Old Architecture in the West Village of NYC

I wanted to share some of my favorite areas in the West Village with you. This is a bit of my usual exploring route, that I actually have done thousands of times most likely. That doesn’t mean I’ve ever tired of it. On the contrary, I can never seem to get enough of it. For years I have loved the quiet peacefulness of Hudson Street. It is one of the most serene spots I know of in Manhattan. Much of the Village way of life doesn’t wake up and come to life until noon or later, so that makes this area all the more tranquil. If I have been shopping on Broadway in Soho for instance, even in the mid or late afternoon, and I want to escape the hustle and bustle of the city I can head further west. After crossing Seventh Avenue, as one approaches Hudson Street, the energy in Manhattan changes. There are quiet, almost remote, streets. Until one walks all the way west, before crossing the highway it is peaceful. The streets aren’t crowded in the daytime.

Through the years the cost of going out in this area has gone up substantially. I generally have been able to take long walks, sit quietly in a café or coffee shop, visit the Saint Luke’s Garden, go to the various thrift shops, or dine at a few select places I know that are affordable and fun to go to. I also have enjoyed kayaking in the Hudson River in the last few years. About a year and a half ago the Downtown Boathouse moved the kayaking down to Tribeca at Pier 26. They sponsor the whole experience of kayaking, so all I have to do is show up at the correct times, borrow a kayak and life jacket, lock up my belongings in a small locker and then a volunteer sees me off in the kayak I borrowed. So through the years since I returned to New York City, in 2007, I have been able to find fun and affordable things to do in this area, regardless of the fact that I can’t afford the fancy restaurants that fill the neighborhood. When I was much younger, before the birth of my daughter (twenty seven years ago), I used to hang out at the folk music scene in the West Village, on MacDougal Street.  I was drawn to the area when I was very young, particularly after reading about John Reed, Louise Bryant and Eugene O’Neill, who all used to hang out, and lived in the areas around Washington Square Park.

The first house in this small exploration is on Commerce Street. After a brief bit of research I discovered that the house across the courtyard was built at the same time. Both were built for a milkman. (1) (I only photographed one of them.) They have been renovated slightly differently, and perhaps, more likely actually, they may be owned by two different owners now. The roof, of a mansard type, was added later on. (2)

The second photo of houses is of numbers 4-10 Grove Street. These houses were built between 1825 and 1834, preceding the increased popularity of Greek revival forms. The doors have “rectangular top lights, the stair cases outside have hand wrought iron work and the windows are dormer types, which was characteristic of the city’s domestic Federal Style.” (3)

The third and fourth photos are Grove Court, a lovely private Court at 10 and 12 Grove Street. It is entered through the wrought iron gate. I have lost count of how many times I have walked up to this gate to peer into the lovely courtyard and look at the lovely homes. It is a treat to see it in the daytime and breathtakingly beautiful, peaceful and remote looking at night. It looks as if it must be one of the quietest places to live in Manhattan. These houses were built “in the 1850’s for workingmen.” (4)

The fifth photo is a house at 17 Grove Street, at the corner of Bedford. It is one of the “few remaining frame houses in Greenwich Village.” (5) The home was built in 1822. A work shop was built around the back of the house in 1833. The owner was in the window business and made window- sashes. Through the years a “Greek Revival Style doorway” was added in the 1830’s or 1840’s, a third story was added on, and later on a necessary but unattractive fire-escape was installed onto the house. (6) My daughter’s father actually worked on one of the renovations back in 1988.

St. Luke’s Episcopal Church is on Hudson Street, right where Grove Street meets Hudson. It is New York City’s third oldest church. When the church was built, back in 1821-22, it was “surrounded by open fields and occasional frame houses and was known as St. Luke’s-in-the-Fields.” (7) There is a private school, St. Luke’s School, on the grounds, and several brick row houses from the 1820’s. The garden at St. Luke’s is a lovely, meditative place to relax in lower Manhattan. They also have a great, small thrift shop.

I don’t have information about the houses on Commerce Street, or Morton Street. They are a continuation of the same kind of styles that were popular in the 1820’s through 1830’s. I believe the apartment building on Morton was built around 1903. During that time stone ornamentation, such as the work outside this building, was popular. There is another building similar on the same block.  The building on Barrow Street has co-ops, but I do not know when it was built or where that beautiful style of curved windows came from.

