Showing posts with label The Great Depression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Great Depression. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

New York City Wildlife




 

 Vincent Schiavelli in Ghost


From The New York City Wildlife Guide by Edward R. Ricciuti (New York, Schocken Books, 1984):


      “The open waters of the city are visited by a handful of different  birds that are superb divers and swimmers, able to chase down fish under the water.  They are the loons, the grebes and the double-breasted cormorant, grouped together here because of their common habits and surroundings in which people are likely to see them.  They are not what could be called related, although taxonomically, the grebes and loons at least, are not that far apart.




Double-crested cormorants


      Cormorants are more gooselike in appearance than the [grebes and loons] mentioned above.  They stay in groups, often migrating in great V formations, leading some people to mistake them for Canada geese.  When flying, their necks stretch out in front of their bodies.  The bill of the cormorant is long but hooked at the tip.

      All three groups of these fish-eating birds sit low in the water.  The cormorant sometimes swims with most of its body below the surface so that only its long neck and head extend above it.  They all submerge head first with lightning speed.   One moment the bird may be bobbing on the surface,  and the next it is gone, as though it has vanished.   Actually, it is rocketing through the depths after a fish or other water creature.   They can remain under a minute or sometimes more, descending several yards, to pop up again, sometimes a long distance from where the dive began.”





Andre Kertesz, East River Esplanade 1948 


      When we lived on East 86th Street between 1985 and 2000, we used to jog early each morning along the East River Esplanade.  We began our run in Carl Schurz Park near the dog playground at the park’s entrance, climbed the stairs to the terrace and continued south on the esplanade to Sutton Place and then ran back.   Occasionally we would see familiar faces from the newspapers (one of them was Gerald Levin, erstwhile feckless Time Warner Chairman; I’ve never seen a man so grim and uptight) or people we’d seen on previous jaunts, but mostly it was a case of daily, predictable Manhattan anonymity -- as the kids today say, random.   Every day really was a new day, as it generally is in the Naked City.





Cormorant in characteristic low, surveilling flight  


      We did have as one constant companion, however, a lone cormorant who we usually sighted in the upper 70s, but whose range extended ten blocks in either direction.  It took us a while to identify him because cormorants were not supposed to inhabit the East River then and because he was always alone in the middle of the flow, making it difficult to see his features and coloring in detail.  Once we were sure he was a cormorant, we wondered whether he belonged to that exotic bird guide category of “escape”?   When we learned that cormorants did inhabit surrounding New York, New Jersey and Connecticut waters, we came to regard him instead as a loner or a rugged individualist.  (Apparently, since our departure from Manhattan, our friend has been joined by others and there now appears to be a cormorant  colony established on  one of the several sad looking rubble piles in the center of the East River.  The pile pictured below, phototographed from the Manhattan side,  is called U Thant Island, presumably because it is near the United Nations.)





Cormorant colony, U Thant Island, off Manhattan, 2008


      Our cormorant was incredibly handsome and his behavior was exactly as Ricciuti describes.  One day we saw him return to the surface after one of his dives carrying what was clearly an eel in his mouth.  The eel’s  slippery shape and fighting spirit, I’m sorry to say, made him unwieldy and challenging for the cormorant  to vanquish and consume.  It was painful (and frankly disgusting) to watch, but this bird’s chief characteristic was indomitability. You could see it in his fighting eyes, which seemed to glow red and shine bright and clear, even from the embankment.





East River Esplanade at East 73rd Street


      I was reminded of my diving cormorant friend yesterday when I found myself in the New York City subway on a miserable cold, wet day.  (“You dive from the street, holing like a rabbit”,  as Edwin Denby wrote in his marvelous sonnet The Subway.)    Unlike the avian, however,  who was gorgeous and dignified in every sort of weather, I felt soggy and abused, sort of a counter-cormorant, hardly the master of my universe. 





George Tooker, The Subway, 1950, Egg tempera on composition board, Whitney Museum of American Art



      We originally moved from Brooklyn Heights back into Manhattan (during the period just following the Bernard Goetz subway shooting incident, an event whose imminence anyone who rode underground with any frequency could feel in the air) just to avoid taking the subway, but in these severely straitened times, I find myself back in the tube.  (Denby wrote in the same poem: “It's a sound effect. The trouble is seeing/(So anesthetized) a square of bare throat/Or the fold at the crotch of a clothed human being:/ You'll want to nuzzle it, crop at it like a goat.”  It’s a terrific poem.) 





Vincent Schiavelli as subway revenant in Ghost 


      Despite what anyone says (especially mayors, former mayors and city administrators)  about how the subways have improved, I find them the same demi-Hell as they have always been. The most positive thing you can say is that they’re merely tributaries off of the real Hell Mouth that is the New York Port Authority Bus Terminal and not the central shaft linking New York City and Dis. Revenants and other shades still ride the shrieking rails and all the old lessons about being alert, making quick, discreet entrances and exits from the system, and trying to protect your loved ones from the damnable and damned operation (watch out for the rotating blades) still obtain.



