Monday, June 22, 2009

Freebie Month Continues, and Cleaning Dilemmas


This book press, shown sitting on a dolly in Barron's back yard because it weighs 80 pounds (I didn't believe it until he actually put it on a scale to prove it) was free. I knew I would eventually get a free book press if I just waited long enough, but it was about ten years. I hope I don't have to wait that long for the free canoe (small enough for one person to carry, not ine of those giant family-size ones). The press is home-made but well-built, with a cast metal platform that shows signs of having been some sort of electrically heated griddle long ago, with some welded parts. It will clamp the hell out of anything. Hauling it upstairs was not that tough because I am physically fit. Clearing a spot on my book repair table provoked a fit of actual cleaning, moving. re-organizing and throwing away of things. It is astounding what kind of crap I have filled my studio with because I thought I would use it some day. Why do I have a tin of brown shoe polish and a can of Huberd's Shoe Grease - and why am I still keeping them? What was I meaning to do with a pink hi-liter? Why didn't I get rid of dozens of things long long ago? The nice thing was finding a pretty little chopstick box with a sliding lid, containing a couple of good paint brushes and yet another X-acto knife, and a box of watercolor supplies I got at a yard sale when I wasn't painting watercolors yet. But what did I think I would do with ancient sample containers of dry tempera paint? Why can't I dispose of the last of my oil painting supplies? Life is a puzzle and a muddle.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Monday, June 8, 2009

Movies - June 7

Rose of Washington Square (1939) I guess I am looking for a movie which utilizes the talents of Alice Faye as ably as Hello Frisco, Hello - with little success. As usual, a few good musical numbers in a welter of melodrama, somewhat enlivened by Bill Frawley and Joyce Compton. Al Jolson gets more songs than Faye does - I like a little Jolson occasionally but this is too much for me. I have been trying for years to truly enjoy him, but though I do not lack the knowledge I lack the comprehension. Anyway, 6.5/10 and I am ending this course of inquiry for a while.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Movies - June 5

The Stork Club (1945) Hat check girl Betty Hutton is beneficiary of millionaire's anonymous generosity - romantic complications follow. Hutton's tendency to comedic overacting is greatly restrained here, except in one ghastly musical number. The rendition of her Hoagy Carmichael hit The Doctor, the Lawyer and the Indian Chief is right on the money though, and a high point of the film. Wisecracking chum Iris Adrian always adds value to any movie, and the fashions, hats and hairdos fall just short of outrageous. Also evident is the mid/late 40s decorative style of isolated classical motifs inflated into huge white replicas. Generally entertaining. 7/10

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Movies - Recent Viewing

Zis Boom Bah (1941) B-movie vehicle for forgotten Vaudeville star Grace Hayes, who helps save her son's college by opening a student-staffed night club. More educational than entertaining, but some adequate musical performances. 6/10

The Dance of Life (1929) Donna tracked this down because she is experiencing an Oscar Levant craze and this is his first film appearance, as well as one of the earliest screen musicals. Sadly, he only gets about thirty seconds total screen time, the remaining two hours being a dreary backstage melodrama. I am quite tolerant of creaky archaic cinema but this one had me weary after half an hour, though the deadly pace was greatly relieved in the middle by a spectacular Ziegfeld Follies sequence with insanely huge stage set and costumes. Your chances of ever encountering this film are extremely slim. 4.5/10

El bolero de Raquel (1957) A Cantinflas movie - lots of humor, a little pathos, a couple of dance numbers, and wedding bells at the end. Unfortunately the subtitles were not well translated so a lot of the impact of his humor was obviously lost. The first 20 minutes is a sequence related to the death of his friend and the resulting funeral - Cantinflas ultimately arrives at the cemetery drunk, goes to the wrong funeral and kisses all the ladies, delivers a bizarre eulogy and falls into the grave. While everyone else grieves, his remarks are sardonic, self-serving and not a little lustful. Not at all what you would see in an American film of that day. The title is a pun - he is a bootblack (bolero) with a girlfriend named Raquel; as the result of a misunderstanding he ends up dancing on a nightclub stage to the Bolero of Ravel. Funny. Sorta. He also accidentally dives off the cliff at Acapulco. It's always something with that guy. 7/10

Friday, June 5, 2009

Strange and Stranger - The World of Steve Ditko by Blake Bell

This is as fine a book as anyone could ever expect on the life and work of a highly influential figure in recent popular culture, as well as a complex and baffling man. Filled with excellent examples of his startling and innovative artistic style, and ably describing his rise and self-orchestrated fall. As a kookologist of long standing, having spent decades in the study of people who dedicate their lives to the promulgation of a personal ideal or philosophy, Ditko appears to me to be a classic example of the self-disabler. Rarely has such a talented, respected and admired artist more completely destroyed his career and even crippled his own artistic skill in the service of an unreachable idealism. First by making reasonable demands of his dishonest employers, then progressively unreasonable demands of people whose sincere desire was to help him achieve any goal he wished to attain, he ultimately made it impossible to do the one thing he most wanted to do - communicate his ideas through the skills to which he had dedicated his entire life. I believe he discovered and enacted this principle: the only way to always be right is to always make everyone else be wrong. His idealism was a form of perfectionism impossible of existence in this world, a philosophy of pure black and white which can only be enacted in fantasy - since in this world dichotomies and true "black and white" are manufactured by the mind and have no natural existence. His Objectivist idealism compelled him to literally deny reality, a direct contradiction of its fundamental principle that reality is what IS, and not what we wish it to be. Most telling is the complete absence from this book of the slightest mention of his having any personal, emotional, or romantic relationship with another person - not even to say that such a thing was absent from his life. If, as I write this, Steve Ditko still lives, he lives in a world of his own creation - poverty and obscurity, unable to afford even to self-publish, surrounded by hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars worth of his own work which his principles will not permit him to sell, and looked on from a distance by dedicated admirers who are willing and able to publish anything for him, if he would only let them. What an opera it would make.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Movies - June 2

