Here is probably the best thing I’ve seen while walking in Hollywood in
recent times:
Friday, August 25, 2017
GROUNDED IN CALIFORNIA
It’s an outline of
California, right? On Selma Avenue. And I can’t decide whether it’s deliberate,
whether some waggish road crew deliberately put it there while filling in a hole
of a completely different shape, or whether my pareidolia is just getting out of
control.
Sunday, August 20, 2017
THE PHILOSOPHER'S WALK
“He
that endeavors to enter into the Philosopher’s Garden without a key, is like
him who would walk without feet.”
The
above quotation and image are from a 1617 alchemical “emblem book” by Michael Maier (aka Michael Majerus) titled “Atalanta
Fugiens, The Flying Atalanta or Philosophical Emblems of the Secrets
of Nature.”
It
consists of 50 emblems (what we might call epigrams) each with an illustration
(by Matthäus Merian) along with a discussion or discourse
about the emblem, and then a related piece of music in the form of a
fugue.
Alchemy isn’t exactly an open book to me, but that emblem above
- “Emblema XXVII” - sounds fair enough. You
need a key to alchemy, you need feet for walking. However a couple of observations emerge from looking
at that image.
First, the fellow there doesn’t seem to be much hindered by the
lack of feet. He’s standing up well
enough and could presumably put one stump in front of the other. It probably wouldn’t be the easiest
locomotion, and I imagine he couldn’t get very far very fast, but since he can
stand he would, in some way or other, be able to walk.
Second, although the scale in the image seems a bit wayward,
it looks as though anybody, preferably (though not necessarily) somebody with
feet, could get over that wall without too much trouble.
Mind you, I expect most alchemists are not great climbers; or walkers.
Friday, August 18, 2017
Sunday, August 6, 2017
SAM'S WALKING WISDOM
"And having heard, or more probably read somewhere, in the days
when I thought I would be well advised to educate myself, or amuse myself, or
stupefy myself, or kill time, that when a man in a forest thinks he is going
forward in a straight line, in reality he is going in a circle, I did my best
to go in a circle, hoping in this way to go in a straight line. For I stopped
being half-witted and became sly, whenever I took the trouble. And my head was
a storehouse of useful knowledge. And if I did not go in a rigorously straight
line, with my system of going in a circle, at least I did not go in a circle,
and that was something. And by going on doing this, day after day, and night
after night, I looked forward to getting out of the forest, some day."
Wednesday, August 2, 2017
OF WALKING AND WRAPPING
The days have been hot – pushing 90
degrees – and it’s been humid (that’s known as “monsoonal moisture” in these
parts), but I’ve been walking because it’s what I do. And of course I’ve been doing it early-ish or
late-ish in the day to avoid the worst of the heat, and I’ve been walking more
or less in the neighborhood, although trying to head for those streets that, for
one reason or another, I never usually walk down.
It must be a few years since I walked past
the garden below, with its blue glass decorations. It’s right alongside the street, and most of
those bottles and vases are just a stone’s throw away, and yet they remain
intact. This seems a reason to be cheerful.
They’ve been trimming – pollarding, I
suppose is the word - the trees in parts of the neighborhood – a huge
operation, big trucks, a big crew, a big mess, especially when it comes to the
ficus trees – a job that needs doing, and it doesn’t do the trees any harm, they'll be back just as big next year, but
of course it does mean there are certain sidewalks where you can’t walk at
all. And it must be said that the guys
on the crew, while by no means hostile, didn’t look very cheerful: maybe it’s the heat, and maybe the one below just
doesn’t like being photographed.
Now, I don’t know much
about the school system in Los Angeles.
Some people say it’s a disaster, some people send their kids to public
schools (which means exactly the opposite in the States than it does in
Britain) and they say they’re fine. Even
so, this sign warning drivers that there’s a school nearby, may be a symbol
that not everything is absolutely as it should be.
Of course you can’t (and shouldn’t) walk
in LA without being aware of the traffic.
Mostly it’s about avoidance, and yet my inner motorhead never quite
gives up, and when I see a truck like this one, my heart does leap just a
little.
And you know, I’m always fascinated by the
wrapped cars of Los Angeles that I see when I’m walking. I know there are wrapped cars in plenty of
other places but I’ve never seen so many as here, and I’m never sure whether
it’s for protection from the sun or to dissuade low-lifes from running a
screwdriver along your paintwork, not that one precludes the other. Sometimes
it’s a full cover:
Sometimes just half:
But how about this one, gift-wrapped, padded,
in disguise:
As you can probably work out, this is some
some kind of forthcoming model from one of the big manufacturers, being secretly
road-tested. Of course, a cynic might
think that under the disguise there’s going to be some big, ugly, penis-substitute of a pickup truck, essentially no different from any of the
other monsters on the roads. My inner
motorhead can be pretty cynical.
And of course, the Los Angeles housing
crisis rumbles on, and here’s one feller who’s found a temporary solution:
It looks like one of those “forts” that
kids build in their grandparents’ back yards, although since the guy was passed
out and there was “drug paraphernalia” visible on the mattress, the phrase “not
in my back yard” sprang rather readily to mind.
Labels:
Hollywood,
PEACE,
PITBULL,
POLLARDING,
TRUCK
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