New York, December 2014 with Max and Sonia
At the pool in early morning there is a
time between night and day when the view fades from reflections of
the interior and gradually cede to the trees and countours of the
buildings outside; and during that time there is reflection and
transmission showing both views as they shift in strength.The
reflections of the white metal ceiling girders appear just at the top
half of the ginkgo trees outsied and appear as mechanical branches.
Jerry and Millie both took me to the
slightly seedy sodium-lit alley behind the Kmart to wait for the
Starlight Express to New York.”Any time, Mary!” Got there in good
time, so I stood there in the cold and dark with my raggedy suitcase
from Morocco by myself: it was cold! Eventually other passengers
arrived, and the bus. Not a very jolly, social group: or was it me,
going somewhere to see someone, not in explorer mode? Starlight
Express did have coffee and snax as advertised, but it was still a
bus ride through the dark highway corridor to New York. There was an
interesting rest stop somewhere in Delaware with quite a variety of
novel junkfood outlets. Eventually we were disgorged in lower
Manhattan among bars and staggering drunks. Everyone else hustled off
somewhere immediately but I was alone, with a mild mismeet with Max.
On the way to his place, I was within inches of being hit by a taxi,
but it somehow never raised my adrenalin. Strange, being so elevated
in one way, and not in another.
Max is a New York person now! I see him
heft suitcases, dash for trains, up flights of stairs, ride a city
bike to his job in Brooklyn, and so on . . . and he has other worlds I don't
know: his band, DJ work, writing and making music. He has a plan to
produce songs from rough drafts clients send him, as a possible job.
I am so glad he is having, and banking, all these interesting
experiences. His tiny Chinatown apartment: his room just about big
enough for a bed: that's ok, he only nominally lives there.
Chinatown at night is draped with
festive lights spanning the street at intervals, like Christmas
lights but all year round. The streets are busy at all hours, and
fragrant with food, garbage, buses, city. At night, the noises are
fewer and so easier to parse: partiers howling, old ladies cawing at
each other in Cantonese, helicopters overhead. In the morning, the
markets are set up: lobsters that are the most enormous I've ever
seen, unknown fruits and veg, dried molluscs and bialves that look
like wads of old chewing gum, various strips of dried fish, and:
white-shelled green almonts, dessicated hazelnuts and chestnuts, a
widevariety of unfamiliar dried beans, and more familiar and
beautiful produce: how the rest of the world shops for food. Nearby
in Little Italy, hordes of NJ tourists taking family selfies in front
of restaurants. Lots of hustle and bustle, and general feeling of
cheer.
In the morning, Max and I went to a
nice place he chose for breakfast: a salad with lox, poached egg,
avocado. His job was imminently disappearing, and he already had a
new one lined up, curating and assembling samples for a company that
supplies materials for architects and designers. With an inhouse
Starbucks, weekly manicures, and twice the salary...good connections!
This day turned out to be a day of tech
problems, all soluble of course in NY. Dead watch battery, dead
camera battery, missing camera memory chip: the watch battery was
replaced by a guy with a tiny booth who might have been in China
itself! And some funkiness with the phone (no ring or buzz).
Curiously, it was impossible to get a map of New York. Eventually, I
got a subway map which did the job.
We walked the High Line, a narrow
elevated garden walkway built on the site of elevated rails, a new
public park which is marvelous, with views of all of lower Manhattan,
various art installations, benches, play spaces, and a really
thoughtful and terrific selection of plantings with year-round
interest and not so ordinary. And high tech drainage and watering
systems, walkways, and so on. The pavement bleeds into the plant beds
and in places, into benches, in a very interesting and attractive
way, that unified the whole project gracefully while allowing for
functional and esthetic variations. It was amazing how a tiny ribbon
of garden changed everything, made a calm space in the middle of the
city, even as the city was inches away. It would have been the best
place to draw, had it not been so cold: landscape, cityscape
including skylines and seaports, all kinds of people doing peoply
things. In the spring, or summer, I will be back, for sure! At one
point we descended to a market and found a wonderland of lights and
decorations; this year the trend seemed to be great wads of tiny
lights as thick as a goodsized tree trunk framing doorways and
windows. Lavish displays of fruit, kilims, books, for the delectation
of those for whom money is no object, and tourists. There was a photo
booth that took 3d photos: not clear whether it printed in 3d?
