Author: jemagwga

  • Portraits of America

    Portraits of America

    Holy City, Wragg Mall 1

    PORTRAITS OF AMERICA is a series of three participatory installations: “Holy City”, “Insurance: Compassion For Sale” and “Fast-Food-Chain-Feeding.”

    #1 Holy City 

    Wragg Mall, Charleston, SC 1991 (outdoor)  –  Elisabeth Harper Gallery, Presbyterian College, Clinton, SC  1994 (indoor)

    This installation was first commissioned by Spoleto Festival USA, part of “Places with a Past: new site-specific art at Charleston’s Spoleto Festival”, curated by Mary-Jane Jacob. It includes sound, video, writings, printed matters, constructed elements and a mailbox.

    Holy City deals with the fact that, in the Charleston area, there are more than 400 churches representing over 60 denominations.

    The site in Charleston: a 500’ long and narrow grassy park lined with trees; two perpendicular alleys, in the shape of a cross; where the alleys meet, stands a fountain.

    Sound: four, 12 minute tapes of a log of Charleston churches, sung in English, Gullah and French, in a musical mode best described by a critic as a mix of Gregorian chant and Rap.
    Music comes from 8 speakers, concealed in the grass, positioned along the alleys so that passersby will be engulfed in a wave of changing tunes. Another tape, made of sounds of the city, comes out of the fountain.

    Video: a 45 minute visual log of the churches of Charleston. From historic churches to store front praise houses, they represent, in random order, all faiths, races, classes and economic strata.  HOLY CITY

    Writings: as many questions about God and faith as there are churches in Charleston. Pseudo-answers found in church bulletin boards, yellow pages, roadside advertising.
    All handwritten on the 3 1/2 X 4 foot, double entry. 1/4 inch thick rubber pages of a book , anchored in concrete. The whole thing looks like an oversize ring binder, held together by giant U-bolts. It takes two to turn the  pages.

    Construction: a Paris-like Morris column shelters a screen for the video and the hardware for the sound system. It is also used to post the printed material sent to us as an answer to our mailings, or deposited in the Mailbox, attached to the side. The model of a modest,  dilapidated church stands on top of the structure.

    HOLY CITY, A DOCUMENTARY DRAWING, by Gwylene Gallimard. 1991
    Mixed media: color pencil, watercolor, spray paint, collages, varnishes. 14 1/2’ x 4 1/2’
    It is a drawing meant to be walked around. Therefore the curved horizontal structure, as a pedestal for it.
    Installation artists often feel a necessity to write about their work as a complement to photographs. I attempted here to use the means of visual communication to show the concept, the environment, the making and all the elements (including the full texts) that were part of this temporary installation.

    PORTRAITS OF AMERICA
    #2 Insurance: Compassion for Sale

    Tula Foundation, Atlanta GA 1993 – Halsey Gallery, College of Charleston, SC 1994  –  Walker’s Point Center for the Arts, Milwaukee, WI  1994

    We did not gauge the importance, social and economic, of universal health coverage, such as the French model of the time, before we started living in the US. Personal and business situations forced us to face the problem. Yet, as artists, we had to keep a sense of distance and humor about it. We used irony to accomplish that.

    This indoor installation includes sound, graphics, construction, writings, printed matters and a recording studio for viewers’ participation.

    Sound: the continuous recitation of the names of insurance companies interweaves with sounds, texts and sketches, by male and female voices, in three languages: Gullah, French, English. All have to do with insurance, nightmares and dreams.

    Graphics: two sets of 7 silkscreened images, Muybridge-like, from video stills. One set shows the face of an old woman as she moves her head from right to left and, in the process, develops a  smile. The other is of the face of a young baby moving its head the same way, but developing a cry. Together, the series seem to define virtual boundaries, for life and anxiety.

    Construction: A free interpretation of San Francisco’s TransAmerica Building sits in the center of the space, atop a platform. You may go up a ramp and access the 36 drawers tucked vertically into the building.

