Year: 2005

  • Water and Steel

    Port of Duluth—Saturday, October 15, 2005

    In the middle of the night, at the end of a long day in the middle of October, I found myself sitting in a recliner. I was in the lounge of the penthouse high above the long deck of the American Spirit, a thousand-foot bulk freighter. We were plunging into the gaping darkness of Lake Superior.

    The American Spirit, which is 1,004 feet long, to be exact, was hauling 62,000 tons of taconite pellets bound for a Mittal Steel facility in Indiana Harbor on Lake Michigan. There it would dispatch its cargo, and then promptly turn around and return to the North Shore for another load. The round trip was scheduled to take a week, give or take a couple days depending on such intangibles as weather conditions on the lakes, traffic, and loading and unloading times. Since the shipping season opened in late March, the boat and its regular complement of twenty-five crew members operated twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. They had already made more than thirty trips around the circuit, hauling Iron Range taconite to ports strung out all along the Great Lakes.

    When I had come aboard the boat the previous afternoon with a photographer, we met the first mate, Randy Samways. He is a giant and affable man who looks like a retired NFL offensive lineman. He warned us that the American Spirit was a notoriously shaky ship and was coming off a particularly rough return journey. “This thing likes to rock and roll,” Samways said. “It makes a lot of people uncomfortable. I’m not going to lie to you.”

    Before the boat eventually headed out into Duluth Harbor, we heard variations of this fair warning from a handful of other crew members. “Have you ever ridden through a patch of airplane turbulence?” another guy asked. “Imagine six days of that, and you’ll have some idea of what you could be in for.”

    That sort of ship turbulence is called cavitation, and on the American Spirit it’s caused by a variety of factors, but most notably by the boat’s worn and outdated variable pitch propellers, which apparently have more of a choppy effect than the newer and smoother banana blade props that have been installed on many of the other freighters on the Great Lakes.

    The penthouse business was unexpected. Faced with the prospect of a week aboard a freighter, I had visions of sharing a cramped, concrete, bunker-style dormitory strung with mesh hammocks; I imagined a scene straight out of a World War II submarine movie. The rest of the boat did have a bit of that vibe, but the penthouse—located three levels above the galley and deck—had the feel more of a swank suburban hotel suite, circa 1979. Most of the time, in fact, it had the feel of a swank suburban hotel suite, circa 1979, trembling through a ceaseless minor earthquake.

    Apparently constructed as traveling quarters for the original owners of the ship (principals of the National Steel Company, which once maintained its own fleet), the American Spirit’s penthouse featured three bedrooms with individual bathrooms and showers, a lounge area with satellite TV, and a dining room and conference table. It also had a bank of massive windows that offered a commanding view of the deck.

    Observed through the windows of the penthouse that first night, Lake Superior was an unbroken plane of gun-metal black static, the sky a solid and mottled wall of gray slate . I noticed that the lounge was equipped with a stereo console that included an eight-track player and a turntable. As the ship shuddered its way through that static and slate at roughly twelve to fourteen miles per hour , I wondered who’d had the bright idea of putting a turntable in a taconite freighter. The whole trip, I sat there at night watching that turntable hopping up and down in regular quarter-inch hiccups, and eventually I had an image in my head of the boat tumbling and rolling perilously through storm troughs while a record of some suitably dramatic classical music—Wagner, perhaps, or Mahler—skipped and skidded wildly at deafening volume.

    Wouldn’t that, I thought, make a wonderful scene in a European film?

    I also thought, If I’d known there was going to be a turntable I would have brought some Ramones records.

    Early in the afternoon of the previous day I’d watched as the American Spirit eased in off Lake Superior and backed into dock number six at the Duluth, Missabe, and Iron Range Railway’s ore shuttle operation in a sprawling and scruffy industrial lot tucked away under Interstate 35.

    Seen from astern, the American Spirit looked like an imposing cruise ship, with cabins, decks, catwalks, smokestacks, and assorted antennae and satellite gear jumbled five stories above the deck. When the whole thing came into view abeam, though, the freighter looked more like an elaborate, nautically themed apartment building dragging a huge health-club running track.

    The ship’s vast length was composed of the adobe-colored deck that stretched to the bow and included seven cargo holds and thirty-six ore hatches. Built at an American Shipbuilding Company yard in Lorain, Ohio, and launched in 1978, the double-hulled American Spirit can haul a variety of dry bulk commodities such as taconite pellets, coal, and limestone aggregates.

    The American Spirit was coming back to Duluth empty, its ballast tanks along both sides of the hull pumped full of water to compensate for the absence of cargo and allow the ship to ride lower in the water for greater maneuverability.

    The generators were pumping out the ballast as the ship angled into position at the dock, which was itself dominated by a towering structure of steel girders, ore shuttles, and elevated railroad tracks. A constant relay of trains rolled in and out high above the harbor, hauling the taconite pellets that would be deposited in the hatches for transport to the steel mill at Indiana Harbor.

    Barring any mishap or delay, Great Lakes freighters are in port every six days during the ten-month shipping season, which typically runs from March 19 to January 15. The crew members of the American Spirit live what would strike most people as wholly unreasonable lives. Their regular schedule during the season is mind boggling to anyone accustomed to a nine-to-five routine: Sixty days on (without a day off), thirty days off, sixty days on, thirty off, and ninety days straight down the stretch. That last run is often extended to 120 days as the season winds down.

    A good deal of the work that has to be done on an ore freighter involves the loading and unloading process (which generally takes eight to ten hours at each end of the trip), and such boats tend to dock in inhospitable parts of town, or in places that couldn’t even charitably be called parts of town at all—harbors, docks, and industrial outbacks beyond the sprawl of cities like Detroit, Cleveland, Duluth, Buffalo, and Gary. This reality makes it difficult for crew members to spend much time away from the boat when they’re in port—if they get away at all.