Considerable space for serious and shocking abuse! Didn't check it
out, maybe was just the red/blue 3d effect.
along the High Line |
Max gave me something wonderful-- a
strand beeste, a model of one of those wooden creatures that moves
along the beach by windpower. It comes with a book; the inventor made
several different kinds with different basic ideas of structure and
power. I think a photocell + remote control to move it if there's no
wind, to harass cats, or dance to music via bluetooth/ . Some
versions look larva-like, it would be good to make one that could
transform itself into another form with big glider wings and soar
off. Sadly, I failed to finish his book, better get to it. So much
going on. But his birthday is right around the corner.
Saturday night, we all (Max, Sonia, and
I) ate at a dim sum place and had wonderful, warming, tasty stuff
including shrimp dumplings, soup, and . . . I don't remember! But had
a great time also. We talked about going to Beacon to the DIA and to
see Sonia's shop, Colorant and all kinds of other things.
The next day, we took the train to
Beacon. There was a large family of about four kids and their
parents, kids peering over the seats, father talking/explaining
sights out the window in the most heartwarming way, and the view
changed from city to exurbs to train tracks along the slatey river,
with chilly naked tree branches rattling in the wind and last years'
tall grass along the tracks. Max and I went to the DIA, and Sonia to
her shop.
The DIA is wholly unlike anything else
about Beacon. Beacon is a small town of wooden houses, maybe early
1900s, small and cozy, all laid along the main street with some
excursions along side streets. Now, it seems to be largely arty
boutiques and the like, catering to tourists. But DIA visitors don't
seem like the type to go for arts and crafts kind of stuff. There
were a few real galleries, glass blowing, etc: cute town. DIA is
haute and chilly, poured concrete with conceptual art, some of it
wonderful. The field of lightning rods of course appealed to me: I
only saw a picture. Mirrors cunningly set in a sandpile to reflect
the surroundings in seemingly impossible ways. Constructions of 4x4
lumber, stairs to nowhere. Cars lightly crushed or twisted and then
painted or otherwise changed. So recent, but I have forgotten so much
of it already!
Sonia is a social genius: her shop is
modest but has a variety of interesting things, mostly naturally dyed
clothes, but also little arty objects, maybe products of friends. I
saw my pics hanging, and saw how unthematic they were. Better next
time. I should be a little more serious about this I guess. She is
unbelievable sweet but must be also smart and energetic to keep
things going. She has the key to mysteries of networking that I can't
fathom, and seems to be able to fix anything and know everyone. After
a shower at the her place in Beacon (where she is a permanent
house-and cat-sitter) we ate at a local fancy restaurant and had a
great time. Arriving back in the city, it was snowing lightly, and
leaving Grand Central Station, had a gorgeous view of Grand Central Station ornamentation, the Empire State Building, and a streetlit glowing
circle filled with snowflakes against the black sky.
Then next day, I was on my own and went
to the Met.At 8:30, Chinatown was still asleep. Of course, I got lost
immediately but stumbled into a diner, and stepped in for coffee: so
cold outside! It was a timewarpy place surrounded by tall buildings,
and started hearing a patois of Chinese and Arabic-- the owner
Egyptian and her friend Chinese. My ears pricked at the word,
“Malista!”: they were talking about the Chinese woman's aching
shoulder and other ailments. It was then I realized I was traveling,
experiencing, discovering new and interesting things, not visiting,
and joined the conversation. Hard to define the difference, since I
had seen and done many things new to me already, but it is different
when you are by yourself.
I planned to go to the Met and got off
a couple of miles farther south than I should have. But that was
lucky, it meant I got to walk through Central Park, lovely in the
blueskied winter. I passed some of the big stores all decked out and
the branches of trees I had last seen in the beginnings of green, in
April. The Met was, of course, overwhelming. I looked and looked and
did not scratch the surface, only got to a few galleries. In one
gallery with windowed ceiling and glass wall overlooking the garden,
there were two Greek statues fifty yards apart, flirting with each
other.
Lunch-- spicy Mongolian lamb with pulled noodles with Sonia. Just the ticket, and Sonia is SO nice.
I did get to Newark, Orly, and finally
Madrid without incident.
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