Mature Themes

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by Andrew Durbin


  4. Joke written on the back of an airplane napkin: “—The oldest man with a Bieber tattoo is named Catullus #63, the parable of Attis and Cybele.” Neither smile nor grimace: partial facial paralysis, singing to himself as he looks out the window. The fellow seated next to him’s engrossed in an episode of Saved By the Bell. The tattoo above his own heart reads: Buddy Holly.

  — posted 04/08/2013 at 19:50 by >

  MONICA MAJOLI

  I am at the Frieze Art Fair

  on May 18, 2013, and it’s

  raining on the inflatable

  Paul McCarthy sculpture

  of Jeff Koons’s balloon dog.

  I’m looking at a painting

  by Monica Majoli,

  at complex forms rendered

  shadow in the geometry

  of available flesh,

  dissolution of youth in the dark,

  this opening in me like a wound

  without recourse to a mend

  is totally Frieze.

  Frieze is like those jobs

  that say you’ll be compensated

  commensurate with experience.

  How many times have I read that

  as “commiserate,” thinking

  we might “weigh in”

  together to express sympathy

  for my having to beg you

  to pay me a living wage, itself a term

  so vexed in its little assertion

  of a metaphysics of cash

  it hurls me further

  into whatever anally tiny

  rabbit hole I’ve already found myself

  crawling down, toward

  a demon rabbit with a Koch brother’s face.

  The number of times reverses me

  into ecstasies, crucified on the cross

  of precarious employment

  but in so less royally

  a martyrdom I am rent

  anonymous by it.

  Frieze is kind of like that,

  except it’s about buying art,

  which I can’t do.

  And writing about it

  is much worse,

  so I’ve been reading

  Bruce Hainley to get away

  from “the process” of doing so.

  Bruce is the LA-based art critic

  and poet who writes

  about artists that a lot of us

  don’t pay much attention to,

  like Lee Lozano. She

  was so pissed off

  at the art world

  she threw it away,

  left New York after a dispute

  over her rent with her landlord

  in a final piece called Dropout.

  She more or less spent the rest of her life

  living a single, continuous performance

  as someone totally outside

  of the art world, reclaiming

  the space that surrounds it,

  redoubled in sequestration

  of the suburbs where how many of us originate,

  her the suburbs of Texas, me

  the suburbs of Florida, Monica Majoli

  the generalized suburb of Los Angeles.

  I’m reading Bruce’s writing in Pep Talk,

  a small art mag produced somewhere,

  I can’t tell where from its website,

  but probably LA,

  where everything cool

  comes from to die back east.

  Ben Fama lent it to me

  one afternoon after I quoted this from a blogpost of Bruce’s in an email to him: “I like pros, especially when it comes to tennis and rent boys”—and here I’m really wondering if the pun on prose consolidates Bruce’s feeling toward it versus poetry under the sign of sex, which Bruce sometimes pays for, in order to direct us toward the pleasure of its use-function when monetized, a pleasure seldom associated with poetry, and one that might lead to the company of more pros. He continues: “If I can get a twofer, and the trick looks like Rafael Nadal, I’m in heaven.”

  I’m in heaven

  when I google image search Rafael Nadal

  and find him radiating solar joy

  on the home page of the New York Times,

  having just advanced in some open

  I’ve already forgotten the name of,

  proving to us

  that the champions

  of the world

  still wear jockey shorts.

  I might collapse in a heap

  he’s so hot. Bruce

  has been everywhere

  in my life recently. Last night,

  I went to a party

  and ran into Alan Gilbert.

  We discussed Bruce’s

  really great new piece

  on Monica Majoli in Artforum.

  Bruce starts with this description

  of Michael Jackson, whose death

  spiked such an inarticulate

  slush of feeling,

  of feeling so sick to my

  stomach when a friend

  called me to tell me the news

  while I was walking down Magazine Street

  in New Orleans,

  I almost threw up

  and had to sit down. Bruce writes: “Forgoing outright atrocity, of which there is so much—too much—right now, aren’t the ‘life,’ ‘body,’ and ‘face’ of Michael Jackson in the running for some of the most abstract events of the last century? (I use the tweezers of scare quotes to approach each of those precarious terms because I’m not certain I could handle them at all otherwise.) ‘His’ face and its occlusion, in the final years, when any nose he had was entirely prosthetic (not to mention the permanent eyeliner and chemical bleaching), became a brutal inversion of all the solar joy he beamed as a young performer—that is, when his face appeared at all, since he was prone to wearing what appeared to be a niqab, ‘transgendering’ his complicated presence as much as cloaking it. I’m bringing up Jackson’s ‘desire,’ every bit as abstract as it was intractable, because his ‘desire’ strikes me as even more elusive and imponderable, although many during his lifetime supposed they understood what he repressed or compensated for, even if a fundamental component of whatever his desire might have been remained the sense that he seemed constitutionally uncoupled (and uncouplable).” Wow, right?

  Monica’s work is really great.