    While the American Spirit was taking on its taconite in Duluth, Vern Eshelman, one of the ship’s five A.B. (able bodied) seamen, dashed home to Poplar, Wisconsin, to mow his lawn. Pam Samways, who is married to the first mate and lives in Duluth, met the boat at the dock and spent some time strolling the deck and hanging out with her husband for a few hours. The majority of the crew operates on a four-hour watch schedule, whether in port or out on the water. The watch system is a firmly entrenched nautical tradition, in which a number of the jobs onboard the boat are shared and parceled out in four-hour a.m. and p.m. shifts (12-4, 4-8, and 8-12). There are, for instance, a handful of A.B. wheelsmen (the guys who actually steer the ship) on the American Spirit crew, but at any given time only one of them will actually be in the pilot house and at the wheel. The captain, Dan Bartels, is also assisted by three mates, ranked first to third, and one of them is on the bridge at all times, plotting the ship’s navigation and monitoring weather conditions and traffic on the lakes.

    Though the pilot house of the American Spirit is equipped with a full complement of computer screens that show detailed present-time information such as the wind direction, depth of the lake, and the boat’s course, speed, and location, the mates do most of the actual navigation in the map room adjacent to the pilot house, using basic nautical methods that involve little more than paper charts, pencil, compass, and plastic triangles.

    Below deck is the engine room. It is a sprawling and unbelievably noisy warren that is equal parts sophisticated control center (something like the booth in a gigantic and very greasy recording studio), laboratory, and dream garage. There, Chief Engineer Tom Sufak supervises four assistants (a first engineer, two seconds, and a third, one of whom is present in the room at all times) and three QMEDS (qualified members of the engine department), one for each watch.

    The American Spirit is powered by two turbocharged sixteen-cylinder Pielstick engines (eight thousand horsepower per engine) that run on heavy diesel fuel. The diesel itself must be preheated by two steam boilers. There are also four huge Caterpillar diesel generators that power the ship’s bow thruster, ballast pumps, and the conveyor system for unloading cargo.

    Ships on the Great Lakes operate on military and eastern time, but once you actually get out on the water, time becomes a crawling (or lurching) thing governed almost entirely by the rising and setting of the sun and the passing of the occasional landmark.

    As the American Spirit finally pulled away from dock six and got turned around in Duluth Harbor, it felt very late. There was a slightly overcast sky and a big, lopsided moon a couple days shy of full. The surface of the water was smeared with all manner of reflected light—from the other boats lined up at the docks, the bridges and buoys, and the city stretched out on the hill above the lake. Up in the pilothouse, Dan Bartels had to guide the wheelsman through the impressionistic maze by using a hand-operated spotlight to point out the buoys and giving vocal directions. As the huge spotlight angled down across the ship’s bow, fat and loaded and aswirl with dust, it looked like the beam from a drive-in movie theater’s projection booth. Slowly, buoy by buoy, Bartels and Wheelsman Vern Eshelman steered the American Spirit under the bright marquee of the Blatnik Bridge, through the Aerial Lift Bridge at Duluth’s Park Point, down the break wall, and, finally picking up speed, into the dark lake beyond.

    According to the Vision Master computer screen at the wheelsman’s station, we were on track to cover 65.98 miles of Lake Superior in the next seven hours and eighteen minutes. As boats go, the American Spirit is a slow and lumbering thing.

    One level down, in the penthouse lounge, I sat up and watched the swaying flashlights of the deckhands making the final rounds of their watch. A short time later, the darkness started to slowly rise up off the lake. Daybreak was coming, and I could hear the ship stirring to life beneath me.

    Lake Superior—Sunday, October 16

    All of the crew members on board the American Spirit, with the exception of the second cook, are men. Many of them represent the second, or even third, generation of their families to work freighters on the Great Lakes. There are also a couple Yemeni deck hands, another Yemeni in the kitchen working as the steward’s assistant, and a third mate from the Philippines. Along with the twenty-five regular crew members, there are two apprentices on board from a union school in Maryland. As one of the crew had scrutinized the boat’s roster on the clipboard prior to departure, I had watched as he ran his finger down the list and counted to himself; the names of the two interlopers from the Twin Cities were tacked onto the ship’s census as “guests.”

    “Twenty-nine,” the guy said to no one in particular. “That’s not a good number on a boat like this.”

    “Why is that?” I asked.

    “You know that business about ‘when the gales of November come early’?” he said. “There were twenty-nine men on the Edmund Fitzgerald.”

    For weeks before boarding the American Spirit I had endured Edmund Fitzgerald references from friends and co-workers, and I wasn’t on the boat twenty minutes before I heard the first of what would be many more such references to the last shipping disaster on the Great Lakes.

    It also struck me as a bit disconcerting that, hanging in the TV lounge of the galley, there was an oil painting of a ship foundering in a heavy storm.

    The galley is the only real community gathering place on the American Spirit. It is a combination living room and cafeteria that is directly attached to the open and spacious kitchen, at the opposite end of which is the officer’s dining room. The latter is a decidedly more formal affair, with table service and a long table, and, in a rare assertion of traditional hierarchy on a boat where everybody interacted freely and dressed pretty much the same, is reserved for the captain, mates, ranking engineers, and, of course, the penthouse guests.

    Along with the rising and setting of the sun and the usual established work routines, meals are a fundamental ritual on the American Spirit, a way to mark time. Steward Mark Hosey is the chef on board. He started out working as a porter (“a pots and pans man,” as he calls it) on the Great Lakes thirty-one years ago. He and his two assistants are in and out of the kitchen pretty much all the time, from dawn to dusk. Breakfast is served from seven until eight a.m., lunch from eleven to twelve, and dinner from four to five. Each of these meals features a varied selection of offerings, mostly solid meat-and-potatoes fare available in prodigious quantities and accompanied by homemade soups, desserts, and a modest salad bar.

    Hosey is a gregarious, easygoing fellow with a lingering trace of a Southern drawl acquired somewhere along the line in his upbringing as the son of a peripatetic military man. He faxes in grocery orders before arriving in each port, and the supplies are generally delivered right to the boat at the dock.

    Despite the fact that he has spent his entire career working in the galley of boats, Hosey’s story is not all that different from many of the other crew members in its particulars. “I had an uncle who was a dispatcher for a fleet of ships,” he said, “and I got Shanghaied right out of high school. I started out working for the Hannah Mining Company fleet out of Cleveland. There was a time when I took a short break for a stint at Ball State University, but otherwise this has been it.”

