Friday, April 24, 2026

On being painted as David II

 

A few more things to say about The Fall. Axiomatic things. Like, for instance, that Mary Evelyn Harju’s representation of me as David is just that, and precisely that. The similarity is there, and unmistakable. Mary’s fascination with the Renaissance is already well-documented. As is her sense of erotic fascination with ideal male nudes. Also notable that who I am in The Fall, as someone being represented, is someone true to life. I really am 5’9, slightly over 5’9, actually, with a pronounced tendency to lankiness. I’m not secretly 5’6, and chunky. Or 5’8 and a half. Those who might see me will not be surprised. These tokens of complete aesthetic legitimacy have to be established, in a country where carnival-rules have made show biz standards the norm. The Fall has a number of ways of being for real that are striking ones. No show biz.

The other thing I wanted to discuss is more interesting. The Fall was modeled for and painted in a co-op studio in the Spring Garden section of North Philadelphia in 2007-2008. On a narrative level, the painting suggests Mary and I in the garden of Eden, and locates a portion of its narrative in the Bible. Mary coming out of a Christian Right family is significant, as is the outre Aughts-Philly peccadillo of her Renaissance obsession and eroticism. The sense of Philadelphia as an Eden, or as Edenic, is an intriguing one. If there is one facet of Philadelphia as a city which establishes that it can manifest as an Eden, or as Edenic, it is the sublime nature of Philadelphia’s architecture. What a city is, primordially, is a collection of buildings. Because Philadelphia, from City Hall on out, was constructed, at its best, of buildings meant to endure over decades and centuries, and to fulfill rigorous aesthetic criteria, it creates a physiology, in Philadelphia, of levitation, transcendentalism over the mundane, and of an atmosphere in which history moves forward, lives and breathes. Because Philadelphia is built, at its best, of living, breathing history, it offers a sense of shelter and amnesty to those who wish to pursue living, breathing history itself. Thus, it could be an Eden, or Edenic, for those of us in the Aughts, who wished to create to do something other than degrade, or reenact show biz. Philadelphia, in short, is built past swinishness. It’s a real city, by world standards. The Fall could not have been painted, I would tend to say, anywhere else, nor could David manifest as David, or Mary and I as Mary and I. Even the inbuilt sense of doubleness in The Fall falls into place with the idea of history which subsists as history, but also lives and breathes. Is, thus, double. And tolerates the phenomenology of doubleness.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Art of Writing interview in TAS


 Many thanks to Malcolm Curtis for publishing this interview segment in TAS.

Philly Free School: catalog page


Otoliths 16

Otoliths 16 (WebCite)

Philadelphia City Paper

Venturi, Scott, and Brown Assoc. 

Golden Notebook (Hannah Miller)

Sharkforum

PAFA (Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts)

PAFA (2)

Highwire Gallery (Calendar 2004/2005)

Me-Tronome (Larry Sawyer)

Switchback Books

Lamoureux 

Myopic Books

Kate the Great's Book Emporium

Molly's Bookstore

PhillySound

Bowery Poetry Club (August 13)

Lame House Press

King.org

Cavalcade of Poets & Independent Artists (e-mail group)

Buffalo Poetics List

Venturi, Scott, and Brown Assoc. (2)

Late Late Capital Bootleg Sessions

Golden Notebook (Hannah Miller)(2)

Late Late Capital Bootleg Sessions (2)

Flickr: Timothy Yu

p-ramblings

p-ramblings (2)

Rhode Island Notebook (Gabriel Gudding)

Moss Trill

Samizdat Blog

Fluid/Exchange

Flickr: Amy King, P.F.S.

moria poetry

Seven Corners (7C)

Vitkauskas

moria poetry (2)

Examiner.com

Electronic Poetry Center

moria poetry (3)

X-Peri

Venturi, Scott, and Brown Assoc. (3)

P.F.S. Post

P.F.S. Post (2)

P.F.S. Post (3)

Goss 183

Buffalo Poetics List

YouTube (Minecraft)

YouTube (2)

YouTube (Falki Hoz)

Amazon Music (Hoz: Hipsters)

SoundCloud (The Esthetic Apostle)

Spotify (Hoz: Hipsters)

i-tunes (Hoz: Hipsters)

Mipoesias (Ocho #11)

Almost Invisible (Strand)

Watertown (Willis)

The & Now Awards: The Best Innovative Writing

Innovative Audiences Wiki

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Goodbye Blue Monday


This portrait of me was taken by New York poet Amy King in 2009, at the venue Goodbye Blue Monday in Bushwick, Brooklyn. I am reading from When You Bit..., the month is August. Also on the bill: Nada Gordon, David Wollach. Like my tat?

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Introducing Dawn Gailey




My friend Dawn Gailey, originally from Phoenixville, took several portraits of me at the Last Drop at 13th and Pine Streets in Center City in the fall of 2008. The bottom one here captures me looking quite like a rebel without a cause. More to say on the Drop, as we called it, in the months to come, as a crucial hang-out space in the Aughts, and site for day-to-day mischief. The basis, also, for Letters to Dead Masters.

Portraiture


This is Mary Evelyn Harju's masterful portrait of me on Avenue A in the East Village, also in 2007. Turns out, for several months in the spring of 1999, I had lived on Avenue A in Alphabet City, as the neighborhood is called. At that time, nothing had really coalesced around me and books. By 2007, I was a much more consolidated presence. The way Mary set up the pictorial composition here is amazing, and had to have been done on the fly. For a visual artist who took heat for being too plodding, too methodical, it proves that Mary could be inspired in an impulsive way, too. The wackiness of Mary's balance of elements often meant that when she had a camera rather than paints, she could indulge herself in impulsive moves, against the idea of too much conscious craft. In this case, all the elements came together in such a way that she managed to set up a compositional structure as satisfying as the ones in her best paintings. She was happy to let elements fall in place as they may.