Wednesday, May 26, 2021

THE STARRY NIGHT

I look at Van Gogh's Starry Night every day. From what I understand, he was in confinement for a mental condition when he painted this. The year was 1889.

I was in Johnstown, PA in May of 2000 for the 111th anniversary of the Johnstown Flood [May 31, 1889]. It was quite moving. I was seated in the theatre watching the disaster unfold at 3:15pm, the exact time the dam failed. Over 2000 luminery candles lined the breastwork of what was left of the dam. They planned to light them all at dusk. One for each soul lost that day. I didn't stay, but followed the path of the water into Johnstown itself.

The town was eerily vacant. There was a baseball game going on. Maybe that's where everyone was. No matter. I walked out to the point where the Little Conemaugh River and Stoney Creek merge. The epicenter of a tragedy. Just beyond the point is the stone bridge that backed-up and created a dam of debris that day. In the night the debris caught fire. Survivors thought it the fires of hell on earth. I think they were right.

From that point one gets a pretty good view of the city and the valley that delivered this strange being called Flood, that moved into everyone's life and altered their inner landscapes forever. Not hard to fill in the blanks. It was a humbling experience. Memorable. I went home.

The next morning I looked at Van Gogh again. But this time something hit me. Something strangely familiar. 1889. Perhaps it was just one of those coincidences. Perhaps, I was imagining things. Where was Van Gogh at the time? Did he know about this flood? Had he seen pictures? Because the valley in the painting is the one I had seen the day before. Were those clouds or roiling waters flowing down the mountain? Was that Johnstown? Was that towering black flame the fires of hell on earth that survivors talked about later? I don't know.

All I know is that when I see this painting, I see Johnstown. When I see it, I find myself believing that someone with roots in another world astral-traveled to a desperate town. Then that someone gathered the feel and the memory of that place and immortalized it in a painting. Maybe, maybe not. I just know what I see ...and I know how it feels.

PHOTO:

JOHNSTOWN 1889

Monday, May 24, 2021

BEFORE AND AFTER the BIGHORN FIRE: CATALINA STATE PARK


ARCHIVE: As hard as it was to see Mt. Lemmon in its altered state following the Bighorn Fire, it was even more difficult to see the changes done to the desert, especially our beloved saguaros. I went to Catalina State Park the day after I went up the mountain. That was two weeks ago. I am just now starting to post what I have seen. I’ve spent a lot of time looking through albums from earlier visits to the park, matching them up with post-fire photos. It has been tedious, but I also think it helped me to process the change. Sometimes you have to really look at something to be ok with it. So here is my before-after album. I will not be posting these all at once, but will add over time as I am still working on it. I will also be posting another album of scenes I can’t match up to ‘before’, photos to document what I’ve seen. Many thanks for letting me share this experience with you… PHOTOS are from February 2017, October 2019, April 2020, and August 2020.