    Writings: the drawers are filled with insurance documents, small prints from contracts, commentary around the topic of insurance, a 17 page free style poetry “Antigone Life” … Even compassion comes at a high price!

    Recording and listening station: where one visitor can tape a story and another can listen. Episodes and comments around insurance.

     

     

     

     

    PORTRAITS OF AMERICA
    #3 Fast-Food-Chain-Feeding

    Halsey Gallery, College of Charleston, SC 1994  –  Walker’s Point Center for the Arts, Milwaukee, WI  1994

    An attempt to look “behind the curtain” at one of America’s most American industries. Coming from French artists who had decided to open a small food enterprise in the US,  to name it “Fast & French, Inc.” and to promote the social side of eating, such a project was a natural.

    An indoor installation which includes video, drawings, constructed elements and printed matters.

    The constructed elements: thin painted plywood cutouts in the shape and color of fast food restaurant gables. Attached to the walls, they are props which hold the drawings and carry different color fluorescent lighting fixtures. The light glows down, along the drawings and gives the space, which is kept dark,  a mysterious hue. Also, five barrier-like structures, placed in front of every drawing protect the space and define the circulation patterns inside the room.

    The drawings: five 8’X15’ pieces, each made of five vertical bands of white Ingres paper. Each piece is a text about the technology of fast food: chemistry, sanitation, finance …  (“Food Industry: Food Additives”; “Food Production: Inspection report”; “Restaurant Industry Dollars”; “Franchised Restaurants: Basic Investments”; “My Favorite Things”)   Rubbing the paper bands with graphite over repetitive relief patterns and writing “ in reverse”, with an eraser, so that the letters come out as white on black, is the technique chosen. The drawings hang, partly on the floor, from the five props.

    The video: an adult reads to children from Margaret Mead’s writings on food, the anthropology of food, its universal, ritualistic, community-building qualities: there is more to food than eating. His voice carries softly throughout the installation. The screen is half-buried under a heap of disposable styrofoam boxes which contain a one-page text on transubstantiation: how industry has transformed food into money, gold really, through chemistry, management  and advertising.  Leon McKelvey, Margareth Mead and children

  • In Search Of…

    In Search Of…

    In Search Of… (Athapascans)

    4- Athabascan1

    5-Athabascan2

    6-Athabascan3Photos by Wim Roefs 

    In Search Of… (Le Calme Après La Tempête)

    LeCalmeAprèsLaTempête1

    LeCalmeAprêsLaTempête

    LeCalmeAprèsLatempête3

    LeCalmeAprèsLaTempête4

    LeCalmeAprèsLaTempête6

    LeCalmeAprèsLaTempête7

    LeCalmeAprèsLaTempête8

    LeCalmeAprèsLaTempête5

    In Search Of… (Fire)

    Roots2013_MC_HR-1323

     

    Photo by Melisa Cardona 

  • Conversations with Time 2

    Conversations with Time 2

    CONVERSATIONS WITH TIME #2:

    There is a situation exemplifying a tragedy for which no outsider enemy is responsible: the so many blocks of barely standing façades of West Baltimore – a war zone. It never failed to deeply touch Omari Fox and I every time we were there. No world war took place in West Baltimore. This has to be repeated in whatever medium we have on hand, as it looks to me like a civil war is still being fought.

    Then, Jean-Marie and I went to Pittsburgh. I felt like a cool breeze. Although the city had been impacted by the industrial changes of the late nineties, Penn Avenue, around the block which houses the Pittsburgh Glass Center, illustrates a couple of centuries of architecture in various stages of renovation or creation. A very daring contemporary green building made of steel, glass and concrete, acts as a beacon for the future. For the installation – Conversations With Time #2 – we chose to oppose a representation of this post-modern building with a large canvas of mended Baltimore façades designed as a giant puzzle. Confronting a fragile glass building with a decaying Baltimore row of houses could possibly generate hope. To reinforce the energizing function of the new amid ruins, the back of the green building became a storage space for smaller Baltimore puzzles, a repository.

