Jed McGowan: Blog
Jed McGowan
Jed McGowan: Blog

3/24/09

 

You walk for days among trees and among stones


Halfway into chapter five.

So how are you? I've been hiking a bunch. A wonderful meeting of the physiological and the psychological!



You walk for days among trees and among stones. Rarely does the eye light on a thing, and then only when it has recognized that thing as the sign of another thing: a print in the sand indicates the tiger's passage; a marsh announces a vein of water; the hibiscus flower, the end of winter. All the rest is silent and interchangeable; trees and stones are only what they are.

Finally the journey leads to the city of Tamara. You penetrate it along streets thick with signboards jutting from the walls. The eye does not see things but images of things that mean other things: pincers point out the tooth-drawer's house; a tankard, the tavern; halberds, the barracks; scales, the grocer's. Statues and shields depict lions, dolphins, towers, stars: a sign that something--who knows what?--has as its sign a lion or a dolphin or a tower or a star. Other signals warn of what is forbidden in a given place (to enter the alley with wagons, to urinate behind the kiosk, to fish with your pole from the bridge) and what is allowed (watering zebras, playing bowls, burning relatives' corpses). From the doors of the temples the gods' statues are seen, each portrayed with his attributes--the cornucopia, the hourglass, the medusa--so that the worshipper can recognize them and address his prayers correctly. If a building has no signboard or figure, its very form and the position it occupies in the city's order suffice to indicate its function: the palace, the prison, the mint, the Pythagorean school, the brothel. The wares, too, which the vendors display on their stalls are valuable not in themselves but as signs of other things: the embroidered headband stands for elegance; the gilded palanquin, power; the volumes of Averroes, learning; the ankle bracelet, voluptuousness. Your gaze scans the streets as if they were written pages: the city says everything you must think, makes you repeat her discourse, and while you believe you are visiting Tamara you are only recording the names with which she defines herself and all her parts.

However the city may really be, beneath this thick coating of signs, whatever it may contain or conceal, you leave Tamara without having discovered it. Outside, the land stretches, empty, to the horizon; the sky opens, with speeding clouds. In the shape that chance and wind give the clouds, you are already intent on recognizing figures: a sailing ship, a hand, an elephant...


--From Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities

I feel a need to start some sort of collective. A group for discussing your work/the work of others, drawing and drinking, whatever. If you live in the Los Angeles area and you're interested in joining this collective, write me an email and we can meet.

Yay!

Comments:
this guy does a hiking zine:
sudlich.blogtribe.org/
i'm not sure how he distributes it or what. it might just be a japan thing. but if you go far enough back in the archives (i forget how far) you see a lot of hiking visuals.
 
Thanks--I'm enjoying that link.

Some private thoughts I've been having that I will hereby make public:

I'm fascinated by the way physical activity affects one's mental state. What some call the "natural high." ha!

I also really appreciate just realizing I'm in a physical world (being an urban man, that fact becomes more apparent when in the wilderness). Cartooning also makes me realize I'm in a physical world--I'm intently focused on the physical object I'm drawing, experiencing its thing-ness. On the other hand, cartooning, more than photography or film I guess, is more obviously a human construction, a stylized take on the world. So there's this push and pull of being in the world and not being in the world that I love about cartooning. And hiking too.
 
let me know the next time you are in the joshua tree area...i'd love to meet up sometime....its only a 3 hr. drive for me from phoenix.
 
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