The  curtains in the room were layered with one hundred years of dust –  quite possibly containing the skin flakes of Rimbaud when he passed  through Paris in 1871 – and the woman who owned the hotel was not going  to give us a new roll of toilet paper when it started to run low –  unless we asked.  But why not?  That’s how it works.  How else could the  hotel afford to charge so little for such a large room with two huge  windows?  Late at night we could see the Eiffel Tower’s searchlight beam  sweep the sky just over the chimneypots lining the roofs on Rue Racine,  and, leaning out over the ledge we could also catch the night café  people wandering home, down on Rue Monsieur le Prince, words and shoes  echoing off shutters and stone.  Why stay anywhere else?  
We  were in France in the first place because Michaela was reading a paper  at an ecocriticism conference in Toulouse, but my focus had always been  on our days in Paris afterwards.  When I was a kid, my family lived in a  small cement factory town in Southern Belgium because my father, a navy  man, had been posted to SHAPE (Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers  Europe, the military wing of NATO, situated near Mons, Belgium, on the  French border).   Usually we ended up in Paris on the rare occasions  when family or friends visited from the states. It was only two hours  away by train.  Closer by car.  The last time I’d been to Paris was in  the late Eighties, to pick up mail at American Express, after having  walked across Southern France. 
(There  was a point during my eighth grade year when my family was going on a  weekend trip to Paris and I begged to be allowed to stay behind, spend  the night at a friend’s house, just so I wouldn’t miss a baseball game.   At the time I was attending an International School – Belgian  curriculum, French spoken in the classroom – but during the spring and  summer I played in an American organized baseball league. Playing  baseball was pretty much my only contact with the Americans who attended  ‘that other school’ at SHAPE: the mysterious American school.  I don’t  know how many times during those years playing baseball some kid would  wander up to me, usually at the beginning of baseball season, and ask:   “Are you Belgium?”  Every year:  “Are you Belgium?”  “Uh...no...”  My  sisters sometimes got the same question, always phrased the same way.   Of course, it became a private joke among us:  "Are you Belgium?"
  
Needless to say, I long ago forgave that twelve year old kid who preferred baseball over Paris...)
Needless to say, I long ago forgave that twelve year old kid who preferred baseball over Paris...)
So we moved with the crowds toward the main attractions – the Mona Lisa, the Winged Victory, Venus de Milo, Michelangelo’s Dying Slave, and Canova’s Eros and Psyche. Like everyone else, I’ve seen so many reproduced images of the Mona Lisa that I simply can’t see it anymore. If you dip into the official Louvre Museum site online, they freely admit that this is the case, saying “We now no longer know how to look at the Mona Lisa, except as a popular image...”
 They  go on to explain that knowing the ‘secrets’ of the painting (technique,  how the back panel was made, who Mona Lisa actually was, etc.) will  help clear away all that clutter in your head so that you can actually  look at it with, well, virgin eyes.  The information did not set me  free.  It rarely does.
They  go on to explain that knowing the ‘secrets’ of the painting (technique,  how the back panel was made, who Mona Lisa actually was, etc.) will  help clear away all that clutter in your head so that you can actually  look at it with, well, virgin eyes.  The information did not set me  free.  It rarely does. 
But  all was not lost.  Instead of focusing on the painting, I focused on  the crowd shifting and swirling in front of the painting:  a great  creature that had no head, no tail, but one million eyes, constantly  snapping, trying to drink the image in, never sated.  And as we stood  there at the edge of the crowd it occurred to me that either the  painting had somehow entranced this massive creature into being for her  own pleasure – which is what the smile was all about – or that all of us  standing there, along with all the tourists that had ever stood there,  had somehow retroactively conjured Da Vinci into being, in order to give  us a reason to be there, right then, crammed together,  worshipping with our cameras – as if we were part of some epic desire  for a communal spectacle that stretched back into the past and long into  the future... 
 What’s fascinating is that most of us were not looking at the painting with our eyes,  but through a camera lens.  Which is exactly how we’ve seen it most of  our lives.  I thought maybe that putting it into that particular frame  made it more familiar, almost comforting, allowing us to take part in  that stream of images we brought with us to the museum.
