by Paul Theroux
“It’s right inside the door,” he said. “Didn’t you see it?”
“Didn’t look.”
“Well, look now!” He became a hysterical bitch, jerking his sweaty head and tensing his finger bones.
“Not on your tintype,” I said coldly.
“It’s your thing—they’re your pictures.”
“I don’t go in there.”
“How did the pictures get inside?” he shrilled at me.
“I threw them there. Now listen, you shit-kicker, go in there and get that picture and make it snappy.”
“Right under your nose,” he mumbled, hurrying inside and retrieving it. He dangled it, using his thumb and forefinger to ridicule what he would never understand.
I looked at the picture.
“And there’s some more,” he said. He handed over a chunk of prints.
“I forgot I took so many.”
He glanced at the one on top. “It’s not as busy as your best work.”
“I suppose not.”
He pinched the mustache of sweat from his upper lip and said, “I’ll never finish the retrospective at this rate.”
I withdrew to my room, taking the pictures of Orlando. Hold the phone, I wanted to say. Correction.
The sun had not set his hair smoldering, the river was turgid, and the trees I had remembered as streaming with light were bare. Orlando was dark, hunched over the oars as if sneaking ashore for some furtive assignation. His head was tilted, his ear against his shoulder, and his face, a brown leaf, had a whisper of stealth on it, the wary listening expression of someone who has just heard an unusual sound. His jersey was full of muscular creases, but it was his hands which gave him away, his grip on the oar handles like a hawk’s fists on a branch. His straining stance was more than a rower’s posture: it was flight, he was leaving me.
I had been wrong to remember him gliding downriver in a halo of autumn light. There was no shower of yellow leaves. This was a determined boatman one distant afternoon, who knew it was late and was wasting no time. Those shadows on his face gave him a ferocity that could have been impatient hope trying to displace sorrow, or the anger of thwarted lust. He looked heavy and grave and his back was to the riverbank that seemed a sodden frontier. There were a dozen pictures in all. In the last he faced the camera. He was so private, so engrossed in his mood, he might have been rowing alone. I barely recognized him.
The camera lied. And had I been foxed by my memory too? The past, drowned and buried by time, was unverifiable. But I had been fooled all right.
I needed a drink. I made a jug of martinis and sluiced the morning away.
At lunch, I gave the pictures to Frank and said, “These are for the shredder.”
He had a sandwich in one hand. He raised the pictures, raised the sandwich, took a bite of the sandwich, and holding the pictures, chewed. Then he tucked the bite into his cheek and said, “Who’s the guy?”
“Fellow I used to know.”
“If they’re personal we should include them. Otherwise forget it—they won’t reproduce.”
“Like I say, shred them.” I snatched them from him and started to tear them. “Pack of lies.”
“Don’t do that!” he squawked, spattering me with mayonnaise. “They’re primary sources. They’ve got to be catalogued. Nothing gets thrown away.”
But I went on tearing them. “I am executing these pictures.”
“Stop it!”
“Finish your lunch,” I said, and dropped the pieces next to his plate.
“Look what you did,” he said. But his tone was softened by gratitude. He began arranging the photograph pieces like a jigsaw, fitting them and puzzling. He smiled as he chewed. He looked eager; this was like making his own pictures—creation.
“I’ll need information on these for the catalogue.”
“You tell me. They’re no damn good, but that’s your problem. It’s your retrospective, ain’t it?”
He put down his bite-scalloped sandwich. He said, “I know you think I’m a fool. That’s what you think, isn’t it?”
“Your pictures, your everything. Who cares what I think?”
“I care,” he said. “I care very, very much what you think, Maude.”
“All right,” I snapped. “I think you’re a fool. So there.”
He narrowed his eyes at me. “And this morning you called me a shit-kicker. That’s the thanks I get.”
“What’s in it for me?” I said.
