Idiosyncratic Celebrations, News Outta My Control / 07.11.2004

The neighborhood's lawns reflect the great divide between the Dead Leaf Browns and the Dichondra Greens. It's time for our annual Leaf Blowing Festival. We live at the edge of a forest of Tulip Poplar trees and each fall they dump millions of leaves on our neighborhood. Coming from Southern California raking and blowing leaves has never been my forte. In fact when we first moved here I deemed this event a "festival" hoping to coax my friends into coming over to help me. But to no avail. There was no fooling them. The leaves didn't start to fall this year until...

Idiosyncratic Celebrations, News Outta My Control / 05.07.2004

Here in Washington there are numerous local parades on July 4th --very local parades, like through the streets of housing developments. These take place all over the region, and, as I suspected, they are staggered so politicians can go from one to the other over the course of the day. Boy Scouts lead Pledge of Allegianceat local 4th of July parade. We always go to the parade in our friends' neighborhood. For some reason we don't have one in our own (perhaps we don't live in a key precinct). It's a tiny affair lead by a local troop of the Boy...

Idiosyncratic Celebrations, News Outta My Control / 04.07.2004

Everyone's talking the finer points of Fahrenheit 9/11. The Lies. The Truth. You conservative bastard. Now listen here you commie liberal. Michael Moore's a documentarian. No, his film is editorializing at its worst! Calm down, folks. It's only a movie. It's only a war. And it's only our country.

WM ISO LIBERAL-MINDED CROWD FOR GROUP HUG AND RECLAMATION OF OUR THE COUNTRY. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.

Last Sunday Susie and I made our way to the American Film Institute Theater in Silver Spring to see for ourselves. No matter where you live on the political sphere, the film is provocative. But I'm not here to speak about that. I'm here to talk about the crowd.

Idiosyncratic Celebrations / 22.02.2004

Washington Post article from February 1997 featuring my friends David and Les (on the left) My best friend from high school, David, got married to Les last weekend. Finally. We were wondering if they'd ever make it legal. Those boys. After all, they've been together for 35 years. I suspected they might do "it." I watched for signs on the Evening News. I was checking the newspaper daily for their photo. Even though we now live 3000 miles apart that's how we'd reconnected after 28 years. One winter morning seven years ago I was attending to my usual workday pre-dawn ritual: oatmeal...

Idiosyncratic Celebrations / 10.11.2003

As sure as Indian Summer recedes, falling leaves ensue. That means it's time for the Gates' annual Falling Leaf Blowing Festival. Whereas last year's festivities were attended by millions (of leaves), this year's numbers are way down. The threat of terrorism nor the 80-degree weather wasn't to blame, although I did discover that raking is much more pleasant when dressed only in a Gap T (I'm trying to court product placement for next year's Festival). Up and down the block it is the talk of the neighborhood: Hurricane Isabel prematurely blew off a major portion of the audience for our fall...

Artistic Tendencies, Fairly Odd Parents-Past, Idiosyncratic Celebrations / 02.11.2003

We're having Indian Summer in our nation's capital. Yesterday the temperature rose to 80 degrees (27 C). Today will be the same. It is a day when not riding your bike in padded Lycra® bicycle shorts should be a capital crime. I'm in a warm mood.

This is perfect timing. It coincides with one of my favorite days of the year, El Día de los Muertos, The Day of the Dead. While death is more of a taboo subject in this country, it's treated much differently in Mexico.

Right after graduate school I took my first job in East Los Angeles as part of the Barrio Mobile Art Studio. BMAS was part of a larger community arts program, Self-Help Graphics. Using a van, four artists went to schools and adult centers in the area where we conducted workshops in painting, sculpture, puppetry and photography. Using the inside of the vehicle as a darkroom I taught children and seniors photography. I was also the only Anglo in the program.

In a way, the community felt very comfortable to me. In the 30s and 40s East LA was a mixture of Jews, Latinos, and African Americans. My mother grew up there. And in the 60s I lived in Pacoima, in the East San Fernando Valley. Home to Ritchie Valens, Latino culture was prominent in Pacoima back then.

