Saturday, July 30, 2011
The Conference
Friday, July 29, 2011
Buddhist Geeks
Thursday, July 28, 2011
REBELS IN PARADISE:
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
NORWAY--AND THE FATE OF THE HUMAN SPECIES
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
HONORING MAGU...
Monday, July 25, 2011
THE TOUR
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Leave the House? Oh, no!
Friday, July 22, 2011
IN THE ATTIC
Thursday, July 21, 2011
FOOD
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
MAGU
Not many men are given to be notable cultural pioneers as well as prolific and endlessly inventive artists in their own right. Count this one man, Gilbert “Magu” Lujan, among them. He is first and foremost an artist. Visit his studio, and you’ll be witness to the spectacle of a teeming, vibrant output of art works in a stunning variety of media—from assemblages of sticks and twigs to whimsical ceramic sculptural objects and a plethora of prints and canvases. This is the heart of Magulandia.
What’s remarkable about this work is the energy with which it gathers a rich texture of cultural history and intensely personal symbol in its extravagantly colorful embrace. It’s a feast for the eye—but especially also for the mind. Magu’s wealth of imagery merges the traditions of art brut and folk art, Meso-American mythology and ritual, the Chicano culture of low-riders, murals and graffiti, the religious imagery of New World Catholicism and the political and sociological imperatives of socialism—along with the savvy self-awareness of contemporary American art since World War II. And if that’s a mouthful, so be it. Such is the range of Magu’s vision and creative reach.
All this, for the artist, is living tradition, genetic information as vital and fluid as the bloodstream. So let it be clear that this merger is embodied first and foremost in the actuality of each discreet object of Magu’s creation, whose seductive, often humorous, sometimes bawdy, always joyful allure is just the doorway into a complex of deeply human meanings and emotions. As with all good artworks, though, once we have exhausted those meanings we always return to that point where we look at them and just say, Yes.
The pioneering social work for which Magu is widely known proceeds from his creative energy, the art work. His efforts as an emerging artist and student in the master’s program at the University of California, Irvine in 1960s and the early 1970s changed the course of art history. Famously, at that time, he brought together Los Four—along with himself, the artists Carlos Almaraz, Frank Romero and Beto de la Rocha—who breached the sober, Euro-centric walls of academia and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art with the exuberant artistic energy that had been gathering on the streets—and particularly the walls—of East Los Angeles. A fervent, dedicated theorist and organizer, Magu was soon recognized as the fulcrum for burgeoning chicanismo, tirelessly promoting an alternative view to the dominant Western aesthetic and re-invigorating it with both a renewed social conscience and Latin passion.
Meet Magu in person and you’ll find him endlessly garrulous, spirited in his arguments, as eager to share his own ideas as he is to hear those of others. A born educator, he has the gift of inspiring those with whom he comes in contact. It is this quality, surely, that has made of him a leader in his own community of artists—a mantle that he nonetheless wears with modesty and circumspection.
In the constellation of our contemporary culture, Gilbert “Magu” Lujan occupies a unique and vitally important place.
Sunday, July 17, 2011
For Your Sunday...
Thursday, July 14, 2011
FOR TODAY...
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
HAWKS...
I believe we must have a hawk’s nest somewhere nearby, in our Los Angeles neighborhood. We have been hearing their strange, brief whistling calls for days now, and we spot them often, perched atop a telephone pole or in one of our tall eucalyptus trees or swooping in long arcs over the garden. This one...
... spotted the other evening toward sunset, had the fluffy look of a fledgling. To judge by the different sources of their calls, I’d say there are three or four of them out there, and that they have been busy these past few days with their preliminary flying lessons. All guesswork, really. Or fantasy. But it’s a delight to have them around.
I wonder if they’ll be disturbed by the work that’s starting today in our yard. It’s a noisy annual two-day job, to trim the trees and cut back the tall hedges on either side of our long garden...
... and carting away the debris up the steep steps at the side of the house to the machine that chews it all up and spits it out.
It’s a (slightly perverse?) pleasure to watch them. A sedentary character myself, I marvel at the strength and grace and energy that goes into their work, and the spirit that they bring to it. We have good reason to be grateful to such men, who readily go about the kind of labor that no longer much appeals to their more privileged brothers in this country, where the expansion of the “middle class” since the end of World War II has left the concept of a “working class” behind—a phenomenon related, surely, to the disrepute into which the word “socialism” has fallen. Forgotten, it seems to me sometimes, are the values and the dedication to social justice that went into the great cultural changes of the past century—many of which are the result precisely of the socialism that is so much despised by those who have benefited from it.
The whole notion of social “classes” is a quaint one in today’s infinitely complex world. It belongs more appropriately to earlier times, when the socially or, later, the financially privileged held the reins of power, for a long time unquestioned by those beneath them in rank or fortune. Now that our precursors have fought so successfully, in many ways, for equality of rights, it is time for us to radically re-evaluate the way in which we establish our relationships. On the economic front, in this shrunken globe (the “flat world” that Thomas L. Friedman writes about) neither capitalism nor socialism is working very well for humankind. Just as we need to evolve toward some more equitable and functional economic system, so also do we need, at the same time, to be ready to make far-reaching changes in the hierarchies and ideologies that divide us culturally.
In short, we’re going to have to find better ways for us to “all get along” as global fellow-travelers. It’s pretty clear by now that the old models are no longer working. Divisions by wealth, class, race, sex, religion—these do not help, but rather endanger us further, along with our already endangered home. If our species is to survive, we still have a good deal of adaptation to accomplish. We are merely foolish if we insist on clinging to our old ways when they are past their usefulness. And yet the more the way of life to which we have become accustomed is threatened, the more resistant we become to change.
Change will happen, of course, whether we want it to or not. My guess is that a millennial shift will have taken place in human consciousness by the end of the current century, if we manage to survive that long. It would be nice to think that I’d be around to see what our world looks like in the year 2200; but I’m not betting on it. In the meantime, there's this...
Monday, July 11, 2011
Those Smooth Young Men in Business Suits
Saturday, July 9, 2011
IT'S MY OWN FAULT...
Friday, July 8, 2011
THE NEWS OF THE WORLD
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
(Un)reasonable Doubt?
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
HOPE
Monday, July 4, 2011
Midwest Tour
I think the hardest part of leaving on a trip is not the packing or the logistics, but saying goodbye to George! We left him in the house early in the morning, having arranged for Lisa, his dog-sitter, to pick him up a little later. He had been watching us pack with suspicious eyes, and was looking thoroughly mournful when we closed the door behind us.
The Jet Blue flight from Long Beach to Chicago was a relative breeze. The small airport at Long Beach was jam-packed with travelers, but security was less of a nightmare than at bigger airports like LAX. The hard part of the first day out was the drive from O’Hare to our first overnight stop in Galena—much further than I had anticipated, and endless road construction slowed the heavy traffic out of town and well into the country. After the four-hour flight, it felt interminable.
Still, we did arrive intact in Galena, where we were booked into a comfortable room at the Farmer’s Guest House. Arriving late, however, we found almost every restaurant closed—except for one, a pleasant stroll across the river near the old railroad station, where our nice waitress came back with the news that the kitchen was fresh out of all the main course choices. All that was left was eggs, so we ordered a 10:30PM breakfast.
Friday, June 24
Breakfast, too, the next morning at our B&B. I must report at some point on B&B breakfasts. These good people were kind enough to scramble up a simple egg for us, but I think there must somewhere be a school for B&B breakfast makers, where they are trained to do dreadful things with eggs to make them a) unrecognizable and b) inedible. They bake them or concoct them with various foreign ingredients into something that looks more like a cake or dessert dish than an honest egg. Call me conventional, I like my eggs to look and taste like eggs, preferably alongside a couple of strips of bacon or a tasty sausage. Is that too much to ask?
We had chosen Galena as a stop-over because my son, Jason, with whom we were to spend our weekend in Iowa City, had recommended it as a wonderful mecca for antiques and collectables. There were, indeed, some beautiful old houses...
The one remaining antique shop in Galena recommended a detour to Cuba City, where we did find a genuine junk shop or two, plus a sandwich for lunch, on our way into Iowa, via Dubuque and, further south, Mount Vernon. The latter is a pleasant little town that was, in my Iowa days, a favored place for Writers’ Workshop faculty to live—close enough for a reasonable commute to Iowa City, and far enough to find some peace and quiet. I do remember driving out to parties there, with such luminaries as Kurt Vonnegut in attendance.
It was nostalgia time in Iowa City. I went there in the early sixties to attend the Writers’ Workshop as a poet, and was inveigled into doing a PhD in Comparative Literature along the way. I was promised two years; it took me four, plus an extra year as an ABD (“all but dissertation”) when I moved on to Southern California for a teaching job. The best part was being in a place with more poets per square block than anywhere else in the world. The bad part was still being young enough to believe that I was the center of the universe, and behave accordingly. I’ll spare you the details.
It was, though, a great joy to be reunited with my son—now… um, growing into middle age—who was born and has spent the better part of his life in Iowa; and his Mom, Elizabeth, who moved back here from Southern California in the early 1970s. It has been a couple of years since we last saw them, here on the West Coast. We got together, first, at Jason’s house in adjacent Coralville, and were delighted to find so many pieces from Ellie’s parents’ art collection—some of them rescued from neglect in the basement—nicely framed and hung, and obviously loved in their new home. Jason has also recently added a new garage behind the house, and a fine new deck in front, where were greeted with great enthusiasm by Jason’s rescue dog, Louis, a sweet creature...


