August 2008 Archives
Lush, Brooklyn, NY. Summer 2008While packing my things into boxes, I found a book beneath my bed and turned to a page that read the following poem by Galway Kinnel. I'm leaving Brooklyn on my dad's birthday, August 27th.
1In the eveninghaze darkening on the hills,purple of the eternal,a last bird crosses over,‘flop flop,’ adoringonly the instant.2Nine years ago,in a plane that rumbled all nightabove the Atlantic,I could see, lit upby lightning bolts jumping out of it,a thunderhead formed like the faceof my brother, looking downon blue,lightning-flashed moments of the Atlantic.3He used to tell me,“What good is the day?On some hill of despairthe bonfireyou kindle can light the great sky—though it’s true, of course, to make it burnyou have to throw yourself in ...”4Wind tears itself hollowin the eaves of these ruins, ghost-fluteof snowdriftsthat build out there in the dark:upside-down ravinesinto which night sweepsour cast wings, our ink-spattered feathers.5I listen.I hear nothing. Onlythe cow, the cow of suchhollowness, mooingdown the bones.6Is that arooster? Hethrashes in the snowfor a grain. Findsit. Ripsit intoflames. Flaps. Crows.Flamesbursting out of his brow.7How many nights must it takeone such as me to learnthat we aren’t, after all, madefrom that bird that flies out of its ashes,that for usas we go up in flames, our one workisto open ourselves, to bethe flames?
Galway Kinnell, “Another Night in the Ruins”
Trees at night, August, 2008.As the we turn the last corner of summer, I've been wondering what to base this blog around. For now, it will just pertain to updates of me. Fall is almost here, and it's time for wandering blindly down highways with a view camera, looking for a glimpse of something oddly beautiful and strikingly normal. Intermittently, I might attend a class or two (or six).
Fall class list:
The American West
Platinum & Palladium Printing
Thesis I
History of Contemporary Photography
Jewish Literature and Civilization
Photography and Business
What a line up. It's going to be a long fall. Currently I'm packing up my apartment in Brooklyn to make a small jaunt back to beloved (and somewhat malevolent) Philadelphia. With one week left in New York, I hope to see some of your friendly faces once more before trading one urbania for another. Thank you for all of your kindness and company this summer.

