Some inhabitants of Los Angeles (I’m one of
them) regularly complain about the lack of public space. Oh sure there’s are biggish parks – Griffith
Park is over 4000 acres – but going there can be a major expedition, especially
when all you want is somewhere to sit for twenty minutes and eat a sandwich. You need a little area – doesn’t have to be
fancy - with a bit of grass and a bench, the kind of thing you find all over
London and other cities. This kind of
thing:
For a long time there used to be a bench
in my neighborhood. It wasn’t strictly
public, I think, because it was on a long thin strip of land that actually
belonged to somebody’s house. Clearly it
was unusable as part of a garden, and there was no point fencing it off because
that made it even less usable. And so
the land was left open, and a bench placed there for the public weal.
In ten years of walking around the local
streets I believe I saw the bench being used exactly twice. I sat on it a couple of times myself because
I felt it should be embraced, but nobody could pretend it was a great local resource.
And in any case, it’s now gone.
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Of
course I noticed this a while ago on one of my daily walk, but I’d never got
around to photographing the bench’s absence (for obvious
reasons).
Even as a bit of negative
space I realize it’s not much of a picture, but here’s the beauty part.
Until I tried to photograph the absence of
the bench I hadn’t noticed the presence of that shiny new, white, replacement wooden fence behind it.
Walking:
I do believe it sharpens up the powers of observation. But sometimes you need a nudge.
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