It was nice to be back at work today––loads of good books had been donated–––and it was also, sigh, also a little depressing because––sure enough, the bathroom was dirty and there was no hand soap...
(I went and found some.)
I find this indicative disarray so disheartening.
Oh, well.
I always have fun with the books & things, no matter what.
I'd set aside a bunch of vintage figurine planters, meaning to make a display, and today we got a bunch of small fake plants, so I put them together. Yay!
It tickles me to set up these little scenes.
[Signs by ArtSparker]
I brought home a copy of J. G. Ballard's novel Crash [British Library (BL) article--with further links]––the one about autoerotic automobile crashes?
I've heard of it, but can't quite imagine what it's like, how it works...
(It was made into a movie in 1996––totally different than the 2004 movie of the same name.)
I'm interested to look closer at Crash because I always think it's so very strange––and a good key to understanding how humans work–– and it bothers me that we moderns mostly, in my experience, blithely accept cars as ho-hum, everyday things.
The main objection I hear to cars is that they burn fossil fuels.
Really cars are like frightening science-fiction creations--massive metal machines that move at unnatural speeds, easily and frequently destroying people, animals, trees, things...
Don't most of us know at least one person who was killed in a car accident–– at second hand, if not first?
I can think of several––the worst I was close to being the teenage son of a coworker (in a former job) who was hit in the street after school.
I was at work the day he was killed, and the weird twist was that my coworker, a lovable, brassy lady, had come in that morning freaked out because driving in to work, she had hit and killed a deer.
I was surprised to see that Crash was published in 1973––seems so modern––and to realize it's the same J. G. Ballard (of course) who wrote Empire of the Sun, about being a boy during WWII in Japanese-occupied Shanghai.
The intro to Crash includes this quote from Ballard that explains why he might see through the mundanity of cars:
Looking around the BL site on Ballard, I found this text collage he made in 1958. "Let's get out of time."
(I went and found some.)
I find this indicative disarray so disheartening.
Oh, well.
I always have fun with the books & things, no matter what.
I'd set aside a bunch of vintage figurine planters, meaning to make a display, and today we got a bunch of small fake plants, so I put them together. Yay!
It tickles me to set up these little scenes.
[Signs by ArtSparker]
I brought home a copy of J. G. Ballard's novel Crash [British Library (BL) article--with further links]––the one about autoerotic automobile crashes?
I've heard of it, but can't quite imagine what it's like, how it works...
(It was made into a movie in 1996––totally different than the 2004 movie of the same name.)
I'm interested to look closer at Crash because I always think it's so very strange––and a good key to understanding how humans work–– and it bothers me that we moderns mostly, in my experience, blithely accept cars as ho-hum, everyday things.
The main objection I hear to cars is that they burn fossil fuels.
Really cars are like frightening science-fiction creations--massive metal machines that move at unnatural speeds, easily and frequently destroying people, animals, trees, things...
Don't most of us know at least one person who was killed in a car accident–– at second hand, if not first?
I can think of several––the worst I was close to being the teenage son of a coworker (in a former job) who was hit in the street after school.
I was at work the day he was killed, and the weird twist was that my coworker, a lovable, brassy lady, had come in that morning freaked out because driving in to work, she had hit and killed a deer.
___________________
I was surprised to see that Crash was published in 1973––seems so modern––and to realize it's the same J. G. Ballard (of course) who wrote Empire of the Sun, about being a boy during WWII in Japanese-occupied Shanghai.
The intro to Crash includes this quote from Ballard that explains why he might see through the mundanity of cars:
"One of the things I took from my wartime experiences was that reality was a stage set ... the comfortable day-to-day life, school, and home where one lives and all the rest of it... could be dismantled overnight."That––reality being "a stage set"––better expresses what I was thinking on my trip than the phrase I wrote yesterday, that "life is a joke".
Looking around the BL site on Ballard, I found this text collage he made in 1958. "Let's get out of time."
a good post.
ReplyDeleteI have never heard of that "Crash" book. Very bizarre!
ReplyDeleteI used to have a copy of the same "Thurber Carnival" book that's in your display!
Thanks, GZ. MORE BIKES!!! :)
ReplyDeleteSTEVE: Yeah, "Crash" does look pretty bizarre...
Hey, you had a lot of cool stuff! Now you have Olga--the coolest!
OMG! I remember when the 1996 movie came out. And think I even started watching it on cable tv at one point but just couldn't get into it.
ReplyDeleteI love the sign "Cool old books & things." You have such an eye. I'm betting the teddy bear planter was a "welcome baby" florist thing.
Kirsten
KIRSTEN: I watched the preview for the 96 movie and thought, OH GOD NO.
ReplyDeleteArt Sparker made that cool sign!
Ah--good guess about the teddy bear planter--I hadn't thought of it.
The funniest (to me) planters are religious ones--they make me laugh to think of their backstory:
"Let's make the Virgin Mary into a planter!"
I haven't seen any of Jesus though...