The house on Leroy Street was built in the “Federal Style of 1830.” (8) An architectural feature that can be seen on many of the Village’s houses of the period is the old “horsewalk” marked by the small door at the sidewalk level to the left of the stoop. The door opens on an enclosed alley which led to a stable in the backyard where nineteenth-century New Yorkers kept their horses. (9) The original owner, Jacob Romaine, did not stable his horse there however, if he did own one. “At the rear of his residence was a small house.” (10) This home had originally been part of the Richmond Hill estate. At the time the street was named Burton Street; it was later re-named Leroy Street.

The tiny, super skinny house is 75 1/2 Bedford Street. Its exterior measures 9-1/2 feet, the interior is 8 feet wide and 42 feet long. The house was built on a carriage way, which explains its narrow frame. The home has three floors and 990 square feet of space. It was once home to poet Edna St. Vincent Millay. Two actors also lived there, Cary Grant and John Barrymore.

The next photo, after the skinny house, is of the corner of Bedford and Barrow Streets, where the Cherry Lane Theatre was founded by Edna St. Vincent Millay and a few of her friends.

The final photo is of Grove Street, taken near the corner of Bedford in the dark, last winter during a bit of snow flurries. It is one photo but I am trying to give you a glimpse of the beauty of the area in the dark.

One thing I learned doing some of this research, and was struck by, was the difference between what kind of housing a blue collar worker could afford to buy, or was provided to live in by his or her employer, back during the 1820’s to 1830’s. It is astoundingly different than what many of us can afford nowadays. Obviously our country was started out on some good ideals, that time and the economy haven’t been able to keep up. To think a milkman owned two lovely houses on Commerce Street and that the workers were given housing in Grove Court, when today only the super wealthy can afford to live in these places – what a difference! Years ago my grandparents, who were two salespeople, owned three homes, two for rental purposes. Today it would be extremely difficult for two salespeople with five children to own three homes. It would be almost unheard of, unless they worked in some super profitable line of sales!!! I just found it somewhat shocking to find out how even in New York, so long ago, blue collar workers could afford nice homes in these really nice neighborhoods.  I assume a lot of it had to do with transportation, so that the workers were in the vicinity of the building, and work that needed to be done.

Well I hope you enjoyed this small exploration of the West Village and its lovely architecture. Once my foot heals up from my surgery and I can get out more, I will try to find some other lovely places to photograph and share with you.

 

Commerce Street

for blog bicycle in west village

The bike in front of the above house

 

Grove Street

Grove Street

 

Grove Court

Grove Court

 

Grove Court

 

Grove Street and Bedford

 

St Luke's Church on Hudson Street

St Luke’s Episcopal Church on Hudson Street

 

Commerce Street

 

Commerce Street

 

Morton Street

Morton Street

 

Barrow Street

 

Morton Street

Morton Street

 

Leroy Street

 

Bedford Street

Bedford Street

 

Corner where Cherry Lane Theatre is

 

Grove Street in the dark with snowflakes

 

(1)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.62

(2)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.62

(3)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.54

(4)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.56

(5)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.57

(6)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.55

(7)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.62

(8)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.63

(9)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.63

(10)Greenwich Village- A Photographic Guide, by Edmund T.Delaney &Charles Lockwood, pg.63

(11)http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2010/07/1831-jacob-romaine-house-7-leroy-street.html

 

All photos and written material by Marilyn Lavender. © Marilyn Lavender, 2015.  “All rights reserved.”

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Josh Davy and His Robots Made From Reclaimed Materials

Several months ago I saw a photo of a robot made by Josh Davy. I immediately wrote my friend to ask where he bought that robot. Josh has been making his robots since 2011, when his first one was made of wood. In 2014 he began making a collection of robots, one per week for three months, and the collection grew more elaborate as time went on. He began using bits of metal, parts from bicycle gears and old vintage tools. He would then fill in any gaps in the work with his silversmith skills and equipment. When he had his first robot gallery show he sold eleven of fourteen pieces on the opening weekend.

I really like Josh’s robots. They are as unique as various individuals. They vary from looking somewhat serious to playful. Josh leaves his viewers to interpret the robots as they choose. Some of his pieces have broken watch faces from old timepieces; others have small bits of animal bones. They all are very interesting to observe.

Josh also is a jewelry maker. He grew up being intrigued with his grandmother’s jewelry box. He began making jewelry and miniature metal sculptures. Later he was accepted at the Cleveland Institute of Art. While in Cleveland he was a partner in a small artisan jewelry shop for four years. In 2010, after joining a Denver art gallery as a painter, he began silversmithing again. Between his jewelry and sculptures he has been creating enough art work to do two solo shows a year at Denver galleries. You can view more of his work at his website: http://www.joshdavy.com/

I hope you enjoyed this post about Josh’s work. I am aiming to find more artists to write about. I will be on the lookout for artists who are using reclaimed materials especially.