    The installation recalls tools and materials used in the original project “Conversations With Time” in Baltimore, and words – heard or seen there. Booklets, which generated dialogue, workshops and even two scripts could be studied. However the installation is not a documentation. It is a memorialization of the intense and emotional time in West Baltimore. Our mending together pieces of the façades tells of our hopes to mend inter-generational relationships – and our regrets to be so far away.

    “Conversations With Time / West Baltimore” when communicated to others, brings some permanency to a discontinued / abandoned (?) project.

    LAST UPDATE: IN 2014, we – a CONVERSATIONS WITH TIME team – are going back to Baltimore to collaborate with SHEILA GASKINS, author and director of “THE LAST HOUSE STANDING: A Play About The Highway To Nowhere” in Baltimore and the injuries from ‘Roots Shock’, on people being displaced. “Conversations With time” and “The Last House Standing” were part of ROOTS Fest, the 35th anniversary of Alternate ROOTS in 2011 as works/programs in progress.

    This is our way to honor the people who participated, to keep our collaborative work, and continue to raise expectations. It talks of the people of West Baltimore as we were intimately -although very temporarily – West Baltimoreans.

    We wanted the piece to appear as a staged painting. It called for a silent performance and became a “tableau vivant.” There was a twist to it though. The silent actors (Jean-Marie Mauclet, Phinias Chirubvu, Dan Brawley, Omari Fox, Kerryl McCord and Gwylene Gallimard) came to life one by one with a question. And the audience was to answer.

    1- This is a work-in-progress. Can it become a memorial to a past event, celebrating the funeral of a past community and at the same time become a platform for further changes?

    2- I did not participate in Conversations With Time in West Baltimore. So I would like to know if you think that this piece creates its presence? And does the title fit the work?

    3- How does my presence as a silent actor impact your perception of the piece?

    4- West Baltimore has liquor stores, guns, etc at every corner, all sanctioned by the government. What is your position on that politicized statement?
    (The question was actually formulated as a spoken word poem by Omari Fox)

    5- If you make an art piece with or inspired by a community, who owns the art when it is sold?

    6- Conversations with Time’ first audience was the participants. You are my second audience and that piece has been modified/created for you. Since I trust you, tell me what you don’t like about the piece?

    Most photographs are by Journey Brave
  • Silkscreens

  • Small Paintings

    Small Paintings

  • Whose Water

    WHOSE WATER ? by JEMA

    whose_water

    A video essay by Jean-Marie Mauclet

    Created as part of “ Rehearsing the Past: Looking at the city from another direction”,

    Organized by Neill Bogan .

    Spoleto Festival USA 2001

    “Listening Across Cultures and Communities”,

    Mariy-Jane Jacob and Tumelo Mosaka curators.

    WHOSE WATER?

    The present text is the voice-over for “Whose Water?”.  The visual is, simply, the slow filming of the peninsula of Charleston, from the water, for one hour, in real time. It starts north of  “Shoreview”, on the Ashley river, goes down to the tip of the peninsula, up the Cooper river, past the twin bridges. It ends at the old coal tipple.

     

    The voices used for the voice-over are those of James E. Campbell, Gwylene Gallimard and Jean-Marie Mauclet. The filming, sound work and editing are by Anthony Bell.

    SULLEN WATERS AND SUDDEN TIME

     

    Sometimes, the waters of our rivers are so flat, so horizontal,

    and the long hours it takes to row them across just as flat, just as horizontal,

    that time itself turns featureless, foreboding.

     

    Horizontal time is everyday’s time.

    It is everything’s time.

    The time of vegetative, low-level energy,

    with its pulsating monotony, its inescapable predictability.

    Before, now and after.

    Just like the even strokes of the ores, as we row the flat waters of the Charleston rivers.

    Repetitive time. Circular time. Obsessive time.