Saturday, June 25
First thing was a room change, graciously agreed to by our hosts. Our original room was quite tiny, with no space to unpack or put the contents of our bags. At breakfast (don’t get me started!) we requested “boiled eggs” over the proprietor’s concoction, and were surprised when they arrive hard-boiled and cold. Clearly, we had miscommunicated out intention. After breakfast, Elizabeth drove around to guide us down to the local farmer’s market...
We met up with Jason again at the farmer’s market, and spent the rest of the day in town with him. Here are Ellie and Jason near the Old Capitol, at the center of the campus...
There is only a small part of the museum’s impressive collection on exhibition in the single gallery they now occupy. Much of it—including an important pre-drip Jackson Pollock painting—is on loan to the Figge Muesum in Davenport, Iowa, while decisions are made as to how and where the university museum will find a new home. A great deal of the collection, we hear, is in storage. A shame, because I do remember the great gallery in the old building, severely flooded and now apparently just empty and decaying, a home to birds and rodents. Sounds like a great movie set! Still, the curators have made the most of their small space, particularly for the collections of African art and modern and contemporary ceramics.
Time out for a break back in our (mow more spacious!) B&B room, and off to Elizabeth’s house for the best dinner of our tour. Jason and Louis in attendance...
Sunday, June 26
Oatmeal for breakfast! Excellent!
We drove out to Jason’s, where Louis jumped on me while I was juggling a cup of hot coffee on the front deck, requiring a quick rinse of clothes and the loan of a pair of shorts. No rain this morning...