A rabbit hole 


      All that being said, the hazards and rigors of the day were survivable.  Amtrak's tawdry, cut-rate Keystone (the crew takes almost ostentatious pleasure in announcing services not offered on the Harrisburg-New York line) brought me through the tundra-like section of the Northeast Corridor back to my family on time, and I had some good conversations and met some interesting people I would like to work with.  Still, seen through the lens of this Depression, as well as the day's terrible weather, New York's looking worse and worse to me.  I know the city so well that I feel all changes acutely and intermittent attempts at adding new glamor and glitz around town seem not just superficial, but also doomed and dead on arrival and not possibly meant to last.  The older, more stolid landmarks are all looking worse for wear and everyone seems tired.





Bryan Ferry, Pre-Hello!, but forever and everlasting (like Mother-of-Pearl)


      Even the railroad station magazine stands have gone downhill.  Nothing offbeat is offered.  You can only buy what they want you to read -- conformist thought jacketed in a variety of covers -- but all the "content" contained within them is virtually identical.  And I won't read Vanity Fair (Justin Bieber cover issue) or the The New York Review of Books (a magazine supposedly dedicated to great art and good writing with an article by Paul Krugman, one of the worst prose stylists in history, on the cover -- what hath God wrought?  Silly question. In this case, I know full well.).  I would like to read Hello!, but it is no longer sold anywhere in Penn Station.  Hello! never lets you down.  Since you've only heard about half the people they cover, it's like reading a roman a clef or seeing a really  enjoyable television show or movie with a lot of cameos.  Its recipes are good also and it has its heart in the right place, strange as that seems.  As Helen Gurley Brown used to say about magazine essentials, "it sits down and visits" and "it's got a lot of me and you" about it.  Well, about me at least.




Bryan Ferry, 2009, with model Tasha de Vancolenos, post-Hello! and forever for a while 



Thursday, December 30, 2010

It's Just Business (New Normal)






Hans von Maree, Self-Portrait with Lembach, 1863
 

      Watching Pierre Morel’s exciting 2008 film Taken (a sort of “emblem movie” for appropriately protective fathers of daughters) two nights ago, I was reminded of what is, for me, the ugliest phrase in the English language when Gerard Watkins, the actor who plays the “white slave” trader Patrice Saint-Clair, explains to Liam Neeson that abducting and selling his daughter Kim wasn’t  “personal”; it was “just business”.



Fernand Khnopff, The Abandoned City, 1904 

 

     The Saint-Clair character soon receives his just deserts, but the dialogue summed up for me our current three-years-and-counting Depression zeitgeist, where what I used to consider normal and acceptable behavior has been abandoned completely and so many people seem to have shed and exchanged their human skin and affect for something rough, horny and caustic.  This “new normal” seems to dominate interpersonal relationships, including especially business relationships, where the former customary courtesies have largely disappeared, as well as attitudes expressed in the media (including, I find, the new so-called “social media”), where snideness, sarcasm and a fixation on the grotesque have become the lingua franca across all genres. 



James Ensor, Intrigue, 1911


     Business cycles work themselves out, of course, over time (the tide does come in, the tide does go out), but I wonder whether this violent, malevolent  and denaturing outlook and approach to life will ever change.   As my  wife sometimes observes, leaving your house often seems like stepping into a wildlife survival show on the Discovery Channel.

     Still, when I pause and try to think calmly, I find that this has been the usual year of miracles for us.  That isn’t an overstatement and I feel blessed to be able to breathe, see, take them in and occasionally appreciate them enough.   To more than compensate for some of the era’s damage there have been some precious new friendships that I know will last me the rest of my life, ones that I really needed to have, and even a couple of old, shattered links that have mended.  There’s more than that, a lot more, but discussing the miracles in one’s life seems and is unseemly, at least in a large group.



Fernand Khnopff, Still Water, 1894


Apart from the pictures that frequently cross my mind, entertain and surprise me, I often find myself thinking of and sustained by these words:

     The first is very short, the few lines that conclude Tom Clark’s poem Nimble Rays Of Day Bring Oxygen To Her Blood, that go:


A leaf spins itself
The leaf's a roof
Over the trembling flower

Everything's safe there
Because nothing that breathes
Air is alone in this world


     The second is the (surprising) conclusion of Claude Levi-Strauss’s Tristes Tropiques, which reads:

“Farewell to savages, then, farewell to journeying!  And instead, during the brief intervals in which humanity can bear to interrupt its hive-like labours, let us grasp the essence of what our species has been and still is, beyond thought and beneath society; an essence that may be vouchsafed to us in a mineral more beautiful than any work of Man:  in the scent, more subtly evolved than our books, that lingers in the heart of a lily; or in the wink of an eye, heavy with patience, serenity, and mutual forgiveness, that sometimes, through an involuntary understanding , one can exchange with a cat.”



Fernand Khnopff, The Sphinx, 1896