Idiosyncratic Celebrations / 04.07.2003

As I turned onto my street yesterday after work I immediately noticed a small American flag had been planted in front of every house on our block. Independence Day was just a day away and someone had decided this would be a good way to display our patriotism. The hair on the back of my neck stood at attention. Last weekend, when I went to help my mother-in-law at her garage sale I noticed an identical landscape in her neighborhood. I had never seen this before. When I questioned who had put the flags there she replied “I think a real...

Artistic Tendencies, Fairly Odd Parents-Present, Idiosyncratic Celebrations / 30.05.2003

September 15, 1990

It was a match made in an art gallery. I was there to support Maryland Art Place in its annual bid to keep its head above water. She had a piece in the benefit show. It was the best piece there: a glass book.

My art making philosophy is simple: A + B = C. That is, put one incongruous idea next to another and, hopefully, it will yield something new and thought provoking. A glass book fit the bill perfectly. Ten minutes later I met her. She was with another man, her date. He introduced us. We started talking as he wandered away. His loss.

She left a message on my machine saying she was going out of town for a couple weeks and would give me a call upon her return. She never did. She recounts today that she had just about given up on meeting that special someone even though she thought of me every day. I had to do some serious sleuthing before I found her.


January 26, 1991

Our first date. I was living in Baltimore but was coming into DC for the anti-war rally on the National Mall (you remember Gulf War I). I was staying with friends and she and I agreed to talk after the rally to set up the specifics.

The phone rang and the machine picked up before my friends answered. Unbeknownst to either of us they listened as we negotiated our first date dance. The audiotape recorded our overly polite posturing for posterity. We only found out about this when they played it for us on our first anniversary.

We ate Ethiopian for our first dinner and found out we both collected cacti. It was a match made in the Southwest desert. I was happy we recognized each other after the four months since our first meeting.


June 1992

We dated for a quite a while before deciding to take the big leap: a trip together. I was giving a talk in London. She was organizing a show of her work in Hamburg.

The very first argument of our lives together occurred in Kasel where we went to see Documenta. We were staying out in the Kaselian suburbs and had to catch an early train for Cologne —she had an appointment to show her work to a museum. I spoke German, she didn’t.

While I was busy dragging our luggage to the street, I suggested she find the concierge and ask her to call us taxi. It was going to be impossible to hail one in that quiet neighborhood. As I stood there she came out and said she couldn’t find her.

She came out too fast. I knew she hadn’t even tried to talk to her. It was the first time I had caught her in one of those tiny white lies I’ve learned to love. We were late and were about to miss our train for her appointment.

“You didn’t even try, did you?!” The tips of her mouth moved imperceptibly. But I could tell. She had obviously never been caught before. “We’re going to miss the train if you don't find her.” “But I don’t speak German.” I put my fingers to my ear and mouth. In my best early morning imitation of a phone receiver I mouthed the words Telephone and Taxi. “It’s the same in any language.” I said. She turned around and went back in.

When she returned she was beaming, as if she’d just climbed Mt. Everest. She recounted her ascent. “I knocked on her apartment door and she answered, her hair in curlers. I gave her your message and she understood immediately [See!]. She was very apologetic. I think she said she should have known. The taxi’s on its way.” Relief.

We just made the train and laughed about our tête à tête on our way west. Hmmm. Laughing after an argument. That was a new and very surprising sensation.


Book Reports, Fairly Odd Parents-Present, Idiosyncratic Celebrations, Worker's Comp / 26.12.2002

Was it visions of sugarplums that made my Christmas Eve day commute to work so sweet? Or was it President Bush's "pardon" for all us Federal workers one half day of freedom for the upcoming holiday? No, as I looked around the subway car I realized everyone was contentedly reading the Health section of the Washington Post. More specifically, they were reading The Happy Heretic, an article about Dr. Martin Seligman's new book, Authentic Happiness. Wellbeing saturated the underground air. With Christmas just past and New Year's up next, the burden of marking time (more specifically, marking this point in my...