Time enough for a taco lunch in Iowa City and a nap at our B&B before heading out, ourselves, to Cedar Rapids. Jason, though now gainfully employed in a day job with an educational testing company, started out his adult life as a serious, well-educated and dedicated musician. After a few years’ absence, it was good to see him back playing music: he is a fine R&B singer and guitarist, and it was a special pleasure to see him now in great form, very much at ease to be performing with skilled fellow-musicians, and for people who obviously appreciated their songs. It’s so important for creative people of all kinds to keep the flame alive, and I’m happy to know that Jason is doing just that.
The biker bar, though, was not exactly the best environment to hear the music. Nor, obviously, great light for a picture. Jason is in the background.) There were continual conversations going on, and the usual bar activity, so we drank our beer contentedly for an hour or so, then said our goodbyes to Jason before heading out through the country-side...
Back to our B&B for a last night there. We were watching an episode of Poirot on PBS when the first warning came—a beep beep beep on the televison, followed by a weather map showing severe weather with tornado warnings at the far west end of the state. Outside the window, there were already occasional flashes of lightning and bursts of thunder, with heavy rain showers passing through. At intervals throughout the evening, the weather warnings appeared on the TV screen, edging eastward, each time a little closer to Iowa City. Really quite exciting—and unnerving. At about ten o’clock—drama outpacing Poirot by far!—our room exploded with a sudden, intense burst of light, as though the lightning had struck directly outside our window, followed instantaneously by the most deafening thunderclap I have ever heard. We trembled, awaiting worse…
But after that, the storm abated. The weather maps showed the severe weather moving to the north and east of Iowa City, leaving us much relieved and able to get comfortably to sleep.
Monday, June 27
We left Iowa City in good time in the morning, driving north again through Mount Vernon and Dubuque, this time into Wisconsin, where we were booked for the night in Spring Green at the Usonian Inn—a motel designed either by an associate or by Frank Lloyd Wright himself, whose Taliesin East community was our objective. We were intrigued, close to our destination, to pass signs to “The House on the Rock,” and detoured off the highway to find it to be the delightful pinnacle of kitsch...