    Hosey learned a long time ago that meals have an important role in boosting crew morale. He orders his supplies and prepares his menus with a bit of surplus in mind. “I try to get stocked up for ten days at every port,” he said. “If there are leftovers, then I know everybody’s getting fed and getting enough to eat. Meals go a long way toward spiffing up the atmosphere on a ship. If something’s gonna blow or stuff’s going to start flying, it usually happens in the galley. When I hear the guys in here laughing, that means everything’s going pretty good.”

    Weight gain is an occupational hazard aboard Great Lakes freighters, and a regular topic of conversation among crew members. Though the work is often difficult and dangerous, the amount of sedentary time during the long stretches out on the water make it difficult to burn off all those calories.

    “One of three things is almost inevitable if you work on these boats long enough,” one of the guys in the engine room told me. “Eventually your heart, knees, or back is going to go out on you. Some guys will get laid low by all three.”

    While I was on the American Spirit, I noticed a number of the crew members were clearly suffering as they subjected themselves to some sort of weight-loss program designed around a regular diet of cabbage soup. It was particularly painful to watch these men dipping into their soup when, at lunch one day, one of their fellow crew members sat across the table from them eating a bacon cheeseburger and two portions of eggs Benedict.

    Curiously—cruelly—eggs Benedict was an offering at virtually every meal for the first two days aboard the American Spirit.

    The first morning out in Lake Superior, we sailed along Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula, churning through rolling waves that were crashing over the bow and tossing spray up the deck. Somewhere to the north was Isle Royale, but it seemed as if the gray sky had completely engulfed the boat and you couldn’t see much of anything beyond the bow. A few crew members were out in the wind and mist, hunched under hoses and staggering along trying to rinse the taconite dust and grit from the deck. That adobe-colored dust is an inescapable part of the atmosphere on the boat; if you step anywhere outside the cabin, or touch any surface or handrail, you’ll instantly acquire a light coating.

    These days the crews on most Great Lakes boats have individual cabins, and the majority of the members of the American Spirit pay to have satellite TV hookups in their rooms. During the NFL season, Sundays on the boat are dominated by football, and the crew runs a highly competitive pool every week. After a lunch of hamburgers grilled on the deck (followed a mere four hours later by steaks grilled on the deck, a Sunday tradition of longstanding on freighters) pretty much everybody disappears to settle in front of their televisions to watch the games.

    Outside of meal times, in fact, the boat generally has a strangely abandoned feel to it. There always seems to be a good deal of activity below deck in the engine room, but for the most part the other crew members seem to spend the majority of their down time in their cabins.

    This is a relatively recent development and one which a number of the older sailors on board will bemoan. It wasn’t all that long ago, according to Captain Dan Bartels, that most boats had only one television, in the galley, a set that was lucky to be able to pull in a clear reception for a single channel.

    “There was a lot more camaraderie in those days,” Bartels said. “You had bigger crews, for one thing, and the quarters were more cramped. Guys would spend a lot of time just hanging out in the galley, telling stories and playing cards. There was a much more relaxed atmosphere. Of course you didn’t have so much paperwork then, either. Now there are all these security rules and paperwork and just general red tape.”

    Bartels is a trim, middle-aged man who is funny in a slightly sardonic, understated way. If you put the entire crew of the American Spirit in a lineup, Bartels is the one guy you’d instantly pick out as the captain of a ship. He’s also making only his second trip in a thirty-day stretch spelling the regular skipper of the American Spirit. He was on his way home to Buffalo for a break when he was sidetracked in Detroit and swapped off the seven hundred-foot H. Lee White, another vessel in the American Steamship Company fleet, to assume command of the bigger and balkier boat.

    A Buffalo, New York, native, Bartels more or less grew up on the Great Lakes. His father was a captain for thirty-three years, and as a kid Bartels made the occasional trip on his dad’s boat and caught the bug. He started working summers on the boats when he was sixteen, and in 1972, after graduating from high school, he went to work full time as an unlicensed ordinary seaman.

    Though ranking jobs on the freighters are now occasionally filled by candidates from the Maritime Academies, the American Spirit’s crew is entirely composed of guys who worked their way up gradually through the ranks and learned their jobs mostly through hands-on experience aboard ship.

    Bartels has seen a lot of changes in thirty years on the Great Lakes, some of them technological advances that have made his job easier—certainly safer—if more complicated. He’s also had to deal with the unpredictable boom-and-bust economic fluctuations of the business part of the job.

    “Because we’re hauling the raw industrial products, if there’s a recession coming we’ll pretty much always feel it first,” he said. “I had a year in the mid-eighties where I worked nineteen days. And we had another similar slump in the early nineties. The flip side is that when the economy’s rolling back the other way, we’ll starting hauling the ore and coal even before the industries start producing again.”

    By almost any standard, shipping on the Great Lakes isn’t what it was in its glory days, when there were booming steel factories, ports, and shipbuilding plants strung out all over the lakes from Thunder Bay out to Buffalo and down into Lake Erie destinations such as Cleveland and Toledo. There’s still a lot of traffic on the lakes, but the fleets tend to be smaller or more consolidated, and the boats are entirely at the mercy of the industries they serve. Increased international competition in the steel market and slumps in Iron Range taconite production have occasionally had drastic effects on the shipping part of the business.

    Working boats today tend to be aging—there hasn’t been a new freighter fitted out on the Great Lakes since the eighties—but because they don’t have to contend with the corrosive effects of saltwater, they can be kept running for almost as long as their mechanical parts and essential structure can be patched up and pieced back together. They’re also much larger, safer, and more efficient than the ships of the past. Most ore boats now feature sophisticated and automated conveyor systems for faster unloading; the American Spirit, for instance, can unload up to 10,000 tons an hour, and the system can be operated by a relatively small contingent of the ship’s crew.

    Last year was a relatively healthy year for Great Lakes carriers, owing to an increase in taconite production on the Iron Range and the rising domestic demand for steel as well as from the booming Chinese market. Sixty percent of the ore used by integrated steel facilities in the United States originates from Minnesota mines, and much of that gets transported on the Great Lakes. The Iron Range still contain the world’s highest concentration of iron ore.