“This retrospective’s going to be the biggest thing—”
“You’ve got to be joking,” I said. “Listen, I’m seventy-one years old. I’ve got more money than I will ever spend and there’s nothing I want in the world that I can’t buy in Hyannis. I’ve had critics eating out of my hand for fifty years, but don’t judge me by my pictures—I don’t give a rat’s ass for them, anyway, burn the lot of them for all I care. I don’t need a retrospective—I didn’t take pictures for people like you. I took them for myself, understand? I’ve had a long fascinating life, and I’m happy, Frank!”
“Then why do you sound so mad?”
“Because you’re pissing me off something wicked, that’s why.”
He swallowed guiltily and looked down at his bitten sandwich.
“You,” I said, wagging my finger in his face, “You say you’re going to make me famous. Well, thanks very much, Frank, but I’ve got news for you—”
“I never said famous. I’m just trying to broaden your appeal.”
“Who the fuck are you trying to impress? I know what you want to do—you want to put your own name in lights. Just like these squirts who make the celebrity scene—they get a hammerlock on the luminaries. Why? Because they want to be famous themselves, and the by-line ends up bigger than the picture. That’s how it happens, you know—any jackass with a two-dollar Instamatic can get billboarded all over Vogue if she does the right people. And you’re doing me the very same way. You’re piggybacking. Deny it.”
“I deny it.” He shuddered and added, “Strenuously.”
“You don’t know the first thing about me.”
“What’s got into you?” he said pityingly. “You’re really bitter. You’ve said some terrible things to me.”
“Get off the bucket. If you’re not interested in fame, what is it?”
“I am sincerely interested in your work. I think it represents the America of this century.”
“Hogwash,” I said. “It doesn’t even represent my life.”
“An artist’s life is his work.”
“I don’t buy that,” I said. My life wasn’t in my work: perhaps that meant I wasn’t an artist? But Frank was convinced I was, and unshakable in his conviction. I said, “I can’t help thinking there must be a pile of dough in this for you.”
“Money is not one of my considerations. Fortunately.”
“Really? You’re loaded, right?”
“I have sufficient funds,” he said: the prissy verbosity of the self-righteous.
“Come off it. You think you can make a bundle. The museum pays you for all of this.”
“As a matter of fact, they don’t. I’m on a year’s sabbatical.”
“You’re doing it free?” For a moment I was ashamed.
“Not exactly,” he said. “I’ve got a Guggenheim.”
My mouth went dry. “Repeat that.”
“And it’s renewable.”
“You’ve got a what?”
“Don’t tell me you never heard of the Guggenheim Foundation.”
“Jumping Jesus, doesn’t that take the cake!”
“What’s wrong with a Guggenheim?”
“Everything,” I said, and decided to let him have it. “Ever heard of Edward Weston?”
“The photographer?”
“No, Edward Weston the dogcatcher,” I said. “Of course the photographer!”
“We had a really big Weston retrospective years ago,” he said, sounding a little tired and knowing, the way the French do when you men
tion wine, as if nothing I said could be news to him.
But I pressed on. “Long before you were born, I met Weston in New York. He said he liked my pictures, but he was a horny devil, so when he said, ‘I’d like to see a lot more of you’ I figured him for a bum-pincher. We had a set-to—he gave me his usual baloney about farmers with furrows on their faces and Kentuckians with bluegrass growing out of their eyebrows. I took exception to it—I mean, what if your farmer happens to be a little shrimp with eyeglasses and beautiful hands? Eugene O’Neill looked like a wino, I told him, and Lawrence had a case of halitosis that made the shit-plant on Moon Island seem like a rose arbor. And let’s face it, most of those black pimps and numbers runners I did in New York looked like kings and princes of Bongo-land. But Weston disagreed, and he wanted to prove his point.”
“Artistically, Weston’s Mexican—”
“Keep your shirt on, Frank. At the time—this was ’thirty-six—he got it into his head to apply for a Guggenheim. They were giving them to painters, English teachers, playwrights—in fact, every filling station attendant in the country believed that as soon as he got a Guggenheim he’d write Leaves of Grass. Weston said if those fakers got them, why not him?
“‘I’m an artist,’ says Weston, and smacks his lips.
“‘Well, I’m a photographer,’ I says, ‘and I wouldn’t touch one of them Guggenheims with a ten-foot pole.’