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Josh Davy

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All photos by Josh Davy.  All written material by Marilyn Lavender. © Marilyn Lavender, 2015.  “All rights reserved.”

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Bernard Blossac & Jean DeMarchy- Two Fashion Illustrators from the 1940’s to 1960’s

I ran across some of Bernard de la Bourdonnaie  Blossac’s illustrations awhile back when I was writing the post about Antonio Lopez, the illustrator. I was struck by the simple elegance of his work. He was born in Paris, France in 1917. His parents owned a large piece of property in Solonge, north-central France and this place is where they enjoyed the sport of hunting. Bernard Blossac, a more creative soul, did not like hunting and he spent his time drawing and painting still life settings and landscapes instead.

He studied at various art academies and in the atelier of Paul Colin, prior to being discovered by designer Robert Piguet. Piguet introduced him to Paul Caldaques, President of the Chambre Synicale de la Couture. (1) Soon after meeting Caldaques he began publishing his drawings in Vogue, L’Officiel, L’Art et la Mode, Harper’s Bazaar and International Textiles. (2) Aside from Piguet, Blossac worked for such designers as Christian Dior, Jacques Fath, Jean Desses, Balenciaga, Worth, Carven and Givenchy. (3)

After the war ended in Europe, Blossac drew for several foreign journals. He traveled to the US and to London, England for business. For thirty years he devoted himself to his craft professionally. After that he continued to draw, only more for pleasure than for a living. At the time of his death in 2002, his nephew, whom he had adopted, took care of his remaining collection of art.

I could not find much information about Jean DeMarchy, the illustrator of the final drawing in this post.  This does not stop me from sharing the stunning drawing by him for designer Lanvin in 1952. Much of DeMarchy’s work was published in “Harper’s Bazaar” during the 1950’s.

Both artists featured in this post used pencil, pen, soft pastels, and charcoal for their mediums. Both incorporated lovely simple lines and achieved the look of aristocratic elegance and class in their drawings. While the clothing itself was beautiful, the artists captured the essence of the experience of wearing the outfits.

My grandmother, Annette Lavender, used to have a beautiful collection of vintage fashion illustrations upon her bedroom wall. As a child I often admired them. What a lovely way to get a glimpse into the fashionable era of another time.

If you yourself would like to collect some fashion illustrations of the past, this website (http://hprints.com/search/Bernard-Blossac/) has several prints by Bernard Blossac, as well as other fashion illustrators. I did not see a copy of this illustration by Jean DeMarchy however.

I hope you enjoyed this post. I had foot surgery on my right foot last Friday morning, so I have been recuperating and it is a slow process. I find it quite difficult to wrap my head around writing posts at this moment. I have several in the works but perhaps by next week I will be more able to focus on them. I have been on pain killers and feeling quite drugged. Right now my life is revolving around my right foot healing and that involves a small repetition of daily acts such as icing my foot regularly, cat napping and hobbling around in between.  Luckily I have been getting help and am being well taken care of.

I do hope you enjoy whatever is left of summer, and the coming joy of fall. Fall is one of my favorite seasons and I am seriously looking forward to fall and fall posts!

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1947 by Bernard Blossac

 

1960's by Bernard Blossac

1960’s by Bernard Blossac

 

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1946 by Bernard Blossac

 

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1940’s by Bernard Blossac

 

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1940’s by Bernard Blossac

 

1947 by Bernard Blossac

 

1952 by Jean DeMarchy

1952 by Jean DeMarchy

 

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Blossac
  2. http://paddyhunter.blogspot.com/2011/11/bernard-blossac.html
  3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Blossac

A photos from Flickr and written material by Marilyn Lavender. © Marilyn Lavender, 2015.  “All rights reserved.”

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Richard Brautigan’s: Homage to The San Francisco YMCA

Homage to the San Francisco YMCA

by Richard Brautigan

Once upon a time in San Francisco there was a man who really liked the finer things in life, especially poetry. He liked a good verse.

He could afford to indulge himself in this liking, which meant that he didn’t have to work because he was receiving a generous pension that was the result of a 1920’s investment that his grandfather had made in a private insane asylum that was operating quite profitably in Southern California.