    The economic pendulum always seems to be swinging, though. During the past year, a combination of factors has been working against the industry; fueled largely by competition from Brazil, the market for domestic steel has softened, leading to a decrease in taconite production on the Range. Toss in wild upsurges in gas costs, and the freighter fleets are once again battling very slim margins. (It is not uncommon for ore boats to top off their tanks en route just to take advantage of penny-per-gallon savings at various fuel stations, and the crew spent a good deal of time on the radio gathering and comparing fuel prices at each port along the way.)

    Still, the boats remain a necessary and viable means to an end. The longer boats can carry greater quantities of cargo and thus charge lower rates, and a ship like the American Spirit can haul more in four days than can be transported across the country train in the same time.

    Once the boat is out in the middle of Lake Superior, there isn’t a whole lot for an interloper on the boat to do but wander around, walk laps on the deck (three laps equals a mile), and hang out in the penthouse lounge or up on the bridge with the captain, wheelsmen, and mates.

    From the looks of things, the penthouse is seldom used. The reading selections on the glass coffee table consisted of old copies of Reader’s Digest, a run of People magazines from 2002 (“Julia’s Secret Wedding!”), issues of Professional Mariner, the 9-11 edition of Newsweek, and a trade paperback copy of a Mona Simpson novel.

    I also noticed that the impressive assortment of beverages in the refrigerator were all at least one year, and in some cases three years, beyond their expiration dates.

    As the American Spirit crept along through the waves and the mist, the recliner in the lounge became a rocking chair, and I came to find this persistent and almost rhythmic motion comforting during those times when the ship was rolling through stretches of the worst turbulence.

    At one point, as I was sitting in the recliner rocking and reading, I looked up for an instant and saw the sun emerge from the clouds for the first time all day, only to immediately plunge into the lake and disappear from the horizon. Moments later even the horizon was once again entirely gone.

    After darkness had settled on the lake, I went up to the pilot house and sat around for most of the night talking with Bartels, Eshelman (who was at the wheel), and Third Mate Bartolome (Tommy) Romero Jr.

    The pilot house, or bridge, is kept completely dark at all times, presumably so the guys on watch can see all the illuminated gauges and screens and pick out any obstacles in the lake or river channels. The room is long and orderly, and located at the top of the stern above the cabins. The atmosphere up there, with the darkness, the regular radio chatter, and the quiet, casual conversation that strays easily between the business of navigation and small talk, has something of the feel of an air traffic control tower at a modest regional airport.

    The crew members relish swapping stories of whopping storms and tragedies narrowly averted, and it seems like virtually everybody onboard has a keen appreciation for the history of disasters on the Great Lakes.

    Bartels told me about the time he was piloting a boat on Lake Michigan, and it ran into a wicked storm off Green Bay in the middle of the night. The ship was ploughed up in an incredible trough and was rolling perilously. Stuff started falling off the shelves, the drawers in the map room were sliding in and out, and everybody on the bridge was either hanging on or pitching around trying to get the thing boat to settle down. In the midst of this mayhem, Bartels staggered out of the map room with a pot of hot coffee extended in one arm, and made his way to the starboard windows, from which he saw a terrifying sight: the bottom of the boat rolling into plain view out of the dark lake beneath him. The mate on the other side of the room was reporting similarly alarming visions, and as Bartels lurched across the pilot house shouting instructions he continued to clutch the pot of coffee in his outstretched arm.

    The boat eventually settled back down, and Bartels disappeared into the map room and reemerged without the coffee pot. The explanation for this strange and seemingly dangerous behavior, Bartels said, should be clear enough: When things really start to go to hell up in the pilot house in the middle of the night, the first thing you save is the coffee pot. You’re probably in for a long night, and you’re going to need that coffee pot.

    A bit later, after a few more similar yarns, including tales of thirty-foot waves breaking over the bow and rolling up the deck, Eshelman asked, “Do you know the difference between a fairy tale and a sea story? A fairy tale starts out ‘Once upon a time.’ A sea story almost always begins with ‘This is no shit.’”

    Sault Ste. Marie, the St. Mary’s River, the Mackinac Straits, and into Lake Michigan— Monday, October 17

    I sat up all night as the American Spirit approached the locks at Sault Ste. Marie. There is only one lock large enough to accommodate a thousand-foot ship, so up in the pilothouse they spent quite a bit of time idling while waiting for the green light from the lockmaster.

    It was just before four a.m. as we finally made our slow approach into the Poe lock, which would lower the boat forty feet into the main channel of the St. Mary’s river. The locks were eerily quiet in the middle of the night, and the captain and the wheelsman had to steer the ship into a long approach canal that was 110 feet wide—no small feat, considering the American Spirit is 105 feet wide. As the boat nosed its way into the slip and crept along, the steel hull ground against the wood and rubber linings of the pier. Plumes of smoke swirled, and occasionally there were little bursts of actual sparks and flames.

    It seems inconceivable that the process of lowering such a giant boat forty feet would be virtually imperceptible, yet the descent was so silent, steady, and swift that the only way to recognize that the ship was descending was by watching the walkways of the pier as they disappeared above the deck. It was 5 a.m. by the time the boat eased out of the locks and moved out into the St. Mary’s River, which would take us down into Lake Huron. I tried to retire to my room to get some sleep, but the boat was rattling so hard and so noisily with all the corrections required for river navigation that the mattress kept getting jiggled off the frame, and even with earplugs the sound was head-splitting. I was just beginning to master a sort of horizontal balancing act when Tommy Romero knocked on my door and encouraged me to come back up to the bridge to watch the sun rise as the crew threaded the boat through all the islands and buoys of the St. Mary’s.

    I frequently received these visits in the wee hours from various crew members, always alerting me to something coming up on the route they felt certain I shouldn’t miss. Almost to a man, the crew members of the American Spirit seemed to have a true appreciation for the aesthetic fringe benefits of their line of work, from the beauty of a full moon rising over the lake to the splendor of peak fall colors along a string of islands.

    The St. Mary’s was astonishingly beautiful, shrouded in moving mist and lined with huge trees. Just as the sun was coming up, we entered a 1.7-mile section called the Rock Cut, a shallow (in some places there was just three feet below the bottom of the ship) and narrow man-made canal eighteen miles out of Sault Ste. Marie that was blasted out of the bedrock to allow two-way boat traffic through a particularly narrow section of the river. The Rock Cut ran right through what appeared to be an otherwise pristine wilderness area, and there were cabins and log homes perched right at the edge of the water. As the boat glided past, it created fantastic, kaleidoscopic shadows in the scattering mist that was already shimmering with sunlight.

