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So I finally landed after my travels, yet feel I have arrived in another place.

Developing a second online blog space, I’ve begun to take on my neurodiversity and become a self advocate – part of a group of neurodiverse individuals who are trying to make a change in the way neurological variation is viewed and treated. The Other Side can be found here https://soniaboue.wordpress.com/about/

There’s a great overlap, between Barcelona in a Bag and The Other Side, and my conviction that art and neurodiversity intersect seriously and purposively in all manner of ways persists and develops as I move forward in my writing both here and there.

Meanwhile, back on planet art the reality of a group show begins to loom. Magdalen Road Studio http://www.magdalenroadstudios.com artists have been busy for months creating responses to Sutton Courtenay Abbey for a show entitled Unravelling Time http://www.theabbey.uk.com

I’ll be posting details very soon!

On learning about the historical link of Sutton Courtenay with the Spanish Civil War, I knew what my piece would be about. George Orwell, whose birth name was Eric Blair, and was buried almost anonymously in the graveyard at the Church of All Saints, Sutton Courtenay in 1950.

You can read about the history here:

http://suttoncourtenay.co.uk/?page_id=111

My idea for a piece called Retreat came quickly but it has continued to unfold, deepening and gathering layers.

The title, Retreat, is multi-layered referring strongly to the key function of the Abbey but also encompassing the powerful connection I feel with George Orwell, which is of course the Spanish Civil War. Retreat becomes in Spanish, retirada, and La Retirada is the term used for the retreat of half a million Spaniards at the fall of the Second Republic in 1939.

Within this one word there is a pleasing rr..repeat, and in my skittering brain I hear tea and treat rolled together, forming a perfect associative basis for my piece. I plan to take tea to George Orwell, as his first wife Eileen did when she visited him in Spain. I will take tea with him. I will also make a tribute for him. All three aspects of my action/ performance/ritual will essentially be one and the same.

My idea is not to work with the physical space of the Abbey and it’s environs as to work at one remove conceptually and historically – perhaps even limiting my piece to virtual spaces. I do know the component pieces that will make up this artwork but I’m going down to the wire in knowing how they’ll stack together and WHERE.

Creating a video piece is a real possibility I feel – but at the last minute a live performance in situ may emerge. This is both scary and exciting not knowing!

Last night the fragments of a poem came to me.

Retreat.

Final billet.
Sutton Courtenay,
A Retreat
(from life).
I will bring you strong tea,
To your own recipe.

In Spain,
Eileen brought you tea, chocolate and cigars.
I will feed you madeleines,
For remembrance.

I have a feeling that these words are my structure for the piece. We’ll see.


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Wow. Well it’s been quite a journey. Three weeks away, two in Mexico City and one in San Francisco respectively, and one week back in the UK trying to land. It’s a truism to say that travel changes you – but it really really does. Including stuff that’s become too settled – travel not only shifts the scenery about but it also moves your mind. Right now I still don’t feel the full force of return and I continue to think this is a good thing. The holiday hasn’t worn off – I feel like a different version of me. Long may it last!

My reasons for travel were largely family, and there are huge joys and limitations in travelling to Mexico. This is not tourism nor sight-seeing, this is duty and reconnection. There are complex dynamics involving a family member who is seriously unwell. San Francisco was something else – the opportunity to shed it all off and become tourists for a while and meet another branch of my family – the neurodiverse camp out in Berkeley. You can read about that here:

https://soniaboue.wordpress.com/2015/08/12/in-deep/

Just before departing Oxford I faced a difficult decision – to leave or take my laptop. Without it, whatever internet connections I could find would be limited to my iPhone. I chose to leave it, and cease blogging, however tempting it would be to write about my experiences on the hoof. I didn’t regret this, and in time began to relish the time I spent entirely offline. Being so internet dependent in my practice (research, support networks and blogging) gives me huge benefits but also there is a down side – the balance with real time becomes tricky sometimes. Habits become entrenched and internet use can begin to interfere with your capacity to interact face to face. My time away was an opportunity to feel the difference and appreciate connection in real time.