  In particular this crucifixion-like

  scene of a BDSM orgy

  in which one subject

  is hung up on a cross of boys

  who pleasure him:

  one boy is half burying

  his face in Christ’s ass

  while another boy has the tip

  of Christ’s cock dipped in his mouth.

  I guess I like Monica’s painting

  for the ecstasy in which Christ finds himself

  nailed to a cross by bodies who crave him,

  subjugating fear, this physical imposition

  of desire that restrains him

  and through which he finds himself

  desirable. S/M frees you

  to a sex without romance,

  formats desire on these

  interpersonal axes that belie

  the fantasy that drives it,

  allowing our interactions

  to match a preset system

  of behaviors we are already aware of

  and introducing within its grid

  a notational set of inputs

  that activate certain desired

  outputs. Nothing is veiled

  in order to forefront

  the point of the act

  in the first place,

  and from this the world’s

  primal motion is set onward—

  So, like, I know I like

  to get tied down

  and jerked off. And for my partner,

  that’s really, really clear,

  you know? Frieze

  is kind of like that, too,

  totally honest

&nbs
p; about its tradeshow quality,

  even if that honesty betrays an unhappiness

  not quite depressed in its paralyzed tears

  but certainly deprived of recourse

  to the promissory world of liberation

  it might have once suggested.

  Flow my tears, the painter said. Or, as Majoli once wrote, “I only paint actual experiences, not fantasies. Within that I elaborate and alter things in the environment, but the activities and the rooms and objects in the interiors are ‘factual.’ So in this way I view the paintings as documentary, as a way for me to memorialize events and relationships. The male sex scenes began when a close friend of mine started to go to underground pissparties and became increasingly involved with S/M sex. I had always been fascinated by his anonymous encounters with men. I envied the nonverbal quality and the absolute sexual abandon of his experiences. AIDS confused all this—and I began to wonder about this decision to pursue this despite the consequences. I understood his desire to ‘connect’ through sex regardless of the cost. I viewed these paintings as religious, although I still can’t explain this. As I continued to paint I slowly realized that I was identifying, uncomfortably so, with the masochist in the composition. I switched reluctantly to images of myself when I fell deeply in love with a woman and felt compelled to paint her after our relationship ended. These autobiographical paintings all involve dildos. Right now, I’m working on a round painting in which I’m fucking myself with one dildo while sucking on a double-headed dildo. The feeling I want to express is of a huge emptiness and isolation. I haven’t figured out why dildos are the central ‘props’ in those paintings. I think it has to do with this false tool—that the mind wants to make real. Using a fake device to try to communicate with a lover or comfort oneself—so in a way this communication or connection is ultimately doomed. The body fragments are self-portraits that I began when I first painted the scenes. In this way I felt it was like a conversation between the intimacy of the details and the voyeuristic, removed quality of the scenes. I feel that both bodies of work concern the same issues—the body fragments address mortality and vulnerability more directly. I chose parts of the body that seemed particularly fragile. The parts are either cut or in a state of exposure to describe the perils of love and simultaneously, the compulsion to love.”

  I’m sitting in a café

  in Brooklyn, texting James La Marre,

  listening to Ariel Pink’s

  “Symphony of a Nymph,”

  writing about Monica Majoli.

  It’s late spring,

  surprisingly brisk

  for this rainy mid-May. I guess

  I’m so over “it,”

  another season’s change

  so vexed as to render

  its character meaningless

  in its punishing irregularity,

  over even the famous path of trees

  that line Eastern Parkway,

  where I sat texting this morning

  below the lush panoply

  of sky slinking

  over the concrete.

  I texted Ben,

  I texted Kate,

  I called my mom,

  and yet the simplicity of these actions

  failed to regulate my sense

  of their eventual removal

  from the things I do. Looking back,

  doesn’t everything seem cryptic,

  sealed in its place

  a symbol of the near impossible exchange

  between times once alike but denied

  the way back to one another,

  like the scrunched face of Rafael Nadal

  when he lost Wimbledon,

  his face no longer legible as a holy thing,

  I thought wow, Rafael,

  if I could be there for you, I would.

  Anyway, wherever I am

  I’m not with you,

  whoever you in the plural are,

  by now I’m all the way down the line

  into garbage time,

  embalmed in its vision

  of an apocalypse

  tearing up what’s left of

  life in universe zero,

  where perhaps our love

  will be stored

  on a hard drive

  forever, fastened

  to its post-physical life away

  from things as they really are.

  Maybe it’s the afterglow of the end

  in Monica Majoli’s paintings,

  a light which dissolves us

  in one form only to restructure us

  in another. Who is my preserver?

  Descended into this

  crystal hard drive,

  I am stationed among the nodes

  asserting me in the various networks

  that have become feeling.

  Soon the one world

  we have found flattened

  in its emergent disunity

  will annihilate itself

  in a compromise with fate

  and the physics

  of this cooling universe

  dissipating so slowly

  it will be like nothing

  ever changed.

