Archive for the ‘synaesthesia’ Category

Umbrella Summer 2008: Orsorum

Friday, June 6th, 2008

Hiroshima Umbrellas by manthatcooksOrsorum means a beginning, a start, an undertaking, or the first few words. Thus, it comes as no surprise that the section of Umbrella’s Summer 2008 issue that takes this term as its title proves a treasure trove of transitional poems and themes.

In “The Velvet Dun”, Jackson Lassiter mocks those who “wax poetic of morn” for ignoring the true terrifying potential and power of a shifting time.

Have they never been unnerved
by the impaling dawn, hid
cowering in dread beneath
a yellow blanket’s vain shield?

However, he fails to give those of us who have not hidden (in dread– I assume we have all hidden from morning in irritation) reason to share or at least understand the fear before moving on to his love of “smoky nightfall”, turning what could have been a revelation about the dangers hidden even in rosy-eyed times of transition into just another night-owl-taking-on-early-birds poem, though admittedly an enjoyable one.

By contrast, his “What Do You Do With The Old Stuff?” begins with an attempt to create a transition, through a “purge” of unneeded material possessions. An inability to unload less physical rem(a)inders of the past gets in the way of change. The reasons for this change, displayed in the third paragraph, give this description of stasis its power and relevance.

Patricia Fargnoli’s “‘There is a radiance in each of us—could we but see it.’” uses a line from a poster not only as its title but also to communicate a transition that stands in shimmering counterpoint to the less present transitions of aging: the slow falling into pain and dysfunction of the body, the loss of loved-ones to death. “Yes oh yes, it sizzles in the cleft of my long dormant / sex”.

In “French Movie”, Robert E. Wood valorizes liminal and ambiguous space in film:

…pauses dominate if the goal is Cannes.
Sometimes it’s best if one character speaks no French
and the subtitles are white on white

More significantly, he concludes on a figure frozen in a transition: “someone has paused on a bridge at night”. A bridge works as an extended threshold between two riverbanks or two states; here, remaining on the bridge represents a valuable silence.

The speaker of Enriqueta Carrington’s “Suites for Cello Solo” attempts to use synesthetic music (”sunlit G in major mode”) to reawaken the recently dead. However, even an art that dwells in liminality cannot undo the transition of death once complete.

Rick Mullin’s “Montclair Father, 46″ highlights the ability of the media in general, and photography in particular, to freeze a moment of transition– in this case, a horrific and brutal moment of transition– in time and thus make it possible to be shared again and again. The effect of this is left to the reader to determine, even as the speaker puts down the paper and attends to his daughters in the second stanza.

Taste, Smell and Sight - COFFEE by Scribbling of LightJoan Merriam enacts a transition by resetting Neruda’s “Ode to Enchanted Light” in an office setting. The world become “a cup overflowing / with coffee” rather than “a glass overflowing /
with water”. Liquid is transformed and wealth redefined as that which speeds up life rather than that which is necessary to life.

David Graham, in “Statewide Razing”, narrates how a wrecking company name may inspire visions of the transitional act of a building’s destruction spread throughout a far broader locale. A phrase perhaps representative of the ambition of a company’s owner becomes a sign for decomposition with machinery equated to “burying beetles and carrion crows”. “The Honey of the Earth” takes snow as that most liminal of spaces, the blank page and offers that up, not as the intimidating specter so many writers fear, but as a valentine.

Finally, Clay Stockton’s essay follows the turns and transitions of Michael Donaghy’s “Upon a Claude Glass”.

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A Tour of Thresholds in Andrew Lundwall’s Windmilling

Friday, April 4th, 2008

West Blatchington Windmill by aneye4pictureAndrew Lundwall’s Windmilling, published through his Scantily Clad Press, begins with a non-prose proem of sorts, “sebastian says”, an introduction of a boy who himself serves as a voice to introduce tools of transition: “i’ve got big stairs”, “where’s my chalk”, “my bicycle recycled”. The conclusion, “bring to me what was my catholic chalk” leads to the question of whether the rest of the poems are written in this ex-catholic calcium sulfate (and if so what color it is). There is no answer, but the question is enough, shifting us into an uncertain space the rest of the poems explore (or perhaps do not).

The second poem, “recovery” presents us with a speaker in a threshold state of eyes unrecovered (as yet) from something; we don’t know what from– a mystery that shifts the focus directly to the liminality of the pre-recovery state. And “who are you then” to hold the person’s eyes in your beauty, or is the addressee a disease? The continuation from there to “every tree / is its own apocalypse / and my mind’s shutter in” places tree in close proximity to eye and mind so that it becomes transitional, both a literal tree that dies eventually and so contains its own end (apocalypse) or to a dendritic nerve which, in being its own apocalypse, may suggest the cause of the shut up mind.