    That of the clock.

    Closed, sullen time.

     

    Yet, should the pulse of the rower be distracted by a swell coming from nowhere; should an osprey, heard earlier yet not seen, dive for fish only yards away starboard; should an unseparable team of dolphins appear and fade, only to return again, slicing the water open again, so close we can see their eye – though the rythm of the row and that of the water prevail – a swell, a splash, a glance, will rip the rustling silence and reveal an other

    time within time, unexpected, untamed, unattended, eternal in its eager nature, yet fleeting in its instantaneity.

    The time of music? poetry? dance? Individual, private time. For each different.

    Time as experience. Existential time.

    Open, sudden time.

     

    Sudden time, however, can it be remembered? Or, as soon as it is memory, doesn’t it get recycled into sullen time?

    The memory of past events, as a form of their celebration, is possible only as an actuator of said events. Otherwise, doesn’t memory turn into stone, monumental silence of an eternal past?

    Isn’t it what monuments do best:  to cast a thick layer of concrete over events, which were supposed to be remembered but are, now, banished into an unspeakable subcouns-

    cious?

    Don’t monuments freeze our memory of the memorialized into a state of deadly sameness?

    As we know, sameness is sameness, is sameness…

    As we may know, sameness, as a mirror, can be shattered  and transform one self-image into multiple reflexions. This auto-iconoclasm draws others, otherness into the mirror, desolves sameness into soon-vanished dust.

     

    If monuments proclaim identity, what are they but stepping stones to authoritarianism?

    If identity remains a closed proposition, what is it but self-censureship?

    If from closed, we slam open the gates to a non-scripted future, then, if there are any monuments left, won’t they be catalysts, lightning rods, funambulists, clowns, dancers, artists?

     

    MONUMENTS

     

    If monuments, like icebergs, are the emerging -say- twenty per cent of a bigger body of history now burried in our memory, can we say that they really represent? symbolize? reveal? convey? –  or, do they rather hide, trump, distort, lie?

     

    Well, let us try to unveil the eighty per cent most American monuments hide, underground, in the American mud, the American subterranean substratum/ subconscious/unspoken.

     

    Isn’t it fair to say that three quarter of the eighty percent in question are readily available in history books?  “Official history”? But what of the last iota, the last little heep of memory dust? The innermost American unspoken? The forever submerged 1 per cent? It may be there that lies the true essence of the true monuments of America. Monuments to silence and anonimity. Monuments to unscripted, uncontrolled heroes?

     

    So – in our quest for the essential American monument, as we row on and on against the strong tides of conventions, towards the edge of history   –  the  Charleston waters –  around the peninsula – extended tip of a tropical iceberg – we reach an area carefully cordonned off  by some local authorities “for further investigation” -we read- by scientists of course, preservationists for sure, archeologists definitly, historians at last (!), the Smithsonian Institution and other agencies in charge of uncovering, saving, classifying, exhibiting, interpreting, filing all discoveries of historic significance. The primal clues to our past.

     

    And the closer to the forbiden area, the harder the row. Like some Ulysses, caught in a  legendary tempest where survival depends on cunning as much as on seamanship, one of the rowers jumps overboard to explore further. Although the waters are shallow , they are muddy, traiturous and unknown. To his major dismay, our fearless explorer  discovers that the past has been caped with a heavy lid of concrete!

     

    What now? Now! Abandoning all metaphores, letting go of legends and shunting off all institutions, we plunge into the mud and, in our frenzy, dig, rake, scrape,  uncover the lid and  – as we feel  –  our way on its surface – we – realize  – that – it  is – what ? – scrached?  etched? carved? with reliefs? hierogliphics? signs maybe? letters? That’s it, letters, big letters carved on the concrete surface… … … There is an “i”, and then a “n” – “in” –

    “g”  and “o”  and “p”  – gop?  – No – “d”  for “god”, and then there is an  “m”?  or a “w”?

    it is a “w” and “e” – “we” – “in god we” –  As soon as a “t” and then a “r” are deciphered we know:  the great American subcounscious is covered over with a slab of concrete  marked: “in god we trust”!