    The range of autumn color stretching out on both sides of the ship was spectacular, particularly when the sun rose just high enough to get tangled in the tops of the trees and ignite the foliage. As the sun popped up out of the fog and swept across the trees, it looked like a series of magic lanterns being lit one right after the other.

    Later in the morning, the American Spirit left the St. Mary’s at De Tour Village in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, crawled through the De Tour Passage into Lake Huron, and then headed back west toward the Mackinac Straits.

    I generally have a pretty sound sense of direction, but I was continually amazed at how catawampus that sense became aboard the ship. With the regular shifts in weather and frequent cloud cover, it was difficult much of the time to tell which direction the boat was headed, and all the zigzagging and reversals in course only served to aggravate this persistent feeling of disorientation. One morning the sun rose behind the boat; the next it popped up out of the lake directly over the bow.

    You roll for hour after hour through open water with no sign of land in any direction and nothing in the way of actual event and then, suddenly, are rewarded with several hours of drama or beauty. There is the languid and pleasurable passing of time, and then there are intense and fleeting rewards for enduring that passing of time.

    It quickly becomes an intoxicating and ideal sort of routine.

    Early in the afternoon the boat glided between Bois Blanc and Mackinac Islands in the Straits, passing within spitting distance of a lovely little lighthouse on Bois Blanc, and sailing close enough to Mackinac that you could stare into the living rooms of the ostentatious mansions through the pilothouse binoculars.

    The American Spirit was churning up the Straits in light rain and increasingly thick fog. The Mackinac Bridge, which we were told was somewhere out there in the distance, was nowhere to be seen and then, in an instant, from perhaps a half mile away, it just popped out of the fog like an architectural drawing pinned to a white wall. As the boat crept closer the fog receded as if on command, and we sailed under the bridge and out into Lake Michigan in bright sunlight and clear skies.

    Before the ship was a mile out into the lake the fog had moved back in, and I watched from the deck as the Mackinac bridge was gradually absorbed and then entirely erased in the distance.

    Lake Michigan, crew members have been insisting, is more relentless than any of the other Great Lakes. Lake Superior, of course, has its fearsome storms and history of spectacular shipwrecks, but is also offers all sorts of nooks and crannies—islands, peninsulas, and harbors—where in a pinch a freighter can seek refuge. Michigan, by contrast, is an inhospitable and unbroken body of unpredictable water. There would, we were told, be nothing much to see from the north of the lake all the way down to Chicago at the southern tip.

    “This is a rough lake,” Dan Bartels said. “It’s definitely my least favorite. If you run into trouble out here, there’s no place to hide."

    Then, in an apparent attempt at offering some reassurance, Bartels informed me that the American Spirit was designed to be able to break in half and still stay afloat.


    That fact seemed more amusing than reassuring to most of the boat’s crew, and was offset by Vern Eshelman’s claim that, in the overwhelming majority of shipwrecks on the Great Lakes, the crew had never even managed to get its lifeboats in the water.


    Read part 2 in the January 2006 issue.

  • The Tortoise and the Hare

    It’s hardly surprising that many of the works in Walker Art Center’s newest show, Andy Warhol/ Supernova: Stars, Deaths, and Disasters, 1962-1964, are the artist’s best-known. His repeating runs of Elvises, Lizzes, Marilyns, and Jackies, along with paintings of car crashes and electric chairs, show the extent to which a fascination with tragedy and death is hard-wired into the human psyche. What you see is what you get. These works are not “interactive”; you don’t have a “dialogue” with them. As with the original Byzantine icons, they exist to exert their power over the viewer, to be meditated upon.

    Theater of the World, probably the most popular piece in the Walker’s other new show, House of Oracles: A Huang Yong Ping Retrospective, is mesmerizing in a totally different way. It’s a model coliseum of sorts, built as a wooden oval about eight feet long. It’s covered with mesh screen and ringed with open compartments occupied by a variety of insects and amphibians: scorpions, centipedes, beetles, spiders, roaches, lizards. There are also scads of tiny crickets, which skitter around the center floor. Left to their own devices, the creatures put on a Darwinist horror show that leaves half-eaten bug carcasses all over the place. The brightly lit, open expanse of the coliseum reminds me of scenes from the end of the first Gulf War: barren, blasted, desert landscapes studded with burned-out tanks and the charred bodies of retreating soldiers.

    Back at the Supernova exhibit, the images seem timeless, or, rather, stuck in time. Elvis draws his gun, Marilyn smiles seductively, Jackie grieves. They have become a common part of America’s art vocabulary through the years, as we’ve cycled through countless stars, deaths, and disasters since Marilyn’s suicide, since the crash that led to 129 Die in Jet in 1962, since the food poisoning incident that led to 1963’s Tunafish Disaster. That familiarity, and our comfort in the familiar, however horrifying or sad, is precisely why Andy Warhol/Supernova could be seen as an over-easy, populist show.

    On the other hand, House of Oracles is full of works that “attempt to embrace a speculative intellectual adventure,” as curator Philippe Vergne puts it in “Why Am I Afraid of Huang Yong Ping?” his essay for the exhibition catalog. They are deliberately obscure, given a pungent and mysterious aura by an artist heretofore virtually unknown in the U.S. Moreover, there are not one but three entrances to this retrospective, which is rigorously organized to avoid chronology—this is fine, because in Huang’s oeuvre, tracing stylistic developments would be largely irrelevant.

    Depending on which entrance you choose, the first work you may encounter is Palanquin, in which snakeskins are wrapped around the poles of a litter, with no rider or bearers. The lightness and simple lines of this object, which hovers in midair, contrast with the massiveness of 11 June 2002—The Nightmare of George V, which involves a life-sized elephant with a snarling tiger on its back, attacking an empty basket of the sort the king used on hunting expeditions. In Eight-Legged Hat, four birds hold aloft with their beaks a pith helmet, on which a global map has been drawn; and Passage involves a pair of roll-down security gates hanging over empty lion cages scattered with dung and bones. In the next gallery, four huge rice bowls are filled with packaged foods—mayonnaise, crackers, and the like—that expired in July 1997, the month that Hong Kong reverted to Chinese rule.