  I WENT DOWN TO THE BEACH

  I went down to the beach and wrote a book called The Beach, inspired by Heart of Darkness, a novel about the perils of inadequately supervised interaction between codified behavior and the Other. To put it more directly, I wrote a novel based on a novel about the degradation of white leadership in the face of non-Western local practice exoticized in fantasy rather than observation. Exterior: the jungle. Interior: Dark night of the white man’s soul. In my novel about the beach, which takes place in a remote region of Thailand, a boy is given a map by a man named Daffy Duck that points to a beach where few people have ever been, largely because of how treacherous the path to it is. Richard, the main character, leads a French couple and later two Harvard graduates on an adventure to the beach, an adventure in which they encounter frictional social elements (like an evil marijuana plantation) that attempt to deter them from traveling to the beach. Finally, they jump off a waterfall, float down a river, and meet a highly organized totalitarian society of expatriates ruled by an American woman named Sal. This is the most significant reference to Heart of Darkness. Their time at the beach is filled with curious events that create a compelling plot of intrigue, like when they run out of rice and Jed, “the enigmatic loner of the group,” volunteers to go for a rice run. Richard, accompanying him, realizes it is time to escape. Tribe members die. Social complexities contribute to pain, paranoia, and euthanasia. I would describe all of this in greater detail but you have to read my book The Beach. To escape, Richard spikes the tribe’s stew one night with marijuana so that everyone is incapacitated by an “overloaded high.” He flees with the French couple and Jed, into the night, “back to civilization.”

  I went down to the beach and adapted my book called The Beach for the big screen, inspired by Apocalypse Now, a movie about the perils of inadequately supervised interaction between codified behavior (played by Marlon Brando) and the Other (played by a number of underpaid local Filipino workers). To put it more directly, I adapted my novel using a film about the degradation of white leadership in the face of non-Western local practice exoticized in fantasy rather than observation. Exterior: the jungle. Interior: Dark night of Marlon Brando’s soul. In the film version of my novel about the beach, which takes place in a remote region of Thailand, a boy (played by Leonardo DiCaprio) is given a map by a man named Daffy Duck (played by Robert Carlyle) that points to a beach where few people have ever been, largely because of how treacherous the path to it is. Richard, the main character, leads a French couple (played by Virginie Ledoyen and Guillaume Canet) and later two American surfers on an adventure to the beach, an adventure in which they encounter frictional social elements (like an evil marijuana plantation) that attempt to deter them from traveling to the beach. Finally, they jump off a waterfall, float down a river,
and meet a highly organized totalitarian society of expatriates ruled by an American woman named Sal (played by Tilda Swinton). This is the most significant reference to Apocalypse Now. Their time at the beach is filled with curious events that create a compelling plot of intrigue, like when Christo (played by Staffan Kihlbom) is injured and Sal volunteers to go to the mainland for medical supplies. Richard realizes it is time to escape. Tribe members die. Social complexities contribute to pain, paranoia, and euthanasia. I would describe all of this in greater detail but you have to see my movie The Beach. To escape, Richard flees the tribe after the marijuana farmers violently disrupt the community’s activities. He flees with Sal, into the night, “back to civilization.”

  At the premier of The Beach, Leonardo DiCaprio stole away from the theater three times to the use the restroom. Sitting near him, I couldn’t help but notice him leaving so often, and decided after the third time he exited the theater to follow him to see if anything was wrong. Didn’t he like the film I’d adapted from the book I’d written? I pushed my way out of my row.

  As I walked up the theater aisle, past friends glittering in the changing light of the projection, each smiling or nodding at me as they watched me pass by, I thought about the conditions under which I’d begun the novel. I had originally meant to set The Beach in New York in 2012. It was going to be about the hostilities of an emergent, troubling climate in which a flurry of deadly natural events wreck the lives of those living in the city. Shortly after Hurricane Sandy “compromised” the coast and shut down much of New Jersey, Staten Island, Brooklyn, and Manhattan, the news wrote my novel itself and I decided that I would invert the reality into a narrative of departure rather than arrival. I wanted to chase the storm, so I set my novel and my film at the beach, away from a city broken by the weather that would play no role in my work.

  I entered the lobby and asked an attendant if he knew where Leo had gone. “He’s in the bathroom to the right,” he said. “He didn’t look well, actually. I think he’s planning to go.”

  “Thanks,” I said. In the hallway that led to the bathroom, the theater piped in Katy Perry’s “Firework.” Its poppy burst of good feelings and helium-inflated enthusiasm for the body unleashed in a rush of heady endorphins, acceptance of anyone and everyone no matter who or what they are, felt incongruous outside my brittle, unsettling film, in the silent lobby with its dim lights that made even my most beautiful, famous friends look like strange ghosts, haunting the image of themselves. I pictured Katy throwing her arms open to Budapest in the music video, fireworks exploding from her breasts into the hot night and wished at the moment I was there with her, in Hungarian summer and not in New York’s brutal winter.

 

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