In the black, as they say and located in the San Fernando Valley, just outside of Tarzana. It was one of those places that do not look like an insane asylum. It looked like something else with flowers all around it, mostly roses.

The checks always arrived on the 1st and the 25th of every month, even when there was not a mail delivery on that day. He had a lovely house in Pacific Heights and he would go out and buy more poetry. He of course had never met a poet in person. That would have been a little too much. One day he decided that his liking for poetry could not be fully expressed in just reading poetry or listening to poets reading on phonograph records. He decided to take the plumbing out of his house and completely replace it with poetry, and so he did.

He turned off the water and took out the pipes and put in John Donne to replace them. The pipes did not look too happy. He took out his bathtub and put in William Shakespeare. The bathtub did not know what was happening.

He took out his kitchen sink and put in Emily Dickinson. The kitchen sink could only start back in wonder. He took out his bathroom sink and put in Vladimir Mayakovsky. The bathroom sink, even though the water was off, broke out into tears.

He took out his hot water heater and put in Michael McClure’s poetry. The hot water heater could barely contain its sanity. Finally he took out his toilet and put in the minor poets. The toilet planned on leaving the country.

And now the time had come to see how it all worked, to enjoy the fruit of his amazing  labor. Christopher Columbus’ slight venture sailing West was merely the shadow of a dismal event in the comparison. He turned the water back on again and surveyed the countenance of his vision brought to reality. He was a happy man.

“I think I‘ll take a bath,” he said, to celebrate. He tried to heat up some Michael McClure to take a bath in some William Shakespeare and what happened was not actually what he had planned on happening.

“Might as well do the dishes, then,” he said. He tried to wash some plates in “I taste a liquor never brewed,” and found there was quite a difference between that liquid and a kitchen sink. Despair was on its way.

He tried to go to the toilet and the minor poets did not do at all. They began gossiping about their careers as he sat There trying to take a shit. One of them had written 197 sonnets about a penguin he has once seen in a travelling circus. He sensed a Pulitzer Prize in this material.

Suddenly the man realized that poetry could not replace plumbing. It’s what they call seeing the light. He decided immediately to take the poetry out and put in the pipes back in, along with the sinks, the bathtub, the hot water heater and the toilet.

“This just doesn’t work out the way I planned it,” he said. “I’ll have to put the plumbing back. Take the poetry out.” It made sense standing there naked in the total light of failure.

But then he ran into more trouble than there was in the first place. The poetry did not want to go. It liked very much occupying the positions of the former plumbing.

“I look great as a kitchen sink,” Emily Dickinson’s poetry said.

“We look wonderful as a toilet,” the minor poets said.

“I’m a perfect hot water heater,” Michael McClure’s poetry said.

Vladimir Mayakovsky sang new faucets from the bathroom, there were faucets beyond suffering, and William Shakespeare’s poetry was nothing but smiles.

“That’s well and dandy for you,” the man said. “But I have to have plumbing, real plumbing in this house. Did you notice the emphasis I put on real? Real! Poetry just can’t handle it. Face up to the reality,” the man said to the poetry.

But the poetry refused to go. “We’re staying.” The man offered to call the police. “Go ahead and lock us up, you illiterate,” the poetry said in one voice.

“I’ll call the fire department!”

“Book burner!” the poetry shouted.

The man began to fight the poetry. It was the first time he had ever been in a fight. He kicked the poetry of Emily Dickinson in the nose.

Off course the poetry of Michael McClure and Vladimir Mayakovsky walked over and said in English and in Russian, “That won’t do at all,” and threw the man down a flight of stairs. He got the message.

That was two years ago. The man is now living in the YMCA in San Francisco and loves it. He spends more time in the bathroom than everybody else. He goes in there at night and talks to himself with the light out.

The photo on the cover of Trout Fishing In America

The photos on the cover of Trout Fishing In America

Richard Brautigan’s writings are known for his humorous and vivid imagination. He was, and remains, very popular among the Beat Generation of Poets.

The Return of the Rivers, in 1957, was Brautigan’s first published poetry book. In 1958, and 1959, The Galilee Hitch-Hiker and Lay the Marble Tea were published.

In the late 1950’s and early 1960’s Brautigan was living in San Francisco, California. He handed out his poetry on the streets and performed in poetry clubs. During the 1960’s Brautigan became a part of the counterculture scene, often performing in poetry shows and in activities with the “left-winged” group the Diggers. He worked as a writer for an underground newspaper, Change, which was created by Ron Loewinsohn.

