Faucet Repair

I take the bus home from the studio most nights now, and around this transition from fall to winter is when it becomes a sort of public hibernation space. The smaller the hours, the more bodies morph into hooded cocoons of shadow and fabric. I’m always fascinated by how people choose to fill their idle time behind these walls—imagining their interior lives is often my own modus. I enjoy the fragmented glimpses of football obsessives late to livestreams and kids snapping crushes their smizing faces. The best are messages drafted and deleted, the raw instinct before the panache. But if I don’t have the energy to steal glances, I usually just stare off into space trying to let the day dissipate from my chest. Feels good to make room for my thoughts to fuse with reflections of other passengers, to come down with the moonrise as we go our own ways together.


No Smiling

Growing up in front of my mom’s camera, I was trained early to obey her lone photographic directive: “no smiling.”

I have more than a few memories of watching first-time subjects react with visible discomfort to this rule. But after a lifetime of confronting her lens, I’ve come to understand its function as a mnemonic portal to an ethos grounded in uncompromising empathy.

What it really holds is a desire to portray unfiltered truths in and of individual people. To lift whatever veil stands between her subjects and their ability to let their insides out. Look at enough of my mom’s images and you’ll start to notice how often she shoots from their perspectives; she’s on the ground with infants learning to crawl, meeting animal gazes on all fours, or crouching into a child’s eyes.

It’s this merging instinct that allows her to dissolve walls (and conjure the kinds of smiles she authorizes, which are the ones that can’t be helped). In her pictures we witness first kisses and changing bodies in bathroom mirrors. Bare pregnant bellies and secrets in playground crannies. Private naps and baby butts. The distinction between domestic and public blurs—she inspires intimacy naturally.

Like any kid blindly craving autonomy, I went through a period of time where I reacted to this impulse with embarrassment. I think my siblings felt similarly. I didn’t understand why she couldn’t leave us or anyone else alone. Why an awkward Halloween costume or mid-shift cigarette or good light on a face just had to be captured.

That our family became a small army of artists is proof enough that we all eventually understood. But what struck me after spending time with the totality of her work, (thanks to my sister Tessa, who led the charge through decades of negatives when we decided to produce this show together), was the way it reflected her selfless approach to motherhood.

Because a mother knows that it’s messy business when we’re launched into a world of endless choices and find ourselves fumbling around in the dark for our identities. How clothes and haircuts and hobbies don’t fit. How lovers and friends come and go. A mother recognizes that lives are sculpted from these sputtering moments and, very often at her own expense, teaches us that we are not alone in them. That they are not only worth remembering, but celebrating. How radically this empowers a young mind to see life as a gift is immeasurable. That is love.

So No Smiling, then, is a product of love. It’s a gesture of gratitude for our mom’s unifying vision and total sacrifice. For her fierce devotion to creating and forever preserving space for us to learn; to be ourselves, to be of service, to be together.


Winchester Cathedral

The air in the crypt around Sound II was thick with nine hundred and forty-five years of spirits. Seam lines and watermarks gave the sculpture an inhuman symmetry, but its leaden casing vibrated like skin. It was angled away from a window such that a black shadow halved its skull and shot from its heels. Arches in the ceiling rolled hollow hills over it. I took a picture of the figure with my phone and noted that it looked miles away on the screen. Upon this vertigo I ducked and spiraled up stone stairs out of the crypt and into the church’s towering rib cage. Gaze down I shuffled towards any way out when a black marble slab caught my sole. I was standing on Jane Austen, the “sweetness of her temper” at my toes.

Eventually I located an exit past a cross-eyed receptionist who said the double doors would feel locked but just needed an extra push. Their suction gave with a grunt and suddenly cut to clouds hung high in gray-blue over neon green sequin trees sprouting from little knolls scattered with life and graves. A mother pushed a stroller really slowly. Two young girls recapped a film on a concrete bench. A dog sniffing free from its lead lifted its leg to pee on a headstone next to a couple on a blanket who were giggling at an accidentally anthropomorphized drawing of a sheep. A waddling crow cocked its head at a berry on the ground. There was also a bloody-nosed beetle in the grass, and on my knees I could see its antennae bend from a gust of wind.