     

    Gasping for air …and meaning….we resurface. As we row away from the site and decide to call it a day, the silence is deep among us. Deep and hollow : Easy or hard, near or far away, the search for our roots is ever a haunting journey.

     

    * * *

     

    Day two. We are determined to explore all the dimensions of the  lid. We swim to the periphery,  feel our way down to its bottom edge and, as blind dogs smelling blood,  we start digging way underneath. Soft as it is, the pluffmud dissolves easily  in the salt water. Quickly we find ourselves under the lid. We are in a cave. The underwater world of the great American subconscious is a cave, a bright cave in the perfect shape of an open rotunda of pure classical proportions. Complete with a guilded dome supported by a set of seven columns of the Corinthian order, elaborate abstract floor patterns of marble, in the center of which what could well be an unknown version of the Rosetta Stone stands, some four feet tall,  on a circular bed of seashells.

     

    Of course, y’all don’t have to believe our saga. But it is further true that, as we enter the cave, small groups of strangely familiar figures, file in as well,  one at a time, so gracefully it could be a ballet, and assemble into harmonious tableaux vivants, in carefully chosen areas of this prestine, rational space.

     

    Here, a group of Native Americans, tall, proud, yet of modest demeanor in their simple tunics draped over their naked body. Barefoot, decorated hairbands, brades, feathers. Men gather around a fire, carving wood, smoking a pipe, all engaged in a very civil conversation, as women tend to the needs of small children, carry flowers, weave baskets. When a man produces a drum, everyone forms into a circle and starts a gently rythmic dance.

     

    Here, a middle-aged white male, long dark beard and unattended black hair, takes off his feathered hat,  kneels down and, in a dramatic gesture, kisses the ground. Behind him, a very tired tribe of young women with children in their arms gathers around  what looks like a very aged holy man, reading from a very heavy holy book. All presently get on their knees as well and gaze to the heavens in search of very needed holy help.

     

    Here, pinned on a picket fence, a grainy poster reads:

    “To be sold on board the ship Bance Island, on Tuesday the sixth of                                                         May next, at Ashley Ferry: a choice cargo of about two hundred and                                                         fifty fine, healthy negroes, just arrived from the Windward and Rice                                                         Coast.

    The utmost care has already been taken, and shall be continued, to                                                         keep them free from the least danger of being infected with the small-                                                        pox, no boat having been on board, and all other communication                                                         with people from Charles Town prevented.”

     

    And there, a very different company, strictly of men, in white shirt sleeves and tie, dark pants and prepy loafers, around an elongated designer table, pencil and Coke at hand, poised to take notes from a conference, the topic of which appears on a white board:  “What went wrong?”

    Please come closer and read the content

    (1) nobody said it would be easy.

    (2) staying focused when everything’s changing around you

    (3) from follower to leader

    (4) overcoming negativity and resistance

    (5) tips from five extraordinary leaders:

     

    Winston Churchill -Oprah Winfrey – Mike Krzyzewski – George W. Bush

    and…  Martin Luther King.

    As you read this part of the script , the following text will appear, at the bottom of the screen:

    WARNING: “THE BLEACHING OF CHARLESTON” IS ONE OF A SERIES OF CONFERENCES PRESENTED BY THE CHARLESTON WAY, A LOCAL THINKTANK WITH GLOBAL VALUES

     

     

     

     

     

    (all this in a very pompous, academic, superficial tone)

     

     

    THE BLEACHING OF CHARLESTON

     

    Charleston is a monument.

    A monument to past American and world history.

    A monument to itself and to us, its inhabitants.

    A monument for future reference.

     

    What an awsome responsability it is, indeed, to keep a monument alive!

     

    Today, in our series of lectures on “Building – Unbuilding the city”, we will apply the four models of government identified in a previous session, to the truly monumental city of Charleston.

