"With every cigarette, I have a companion for five minutes," she replied as you walked out the door.
Trysts with bodies, images, objects and thoughts: illicit affairs committed by the extraterrestrial who suffers for the want of more human conquest and romance.
I remember a conversation I once had with Matthew Higgs, former curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art in London and now director of White Columns in New York:
Yason: Art is a good reason to wake up and love.
(In response to this foolish platitude, Matthew argued for a more externalized practice of art and love as social acts.)
Matthew: Well, one can embrace more complexities, embrace more geographies, embrace more bodies. Embrace more experiences.
What can we do to make life and love interesting?
Celebrate real life. See love as the art of visual excess tempered by melancholy.
The strangeness of white, the loneliness of silver, the excessiveness of camouflage?
Yes, a visual softness manifested through craft and decoration.
Thirteen crafts materials to decorate your love life wigs, hats, scarves, brooches, beads, sequins, labelling tags, mixed confetti, buttons, shoes, the watch, the mobile phone, the answering machine
Whatever the desire it should be celebrated. Desire as a form of exchange.
Fade in music, You and Me Against the World.
Cut to the film, My Own Private Idaho.
River Phoenix: I really want to be close to you. I really want to kiss you, man.
Keanu Reeves: You know I only have sex with a guy if I get paid. You know that two guys cant really love each other.
River Phoenix: I dont know. I know I can love someone without having to get paid for it.
Isnt love, then, the greatest taboo? Our world right now lacks the ability to look inward, and this loss of psychic space has resulted to fragmented selves suffering for the want of love. I make no moral judgments about this condition. I dont even prescribe that we strive for a wholeness, a transcendence even. On the contrary, I am more interested in the contradictions that both inform and challenge standard human relations and stable subjectivities.
Vergils fallen asleep in his mothers gown. After fixing up the room a little stacking the tapes on the shelves, returning the toiletries to the medicine cabinet, and untangling video cables scattered about the floor Kitty decides its time to go home. Its almost four, but thats okay since no one waits up for her anymore. She cant help but smile when she sees Vergils dark face in the middle of all that white tulle, as though its a kind of gift, like a piece of fragile, tektite-glazed ceramic a squat, angel-faced vase? still cradled in the abundant, whorled softness of its packaging. She takes out the clumsy still-camera from her duffel bag. Its strange she discovers shes not had to use it for sometime now. She steps closer to the bed, thinks of what might be a good angle, and stoops to give Vergil a wee three-second kiss on the plush, delicately parted lips. She steps back to her old position, regains her bearings, trains the cameras eye on the scene, and clicks. A flash, and the sound of tiny cogs and wheels turning. Vergil stirs a little, but quickly falls back to the unknowing solidity of his sleep." J. Neil Garcia, "Kitty and Vergil (for Y)"