Recently I’ve been drawn to paintings that feel like they’re right on the verge of falling apart. A tattered blanket that’s been in a family home’s circulation for years and will never die. It's related to touch—I’ve become repelled by sheen, gloss, smooth buttery blends, impressive flash-bang facades. Maybe one day I’ll come back around to searching for the fickle alien in Technique, but currently I can’t visualize it. It’s receding too quickly in the rearview. Give me instead a home in Daumier's Don Quixote and Sancho Panza sketch. Or Mamma Andersson’s Swannery. A hand making marks, roving around, touching and touching and remembering and forgetting in a state of pulsing affirmation. This rigid, dumb, loud, deceptive, botoxed moment needs rough, dirty, loose, economical, quiet, humble maps. With space to breathe and a steady beat. I’ve been painting to D’Angelo’s Voodoo.

And last week there was a 120 hour stretch of only Elliott Smith. I was (happily) stuck in his world. It’s known that he was big on The Beatles, and I couldn’t help but notice that he carried on their tradition of peppering the message with genre paintings. “Michelle,” “Eleanor Rigby,” “Lovely Rita,” “Martha My Dear,” “Rocky Raccoon,” “Julia,” etc. Elliott has “Clementine,” “Sweet Adeline,” “Amity,” “Pretty Mary Kay,” etc. Imagined models in specific situations speaking to big ideas. This equation tastes right to me in my own realm right now. Duty free came about that way when being nose to nose with love made me think globally.


Date

I burst into the Tate late enough to panic-scatter the contents of my backpack across the museum’s concrete floor. She glided over, put her hand on my shoulder and suggested the rooftop lounge to decompress before the show.

We leaned over London as it spiked a pink sunset. An isosceles skyscraper burned white with mirrored light like the tip of a giant utility knife. Construction cranes flamingoed across the expanse. We talked about the world as a petri dish, humans sprouting and returning to the earth like bacteria, and how mystifying it is for a character to be written into another’s life with no exposition. We compared the shapes of our languages and flipped through Lunch Poems.

Then we walked through Guston’s life. She was drawn to reds and figuration dissolving. I felt something devotional in his centered symbols and a spark from what he said about unnumbing oneself to brutality (though in her presence I realized it also applied to tenderness). She moved quickly through the room until she became glued, just like I do.

I chose a place for dinner that was a walk away, and as we approached it she let out a sharp laugh—turned out her twin waited tables there. Then hours evaporated. Her name held “the beauty of art” in Korean. Nature was her Great Creator. She also left home for perspectives she couldn’t conceptualize at the time.

Her sister’s boyfriend worked at a hotel bar down the street. On the way there, the moon was intensely full. A luminous silver retina. It watched us through the lobby’s glass facade as we clinked lagers. I learned about someone who had, like me, spent incalculable hours shaping solitude into a home. Who had, like me, developed a taste for contradiction; her deeply sensitive aura belied the image of her hours later outside Waterloo Station, umber hair snaking down a leather jacket toward a super slim smoldering between black fingernails, smoke curling around the shine of her amber-brown eyes.

At the bar, she kept accidentally kicking me under the table when she would cross her legs, instinctively apologizing each time. After the third sorry, I told her she was in fact allowed to touch me and offered my hand on the tabletop. She slowly scanned my palm lines, then pressed her fingers into them for a blink of charged silence. I asked her what she was thinking. Then I felt my corners round as she re-met my gaze and told me the truth.


Teachers

Noah Davis, Piero, George Tooker, Nicole Eisenman, Brett Whiteley, Catherine Murphy is in the house, Paula Rego, Sargent, Lois Dodd, Alex Katz, Joe Brainard, Wilhelm Sasnal, Paul Cadmus, Thomas Hart Benton, Inka Essenhigh, Philip Pearlstein, Frank Moore, Frida Kahlo, Chronis Botsoglou, Sibylle Ruppert, Henry Taylor, Sophie Calle, Daumier, Robin F. Williams, Jack Whitten, Jessie Homer French, Jasper Johns, Nyoman Masriadi, Anna Weyant, Justin Liam O’Brien, Rosemarie Trockel, Degas, Aubrey Levinthal, Ingres is in the house, Ruprecht von Kaufmann, Jesse Mockrin, Munch, Grant Wood, Leonor Fini, Tristan Unrau, Justin John Greene, Seth Becker, Eric Fischl, Luchita Hurtado, Emile Meunier, Jennifer Packer, John Currin, Lisa Yuskavage, Nicholas Bierk, Freud, Todd Bienvenu, Georgia O’Keeffe, Goya, Ray Johnson, Ivan Seal, Kyle Dunn, Kerry James Marshall, Gareth Cadwallader, Georg Scholz, Ana Mendieta, Christian Rex van Minnen, Issy Wood, Matthew Wong, Austin Harris, Wayne Thiebaud, Jane Dickson, Richter, Raina Seung Eun Jung, Co Westerik, Neo Rauch, Paul Landacre, Alice Neel, Matt Bollinger, Shannon Cartier Lucy, Peter Blume, Maud Madsen, Peter Doig, Vija Celmins, Dylan Vandenhoeck, Judith Leyster is in the house yeah, Duchamp, Ruba Nadar, Graham Sutherland, Hockney, Velázquez, Jonathan Tignor, Tschabalala Self, Hopper, Lee Lozano, Martin Wong, Guston, Leonardo, Marisol, Gregory Gillespie, Cézanne, James Castle, Pyke Koch, Peeter Allik, Kent O’Connor, Heide Fasnacht, Brett Bigbee, Haley Josephs, Félix Vallotton…