     

    They are:              Energizing               Preserving              Purring     and   Bleaching.

     

    As you remember, none of those modes is exclusive of the others. You may be applying one, two, three or the four of them at the same time. Or you may have chosen to select one only, for the time being.  Clearly the ways NOT to ram your administration into principled dead-ends are flexibility and opportunism.

     

    So, let us start with ENERGIZING.

     

    Energizing is based on a strict cost/benefit analysis. City management develops a set

    of economic standards with pilots,  markers, thresholds and triggers, which, when applied to designated sectors, help identify srengths and weaknesses at great speed, prompting  the decision to ENERGIZE this or that sector. Therefore guaranteeing the steady course expected from any good administration.

    Energizing is, for a historic city like Charleston, a necessary tool. Because history dictates  long term trends which cannot be disturbed by parasitic events, facts or developments, the short term must be managed promptly. As the Chinese proverb says: take care of little thinks first: it will give you the time to attend to the important ones…

    Or something to that effect!

     

    PRESERVING.

    Preserving refers to the overall image a city has of itself and its future, as acquired through its past. Preserving has to do with making your city a witness to its past; offering its citizens and visitors a window into the past.  Making sure that the future will look like the past.

    What characterises PRESERVING is the development of (a) guidelines to safeguard the permanence of the image of the city and (b) a stringent body of ordinances to enforce them. Every aspect of the city image is covered. Old as well as new. From building height to color schemes; the proper entablature of a colomn, a window sash,  the matching of historic moldings, standing-seam metal roofs or historic ornemental iron work.

    Of course, not only may old buildings not be defaced, but new construction must blend into the historic patina. That is why no visible architecture has been built in Charleston,  since  – say – the sixties.

    Contemporary structures are,either papered over with recycled, traditional gestures of facade architecture, or use what is considered a staple of Charleston’s building tradition: THE BRICK. Or, more accurately, the brick veneer applied to exteriors, designed so that they (a) do not attract the eye and (b) do not distract from the historic context. To be sure, there exist eye sores, even in Charleston: appartment buildings or hotels, parking lots or run-down areas. But they are few and they fulfill an important function for diversity and tourism.

    Finally, Charleston has learned an essential PRESERVING  lesson: from now on, any new construction will have to rise from underdeveloped, blighted or otherwise condemned areas. The valuable stock of real estate representing Charleston’s history is now safe. It will remain in the hands of those who know best (a) how to make the city prosper: its successful entrepreneurs and (b) where to look for a perennial model: the past.

     

    We will brush over PURRING. Purring is a method of  government  which cannot be used for extended periods of time. However, its judicious manipulation can prove rewarding.

    Now –  Look at a cat – Observe how its purring not only expresses contentment but generates an infectious sense of  security. See how the animal surrenders its defenses for the sake of a beneficial rest. As we know, though, the rest may be real but the sense of security relies on an accute, self-assured, unbreakable instinct of conservation.

    Of course, purring does not define a management style unless we add, to the permeating sense of security, a soft-handed determination to keep things under full control. As for cats, again, it seems that purring requires the constant ability to jump up and defend the territory,  whenever-wherever needed, tooth and nail, if need be. If you are of the rat family, beware!

     

    Finally, we come to BLEACHING.

    Litteraly, bleach cleanses. It renders white, whiter. Color, colorless. Although it may not be the intent of bleaching to elliminate diversity, it is the most efficient way to realize, fast, a significant concensus which, in turn, will permit quick, sweeping decisions at the right time.

    Bleaching is based on the global belief that economic freedom is the only model on which to manage a town, a region, a whole country, ultimately the world. Market-based solutions  to urban growth are rapid, clean and irreversible. And they promote the values on which the future can safely rest, in a fast-changing world.