    All of these works address colonialism, and with all of them, except for the rice bowls, what is absent seems to be as significant as what is present. “I understand only half of it,” said curator Philippe Vergne of Huang’s art, while guiding a tour of journalists—and he spent years organizing this exhibit. Certainly, he was being modest, but nor was he entirely joking; the pieces in this show are visually simple, but conceptually so complex as to practically constitute their own world, one that bridges—or digests—East and West and is not defined, but rather brought into existence by the artist.

    Perhaps the most up-front pieces in House of Oracles are two “long drawings,” gorgeous watercolors of Huang’s own artwork. One of them, Long Drawing for Walker Art Center, is situated at an entrance and acts as an exhibition preview; Huang has referenced all the pieces in his retrospective and organized them in a linear arrangement, as a sort of artistic odyssey. This display of his “greatest hits” follows (probably not unwittingly) in the steps of Marcel Duchamp, who made a series of portable museums, La Boîte-en-Valise, that were stocked with miniature reproductions of his works. Another piece by Huang, The Wise Man Learns From the Spider How to Spin a Web, references his relationship to Duchamp, who opened a vast new world to the young artist in China in the eighties, when books on Western artists were rare. But eventually his admiration for the legend turned to annoyance regarding his ubiquity. In one of his essays, Huang wrote, “Is it possible for us not to mention Duchamp anymore, to let him really die? This is possible but is also not possible. At least, the reason for me writing this essay is to stop myself mentioning him again in the future.”

    Huang’s other long drawing documents The Bat Project, an epic work inspired by the collision of a U.S. surveillance plane and a Chinese military plane in 2001, and the diplomatic negotiations that ensued. Due to censorship, this piece has morphed several times; the culmination, Bat Project IV, is here at the Walker. Frankly, this type of work, which involves countless letters, incidents, modifications, actions, and counter-actions, all documented with memos, models, photos, and film, can be excruciatingly boring, and make one yearn for the directness of Warhol’s paintings next door.

    Or maybe that’s taking the easy way out. Toward the end of “Why Am I Afraid of Huang Yong Ping?” Vergne places Huang within “an aesthetic revolution that argues that much of contemporary art has been infantilized by the legacy of Pop Art and other forms of postmodern appropriation and their kiss-of-death relationship to the world of media, popular culture, and consumption.” The curator goes on to ask, “Is the radical criticality of early Pop”—e.g. Warhol’s paintings of stars, deaths, and disasters—“still effective or relevant?”

    Absolutely, Douglas Fogle would say, at least in Warhol’s case. Fogle is Vergne’s colleague at the Walker and the curator of Andy Warhol/Supernova —a show whose press release boldly stated that “these masterpieces are as radical and relevant today as they were in 1964.” That’s hard to buy, because it’s difficult not to take Warhol’s paintings for granted, though this exhibition is meant to give them fresh consideration. Certainly Warhol is right up there with Duchamp, as far as radical innovators go, although he lived to see his innovations grow stale. Indeed, he himself diluted the power of his early works by later churning out portraits of business moguls and socialites. Now, of course, almost anyone can “commission” a silkscreen artwork from imitators. Says one website offering such services: “Pop Art Universe embraces the whimsical and fun style inspired by Andy Warhol. Enjoy!”

    Fun? Whimsical? Enjoy? Whatever. Warhol was a consummate ironist, and many of his utterances, while sometimes whimsically put, were, as we know, quite prophetic—even, one could say, oracular. Fogle selected a particularly eerie musing from Warhol to open his catalog essay: “… I always thought that I was more half-there than all-there—I always suspected that I was watching TV instead of living life. People sometimes say that the way things happen in movies is unreal, but actually it’s the way things happen in life that’s unreal … when things really do happen to you, it’s like watching television—you don’t feel anything.” Further in that essay, “Spectators at Our Own Deaths,” Fogle links Warhol’s work to the tradition of history painting, specifically noting Géricault—the same artist, interestingly, that curator Vergne mentioned with respect to Huang’s work when leading the tour of House of Oracles.

    Certainly, both Warhol and Huang have responded to events of their time—but not, as Géricault did in his masterpiece, The Raft of the Medusa, with the intent of expressing popular outrage. They’re not trying to change anything, but merely bearing witness. Their individual responses to the subject matter at hand simply don’t matter; both artists turn themselves off, in a sense, in making their art. Numerous pieces in House of Oracles are created using elements of chance, such as Four Paintings Created According to Random Instructions (which were determined by spinning a wheel). In one of his essays, Huang wrote that “the desire for individuality and for attracting attention has become the most serious disease of avant-garde artists.” His way with words, in fact, recalls Warhol. For instance, Huang believes that “pursuing innovation is meaningless, and pursuing noninnovation is also meaningless, because ‘pursuing’ is the source of meaninglessness.” You can imagine Warhol vaguely agreeing, nodding and going “mm-hmm … ”

    Despite Warhol’s carefully cultivated non-persona, he was obsessed with celebrity and status, not least his own. Fogle quotes Thierry du Duve: “To desire fame—not the glory of the hero but the glamour of the star—with the intensity and awareness Warhol did, is to desire to be nothing, nothing of the human, the interior, the profound.” Indeed, Warhol liked to think of the artist as a machine, and commercial silkscreening became his preferred technique; he churned out hundreds of variations on relatively few themes. Perhaps Huang had Warhol in mind when he observed that “an obvious Western habit is that if you have an idea, you are expected to carry it through consistently: you will do it once, ten times, a hundred times; you will do it for a year, then for ten years; you are expected to insist on doing it obstinately.”

    Huang’s distance from his work is tied to various Eastern philosophies. It points to a sense that the individual is ultimately powerless, and chance, all-powerful; as well as a belief that self-expression—even talking, discussion—is futile. With The History of Chinese Painting and the History of Modern Western Art Washed in the Washing Machine for Two Minutes, Huang transformed two art books into so much pulp. He said, “Being put into the washing machine for two minutes can better enhance the fusion of ‘Eastern and Western paintings’ than debating for a hundred years”—another idea that Warhol probably would have found quite sensible.

