Mason Currey – Daily Rituals

Mason Curry - Daily Rituals book cover

Daily Rituals by Mason Currey is a very interesting book about artists’ routines in creating work.

Conclusion: discipline is everything. And dedication. And perseverance. See also Ryan Holiday’s The Obstacle is the Way.

Francis Bacon: chaos and total dedication.

Simone de Beauvoir: total asceticism.

Kierkegaard: coffee and sugar, walking, writing.

Benjamin Franklin: air bath (meditation?).

Anthony Trollope: writing 3 hours a day for work. Copied his mother here, who wrote for 4 hours before making breakfast.

Toulouse Lautrec: booze.

Thomas Mann: family man with a strict schedule for writing.

Mahler: schedule. Moody and lonely boy.

Matisse , Margaret Mead: always working.

Gertrude Stein: what a spoiled baby she is.

Ann Beatty: can only write if she’s really inspired.

Murakami: schedule, no social life.

William James: automate everything, leave yourself free for better activities.

James Joyce: estimates that it took him 20000 hours to write Ulysses.

Beckett made his depression work for him.

Sartre: regime and pills, cigarettes, alcohol.

Graham Greene: wrote 2 books at once. On pills.

Umberto Eco: can write anywhere, anytime.

David Lynch: sugar.

Paul Erdős: a machine that turns coffee into scaffolding.

Abramovic: rigorous.

Twyla Tharpe: asocial = procreative.

Bernard Malamud: conclusion: in the end, everyone learns their own best way. The real mystery to crack is you.

Eerste bericht

De komende weken zullen we (waarschijnlijk) aandoen:

Bangkok
Kanchanaburi
Ayutthaya
Sokuthai
Chiang Mai
Pai
Koh Samet
Bangkok

Denis Johnson – Angels

Denis johnson - angels

Angels. Not really. The story of 2 alcoholic drifters working their way through life. Making a habit of taking the wrong, or rather, no, decisions. Dark, like Jesus Son. Bukowski-esk, but I find this one darker and more pessimistic. People are tested, while in Bukowski, they make their own choices. And there is a bit more humor and relativizing in Bukowski.

And people do not get raped in Bukowski like in here.

A Houston family. A low social standing. All three brothers from 2 fathers follow the wrong path. Sex, drugs, alcohol, violence, crime. And all incapable of finding a way out.

The book has a marvelous ending.

Beautiful.

Ed van der Elsken, street photographer in love

I visited Ed van der Elsken’s retrospective at the Stedelijk Museum. Van der Elsken is chaotic and distinctly extroverted, an expressionist. His films are messy and experimental. The exhibition was impressive, but mostly, it was a lot.

I came down the stairs with a full head. The book De Verliefde Camera is the catalog of this retrospective. In the introduction, Hripsimé Visser, the catalog’s compiler, calls the work vibrant and dynamic. Surely that seems like an understatement. The book gives an overview of Van der Elsken’s work chronologically.

Ed van der Elsken - de verliefde camera - book cover

Paris, street photographs. Then, a series called A Love Story: Love on the Left Bank. The photographs in this series are large areas of black, little light, and stark—more lust than love.

Then Africa. Again, rather dark photos. Where the story is anthropological, in my opinion, Van der Elsken was much more interested in the aesthetics of black people. Close-ups of Negroes and Negresses, and I don’t mean that as a swear word, but as an indication of the style of the photographs. Photographs that are not about life in Africa as their subject but much more about the anatomy of the African man.

Sweet Life. Van der Elsken at his best: street photographs of everything that comes in front of the camera that he finds interesting. Here, Van der Elsken measures up to William Klein and Robert Frank.

Amsterdam. There are street photos, reportage-style photos, and portraits. Again, the individual photos are the strongest. The street photos are of everyday things.

Eye Love You. Color for the first time. Everyday scenes. Topper: a photo of elderly ladies with sunglasses and in neat dresses photographing two Negro children as if they were at the zoo. The vicarious blush comes to your cheeks.

Japan. Again, the street photos of someone who takes unfettered pictures of everyday subjects.

Ultimately, Ed van der Elsken was primarily an excellent street photographer who tried to make ends meet through his photography. His street photographs are world-class.

Een Klein Leven, een dik boek, laat maar

Mishandelde jongen wordt als volwassene onverbeterlijke zelfmutilant die zijn hele leven anderen tot last is niets positiefs bijdraagt en na uitgesponnen verhaal uiteindelijke zelfmoord pleegt.

Blijft irritant.

Vreselijk overschat boek van Hanya Yanagihara. Een Klein Leven.

Niet lezen.