    Governments of all sizes are entangled in an inextricable web of overlapping and often contradictory regulations which  slow down the natural processes of economic growth. It is in the interest of elected officials to transfer part of their responsabilities to private entities, which will (a) do a better, more efficient job and (b) profit in the process and invigorate the economic base. At the city level, for example, who is better equiped to manage the housing stock but real-estate professionals? Indeed, the cushioning effects of cumbersome,  publicly funded socio-economic programs will be more discrete. The punch of economic stimulation provided by the free market will knock out the weakest subjects. But, at last, the inevitability of  progress will have been established. And in any case, who is better equiped to attend to the wounds of the weakest but  foundations, civic organizations, faith-based or not, all with a long track record? Indeed, the private sector can be just as charitable as any government agency!

     

    There are essential corollaries to the liberal approach, though. Once you have deregulated real-estate and made it accessible to those who can afford it,  you must be ready to provide the big three commodities of a modern city: easy traffic, varied entertainment and public safety.

    I remember Robert Moses when he declared that to build a highway ”… you have to hack your way with a meat ax…”  We know what this image implies. We know progress requires sacrifices.  We even can quote Mr. Moses’ favorite opponant, Lewis Mumford :”A city exists, not for the constant passage of motorcars, but for the care and culture of man”.

    Well, Mr. Mumford, today, it is possible to satisfy traffic and to tend to the care and culture of the people. See Charleston. Highways surround the city, feed it from all sides. Yet, they do not disturb existing neighborhoods.

    Besides, entertainement is plentiful and of high quality. Aquarium, I-Max, the downtown shopping district,  restaurants, galleries, museums, libraries, and, of course, the yearly Spoleto Festival. Two weeks of world-class culture in a world-class city.

     

    Finally, we must talk about public safety. Public safety is the key to any city’s future. If we refer to our earlier comments on ‘Purring” and apply them to Charleston, we know that the “All America City” requires a police force that is sharp in its delivery and smooth in its appearance, inspiring confidence in a constant show of SELF-confidence. Good policing is the bound that keeps the city together. Together, citizens must help the police do the best job it can at eradicating violence, crime, corruption. As a very good friend of mine, down in Florida said in his latest delivery as a neighborhood pastor: ” Economic growth cannot last in a corrupt environment”.  It is precisely when one tries to stabilize neighborhoods,  establish conditions of economic opportunities, that the most volatile fringes of our society are most likely to challenge the forces of law and order. Cities succeed or fail at this juncture. Authorities cannot hesitate, in a balanced and fair way when possible, to impose peace where peace is needed most: in our city neighborhoods. They are at the core of our economic strength. If need be, all pockets of economic resistance will be forcefully eliminated because – and this will be my final remark – there is no wealth without peace and no peace without a strong police force. Such is the price of social justice.

     

    Thank you.

     

     

     

     

     

    FINALE

     

     

     

     

    Look at time – in any direction.

    Look at history  looking behind or looking forward.

    Look at us – being carried from past to future.

    And no time really to consider the present.

     

    The present is the sacrificial lamb of history.

     

    Philosophy, science, take place in the present.

    It is their claim to reality.

    The same for art.

     

    If the forces which shaped the past are to shape the future, then, the present is only a gray

    filter of neutral mindlessness; an uncommited, silent exercise in official peace-keeping; the

    neutralizing – gagging – suppressing of dissident voices.

     

    Isn’t it the work of philosophy, science, the arts, to puncture the filter, to break the silence?

    And always endeavor  to enlarge the focus of our knowledge?

    And to frown upon any past which attempts to hand down unbroken treasures, icones of worship?

    And to be the iconoclast, when the temptation arises to build memorials for future contemplation?

    And to judge empires for being empires: networks of self-serving power groups, which accumulate influence – and money – or both – and more, for their self-perpetuation?

    And to name the true heroes of the day: the victims of the empires, usually silent because kept silent, ignorant because kept ignorant, poor… because the present is always too short for the trickle to reach down?

    And to prove to the world – every minute of the world – that whatever happens, happens now?

    Simple enough, right?