Burn After Reading (2008) Coen brothers' comedy of errors, all-around good entertainment. Donna's choice, watched with her last night. 8/10

The Great American Broadcast (1941) Ostensibly portraying the epic development of radio from its infancy to coast-to-coast networks; the framework upon which is hung a weak plot and some mediocre songs. I love Alice Faye but it just isn't believable that John Payne, Jack Oakie, and Cesar Romero should all go gaga over her like they do here. Jack Oakie, yes. Two numbers by the Ink Spots, one with the Nicholas Brothers, are really all that's worth seeing here. 5.5/10

Oneirogenic Foods

A KDV Klassik - my 2007 essay on dream-producing foods.

This is about food that makes you dream. I first began paying attention to the effect food has on my dreams in the early 1990s when I lived in Boston Massachusetts. It was the custom of the future Mrs. Nenslo and me to make Christmas Day festive by going to Haim's Deli in Brookline to nosh on knishes. Everything was closed except jewish delicatessens, and neither of us celebrated the season any other way. I was not yet a vegetarian but quite reasonably never ate liver in any form except the chopped liver at Haim's Deli once a year. My response to the burlesque query, "What am I, chopped liver?" would be I WISH. It made the most unpleasant of meats 90 percent delicious. I noticed the first year that my dreams that night were very busy, detailed and intense, and attributed it to the succulent chopped liver. Everything else we had was pretty much potato and cabbage. Every year I had chopped liver and wild dreams. I also discovered around the same time a similar effect from dried turkish figs, the fat yellow ones packed nose to tail in a tidy circular package.

My dreams are usually pretty detailed, busy and colorful, with lots of bicycle and trolley rides through hilly old-world cityscapes or wanderings through cramped twisting hallways that contract into an inaccessible staircase with a light at the end. Occasionally I spend time crawling down the sidewalk using every crack and crevice to drag myself along against incredible pressure, as other people walk normally past. Other times, much more rarely these days, I simply lift my feet forwards and up, and scoot along above the ground, guiding myself with my body weight as if on an invisible skateboard. I made a practice of keeping a dream diary for a few years, but found that reading one's own dreams is almost as boring as reading someone else's.

Last fall I kept bicycling past a tree with huge lumpy pears on it. One day I saw an old guy doing yard work there and asked him about it, learning that it was a quince tree. He gave me a couple and explained in far too much detail exactly how to cut it up without cutting my own finger off, and how to boil it in a little water with lots of sugar. The quince is a woody, resinous and aromatic fruit. That is, it was the vilest fruit I have ever tasted and it smelled exactly like it tasted - like a bucket of rotting lemon rinds. That night I had amazingly happy dreams. I was flying around a pastel landscape like something out of a Barbie in Fairytopia animation, singing joyous songs. I tried it again the next day and it was the same. I decided, however, to forego the heavenly dreams in favor of not having to eat that nasty stuff again, though I came to wish I had stuck a little in the freezer for later. I later tried a mexican style quince jelly, not as nasty tasting but a rather repellent texture, and found it gave a kind of "dirty" variety of the flying dream - not porno, but being swung around in circles at the end of a rope in the middle of a junkyard. I tried this two days in a row also, with the same results.

I found a few months ago that I could relieve minor allergy/sinus/migraine pain by drinking a tea of ground bay leaves, or by chewing one of the fresh leaves from a bay laurel I have in the back yard. I also found that, if taken in the evening, it makes my dreams so busy and detailed that I tend to wake up as tired as I was the night before. This year I also tried quince again, having nabbed a couple of small ones from a tree overhanging the sidewalk on one of my recent perambulations. I chopped them up fine and cooked them with sugar into jam. These were not as powerfully aromatic as the ones I got last year, and the jam is merely sweet, tart and fruity, not vile and resinous. The only effect I seem to get from eating it on bread in the evening is that it keeps me awake most of the night. Two nights in a row I have lain waiting to wake in dreamland flapping my arms and going la la laaaa.... but I don't.

The only other material I can recall which had a noticeable effect on my dreams is marijuana, which damps them down entirely - I would sleep the night through and wake without recalling a thing. A good reason for me not to do it.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Work In Progress


I thought someone might enjoy seeing what my table looks like while I am painting. This is the second in a series of watercolors of pots at local garden centers. It's been quite a while since I painted in watercolor, and I picked this complex image to do because it would give me the most practice. I have been at it for a couple of days, which is a long time for me - I'd rather get a picture done in fifteen minutes and be done with it. As you see, I work from left to right since I am right handed. I just work up a piece at a time, and stop when I get to the end.