2 April 2021
Lost and Found @ Marcel Proust
Here is the first of three pictures from the other evening; this one of large lumbering clouds as thick as a family of polar bears huddling all together, is lit up as if with theatre lights of soft pink and yellow that glowed like stage scenery, and on this evening, the cloud bank resembles an arrangement of giant peonies. The sky was just beginning to turn and I was hopeful for a few studies.
Lately, I’ve been reading letters from Marcel Proust to his upstairs neighbor on the Blvd Hausseman in Paris. This correspondence makes up a book translated from the French by the clever Lydia Davis. Reading this small volume is easy, like taking a short cut through the thick forest of Swann’s Way which I read in English after failing to get through it in French many years earlier. It had rested dutifully on my bedside table like a medicine too arduous to swallow despite knowing it would heal me. I gave up after about fifty pages because I was and still am, somewhat weak-willed under the weight of a French paragraph. But years later, I find myself here in Australia, far enough away from the limelight of heady distraction, yet thirsty for Paris all the same, so I tried again in English with the lively translation of Swann’s Way by Lydia Davis. This time around I read leisurely as one really should.
But this small unique book of unusual banter is a warm surprise for any fan of Marcel Proust. It’s a concise collection of mostly trivial and anectodal musings that move at a sprightly pace. Curiously, we do not have any of his neighbor’s letters written back to him but this could actually be a good thing because after all, who wants to be in the ring with Mike Tyson?
I really like these letters because he gets to the point quickly whilst never losing that loitering visual style, as descriptive, as it is long. Lke his cousin Henry James across the ocean, Marcel Proust could also go on, and on, and on. One either loves him for it, or quits. I sometimes wondered myself whether or not I would become trapped in it, flattened between pages and lost forever like an artic explorer.
There are many hardy readers who make it through all seven volumes, and I am faint with admiration. On Reddit I found a reader who went through the whole set in a year reading ten pages a day. They made it sound like a long journey with beautiful vistas and stunning mountain ranges but also boring empty plateaus that go on for hundreds of miles. Other readers describe how it brought them closer to God. But in any event, it is an event! it’s an adventure in artistic stamina for both the writer and all the rest of us who trail behind like a mass of marathoners through all the borroughs of NY. The artist in this case gave it his all, just like Nadal and Federer, and Van Gogh and Gauguin, though the latter two never saw the prize money. But we the readers give it our all too. Without the real lovers of art there would be empty museums.
I don’t want to go too far astray in all this but just so you know, lots of people have been also eaten up by all sorts of art work in museums and lovely homes everywhere. Like long novels there are also innumerable, over-sized, and intricate pictures into which intrepid amateurs of painting visit on a regular basis like it’s dialysis treatment. I can think of artists like Hieronymus Bosch and Peter Bruegal, the elder, whose large pictures take some of us on journeys from which we never return at least in the same psychic state. And again as I always have to ask; isn’t this what art is for? One might need to be a brave soldier to make art but to love it requires a hallowed heart I think.
For me, when I think of reading Proust, I often imagine that I’m watching long thin sculls from the edge of a river bank gliding effortlessly through glassy water, each crew moving in a languid precision and slicing the water like a butter knife. It can be hypontising just to watch as time seems to switch off. And this too is about Painting or any creative act I’m sure. Can the painter and viewer both give up the stopwatch long enough to allow the work to meander freely on its own accord? Can one let go and have faith that they’ll be scooped up towards the end of their artistic endeavour and be delivered safely home again yet some place different?
What I also loved when reading Swann’s Way was that I felt like was on a luxurious ocean liner of long ago, like I was taking a year off to see the world through the lens of 1st class life. But the same time, I also parachuted into the pages of the slow luxuriant and idle world of Hans Castorp living high up in the Swiss alps. Both protagnists lived parallel lives but one searched for the meaning of life through illness, the other through pleasurable romantic indolence.
But here, in the 21th century, our lives seem to have sped up so quickly that many of us can no longer sit still. It’s like we haven’t yet learned that an easy cadence is not just reserved for the wealthy but also for those who seek out refuge in an oasis of art. Marcel Proust has taught me emphatically that at least in the imagination of my mind, there is a vast landscape, indeed continents to explore in just painting alone, and it can be done at a leisurely pace. We can (we must) put aside our smart phones and such, even temporararly, if we truly desire to find some peace away from a relentlessly invasive news cycle. I know, from experience.
Of course, no matter how much they like to complain, it’s so much easier being wealthy. What do they say Time is Money? So theoretically, the more the money, the more the time. To use all this time to get lost in any form of art is a worthy cause I think, but I’m biased of course. Ironically, the Rich of today seem to love the frenetic pace of working more to make even more money. In yesteryear, of course, they possessed all the time in the world because basically they could afford to. But they could afford to, because everyone else was running around below deck to make sure that enough coal was shovelled into the giant steam engines propelling this affluent life they lived. How else could the Grand Bourgeoisie calmly repose in chaise-lounges on the decks of so many boats drifting toward the 1st World War?
Left to their own devices, Proust also reminds us continuously just what busy-bodies the Grand Bourgeois were really like. Today, in contrast, the wealthy fly faster, and higher in their private jets, and they seem to love making more and more deals. Are they any less insecure? Do they reside in a state of calm curiosity? Boy, I certainly hope so, but what I read about them in the NYT, I kind of doubt it. Suddenly, all this makes me think of the marvellous story by Eugene O’Neill that I loved in school, The Hairy Ape.
But again, back here on mortal earth, and again in this surreal 21st century, it’s been a strange few days recently, I occasionally slip into that French ‘existential angst’ for no real apparent reason. Life is pretty good despite COVID. I’m getting a lot done in the Painting world and my piano study always improves and gives me joy. But it occurred to me that all this might be because I live a life of solitude. There are days that slip by me when I realise that I haven’t had a converstion with anyone else. I’m reading a contemporary book, Orphic Paris, a kind of diary by the poet Henry Cole, who resides in Paris. On one of the first pages is just one quote by Verlaine: “A man alone is in bad company”. Should I worry?