A good bruise goes a long way because it remembers a Hereditary outburst. And straining for a low pass knob. And a fart first impression. And legal action by association. And pouring nuclear hot sauce all over its food with a broom to its head. And hearing gunshots at the front door and then hiding in its bedroom only to step in dog shit in the dark. And when laundry was too expensive, getting on its hands and knees to wring it in a dirty bathtub. And a cop’s flashlight like a tunnel to the passenger seat. And losing some scalp getting out of the car under barbed wire. And fighting the Anima under the spell of dark matter. And the rush of illegal dumping within legshot of a ranger. And a shadow downing beer after beer because it was the only cold thing. And mini escapes to the coffee shop shackle, the cotton mouth walk. And an army of tiny knives carving into its ribs. And laughing detonations outside its bedroom window. And Marvin Gaye with no curtains. And demons crawling out of its night stomach. And an inability to keep time. And permanent ongoing renovations. And shaving a circle down to a single molecular point. And a broken axle road trip. And a looking glass living room. And waves of dried sweat marking hat circumference. And garaging detritus. And a clean mirror in a familiar bathroom. And sleep in the shape of a fetus.

And the sun on a pulley in the morning.


Enuresis / Using A Dating App

As I slip underneath my sheets, I remember being told in a doctor’s office that it would stop happening if I stopped thinking about it.

“Take a date night, for example. A case of how your brain benefits from distraction.

You’re cuddled up on a couch in the living room of a foreign flat. A depleted candle has thickened the air with cinnamon. Earlier you went to a bar for watery cocktails, which you’ve since chased with two barely refrigerated beers. A shaky internet connection brings a romantic comedy in and out of focus at irregular intervals. During quiet scenes, you can hear your nostrils.

As the end credits roll, you zombie through a hallway into a low-ceilinged bedroom with a mirrored wardrobe facing the bed. You’re pulled into pillows and remember taking a salsa class years ago where you were told to lead on the first day. You flip over and catch a glimpse of your idiot silhouette contorting in the mirror. An air conditioning unit sputters and pops into gear, coating the room with a loud, deep-throated exhale. Two dogs trade barks and snarls somewhere down the street, sparking hysteria in another one next door. Upstairs a toilet flushes and sends water scattering through plumbing in the walls like blood pumping through a vast capillary network, followed by thuds and thuds and thuds and thuds of iron soles above a booming string arrangement swelling from the living room as a white light shoots into the hallway, an algorithm starting another film you might like.

You wake up first. You stretch your legs and clock the sweetest friction. You deflate into a new day.”


After three years of espousing the virtues of an absolute indifference to thematic cohesion across one’s body of work, I’ve found myself working in a series for the first time.

Oddly, the planet that has exploded into thousands of smaller islands is the world of rock climbing. Specifically, indoor rock climbing gyms. Even more precisely, Sender One in Los Angeles, where Grey climbs. It only took one visit—I went with him and Tessa for a couple hours earlier this month and the floodgates opened.

Firstly, the visuals. If big rock candy mountains shooting towards the sky with tons of planar changes along the way weren’t dramatic enough, they’re pocked with hundreds of multicolored holds ranging from tiny pink gumdrops to suitcase-sized black monoliths. Marked with tags identifying the difficulty of color-coordinated routes, they’re a chromatic choose-your-own-adventure-to-the-summit display. The fact that everyone can see your choice as you stand under these rainbow proposals lays a core question bare: will you choose the comfortable path or risk public failure (perhaps even humiliation) on the more challenging one?