In the summer of 1961 Brautigan took his family camping in the areas around Snake River in Idaho. They had bought an old station wagon. He and his wife Virginia packed two crates of books, Coleman camping supplies, a tent, diapers for their daughter Ianthe, and a Royal typewriter that Richard borrowed from his barber. Brautigan was quite fond of fishing and fished many of the creeks around the Snake River in Idaho. While camping he completed  A Confederate General from Big Sur and Trout Fishing In America. A Confederate General from Big Sur became his first published novel, and it brought about only a small amount of success. In 1967 however, when Trout Fishing in America was published, Brautigan quickly became an internationally known writer, “Literary critics labeled him the writer most representative of the emerging countercultural youth-movement of the late 1960’s. Trout Fishing in America has sold over 4 million copies worldwide (1).”

In Watermelon Sugar and All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace were both published in the 1960’s. Also, during the 1960’s, Rolling Stone Magazine published 23 short pieces written by Brautigan.

During the 1970’s Brautigan published five novels and Revenge of the Lawn, a collection of short stories.

His popularity in the US waned during the 1970’s and the eighties; however in Europe and Japan he remained popular. He lived for several years in Japan and was married to a Japanese woman for a brief time. During the 1980’s his published works were The Tokyo-Montana Express (1980) and So the Wind Won’t Blow It All Away in 1982.

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Brautigan’s friend, Pierre Delattre, tells a story in “Brautigan Done For” where he describes Brautigan as a “great fisherman.” Apparently he had a knack of quickly catching fish. He also describes Brautigan speaking about his writing and typewriter. “Quiet”, he whispered to Delattre, as he looked at his typewriter. “  My new novel’s in there. I kind of stroll in occasionally, write a few quick paragraphs, and get out before the novel knows what I’m doing. If novels ever find out you’re writing them, you’re done for. “(2)

As for his attire, and outward expression of his personality Brautigan generally dressed like he did on the cover of Trout Fishing in America. In Michael McClure’s book “Lighting the Corners :On Art, Nature, and the Visionary” he writes that : “Richard’s style was shabby- loose threads at the cuff, black pants faded to gray, an old mismatched vest, a navy pea-jacket, and later something like love beads around the neck. As he began to be more successful he was even more fearful of change (3). “

Throughout his writing career Brautigan suffered from alcoholism. It had a large effect on his life his life, his two marriages and caused him much despair.

By the spring of 1984 Brautigan had bought home in Bolinas, California with his earnings from earlier writings and was trying his hand at screen play writing. During the fall he fell into a severe depression. He spoke with his ex-girlfriend Marcia Clay on September 15th and told her he needed to find a piece of writing he wanted to read to her. She told him she would call again in ten minutes. When she called back he did not answer. “She called repeatedly, each time getting only the answering machine. (4)

It is believed that Brautigan died on Sunday, September 16th after calling his friend Don Carpenter. When their conversation ended he said “I love you. Goodbye.” (5) He then turned up his radio, stood looking out the window facing towards the ocean and shot himself in the head. He was only 49. As friends called over several days the batteries of his answering machine ran low. On October 25th, a friend who had hired an investigator sent over Robert Yench to check on Brautigan. His badly decomposed body was found with a gunshot wound to his head.

Brautigan was buried in the Calvary Catholic Cemetery in Bodega, California, under the shade of trees. Ianthe Brautigan, his daughter, has said that her father spent “much time avoiding the sun.” She has not yet erected a marker for his grave. She decided “That I don’t take having the last word lightly.”(6)

What a tragedy, to have lost such a gifted writer, at such a young age. Through the years I have been to Brautigan birthday poetry celebrations and met many others who have enjoyed, and celebrate his life and work. I have expressed to friends that reading Richard Brautigan was like a mini- vacation. Within a half an hour he’d take me to various places. They might be Tokyo, San Francisco, or Montana. There would be times when we traveled where I swore he must have taken a lot of LSD to write that story. I found it refreshing and a release from my usual day to day activities to read such a strange story.

I think one has to have a sense of humor to read Brautigan. In the beginning getting used to him is like a wild ride, you never know where he is going to turn, yet after a while you start to understand and accept that you are on an unexpected journey and you start enjoying it. Then you look forward to it, and feel as if he is your friend.