What’s fascinating is that most of us were not looking at the painting with our eyes,  but through a camera lens.  Which is exactly how we’ve seen it most of  our lives.  I thought maybe that putting it into that particular frame  made it more familiar, almost comforting, allowing us to take part in  that stream of images we brought with us to the museum.   The  painting is brilliant, yes.  And, yes, there is that smile.  But what  has made her so famous in the last half-century is not the beauty and  mystery of the painting itself, but the ease of her reproducibility.  There are a few other Leonardo paintings in the Louvre that I think are  on an equal level – the Virgin of the Rocks comes to mind. It hangs in the long gallery just outside the Mona Lisa room. Another one that comes to mind is Bacchus  – a painting that used to be in the same room as the Mona Lisa the  first time I was there as an adult, but I couldn’t find it this time  (some say it’s probably not a Leonardo anyway, so there’s that).  But  these two paintings are not reproducible in the same way as the Mona  Lisa. Stylistically they just aren’t simple enough. They don’t work on a  T-shirt. Or a pair of socks.
The  painting is brilliant, yes.  And, yes, there is that smile.  But what  has made her so famous in the last half-century is not the beauty and  mystery of the painting itself, but the ease of her reproducibility.  There are a few other Leonardo paintings in the Louvre that I think are  on an equal level – the Virgin of the Rocks comes to mind. It hangs in the long gallery just outside the Mona Lisa room. Another one that comes to mind is Bacchus  – a painting that used to be in the same room as the Mona Lisa the  first time I was there as an adult, but I couldn’t find it this time  (some say it’s probably not a Leonardo anyway, so there’s that).  But  these two paintings are not reproducible in the same way as the Mona  Lisa. Stylistically they just aren’t simple enough. They don’t work on a  T-shirt. Or a pair of socks.  
Meanwhile,  on the floor below, not very far from the Venus de Milo, there’s the  Etruscan room.  There was no one in the Etruscan room.  I know next to  nothing about the Etruscans.  I’ve seen very little reproduced images of  Etruscan art.  D.H. Lawrence said about them:  “The Etruscans, as  everyone knows, were the people who occupied the middle of Italy in  early Roman days, and whom the Romans, in their usual neighbourly  fashion, wiped out entirely in order to make room for Rome with a very  big R.”  Not sure if this is completely accurate.  But that’s about all  the information I brought into the room with me.  
 After  the Louvre we walked over to Notre Dame.  We’d been there the night  before at sunset, wandering along the Seine among the drinking students,  teens from the outlying suburbs not quite sure what they were looking  for, couples eating in the boat restaurants moored quayside, those  looking to sell cheap bottles of wine to tourists, and the scattering of  homeless men waiting for everyone to leave so they could curl up on  their cardboard beds and sleep.  Because it was early afternoon there  were now throngs of people slow-shuffling up and down the north and  south aisles, crowding into the north or south transepts to get a good  shot of the rose windows.  One man, just ahead of me as we entered the  cathedral, held a digital camera in front of him, and wandered among the  crowd while staring at the screen.  Maybe he was making a video for  someone who had been left back home?  He never stopped, looked around,  took his eyes off the screen.  Was he actually in Notre Dame?  
It sounds ridiculous to say it - naïve, even - but I feel in this age of tech-mediated experience, it needs to be said:  being there involves  being in the body – all the senses.  There is a powerful smell of dust  in the cathedral – almost one thousand years thick, the smell of dust  against stone – that cannot be separated from the vision of one of the  rose windows or of any number of stone saints looking down at you.   Soon, you’ll probably be able to punch up Notre Dame on Google, raise a  hologram of the cathedral off your screen, and when you place your face  into the projection it will trigger sections of the brain so that you  can see, hear, feel the cathedral as you walk through it...not with the  usual gaming visuals...it will feel like the actual cathedral (a similar  device is in my second novel, Among the Angels’ Hierarchies).   You will be able to walk through it completely alone, if you so choose.  Or maybe you will choose to experience it with only your partner, or a  complete stranger (with angel wings, if you like), even a crowd of  thousands – all  worshipping you, you, you.  You will be able to control the entire  experience (there’s probably the technology for this device right now –  cooked up in some Pentagon lab somewhere).  But still, if we went on  that particular holographic trip, can we say we were really there?  What’s clear is that our ideas of being there  are changing.  And we are increasingly living in a space that is not  really anywhere at all (cyberspace...the place you are right now...).  