These limb ledges are also fascinating for their truly psychedelic geometry. There’s such a diversity of designs, from oblong red hourglasses to giant lemon wedges to lime green knolls. And their shapes shift as bodies interact with them—one image since imprinted is of a focused climber’s downcast profile next to an amoeba-like splotch of blue with a protrusion that echoed his nose. Like a taxidermied Blue Meanie.

Then there’s the element of body language (my one true love). Never have I been somewhere with so many people voluntarily contorting at once. Watching strangers pretzel themselves onto precarious perches (sorry), I daydreamed about their walks of life. Was the guy mountain goating a microscopic dot in a crucified pose an OB-GYN in bloody scrubs an hour before? Was the woman peering down between her split legs an accountant who just finished crunching her client’s numbers? These were the city’s bipedal sidewalk stoics brought onto all fours and inverted.

What this leads to is an environment that feels like a Ministry of Silly Walks on the y-axis, but there’s also the palpable texture of desire in the air. What I mean by this has less to do with spandex-accentuated bodies and more with constant reaching and reaching and reaching. I’m fixated on this part of it, of arms and then hands and then fingers like spiders straining and grasping for those last few centimeters. Like a defibrillator to my melodramatic heart are the moments where the next move is just beyond the wingspan, so the only choice left is to jump.

But to do so, climbers are legally required to be strapped into a harness connected to a trained someone on the ground who is responsible for their safety. A fascinating dynamic where one person’s ascension is literally bound to another’s humble support. In my case it was Grey who knotted me up and gave me the green light. On the highest climb I did that day, I remember his voice offering tips and reminders as I pulled myself up onto the first set of pegs. These turned to affirmations as I found my rhythm, then faint mutters as I climbed higher still.

In the final push to the top, I remember the sounds below falling away entirely. Being left with my own heaving breaths and a deep focus on one choice at a time was utterly meditative (not unlike pitching, actually), and for a few flowy minutes I took great pleasure in meeting myself where I was. Then it was time to come down.


Incision Inventory:

The most recent one is a tiny crater carved out of my left ring finger. Last night I had Punch Drunk Love blaring from my computer on the kitchen counter while I made dinner, and as I was peeling potatoes for a mash, a loud noise in the film yanked my glance away from the spuds and punctuated a sharp sting. Of note: blood pooling on the cutting board while Jeremy Blake’s abstractions floated in and out of focus.

Next is a slightly smaller poke, almost perfectly round, situated smack in the middle of the webbing between my left index and middle fingers. It was a few days ago while sitting in the front seat of the upstairs section on the 295 bus. Someone had left an empty energy drink can on the ground, and between stops it was rolling back and forth in front of my toes trying to get my attention. It did, so I reached into my backpack to grab a pencil. I keep all of them in a tightly-packed internal pocket and make sure they’re oriented points-down for these situations, but somehow one of them had flipped in transit and decided to bite me when I plunged my digits into its nest.

Third-freshest was a tick-sized blister on my right middle finger that stealthily popped while I was vigorously jamming power chords in my room one night last week. The song in question was MJ Lenderman’s “SUV,” (I prefer the version from his November ‘23 live album), an absolute banger that has enchanted my millions of imaginary fans and kept my neighbors awake regularly over the past couple of weeks.

Flip my right hand over and we meet crime scene number four, another skin balloon that burst on a toes-to-bar skill training day at Crossfit. I purchased some apathetically-reviewed, Amazon-recommended grips to prevent this very thing from happening, but alas, the gear/chalk powder/correct technique precautions still did not prevent my moisturized epidermis from surrendering to the weight of my body.

Same goes for one in the exact same spot on the other hand that happened just days earlier.

Rounding out this handsome group of red reminders is a shooting scar arcing across the dorsal plane of my left wrist. It happened last month on a wet afternoon: I had just hopped off the bus in Shepherd’s Bush to receive treatment for an ear infection at my GP’s office, my backpack’s handle clenched in one claw like a briefcase, when I approached the clinic’s entryway and attempted to hoist the bag onto my shoulders. In doing so, I somehow grated my wrist against the building’s stucco wall. Checking in with the receptionist, I told her I was there for an ear appointment but also wanted to request treatment for the open wound that was dripping on her linoleum.