Tag: Jim Dine
Circular Ekphrasis
Dueling Jim Dine
“My mind was going and so was my hand,” he said, and so did I. There seemed to be some sort of automatic conduit, almost an unthinking or unconscious mechanics between what occurred in my brain and body and the gestures of my hand fisting a tool. He called his “drawing,” I, “writing”; “scribbling,” both.
He sketched a line.
I doodled a word.
We compared combinations of marks. I thought his propitious, he considered mine apropos. We continued. He smudged and scraped, texturing and smearing a darkened patch of his paper. I scrawled smudge, erasing the ink as I wrote, leaving a bleary term, as well as “melancholy knot.” He raised an eyebrow, squirting water on lines of ink, causing them to run and wriggle down the surface. I likewise thought “crow’s blood,” and wrote “mood of lightless cavern,” in carefully dropped water stains.
He squinted as if he’d been challenged. I, the I writing, watched, expectantly. The draftsman sat down.
I roped out over my page “the knife sliced deep through parchment, carrying fire.” He leapt to and slashed his surface staining the tear’s edges black with brilliant red and orange pastels rising off the seam. We chuckled, he winked.
Picking up a squat bottle of indigo blue, he dashed it against an open field on his paper, creating a blotch slowly swelling in miniscule fronds.
I reacted. Grabbing pens in both hands I charged my page and inscribed, as if in fury, fat-felt-tipped and intimately paralleled in circular lines (by turning the paper as I scrawled) “maniacal laughter sobs from grievous wound seeping rabidly throughout his grocery list, voicemail and every phrase and memo taken in, given out, as if he could not escape the inky squid-cloud, the night’s obsessed vortex, unable to feign or dart his pollution.”
Scenting blood, inveigled in duel, he savaged his canvas with cadmium shrieks, scratching and scabbing the pulp, then clouding it with sponges of charcoal and chalk, dementing the work to a state.
Scowling, he read the above.
We rested with coffee and smokes.
At this point, he challenged me to a mark-for-mark, side-by-side, making in tandem. He moved and struck; “drak” I jotted. He followed with a long downward arc of blue chalk while I scrivened a loosened cursive “loop of sky in gravity’d tears” also in chalk. Jagging yellow up and across, all caps I shouted “WITH THE HEAT OF THE WIND’S BLAZE THROUGH DESERT!”
He spiraled while I “circled round the mayhem of the mill, her lilting light goes out.” We darken and begin to fill the ground…as he shades and scumbles
I “in the apparatus of time the world dims and pops. Stumbling gesturally through policy and poem the language drains its line. Discovering its feeble feet it finds a lure and breaths crackle in plentiful song. The patching powers perhaps the frame, caressing its fitful desire, soon it swoons and whispers. The vapor twists its noise and cogitates in action worrying, tendering, arousing limpid lisps. We vibrate and hold, tendrilling thread to conjoin. Fastening now on swoop and dive, a sistered surround, a remoteness drawn near. We are woven, our minds are going and so are our hands….”
Affinities : Possessing the Wordless
The following quotations are from “Putting Down Marks (my life as a draftsman)” by Jim Dine. Where he uses “draw” or “drawing” substitute “write” or “writing” and I find a remarkable similarity with my own experience making things…I find his work and thought quite inspiring to my own and wanted to share with you many writers/artists/thinkers…
“I’ve always had a wish to put down marks”
“My mind was going and so was my hand”
“I love building up, erasing, losing it, bringing it back, taking it away. I trust my method of not trusting”
“He’s always so frightened of failure and of finishing, and that moves me” (of Giacometti)
“But what is really the optimal situation for me is to get my brain around what I’m trying to do. That’s all.”
“I have a total connection between my hand and my eye – it’s just that I can’t see sometimes”
“Drawing is not an exercise. Exercise is sitting on a stationary bicycle and going nowhere. Drawing is being on a bicycle and taking a journey. For me to succeed in drawing, I must go fast and arrive somewhere. The quest is to keep the thing alive – “
“I’m interested in making a vehicle within which it is possible to feel certain things…And these emotions don’t have words. They really don’t”
“I want to get my drawing out of my heart the way photography accesses my marginal thoughts and images”
“The state of wanting to draw something, for me, is a way to capture it and that’s a primary emotion for me.”
“I want to possess them and what better way of possessing them than to draw them. The reason I wanted to possess them is they reminded me of other things that are wordless”
“Drawing is the medium which has been the blood of my life”
THANK YOU JIM DINE!