All  this brought to mind a story a cousin told me about camping at Devils  Tower National Monument.  Devils Tower is an ancient volcanic neck  rising from the Black Hills in northeastern Wyoming.  The tower is  sacred to several Plains tribes, including the Lakota, Cheyenne and  Kiowa, and, in recent years, has become a popular mountain climbing site  (angering the tribes), but most everyone knows the image of the  monolith from the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind.   
In  the 1977 movie, Devils Tower is the place the aliens have chosen to  make first contact with humanity.  The night my cousins were camping at  the National Monument campground the park service had set up a huge  white screen and played the movie for resident campers.  There it was –  Devils Tower, onscreen, with an instant, ready-made story – all the  while the actual Devils Tower was right behind them, a looming  silhouette against a starry sky. 
For me, before getting mired in the question of what is reality,  there’s the sad realization that those who want to – or have become  conditioned to – experience the world without being in the actual world  are not capable of noticing (or caring) when huge swathes of the world  are destroyed (mountain-top removal, strip-mining, endless housing  developments, clear-cut forests, oil spills, etc. ).  When you don’t  particularly live anywhere it makes it that much easier to watch it all  go with a "oh well, what can you do?" (which reminds me of a line from a  Firesign Theatre sketch:  “How can you be two places at once when  you’re not anywhere at all?”) 
In  the cathedral there’s a line of chapels dedicated to different saints  running up the aisles on both sides of the nave.  Despite the crowds and  cameras, there were people sitting in front of each chapel, praying.   What deep concentration from a man I saw kneeling before a row of  burning candles, hands clasped over the back of the chair in front of  him, while right beside him a young man took shots of his girlfriend  among the candles.  Echoes of voices, shoes, the whirr of cameras,  pigeon wings flapping across the vaults high above, piped in polyphony.   A great voyeur-moment was when I spotted a young Japanese woman taking a  picture of something behind the closed gate of the chapel of St.  Georges.  I stood behind her, saw she was lining up a shot of a robed  priest who’d fallen asleep behind a pillar.  He was only visible from  that particular angle – but there he was, naked before her lens, slumped  on a wood bench, chin to chest.  She spent two minutes setting up the  shot and I spent those two minutes watching her set up the shot...
The  next morning, we got up early, went down to Notre Dame right when the  doors opened, so we could wander in the cathedral without the crowds.   There were probably about twenty people total in the place for a good  half hour.  One of them was a man who kept nervously walking up and down  a side aisle of the nave, stopping at each pillar, arching his back,  face raised to the vaults above, and spreading his arms out like he was  stretched out on a cross.  No one took his picture. What’s fascinating  about wandering around in the silent cathedral – nothing but the sound of sparrow banter coming through the open transept doors –  is that Notre Dame was meant to accommodate up to 6000 people.  A  nearly empty cathedral is an anomaly.  It’s meant to be filled – with  pilgrims, penitents, tourists, pick-pockets, the lost, the lonely, the  self-righteous, the pious, even the self-proclaimed damned.  Why not?   It’s a big space.  
Meanwhile, a sign on one of the closed boxes belonging to a secondhand book vendor along the Seine (a bouquiniste):
Bouquiniste en...reve.
(Bookseller off....dreaming)
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I will be reading, along with Niall Griffiths and Cynan Jones, at the Hay Festival on June 2nd, 2011, at 6:45 at the Elmley Foundation Theatre.
Niall Griffiths will be reading from a memoir, Ten Pound Poms; Cynan Jones from his new novel, Everything I Found on the Beach; and I will be reading from my new novel, A Fish Trapped Inside the Wind; along with questions from Susie Wild.
Be there.  Or be square. 




Wish I could be there! Enjoying your blog.
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