My one cultural foray in Mexico City was to see Mexican performance artist Lorena Wolffer’s work at the Museo de Arte Moderno

http://www.museoartemoderno.com/lorena-wolffer/

This proved to be an intensely moving experience. Lorena works with the subject of violence against women and as I viewed all the various exhibits for her showing at the museum their cumulative power came crashing down on me. The photographs at the top of the page are so dark because they are taken inside a tiny memorial chapel in which the names of female victims scrolled down a projected screen. This was where I sank down on the only available chair (I think the attendant had gone to stretch their legs) and wept. The artist in me thought to take a selfie of this profound moment – I wanted to capture and remember it. These tears are real, this violence is real, these bodies are real…

Lorena’s practice is extremely varied and with time I plan to study more – though I did spend a good while piggy backing on a family member’s pc in Mexico to go through her youtube appearances that evening. What I took from her work was her willingness to take on others wounds and to enact healing rituals. I asked myself if an artist can stand in for others and I realised that this is what I myself do in performance when I channel family members who are now dead and it becomes more generalised to the Spanish exiles as a body of people, including imaginary members. Like the infant who may have worn this night dress – my stand in child victim during the Unpacking Exile performance at the Bath Fringe Festival 2015.

The healing rituals Lorena enacts are also fascinating to me. I too relate to what she does (though in her case naming and specificity are a real feature) – what are my performances with shrine assemblages if not healing rituals. We highlight, mourn and heal all at once. This is not to “make it okay” for the violence to be perpetrated in the first place, but part of something else. What else is the thing I have been unconsciously chewing on ever since. I’m extremely grateful to Mexican performance artist, Veronica Cordova de la Rosa, for sharing a link today on FaceBook, to Doris Salcedo, Columbian artist, talking to Tim Marlow about her work show at the White Cube,’A Flor de Piel’ and ‘Plegaria Muda’.

http://whitecube.com/channel/in_the_gallery_past/doris_salcedo_on_a_flor_de_piel_and_plegaria_muda/

What enviable eloquence and what brilliance. She too works with violence, memory and tribute. These pieces especially ‘A Flor de Piel’ are gorgeous in execution and intensely layered in conception. I also loved Salcedo’s bearing throughout this interview – her gravity and clarity are notable and generate a powerful presence.

Doris solved the ‘what else’ question I have been asking myself ever since seeing Lorena’s show. What I take from her is her insistence that of course we can do nothing. We can’t stop the violence and killing, it will always recur, but we must remember every single death, each individual who has been killed. It is only through these acts that we can remain human.

This journey, this art practice and my time offline all make sense to me now. At core my work and my life is about the struggle to become and to remain human. Standing in contrast to the violence and injustices that rage around me. At core this is why although at times it seems pointless (I can’t halt the “dehumanising” actions of others) my work feels vital and compelling. This is at core why – although at times I am tempted to move on – I can’t give up. As Doris says – it is our obligation. This is my obligation.

The only real questions are not whether to continue but how – how to make my work respectfully, how to make it well, and how to engage and not repel my audience with the material I seek to cover. This is the lifetime of work I hope I have left within me, and I hope to do it and to do it well.


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What I love about art blogging is the freedom within the form. If readers look back on my posts they will find a complete collage of thoughts and images – I come at this space from whatever angle I happen to find myself. Now that is a joy.

Barcelona in a Bag will be taking a break for a few weeks over the Summer. It’s hard to break off when there’s so much work to be done and the feeling that I’m close to the source of something – but there is immense value in standing back and allowing the unconscious mind to process this feeling, cast light on it and suggest the way forward on my return.

In the meantime I’m leaving this last experimental video with footage taken in the studio on my iPhone. Passage it’s called, and it has a sense of journey. That’s all I can say.

https://youtu.be/VnuQjOm4TSs

Have a wonderful Summer and thank you for reading Barcelona in a Bag.