    But what of this fresh consideration of Warhol’s paintings in Supernova? Fogle draws several conclusions in the final paragraphs of his essay, observing that “… there is to my mind something extraordinarily human and sympathetic about Warhol’s images of stars, deaths, and disasters” and identifying “something hopeful about his framing of the perverse concatenation of celebrity and disaster in American culture.” But his penultimate thought hardly sounds hopeful or sympathetic: “Warhol’s Disasters … provide a sobering historical counterpoint and critical antidote to our voracious consumption of the uninterrupted flow of information, giving us pause before we televisually eat our own dead.”

    These artworks are supposed to provide a shot in the arm—to what end is unclear—before we return to the routine materialistic orgy of our lives. But as the publicity materials for Huang’s retrospective state, “when one enters a house of oracles, one does not exit without being profoundly changed by the experience.” Grand claims, both, especially as testaments to the power of art, and the power of our ignorance.

    Ultimately, if viewing Supernova is akin to, say, digging with relish into a jumbo bag of Cheetos, then House of Oracles is like confronting a plate of Golden Phoenix Claws, a dim sum delicacy of fried chicken feet in black bean sauce. That’s not meant to disparage the Warhol show, or to warn people away from the Huang retrospective. To the contrary, considering these exhibitions together raises a host of intriguing questions—not just about how these artists compare to or contrast with one another, but about what draws us to art in the first place, and what we expect to get from it.

  • Soundtrack to Mary

    While reflecting on one’s life, certain images and themes seem to dominate: God, Family, Love, etc. However, it’s occurred to me that I may have an unconscious fixation with Chihuahuas (for the record, I can barely spell “Chihuahua”). I’ve never eaten at a Taco Bell. Paris Hilton means very little to me. Yet Chihuahuas seem to have had a profound effect on me.

    Growing up, we had a neighbor across the alley from us who was from Greece. He wore a Greek sailor cap, drove a Rambler, and owned a white Chihuahua named Judy. It’s safe to say that Judy may not have appreciated the hand she was dealt in this life, as she seemed to have yearned to be an Irish wolfhound. In the 1970s, dogs were less about ornamentation and more about scaring people off of property, and Judy was quite effective at that duty. On the same block lived a German shepherd with anger management issues, and quite honestly, I was more afraid of Judy’s frenzied wrath.

    Coincidentally, my aunt had a Chihuahua named Chico who seemed to dig me. I can almost still hear his little black toenails clicking on the kitchen linoleum. There aren’t a ton of photos of me as a kid, but the one everyone remembers is me at age four sitting on a picnic table with my arm around what appeared to be a sock puppet, but was actually Chico. According to family lore, Chico was killed by an airborne shingle. A careless roofer next door was responsible. I must have told the shingle story for fifteen years before I learned that Chico had in fact survived the shingle missile, but died of cancer years later. I got a chance to ask writer Chuck Klosterman my favorite question: “If you lost both arms in a horrible freak accident, and your choice was to have no arms or have a Chihuahua’s paws surgically attached, which would you prefer?” His answer stunned me. “What would be the advantage?”

    “Geez, Chuck, I don’t know. How about you’d be known as that writer from Spin with Chihuahua hands?” While taking a walk around the lake, my boyfriend and I passed a woman walking an unusually shaky, irritated-looking Chihuahua. “Poor nervous rat on a string,” I commented as we passed, to which my beloved suggested I use that as the name of my future autobiography. Thanks, honey.

    I love you, too.

    Email Mary at popularcreeps@yahoo.com.

  • A Tisket, A Tasket

    There are happy gift baskets, and there are sad gift baskets. The sad ones are given by well-meaning souls who see shrink-wrapped fruit and think, “Oh joy!” Oftentimes these come year after year, stuffed with salamis and tissue paper, implying nothing other than, “Happy holidays, have a snack.” Worse yet is the revelation, upon stopping at the local gas station, that your basket was possibly purchased in conjunction with a car wash and a Slurpee. The happy gift baskets are usually hand-packed by the giver with specially selected items that the receiver will love, or that the giver wants to share. Where a sad basket would feature corporate cheese product encased in thick red wax, a happy basket might include a wedge of Roquefort that the giver knows is marvelous with your favorite Pinot Noir.

    Mind you, it’s not about food snobbery—caviar isn’t the be-all, end-all among food gifts, especially for those of us who think it’s overrated. I dream of baskets that have a pedigree applied by the giver: a favorite maple syrup and a fantastic gingerbread pancake recipe. The saddest baskets come with no thought or care to the eater: Vegetarians get steak sauces; timid palates are overwhelmed by ethnically themed baskets. My favorite December pastime is to stroll through specialty markets, latte in hand, and discover a spice blend that would complement my sister’s elk steaks or the ideal dark chocolate for a friend who loves port. In truth, I hoard these little discoveries all year, waiting until the eating season is well under way to share my finds. I believe that the happiest baskets should imply, “Happy holidays, eat well, celebrate living.” So I’ve devoted this month’s column to the kinds of gems that I dream of getting (and possibly giving). These five items became my obsessions this year, and all are, in their own way, simply fabulous.

    The newest one has me standing at my local cheese counter, advising complete strangers in an attempt to convert them to its pleasures. It’s not that difficult, either: Fiscalini San Joaquin Gold, a farmstead cheese created in California, isn’t a heavy, stinky cheese that only the brave will love; it’s semi-hard, with a lovely straw coloring and soft, buttery flavor. Because it is a farmstead cheese, you know that the Fiscalini family, which has been in business since 1914, controls the entire process; they care for the cows and personally process the milk to their standards of quality. The true beauty of this cheese is its versatility: It grates like a dream onto risotto, melts easily on rosemary crostini, and is tremendous eaten directly from the fridge.