    But then, what of the propensity to build monuments?

    This urge to “pass on”?

    This rage to be remembered?

    Or is this only the passtime of the rich and powerful? As long as they can manipulate the selective memory of history?

     

    Is there no destiny but manufactured?

    Will we keep our hands free to experience life, express life, experiment as we go?

    Aren’t memories legitimate only if one can question their legitimacy?

    Aren’t projected dreams acceptable only if they are innocent?

     

    To keep our hands open.

    To tune our mind to incoming influences.

    To appreciate the vulnerability of thruths.

    To measure the temporarity of dogmas.

    Were it not for ideologies, couldn’t history be the unfolding of freedom? With its oddities, its impossibilities, its tardiness, its intense sense of instant responsability, its vulnerability, its humor?                                          (a light chuckle, here)

     

    And when will we stop personalizing history, the past, the future, memory, destiny as separate, independant entities, with their own independant pulse. All worthy of a monument celebrating their history, past, future, memory, destiny?

    Echoes of self. You must go.

    So we can live.

    (another chuckle, here – if you can)

     

    WHOSE WATER?                            This text was censured and taked out

     

    Six AM. The morning shift of the New Charleston Mosquito Fleet – a handfull of sleep- disorder victims, age 20 to 60 – arrives at the City Marina and rigs the thirty foot  gig.

    It takes six adults to row the boat built by inner-city kids for alternative recreation and in memory of the original Charleston Mosquito Fleet,  a flotilla of small fishing sailboats whose black owners fed Charleston fish for 100 years. The Charleston Mosquito Fleet

    was docked at the foot of Market street and, with some help, would still be selling its fish there, today,  if  it had not lost this privilege of prime waterfront space – or  is it  a right? – Someone, tell us – WHOSE WATER? –  The Charleston Mosquito Fleet was shoved off to a remote mooring, where  it could not do business, sell its fish, any longer. The Charleston Mosquito Fleet died out.  WHOSE WATER?

     

    Today, from the City Marina, the sleep-deprived bunch will row up river, against the tide, all the way to “Shoreview”. Then they will row back, with the tide and call the three-mile row  a rowing day.  OUR WATER.

     

    “Shoreview” is known, around here, as a “project”. A little ghetto really, a subsidized housing complex along the Ashley river. Destined originally for a military population, right after the second World War, “Shoreview” was designed as in a park, complete with beautiful oak trees planted along meandering streets, traffic circles and a million-dollar view on the Ashley river – Mostly African-American, the residents of this estate started receiving eviction notices at the end of 2000. The Bleach Company – 722 2615 – was about to break ground for a  – guess what? – million-dollar condominium complex – with – you can see it on the brochure already – “ unspoilable view of the Ashley river”.

    WHOSE RIVER?                  WHOSE WATER?

     

    It is seven AM and the New Mosquito Fleet gig is returning to port. It slips by the Citadel – you remember? the Citadel?  – WHOSE  HISTORY? Please – and just north of the twin Ashley river bridges, starboard, the river bank appears cluttered with the sight of cranes, pilings, concrete trucks and the burgeoning profile – still low – of a new building site. Atop the tallest crane, a name and a telephone number: the Bleach Company – 722 2615 –  Right where the official Charleston Downtown Plan reads “Brittlebank Park will be extended south”, there  will flicker “the Bristol”, a million-dollar condominium complex. Unspoilable view on the Ashley river!

    WHOSE RIVER?               WHOSE WATER?

     

    Only a few months ago, this was a modest fishing spot. For modest folks, no doubt.                                                                       WHOSE WATER?              WHOSE WATER?

     

    Building pretty                            Unbuilding cities

    Promoting life-style                    Severing life-lines

    Pushing condohood               crushing neighborhoods

    Should we call that  ………….              Cultural polution?

    Selective deprivation?

    A sun-tanned, final solution?

     

    WHOSE WATER? WHOSE FUTURE? WHOSE HISTORY?