I wondered what Frank Lloyd Wright might have thought of all this, so close—geographically, I mean—to his own architectural monument. Would he have been intrigued by the monomania (not, incidentally, much unlike his own!) or appalled by its undisciplined expression?
We found the village of Spring Green clearly suffering from the bad economy, with several restaurants and B&Bs closed down, and a rather desultory air about the place. Since we were by this time hungry, however, we were grateful to find a delightful bookshop which also served sandwiches for lunch, and enjoyed a good chat with the owner—who promised to order a few copies of “Persist,” which he said sounded just right for the creative community thereabouts. We asked about “Driftless,” by David Rhodes—one of our all-time favorite books—and were pleased to find that our enthusiasm was shared. The “driftless” area, mentioned above, is a slice of landscape that was somehow missed by the last great glacial shift and retained its millennia-old geological characteristics—not to mention the quiet beauty of its verdant, rolling hills...
A few more stops in Spring Green, notably at the friendly local department store and the Catholic church, designed in the Wright tradition by his son-in-law—a fine-looking piece of architecture from the outside...

Tuesday, June 28
Breakfast—you guessed it—in an empty restaurant. Well, virtually empty. The place was a huge converted barn, with windows affording views through the ceiling, up to the old raftered roof. There were, we noticed, a couple of other customers at a distant bar, clearly locals. Otherwise we were the only two breakfasters in this vast, echoing space. (It’s the economy, stupid!)
Booked into the four-hour tour of the Frank Lloyd Wright estates at 9:30, we arrived promptly, as instructed, and signed in at the visitor center...
Next stop was the school Wright designed...

The rest of the tour was on foot. (Our camera’s battery gave up on us at this point, and we had forgotten to bring along a spare. Curses!) We climbed a hill through a meadow of tall, silvery grasses and wildflowers to the “Romeo and Juliet Wind Tower”—an elegant, embracing twin set of tall, narrow buildings designed as a windmill to pump water for the facility. The concept—though not the architecture, of course—made me think of that other Frank (Gehry’s) Fred and Ginger building in Prague. I wonder if he gave a thought to the master as he designed it?

We were glad to have chosen the long tour, arriving back at the visitor center for a pleasant lunch in the dining room there...
Well, I had imagined a stroll. It turned out to be a good, long hike, starting with the rooming house...

Back at the Union, somewhat fatigued by a long day on our feet, we found a place amongst the crowded tables to sit down for a shared glass of beer...
Wednesday, June 29
The last full day of our Midwestern tour. Breakfast—I hesitate to mention—was another strange experience. You would think that toast—no?—would be a not outrageous thing to ask for. It did seem so, however. I was asked if the donuts provided were not satisfactory, and was met with something approaching disbelief when I said that, no, I did actually prefer toast. I’m not hot on sweet buns for breakfast. A good deal of searching in the kitchen, it seemed, resulted in the eventual discovery of an English muffin.
We soon found congenial company with our fellow-breakfasters—Maryanne turned out to be one of the many dedicated teachers subjected to the state’s massive budget cuts—and sat for a long while in sympathetic talk. We set out late-ish, enjoying a cup of coffee with the brother of one of Ellie's old college friends, who directed us to the house where the family had lived...

After a quick lunch at a local hangout, we decided on a visit to the Museum of Contemporary Art and spent a while in the several exhibitions there. I wish I could report on some excitement there, but truthfully I found the shows kind of pedestrian. I suspect that they, too, reflected a paucity of discretionary funds. A nice gift shop, though...
Rather uninspired and—I speak for myself—rather travel fatigued, we wandered down to the Convention Center, just a couple of blocks from the Capitol, which we had seen in model form on our Frank Lloyd Wright tour. He had designed it years before, but died before seeing his plan approved and brought to fruition.
In the growing, increasingly muggy heat, we headed back toward the university campus on a final search for another of Ellie’s undergraduate haunts, a complex of lecture halls, to satisfy the last of her nostalgic wishes; and stopped to enjoy an ice blended mocha before heading back to the Capitol for a Wednesday evening “Concert on the Square.” We were surprised by the great throngs of people gathered for the event, with blankets spread out under the trees, beach chairs and elaborate picnics. Each one of the quadrants surrounding the building was crowded...
Thursday, June 30
Breakfast. Don’t ask. Soft-boiled eggs, okay, nice. But still no toast. Good conversation. We packed and checked out of our B&B in good time for a visit to the UW Arboretum on our way out of town. A lovely walk through the prairie meadows…