Then “whistler” continues the eye theme but only through a synaesthetic transition: “blind hands / of . . . stars” that “fall into the graffiti / of her moist lap”. Who is this woman with the painted thighs? Her occluded identity is not so important as the fall or change of the stars, which allies her with the addressee of “recovery” and makes her thus, perhaps, the cause of the stars’ blindness, the location of which in hands suggests an inability on the part of stars to touch. Indeed, they are too hot until they reach something damp (like paint still drying or sweaty August skin).

Windmills of the mind . . ., by law_keven“powder this however” takes movement as its theme yet sits in a space between movement and stasis because it concludes with two lines that together repeat the title. Perhaps the movement is illusory, hallucinatory, a frantic nothingness conjured by “the cocaine glow of go”. Its possible unreality, too, points back to the collection’s title’s reference to Don Quixote, though the action of windmilling begins from a closer-to-real place than tilting at windmills does. (We could say it dwells on the threshold between real and unreal.)

With “memory’s trooperwomen” we have a return to the eyes, though here it is in “eyeshades”, suspended between being eyes and not eyes. There is a similar sort of threshold space occupied by the line “my body sunk in real lobotomy” as the effects of lobotomy on the mind are much more commonly considered. This line, then, seeks to eliminate the Cartesian divide and thus make both halves both-and spaces, fully integrated and liminal instead of only liminal on the thin and impossible threshold.

Then comes “solitude deluxe”, beginning with the transition into solitude, “the shock of / intimate fade”. This phrases richly describes that slip from closeness to alone-ness more fully its ambiguity: does intimacy shock and then this shock fade, or does the fading of intimacy fade? Either way, it is followed by fragile efforts– “eggshells”– to hold onto the form of nearness, “her silhouettes”.

The next poem, “blaring loss” brings her back along with “cocaine face of burden”. The drawing back together of various strands, however, brings no sense of conclusion, only one of continued change and uncertainty. It starts to become threatening: “on all fours blaring loss”, “excessive strip club mouths / that screw chunks of sleep” with overtones of toothy mouths devouring chunks of meat, “a wilderness urge bewitching” could draw you to your death, and “into neon veins that blaze” (high? drugged? dying bright?) “smoke the heavens’ fingertip”. Something has transmogrified.

Finally, then, we get a name: “sophie”. What does she do that’s so important as to earn a name when even the speaker goes by pronoun? “sophie’s hands [are they blind like the stars'?] / reload my shadow / rewind my window”; they add substance and thus emphasize the liminal nature of a shadow, and they alter through time the threshold between the inside and the world (perhaps this threshold is also an eye). She leads to a perception of a world where everyone is altered, everyone is high– “bourbon babies”, “a meth-addicted monk”– except perhaps the “groaning metallic / gruntworkers”, though they are changed into the material with which they work. Her rewinding of the windows may even be what is required for the speaker to see any of the scene described after the first three lines of this final poem– or, indeed, in the act of rewinding and going back in time, it may be what’s required to see anything witnessed in the previous poems– a possibility which makes this figure worthy of a name that approaches that of the personification of wisdom, Sophia.

And so the reader windmills through these possibilities, turning through and crossing thresholds, creating their own and always, always imagining the answers.

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On the Threshold of Recorded Sound

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

In an age of digital reproduction, we forget the physical nature of acts of recording, we think of data online as data “out there” rather than as data existing within a very real set of machines, and thus, even as we view information as both existing and not existing, we are further removed from the actual liminal nature of reproduction and recording. We forget how such objects as phonographs all the way to mp3 players make sound perceivable by other senses so that the phenomenon becomes liminal itself– external synaesthesia again. We have become numbed to the way such technologies represent the capturing of temporary phenomenon and thus the transition of such things as sound from fleeting to (relatively) permanent. We can only imagine the sense of in-betweenness felt by those who first recorded sound– that is, until the technology to record some aspect of perception we have not yet imagined being made permanent is developed.

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Camera Lucida

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Wired has a brief piece up about artists using sulfuric acid to create– and capture– sonoluminescence, a phenomenon that by its very nature exists on a threshold. Sound waves create light waves, or sound is transformed into light. Those who witness it experience a sort of externalized synaesthesia, a confusion of the senses reflected in measurable outside reality. This aspect is most obvious in the case of the installations, as the photographs, while indicating the visibility of sound, will be viewed by audiences removed from the time frame of sound.

The photographs, however, develop another sort of hybridity and border space through the immortalization of a short-lived phenomenon. Technically, of course, every photograph does record a vanishing frame, an impermanent state, but the understanding that the clouds of color must have disappeared shortly after a picture was taken allows this sort of subject matter to emphasize the liminal area inhabited by all photography in a way that images of old trees and Ozymandias cannot.

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