, a separateness that perfects the object while keeping it from becoming precious.
Friday, January 15, 2010
Trying to Figure out What's on My Fingers

Vegetable Oil (Contains one or more of the following: Corn, Soybean, and/or Sunflower Oil)
Salt
Cheddar Cheese (Milk, Cheese Culture, Salt, Enzymes)
Maltodextrin
Wheat Flour
Whey
Monosodium Glutamate
Buttermilk Solids
Romano Cheese from Cow's Milk (Part-Skim Cow's Milk, Cheese Cultures, Salt, Enzymes)
Whey Protein Concentrate
Onion Powder
Partially Hydrogenated Soybean and Cottonseed Oil
Cornflour
Disodium Phosphate
Lactose
Natural and Artificial Flavor
Dextrose
Tomato Powder
Spices
Lactic Acid
Citric Acid
Sugar
Garlic Powder
Red and Green Bell Pepper Powder
Sodium Caseinate
Disodium Inosinate
Disodium Guanylate
NonFat Milk Solids
Whey Protein Isolate
Corn Syrup Solids


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