Patti Smith

I’ve alluded to Patti Smith’s book, Just Kids in other posts.

Just Kids
by Patti Smith
Powells.com

 

I’m rereading it because I need that voice of hers.  I need to meet up with the artist.  Is their any artist who’s not striving to be free?  That freedom takes different forms, but I think it’s fundamental for anyone who’s creative.  It has to do with the eye, freeing the eye (ear, body, tongue, mind) from seeing the world in only one, proscribed, common way.  Without this kind of freedom, it is impossible to invent, design, create.

Jackson Pollock

Jackson Pollock had to see the world in a new way in order to paint the way he did.  In the documentary, Patti Smith: Dream of Life, Smith talks about Pollock as she works on one of her own paintings.  Pollock apparently complained because Picasso had done everything in painting.  Smith agrees, but then goes to talk about Picasso’s influence on Pollock–that it came down to a drip of sweat from a horse’s nose.  I don’t know if this is true, but it could be.  We are influenced by things around us in myriad ways, by connections that may not surface for years.

So I’m indulging my Patti Smith crush right now.  As I said, I need her voice to help me find my own.  After I watched the documentary this morning, I stood in my bathroom looking at myself in the mirror, imagining a conversation with Smith.  I want to ask her how she did it when her kids were young, when they were teens.  It’s not just finding an hour here or there to paint or write.  It’s how to sustain the big, huge energy that making art requires when one needs to switch gears so often to tend to children and family.

Which leads me around indirectly to the recent comment by V.S. Naipul about the inferiority of women’s writing.  He claims he can tell when a woman has written something within a half page or something ridiculous like that because of the sentiment of the work.  Bluster and bullshit.  But what picks at me is this–what is the impact on one’s work when interruptions are par for the course?  What does that kind of life pace do to the quality, the texture of the work?

I go back to something I think I’ve discussed here before–poet Maxine Kumin writes about doing her work (which won her a Pulitzer by the way) in the interstices.  She’d have one of her poems with her at all times.  While waiting for her daughter to finish swim lessons, she’d work.  Early for school pick up?  Out comes her latest poem.

Very few of us have the luxury of uninterrupted hours for our creative work.  Or at least, we don’t get it consistently.  I suppose it is a demonstration of persistence in keeping at it.  It is part of the commitment, the discipline.

When Patti Smith met Robert Mapplethorpe in NYC in 1967, she didn’t have a job or a place to live.  She’d come to NY to be an artist.  She didn’t even know what she meant by that exactly–her medium wasn’t clear.  But she was dedicated.  She worked hard.  I think luck played a little part in things.  But she was unafraid.  The path wasn’t clear and still, she wasn’t afraid.

Here’s an amazing picture of Smith that I first saw on Luke Storms’ blog, Intense City:

I rented Patti Smith: Dreams of Life from Netflix.  It’s meandering roam of a documentary.  Dream-like in one sense.  One of my strongest impressions is of Smith’s vulnerability and aloneness.  I don’t know if she’s lonely.  But she lost four key people in her life within a five or six year span.  I don’t get melancholy from Smith, but a sense of apartness.  I hesitate to attempt characterizing Smith based on a documentary I watched while lying on my couch with a sore throat.  But there’s something about her I admire, things about her inspire me.  I’m trying unsuccessfully to pin this down.  One thing I do want to get down is that without the vulnerability, that sense of life happening to us, we can’t make art.

And to my lovely friend Kehaunani–It was good to talk to you today.  Thanks.  You always know how to set my head back on just straight enough.

1 December 2008

Following up from yesterday to build some momentum…

Maxine Kumin is one of my heroes.  She won the Pulitzer for her collection of poetry, Up Country, in 1973.  While her three children were mostly grown at that point, many of the poems in that collection were written when her children were younger.

Kumin and Anne Sexton were great friends right up until the point of Sexton’s suicide.  They spent hours on the phone each day going over each others poems line by line, suggesting book titles and even writing children’s books together.  Whether they knew it at the time or not, Kumin and Sexton were on the cutting edge for women writers.

Kumin wrote an essay called Interstices where she talks about writing ‘in the interstices of time between laundry and chaffeuring’ and other writing/teaching work that she did.

Inspired by Kumin and other women writers, I carry a poem I’m working on, a book or notebook with me all the  time.  Not only do I sit in the car before school pick up going over my latest piece, but I’ve even had Izzy write down notes for me as I’m driving.

While it’s wonderful to have great drifting waves of time to write, the truth is that it’s best to consider oneself a writer all the time. I like to carry a notebook around to record phrases from eavesdropped conversations or capture an image.  Editing a draft of a new poem can be done in bits and pieces while I’m waiting for Izzy to finish her guitar lesson.

I feel as though I’m writing all the time by observing, editing and reading.  When I do get to put pen to paper, I’m not trying to reign myself in from ‘real life’ and find I can get to work more quickly.  Everything around me feeds my poetry.  An optimal state to be sure.  It gets disrupted regularly, but it’s lovely to know it’s there and I’ll get back to it.

Here’s one of Maxine Kumin’s poems-
In the Park

You have forty-nine days between
death and rebirth if you’re a Buddhist.
Even the smallest soul could swim
the English Channel in that time
or climb, like a ten-month-old child,
every step of the Washington Monument
to travel across, up, down, over or through
–you won’t know till you get there which to do.

He laid on me for a few seconds
said Roscoe Black, who lived to tell
about his skirmish with a grizzly bear
in Glacier Park.He laid on me not doing anything.I could feel his heart
beating against my heart.
Never mind lie and lay, the whole world
confuses them.For Roscoe Black you might say
all forty-nine days flew by.

I was raised on the Old Testament.
In it God talks to Moses, Noah,
Samuel, and they answer.
People confer with angels.Certain
animals converse with humans.
It’s a simple world, full of crossovers.
Heaven’s an airy Somewhere, and God
has a nasty temper when provoked,
but if there’s a Hell, little is made of it.
No longtailed Devil, no eternal fire,

and no choosing what to come back as.
When the grizzly bear appears, he lies/lays down
on atheist and zealot.In the pitch-dark
each of us waits for him in Glacier Park.