Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Greenwich Village, July 2006


I've been saving this photo for months in order to use it on Halloween! The skull talking on a cell phone is the signature image of street artist SpazMat. This poster was on Houston Street, on a big hulk of metal from a construction project. (Love that rusty texture!)

More SpazMat here.

Monday, October 30, 2006

Hell's Kitchen, July/Sept. 2006


This tag is a common sight all over Hell's Kitchen, and indeed all over lower Manhattan. The spiraling eye sockets, the skull's leer - I can't decide whether the face is drunk or dead or what. It's often accompanied by the initials SG.


One of SG's favorite canvases is the rolling steel security gate. These gates seem to attract graffiti. Someone told me that graffiti artists, if caught, get fined commensurate with the damage they've caused. I've often wondered if they graffiti these doors because repainting them is cheaper than, say, repairing a brick wall.


Or maybe all that blank space is just too tempting. In any event, graffiti artists, including SG, like these doors.


This one is by far my favorite - the only example I've found of a color tag from SG. And it comes complete with its own mini-me!

Sunday, October 29, 2006

East Village, June 2006


Here's the tower of the Most Holy Redeemer Catholic Church reflected in a puddle of rainwater on E. Third Street. I took this photo several months ago, but this is also the kind of weekend we're having now. In fact, as I walked to the gym yesterday morning, the wind blew my umbrella inside out, breaking all the ribs!

Bach and Zen

Yesterday, I attended a Zen workshop at which we were asked to hear the moment, the messages of the world, and to write them down. It was an exercise meant to teach us to listen to what’s around us, and to ourselves. The teacher put on a Bach CD to accompany the writing. Here’s the result, written in about 10 minutes. The line about Nirvana is from the Heart Sutra, one of the foundational writings of Buddhism.

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How funny! I was feeling pain until the music started, before it swept in like a butterfly. I’d been trying to hear the messages, the hum, of the world. I heard Darfur. Iraq. I guess it makes sense for me to focus on world events, since I spend all my days as a journalist simmering in them, and indeed feeling somewhat overcooked at the end of the day. So much pain!

And yet, that music! The bow of the cello or violin - I don’t know which - sweeping up and down like wings on air. Again, a butterfly. And rain on the window, the wind, the engines and brakes of trucks on Crosby Street. All just happening.

My mind imposes on the world this idea of pain. Not that it isn’t there, but that I qualify it that way, and allow its abstractions to obscure the moment - the thousands and thousands of cellos that play around me every day in the street, the cliched music of the car horns, the rhythm of the rain. “Far beyond deluded thoughts, this is Nirvana.”

There is some sadness in the music, the melancholy low tones, as in the world, as in everything. Isn’t everything sad, just as everything is happy? This duality is yet another fiction. Surely, even in Darfur, even in Iraq, someone laughs. Really, it’s just music. It’s just a butterfly. It’s just the rain. It just is.

Perhaps this is too neat. Perhaps the victim of a crime, the relative of someone who worked at the World Trade Center, the mother of a sick infant in Somalia, won’t see this fundamental balance.

But what does the world say?

The world says only, “I am here. Be sure you notice.”

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Hell's Kitchen, June 2006


These doors on W. 53rd Street near 10th Avenue are part of a huge mural. There are a lot of television and music production studios in that part of town, and I believe this building is one of them.

I like the diagonal lines against the horizontals and verticals - a lot like yesterday's photo in that respect. In fact, I suppose that's a common theme for me!

Friday, October 27, 2006

Chelsea, August 2006


When I saw this pipe beneath some outdoor stairs on W. 22nd Street, I knew I had a photo!

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Sept. 2006


As long as we're talking about Buddhism, here's some excellent meditation advice.

A friend of mine collects what she calls "Found Dharma Talks," which are essentially bits of signs, advertising, or other wording that seem to carry a deeper message. You'd be surprised how numerous they are. This is a little too obvious to be a good example, but it does remind us to keep it simple, follow the breath, quiet our minds, and be.