Found Words, Waiting

I was thinking about how writing dovetails with our wider lives, the lives we may lead outside the tiny cramped space in which we sit for hours hunched over a screen that slowly eats the cones and rods from within our dark-shadowed eyes, perhaps even the sanity from behind our knitted brows, lost amid a precarious landscape built from stacked pizza boxes and empty wine bottles and other far less wholesome things. You know… that place outside we call “the world”? I ventured into my corner of it recently (Vancouver, British Columbia) and even there I began to notice the marks and stamps left by other writers. Either that or I’m now so delusionally obsessed with writing I’ve reached the point of developing a serious pathology.

Vancouver’s most acclaimed literary figure was probably Malcolm Lowry, who wrote Under the Volcano here. William Gibson and Douglas Coupland also spring to mind. But I don’t really mean that. I’m not so much interested in the indisputably famous and lauded, but more the quieter language moments we sometimes stumble on by accident.

A case in point is the Fairmont Pacific Rim Hotel in downtown Vancouver. If you are ever in town, it’s an otherwise fairly nondescript piece of modern architecture (think steel, concrete and green-tinted glass) at the intersection of Burrard and Cordova, but what makes it remarkable is that a one-line poem wraps around 17 stories of its facade. Written by British artist Liam Gillick, it reads:

“lying on top of a building the clouds looked no nearer than when I was lying on the street”

Understated and minimalist, its impact undoubtedly dependent upon its being experienced in context, it nevertheless offers a patina of beauty to an otherwise ordinary late winter day in the city; a reminder that language, as abstract as we sometimes suppose, can also be such a visual and visceral thing of the world.

And that isn’t all. I found myself at the main central library and once again, even before entering what is frankly a stunning building in its own right, more understated words introduced themselves to me like slightly reticent predators.

THE WORDS DON’T FIT THE PICTURE

Which is artist Ron Terada’s poetic expression of Vancouver’s historic relationship with bright, neon signs. Or as he puts it himself: “The sign takes its cues from an era of signage when signs were seen as celebratory, grand and iconic – in effect, as landmarks in their own right, a kind of symbolic architecture… Taken within the context of a public library, the work touches upon – in a very poetic way – the use of words and language as boundless and imaginative, as a catalyst for a multiplicity of meanings.”

And still we weren’t done, because inside the breathtaking atrium, there were yet more words, way up on the precipitous walls. Mysterious and, again, quietly poetic words. This time, it required some detective work to discover their source, detective work that hasn’t paid off at the time of writing (if my inquiries pay off, I’ll add any new information later). Here are those words, in the form of six banners hung beside each other (no idea how to format that here), all upper case text, each six-line block in different but uniform colours:

WITH
MEMORY
OF ALL IT
WOULD
LEAVE
UNDONE

FIRST
THROUGH
FOLLY
AND THEN
NOW BY
ERROR

LIKE A
HOPE
AGAINST
HOPE AND
WHATEVER
ELSE

IT WAS
NOW
THERE
AGAIN TO
BE MADE
REAL

HAVING
BEEN
WRITTEN
AT SOME
PRIOR
POINT

IN THE
FACE OF
ALL IT
COULD
HAVE
BECOME

Enigmatic and elusive words, somehow sorrowful, regretful. Certainly beautiful. Which could lead to a whole other blog post on how important language is as something beyond mere communication and more like art, but I’ll resist as this is getting long.

Funnier still, this strange journey through some kind of secret poetic life of my adopted city didn’t end there. Retiring to one of my old favourite haunts, a little bar in Gastown, the oldest part of Vancouver, named the Irish Heather, all four bathroom doors were festooned with…. you guessed it…. words. Words written by Samuel Beckett, Shane MacGowan, Sinéad O’Connor and Brendan Behan, the latter of which seemed to encapsulate the day.

 

 “I have a total irreverence
for anything connected
with society,
except that which makes
the roads safer,
the beer stronger,
the food cheaper and
the old men and old women
warmer in the winter and
happier in the summer.”

Anyone else know of similar examples in their own cities, where solitary words must compete quietly against the rush of traffic, the roar of floatplanes in the harbour, the blustery cacophony of pigeon wings… and sometimes even triumph?

 

 

 

 

 

 

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David Antrobus is a contributing writer for Indies Unlimited and author of the nonfiction book Dissolute Kinship: A 9/11 Road Trip. For more information, please visit the IU Bio page, and his website: The Migrant Type.

Author: David Antrobus

Born in Manchester, England, author David Antrobus currently lives in British Columbia. David also edits and writes in many styles and genres, from nonfiction to dark fantasy. He worked for twenty years with abused teens. You can also find David at his blog and at his Amazon author page.

18 thoughts on “Found Words, Waiting”

  1. Hmmmm. I haven't noticed any that come to mind but they must be here. Stratford is home to the biggest Shakespearean Festival in the world. We have, in our tiny city, four major live theatres where all manner of works, not all Shakespeare, are professionally performed. I'll need to keep my eyes open.

    1. So does Stratford, Ontario have huge ties to Stratford-on-Avon? It must, right? It's funny; I wouldn't have called Vancouver a particularly literary city, and I certainly didn't set out to find these little gems, but when I looked at photos of our visit (I live just outside Van), I noticed this theme of words and shazam (is that the right flourish?), a blog post was born!

          1. The name Stratford came form the Brits, I am sure,(it is still a pretty WASP city) but I think that the other connections are accidental. The Festival actually began after the city was already established. I think the name figured into the choice of location. And yes, isn't it interesting what cam spark a theme for a post. Is that one of the traits that makes us writers – the things that spark our thought processes?

  2. Nice post, D. San Francisco has a lot of little hidden treasure like that both literary and artistic. My favorite is Balmy Alley. It's just like any alley in the Mission, but the garage doors and fences are covered in beautiful murals by some of the greatest artists to pass through SF. They are faded and sort of maintained, and left up by agreement – I mean, they are literally painted on people's garages. Derelict motorcycles lean up against them. It's a wonderful block. And there are many more. That I can't think of right now. 🙂

    1. That's exactly it, though. They are local and ephemeral and (I'm guessing) not included in any tourist brochure, yet they are kind of precious and unexpected. I wasn't expecting anything like that, for sure, and it added a dimension to my day that I hadn't anticipated. Which is cool. I know that sounds lame. Eh. Ha. 🙂

        1. Wow! Street art can be humbling, as you say. The story underneath is, too. Glad you weren't hurt. My spouse is getting used to me reacting to stuff, too, but I am slowly learning when to back off. Really pisses me off when jerks get away with stuff. Hard to keep quiet.

  3. I don't know if you read through, but the one with the eyes is my favorite. It was originally a pastoral scene like the border. Someone trashed the door, so they commissioned someone to fix it. I think it's supposed to be the eyes of an 8 year old Nicaraguan girl. There is a soldier in one eye and a dove of peace in the other. It gives me chills. I think I have a better pic.

  4. Little reminders to all to stop and smell the roses. Everyone is always in so much of a rush, sometimes people forget there is real beauty in us humans.

    1. The thing is, I love the spontaneous stuff, genuine street art coming from the people, etc., …even Banksy's stuff, for that matter (seriously, Google him if you haven't seen his work)… but what struck me about these Vancouver examples were a) that they were planned and therefore clearly *not* spontaneous and b) they featured only text, albeit text in surprising locations. The power of words alone sans any visuals other than the context. Ha, not really sure what I'm trying to say, here, but it strikes me as a genuine placing of trust in words, and words alone.

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