The word “community” gets thrown around a lot, often with little if any justification. A group of people who hold the same political view on a given issue commonly aren’t communing with each other. I share with many others a dark view of Mr. Trump and reactionaries’ attempts to keep certain voters from voting, but I don’t “commune” with all those others just because we share an opinion or revulsion. Some Northerners before the Civil War opposed slavery because they felt that it was a violation of the spirit of God and indispensable human values. But many Northerners opposed it rather because they didn’t want more “coloreds” coming to live and work among whites like them in order to escape from slavery in the South.
I do, however, feel a strong sense of community with some people, many of them living and even more of them long-dead, who’ve had certain types of visions, seen certain realities, had certain emotions, beyond the merely topical or intellectual – and who worked devotedly enough on themselves and their art that they could make works able to evoke within me something of what they experienced or intended. I constantly draw strength from communion with those people, through reading their words, listening to their music, viewing works that they painted, sculpted, or photographed.
In dejection from all the awful and discouraging news about reactionary political victories, rampant viral sub-variants, catastrophic droughts, and increasing violence (as well as, for me, unhappy views about my own self), I found myself doing something that I’ve done on occasion over the years, especially under stress: I was hand-writing, long past midnight, a list of my favorite artists and mystical writers. That exercise can calm and comfort me. not just as an obsessive-compulsive ritual, but as a reminder of real treasures that I’ve been given, for inspiration and illumination.
With this in mind, I’ll describe a very recent experience I had. For about twenty years, I’ve had a group of three friends with whom I’ve talked about various matters photographic, and with whom I’ve gone shooting and exhibition-viewing when we can. These days, as you’ll appreciate, it’s hard to preserve such ties and such benefits. As others do, we at least try to hold periodic video gatherings of our little tribe. During one of those the other month, I told the three of them that I’d enjoy making each of them a print of any of my images at any size that my printer would allow. One of the amigos, Kevin, asked me for a print of the image below, “The One Blue Expanse,” to hang in an office that he’s building in his basement. I don’t want to write “about” this photograph now. I’d just be grateful if you’d look at it and let yourself be absorbed in it for a moment before finishing this story. (Don’t miss the duck’s silhouette at middle left!)
(For a better view, go to: https://lawrenceruss.com/index/G0000u7qnNbBVMg8/I0000F0j._OxU7_g .)
After sending him the print he wanted, I got an e-mail from Kevin, saying that he’d received it, and thanking me for it.
The day after getting his note, I returned to a wonderful book that I’d been rereading for the umpteenth time, but that I hadn’t read in many years: One Hundred Poems from the Japanese, translated by Kenneth Rexroth. Opening to my bookmark, the first work that I read was the following four-line poem by Fujiwara No Tadamichi, “who was Regent and Prime Minister in the latter part of the twelfth century”:
As I row over the plain
Of the sea and gaze
From the distance, the waves
Merge with the bright sky.
If that sky was bright for Fujiwara, then the one expanse that he saw was almost certainly also blue. His poem seems to mirror the experience behind and within my photograph. As I’ve written in these posts before, I don’t believe in coincidences; I believe in coincidings. Whatever you or I may believe is responsible for the occurrence of such a peaceful, felt communion as this, across divides of time (about a millennium) and geography (thousands of miles) and social class (middle class versus aristocracy) and culture, I take it as a gift, as evidence of the miracle and worth of art, and I’m grateful for all such things in these times which, for more and more people, have brought to mind these lines from Yeats’s “The Second Coming”:
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all convictions, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
God be praised for all genuine art, and for any small communion of peace that comes to us.