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Had to be a Reason is a poetic video response to Literature or Life – a book by Spanish exile Jorge Semprúm on his internment in Buchenwald, which has already inspired two recent blogs on Barcelona in a Bag. This is a video meditation fusing word and image both experimental and indicative of new directions in writing and making.

https://youtu.be/xn5fXjhbVA4

 


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A blog post in which I come to the realisation that my last post was a beginning and not and ending. That I must go deeper still.

The Red Triangle II

Continuing to make my way through Jorge Semprún’s Literature or Life (English translation, Viking Books 1997), I find that  I am gazing into a new space in the abyss of memory and trauma.

I don’t now mean the actual horrors of Buchenwald (how can one ever grasp them) but rather the traces of that horror – the “death” that is survival as Semprún puts it. I’m also absorbing the unavoidable logic that the barely fathomable Nazi evil to which he was both witness and subject was humanly perpetrated, and thus it was inarguably human. That we cannot take refuge in it’s inhumanity is a philosophical proposition woven through every page of this remarkable book. It’s a terrible truth but one I am more than willing to swallow however much it will keep me up at night. I am already wiser.

So I pick up Literature or Life after a short pause in which the necessary hum of daily life intervened providing me with enough oxygen to carry on. I find Semprún in conversation with Claude-Edmonde Magny. She reads out excerpts from her letter to him about his poetry dating from before his internment. They discuss the halting, problematic book he is trying to write about Buchenwald. We will presently learn that it was too soon to begin to address the horror and a period of amnesia will be sought. As ever Semprún spins the narrative reel back and forth, building in layers of association and meaning.

As I tune in I shrink to allow a coin the size of the London Eye to drop into my brain. It’s a little bit Alice in Wonderland but I feel I must become smaller to accommodate knowledge of such proportions. As I turn each page my mind also begins to work like the ferryman of old, back and forth across the rivers of memory and association, and I know I must write again. Of so many things. My grandmother’s flat perched in a building with two winding marble staircases at either side, this mirror image holding for the child me the fascination of identical twins. My first “art perfomance” – the moment aged seven I released my pyjamas from their pegs on the balcony of that fifth floor apartment and watched them sail down onto the roof of a passing taxi never to return. All must be recalled. Rescued. This way I am certain not to falter in my task. Unravel the post memory tangle I shall.

Often words serve to skate over the surface of our understanding, and we must wait for time to deepen the cut of blade on ice to take us further under. My father was not at Buchenwald or any other German concentration camp, and his internment in the French camps of Argelès sur Mer and Barcarès were in duration but a third of Semprún’s incarceration. Held captive behind barbed wired on the beaches of France, the forms of death encountered would also be different to that which engulfed Semprún at Buchenwald. These were not death camps but more truly camps of indifference and neglect – their function as holding centres for Dachau and Mauthausen deportees would come later. Conditions were punishing and insanitary, and many  of the exiles did not survive.

There are scant details of my father’s work as a reporter with a Republican tank regiment, and his passage from Spain, but we can guess at the most probable combination of luck, death, terror and comradeship.  An emotional melange, a pic ‘n mix – without choice. No pic and all mix.

So I wait for the coin to drop – Semprún is about to reveal the unspoken mysteries of my father’s condition. In addition to acquiring the term exile and slowly garnering the substance beneath it, I must add something else.

I had known officially since the age of 13 that my father was ill. A bewildering and secret malady. A plethora of pill bottles, an often withdrawn father who resided with us in England, and the one who seemed to brighten significantly in Spain. Prone to anxiety and disappearing behind a book he was also affectionate and funny – delighting in acute observations of British eccentricity and the many quirks of his adoptive home. But the English winters conspired against him, and even our trips to Spain could not relieve his homesickness for the other Spain – the golden days of his childhood and the sweetness of his schooldays at the Instituto Escuela in Madrid. He bumped along not knowing how loveable he was – a bewildered and absent presence. I remember the silences which I now think aped forgetting. His bitterness was tempered by his gentle soul.