I will be forever grateful to Brautigan since his writings helped my daughter, Emily, find her way out of a really rough depression as a teenager. This proves that a man can still help raise a child, even long after his life on earth has ended. Emily was reading books and watching several movies about artists or performers who had committed suicide while she was in this depression. It was frightening to see and I kept trying to reach her and the struggling continued. Finally I found a book by Ianthe Brautigan about her relationship with her father and his struggles with his drinking. The book was titled “You Can’t Catch Death.” As I was reading it I told Emily about it and I also tried to see if I could get her to read some of Richard Brautigan’s writing. I felt that his writing would help inspire her. I began leaving several of his books out, lying around the living room area. Finally she picked one up and started her own journey with Brautigan! Her transformation out of her depression was almost instantaneous. She suddenly had a new lease on life, one that was bold, unique and downright quirky. She’s always had an expressive, creative voice inside of her, it was just that she had sunken into a type of abyss and lost her ability to carry it to the surface. Plus finding the connection with Brautigan’s writing showed her how he had been embraced by a beatnik culture that had celebrated his thinking outside-the-box. That of course, gave her the freedom to express her own voice.

I have inserted two drawings Emily, my daughter did in this post.  One is of Richard Brautigan, the other is of Lee Mellon, a character in his book A Confederate General From Big Sur.  At the end of this post I am posting an untitled poem by Emily Owens, my daughter, that shows Brautigan’s influence upon her own writing.  Those of you familiar with his writings will know how he liked to use numbers in his stories. In honor of Emily’s love for Brautigan she has a small tattoo on the inside of her wrist that says “Trout.”

Well I hoped you enjoyed this post on Richard Brautigan’s life and writing. I plan to get to another outfit post or two soon. Foot surgery was changed to September 4th so I am getting ready for next Friday! There is so much to juggle getting ready for three weeks of staying home with my foot up!

Richard Brautigan drawing by Emily Owens

Richard Brautigan drawing by Emily Owens

Untitled Poem by Emily Owens

the factory was torn down. It sat there for thirty years, dreaming otherwise being fairly sedentary.

They rammed and busted into it, knocking down everything with a fierce growl, like the punt of a soccer ball when the player is very determined to destroy team he opposes.

They knocked down with machines larger than the men who welded them and picked up the rubble with the same machines again + left some behind also because they were sloppy like those sort of “jobs” tend to be.

After that they burned the ground. The construction worker’s wife had left him. It’s illegal to burn your wife in Colorado so he burned the factory’s plot of land instead, (in it’s absence, I am a firm believer this land still belonged to the factory, even if only in spirit.) it wasn’t something he was supposed to do on the job but everyone joined him and they laughed and poured beer and the factory smoldered and became less of what it was.

The construction worker felt good and the ghost of the factory was a little bent up about it because that’s how factories tend to feel after being torn down and burnt afterwards.

6 months went by and nothing happened.

No one came to visit

The factory (honestly) didn’t mind too much.

On the first day of what would classifiably be considered the seventh month, a flower popped up, right where the factory had stood.

and then 7.

And then 28 & then more

Until the field where the factory once lived was full of flowers (28,971,600) no one would have ever been able to tell that it was once upon a time, a place anyone would destroy and then burn down an laughed through gated anxiety as they distracted themselves from their ex-wife at the bar while their friends placed peanut after peanut down their throat, systematically smiling down the pretty bartender & pretending to still pay attention.

I mean, there were so many.

There’d be no way to tell except some remnant we won’t discuss now because there isn’t enough time and the flowers are busy growing.

(& no

one

can tell you today

because this is a

very old story you have

heard just now

for the very first time.)

-For Richard Brautigan, on June 30th, June 30th. And for me, On June 30th, June 30th.

 

Drawing by Emily Owens of Lee Mellon. He is a character from A Confederate General From Big Sur.

Drawing by Emily Owens of Lee Mellon. He is a character from A Confederate General From Big Sur.

 

(1). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Brautigan

(2). Pierre Delattre’s “Brautigan Done For. Episodes” (pg. 53-54)

(3). Michael McClure, Lighting the Corners: On Art & Nature, and the Visionary. (pg.39)

(4). William Hjortsberg’s JubileeHitchiker: The Life and Times of Richard Brautigan. (pg.811)

(5). http://www.brautigan.net/chronology1980.html, Sunday, Sept.16th,1984Ianthe Brautigan’s, You Can’t Catch Death. (pg. 134-135)

(6). Ianthe Brautigan’s, You Can’t Catch Death. (pg. 134-135)

All photos here from Flickr and written material by Marilyn Lavender. © Marilyn Lavender, 2015.  “All rights reserved.”

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