“He said he needed the freedom. The money would free him. ‘How very American,’ I says. Give this boy a few bucks and suddenly he’s free. I couldn’t see the point of it—still can’t. How much money makes you free? I told him he’d be de-balled by patronage and end up being just another castrated wage slave. The only virtue in being an artist—that was his word—is being your own man. No masters, no enemies, no rivals, no patrons! I said he was talking a lot of garbage—you were free until you took the money, then you weren’t free anymore, you were in the pay of Jack Guggenheim or whoever.
“This really annoyed him. ‘My equipment costs money,’ he says, ‘and I want to do an epic series of photographs of the West.’ ‘Get a loan,’ I says, ‘mortgage that tripod—you can repay the bank when you’re rich, but with a patron, no matter how rich you get, you’ll be in debt for the rest of your natural life.’ I told him I was from a banking family and I knew what I was talking about. I said, ‘You’re a good risk for a loan—big on talent and low on overheads. After all, you can take all the pictures you want of the Grand Canyon and no one’ll send you a bill.’
“He couldn’t see why he should get a bank loan instead of a gift from a fame-sucker on Park Avenue—I guess he figured the bank might foreclose and repossess his genius. ‘It’s my mind,’ he said. ‘I need spiritual freedom to do anything I want’—and these are his exact words—‘from a cloud to an old shoe.’
“‘To me, there’s not a dime’s worth of difference between a cloud and an old shoe. The sky’s full of old shoes,’ I says to him.
“We were getting nowhere. He said that he was going to apply for a Guggenheim just the same. And he did. And I’ll be goddamned if he didn’t get one. In 1937, he was the first photographer ever to get a Guggenheim, but as I said to him, ‘Your camera still weighs forty pounds and if you shoot any nice pictures you’ll have to go around afterward and say thank you to all the Guggenheims.’ Imagine, an artist saying thank you! I didn’t see much of him after that.”
Frank said, “You peed on Weston, so you’re peeing on me.”
“On the contrary,” I said. “The next thing I know I get a letter from the foundation. Do I wish to apply for a Guggenheim grant? Well, I made a big mistake. I was young, I wasn’t as smart as I am now. It wasn’t the money, but somehow if they gave me the money they were testifying to my art. You’re an artist, here’s ten bucks to prove it—that kind of thing. Was I worth it? There was a crisis in my life. I needed encouragement. That’s the worst of patronage, you know, the belief that having a patron means having talent. But the answer to ‘Am I an artist?’ must always be no, because no artist would ask that dumb question. Right?”
“Interesting,” said Frank.
“I filled out the application, in triplicate. My name, outline of project, previous shows, sponsors. It was like a Means Test—no, it was like a Pauper’s Oath. Then I waited.”
“I never knew you had a Guggenheim,” said Frank.
“That’s the point of the story, you peckerhead. I didn’t get the fucking thing!”
“I see.”
“No moolah for Maude.”
I fell silent. I had applied in October, this receding time of year. The leaves, the grass, the withered flowers, just like this. And the air rounded with a chill amplifying the rasps of autumn, everything that had been alive in the summer turning to confetti, smoke, dust, and haze. Even the fires dying into yellow vapor, the sunlight weakening on the Sound, somewhere a buzz saw, and hammerings from the Hyannis shore. I was parched with incomprehension; I could taste the driest disappointment, and it stifled me like defeat.
“Afterward I hated them—for making me want it, for making me need proof, and for thinking, when I didn’t get it, that I wasn’t worth it. But I got over it. Everyone who gets one of those things deserves it. The best never ask.”
“What was your, um, project?”
“Something to do with Florida.”
“But you did Florida!” said Frank. “It was your first big success!”
“So it was. If you have something to do you do it. You don’t sit around on your fanny waiting for someone to put you on the payroll.” But I could not remember how I had done Florida, or why I had gone.
“Some payroll,” said Frank. “Subsistence—that’s all I get.”