This in time was understood by the older me as clinical depression, and a lifelong battle with a serious cycle of mental illness. Exactly how serious I would find out much later. Recently in fact. Very recently. And now somehow Semprún has come to help me make sense of it, to allow me to give it a new name – exile plus. My skin crawls, I plug Vaughan Williams in on a loop, and my skittish mind turns to triple A batteries and platinum bank cards. Exile plus.

My primary source for insider knowledge on the emotional texture of Spanish exile has been the writer Max Aub who lived his exile in Mexico City. No-one has taught me more in a shorter space of time than Aub, about it’s acid bite, and the compulsive nature of his creative output. What I mean in simple terms was Aub’s need to create in order to “make soil.” To recreate lost territory with memoirs, journals, plays, and novels. He even invented an artist and faked his monograph, works and all – this was a land from which to launch mischief, satire and bile. Forced into self publication in Mexico, and lacking a profile in Spain he was further embittered.  In Aub I discern the urgency of mark making. Of leaving traces of existence. And it’s gone a long way in explaining the extraordinary importance to my father of his creative project to become a playwright of note.  It was not ego it was survival.

Through Aub I had come to know that writing was country. It was a haven. But the writing project was also my father’s nemesis, falling on deaf ears as it did.  It seemed to mock him and give Franco his ghastly victory anew. A painful re-enactment of loss.

With Semprún I track the indelible traces of trauma – not just the long haul of permanent exile but the effects of war and imprisonment. What I hadn’t absorbed until now was the detail. The existential horror of the every day which may have driven dad’s illness.  A life quite possibly punctured by searing traumatic memory, which would now be called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). And a life medicated thus, with the old fashioned psychiatry of electric shocks and tricyclic antidepressants.

Of course there is a simple way to frame Jorge Semprún’s distress and say he was  haunted by Buchenwald, but we must avoid such language as it skims the surface and won’t yield the complexities. The following excerpts allow us to go deeper.

“I’d woken up with a start.”

“Awakening had not brought comfort, however, had not swept away the anguish – on the contrary. It deepened the distress while transforming it. Because the return to wakefulness, to the sleep of life, was terrifying in itself. That life was a dream – after the radiant reality of the camp – is what was terrifying” p155

“Everything would begin all over again as long as I was alive, or rather, as long as I was revenant. As long as I was tempted to write. The joy of writing I was beginning to realise would never dispel the sorrow of memory. Quite on the contrary: writing sharpened it, deepened it, revived it. Made it unbearable.

Only forgetting could save me.” p161

This the agonising  “death life” of the survivor, with the nightly bind, a scratched disc of all too vivid awakenings. With no escape, as the writer’s balm is the rub of remembrance and a wretched site of re-traumatisation. Forgetting is the only salvation he says, but Buchenwald would surely be seared on the psyche. Etched on the emotional retina for good.

My father, like Semprún, paused a goodly while before attempting his returns to the trauma site in his early plays. He was busy finishing his education and gaining a university lectureship, and trying to get on with the business of living. Perhaps he was also busy trying to get on with the business of forgetting.

But many exiled writers like Aub and my father were ultimately compelled to write as a form of existential return. The alternative was to accept a living death – erasure from both contemporary and historical memory. We know too that traumatic experience also draws one on a loop to return, but the perils are obvious.  In these circumstances writing and memory create a psychologically fatal paradox – damned if you do and damned if you don’t. Trapped as a fly in the spider’s web – the only psychological certainty is a form of living death. When you put it like this, the wonder is that dad was able to recover and chose life many times over, and that ultimately writing as a pleasure and a sanctuary could be found in places.

I think like Semprún that my father moved between memory and amnesia. The briefcase of pills, the journeys to the ECT suite and my mother’s loving and sustained ministrations kept him with us. I’m not a fan of old style psychiatry nor the modern brand if I’m honest – but I’m so grateful for the years together. I just wish I had understood him more.  The struggle he faced now that I grasp it takes my breath away.

 

 

 

 


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