“You let them buy you Tootsie Rolls, is that it? Ain’t it a riot? They’re paying you to study my work, but they refused to pay me to produce it. What’s wrong with a Guggenheim? That’s what’s wrong. They don’t care about the ship—all they’re interested in is the goddamned barnacles.”
In my anger over lunch I almost blurted out to Frank that I had seen his raunchy pictures. But I resisted: his back was to the wall—I couldn’t throw that at him. And furthermore, I had not worked out in my own mind how they mattered: the mind is more fastidious than the eye. I didn’t know whether to witness or judge, and had not decided if such stuff should be suppressed. The soul of art is human emotion. Although pornography depicted anonymous emotion and was crude as a cactus, the people who needed it brought imagination to it and pulped the lumps and spines into art. and let this simmer in their brains. It was like making your own amorous masterpiece, the pure glory of love’s double image—the classically serene embrace—out of the furious meat of Kenny and Doris. Perhaps in Doris’s bivalve and Kenny’s knobby anemone Frank saw a whole sea-floor of possibility, or were these fuck shots merely a sleazy detonator for his libido? “Rhetorical,” he might say; but how did they refer, and to whom, and why?
It baffled me. I resolved to wait.
Quite late—I was in my room, something on my mind, an unformed consequence—Frank knocked on my door. He rapped impatiently, loudly hectoring to alert me to his anger. He burst in, heaved himself at me, then drew back.
He shook his bony fingers and glared.
“You’ve been in my things!”
Enraged, he had a look of starvation. I had never seen him so skinny or so pale; his eyes bulged, there was a beggar’s cringe in his shoulders. But I had seen this sort of thing once before. I knew this intrusion, a particular one—which?
“You know what I’m talking about.”
I smiled at him: I had heard that once, in precisely those words. “Haven’t the faintest.”
He said, “My personal property. Pictures.”
“Describe them.”
“Don’t be funny—you know the ones I mean.” His voice cracked and I thought he was going to burst into tears. Single people are fairly unembarrassed about crying: they practice it alone in their rooms. He sat down and took a d
eep breath and after exhaling it seemed much calmer. He recovered his aggrieved tone. “If there’s one thing I hate it’s people who don’t respect private property.”
“Then get your skinny ass off my chair and clear out. This is my private property, buddy.”
“I want an explanation. I’m not leaving until I get it.”
“I went into a room in my house, opened the drawer of a table I happen to own and found some of your pictures. I wasn’t going to mention it, but since you raised the matter I can tell you I think you have rather a grim taste in anatomy. That’s all there is to it.”
But I didn’t want him to go. I needed him to help me remember that other intrusion. His eyes were damp with anger. He had gotten even skinnier since entering my room and looked as if he might let out one maniacal honk of wind and shrivel like a bag before my very eyes.
I said, “Also, I thought I recognized the people in them.”
“You’re putting me on.”
“Turns out it’s the same couple I’ve been seeing for years. Kenny and Doris. They could use a vacation. I wonder what folks like that do on vacation. Probably tear open a six-pack and shoot the bull. Watch television. Stuff themselves with Twinkies.”
“You’re not even sorry.”
“Sorry?” I said. “I’m appalled!”
“I want an apology.”
“You came to the wrong place, buster.”
He shook his head vengefully. “Know something? You’re really incredible.”
“Just as a point of interest,” I said brightly, “how did you know I’d seen them?”
“That’s my business.”
“Very clever of you, I’ll grant you that. Seriously, how’d you know I’d been nosing around?”
“So you admit you were nosing around!”
“Of course. I’ve got a right to in my own house, haven’t I?”
“Not with my stuff you haven’t. No one touches my stuff.”
“Your ‘stuff’? If us photographers said that, where would you museum people be?”
“That’s got nothing to do with it.”
“Listen, you peckerhead, for the past three months you’ve been pawing over my pictures and drooling. Have I complained? I jolly well haven’t. And remember,” I said, flinging a finger at him, “when they were handing out Guggenheims no one gave me one. As far as I’m concerned you’re just another burglar using his Guggenheim as a license to pry, so shut up and be glad I don’t report you to the police.”