    If you feel that hot chocolate is reserved for children at sledding parties, skip this paragraph. If you understand that it was this beverage that caused the magnificent cocoa bean to make its first journey across the ocean from the New World, then come with me to breakfast in Madrid. It was there that I first tasted the way that this type of chocolate was intended to be enjoyed: gulp after gulp of warm, thick, creamy loveliness that made it impossible forevermore to even consider Swiss Miss. The generous people of Schokinag, a German company with nearly eighty years of expertise, have delighted my chocolate-loving heart with the introduction of their European Drinking Chocolate. Open the twelve-ounce tin and you will find tiny chips of chocolate—there’s a triple chocolate version that has both milk and dark chocolate chips dusted with cocoa powder, a white chocolate with natural vanilla, and a dazzling Moroccan Spice flavor. You simply melt five tablespoons of chips with a tablespoon of milk, and then add milk (along with cream or half and half, don’t be shy) to create the consistency that’s tastiest for you. You can find Schokinag at Whole Foods Market (where you might also pick up some hand-cut vanilla marshmallows, if you must) and at Chocolate Celeste.

    I understand that processed sugar isn’t all that great for you, but I have never cottoned to sugar substitutes like Equal or Splenda. Beyond the commercial test-tube nature of their origins, they impart a metallic, chemical twang that does nothing to sate a sweet craving. However, since weighing 754 pounds is not on my list of lifetime goals, I have embraced agave nectar. Derived from the heart of the agave cactus, the sweet syrup has a low glycemic load, which means it doesn’t give you the blood-sugar rushes that processed sugar does. This translates into a healthier heart and trimmer figure. Agave’s mellow, honey-like flavor is actually sweeter than regular sugar, so you use about half as much. I’ve poured it on pancakes, mixed it in cocktails, made ice cream with it, and baked cookies that my little ones never suspected were “healthy.” Intelligent Nutrients in Minneapolis has its own brand, which can also be found at some Juut Salon Spa locations.

    Along with the sweet, it’s always good to put something salty into your gift basket, too. Now, some scientists will tell you that salt is salt, NaCL is strictly NaCL, no matter where it’s harvested or what color it takes. And there are other people who will tell you that salt unlocks very subtle things about the universe, and that a red crystal from Hawaii carries a different notion of the ocean than a grayish cube from France. The magic held within this simple, elemental compound is one of my favorite earthly mysteries. While there are many fascinating salts around the globe, the most intriguing one for me lately is Balinese sea salt from Big Tree Farms. The crystals, made using an ancient week-long process involving saltwater, sand, and troughs made from palm trees, develop into miniscule hollow pyramids. The flavor is light and briny, but the crunch is the thing. For those who love to snatch a fingerful of the stuff here and there, this is the ultimate. Of course, you’ll also want to use it to adorn baked pretzels, scrambled eggs, or ice cream with caramel sauce (try it). Locally, Williams-Sonoma and the Kitchen Window are stocking boxes.

    Finally, my love for peanut butter and mustard sandwiches may not be as odd as you think (cringe if you must, but I dare you to try it before you knock it). Look beyond the sugared-up jars of Jif in your cupboards, recognize the relation of ground nuts to pesto, and appreciate the tender balance of savory and sweet that can come from a good almond butter. Then the fact that nut butters are more than just a base for fruity preserves will not seem so surprising. Kettle Foods, of snack chip fame, makes an unsalted hazelnut butter that, if you let it, will expand your horizons. Yes, you can spread it on toasted bread or mix it into a cookie recipe, but you can also throw it in a pan with garlic, rosemary, and olive oil and then toss your pasta in it. Whisk it into a simple vinaigrette for a salad, or mix with honey mustard and smear over a pork roast—it will change how you look at ground nuts.

    Remember that anyone can throw some cans and jars in a basket with some raffia to make a passable gift. But what does that say about you? I believe that food should be one of the most personal gifts you can give—after all, you are sharing your taste. In the end, if it’s the thought that counts, make sure it counts.

     

    Open-Faced Sandwich With

    Fiscalini San Joaquin Gold Cheese

    The perfect quick lunch while wrapping gifts.

    2 thick slices of crusty bread

    Olive oil

    2 slices prosciutto

    2 slices and 2 tablespoons grated

    Fiscalini San Joaquin Gold cheese

    1 cup baby portobello mushrooms

    2 tablespoons butter

    1 tablespoon chopped thyme

    Brush one side of each bread slice with olive oil and top it with a slice of prosciutto and thick slice of cheese. Place on cooking sheet under a broiler for a few minutes or in a 250-degree oven for about 7 minutes or until cheese melts.

    Meanwhile, melt butter in pan, and sauté mushrooms with thyme until dark and soft. Pile mushrooms on bread slices and sprinkle with grated cheese.

  • A Working Christmas

    Pat was my boss at the diner. I’d say she was around fifty years old, but I don’t know for sure. That’s just not the kind of question you ask your boss. Donnie the dishwasher was thirty-five, with the mental capacity of an adolescent. Then again, how many teens do you know who could work a forty-hour week and pay their bills on time?

    I was seventeen when I started working there. The second shift, 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., meant no late nights and, more important, no early mornings. The diner was open twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year. On Christmas that year, we got our first real snow of the season. No accumulation, just swirly snow-globe snow. My walk to work that day seemed longer than usual because of the quiet. You’ve never known quiet until you’ve walked downtown St. Paul on Christmas Day. Actually, this wasn’t just downtown St. Paul Sunday quiet, this was a higher grade of silence, like the difference between gold and platinum. It was ominously beautiful, like an act of God or something. Like the Rapture. I could see the diner up ahead, glowing dimly in the snow, the Pancake House of Purgatory.

    When I got there, Donnie was quartering chickens back at the prep table, singing and dancing and slipping around on chicken guts on the floor. I put on a clean apron and took my station behind the counter. It never dawned on me that Christmas might be dead on top of everything else. Pat slapped a Phillips screwdriver in my one hand and a bleach-soaked towel in the other. She said, “No way you’re gonna sit on your rear all day and moan, kiddo. We all got other places we’d rather be. You’re gonna take apart the pie case and scrub it down.” Three hours later, Donnie had moved on to chopping onions, I had the pie case put back together, Pat had the meat cooler sparkling, and we got our first customer.

    Al Vanoni was a fat cab driver who always carried his own insulated coffee cup with him. That thing was about the size of an ice-cream bucket, suiting the scale of his body. If Vanoni tried to drink out of one of our coffee cups, he would have looked silly, like a fairy-tale giant. He came in wearing a Santa hat and ordered a double patty melt to go, on the double. “I’d love to stay and talk, but I got volleys all day between the senior high-rises and the suburbs.” When Vanoni went for the ketchup, he pounded his meaty hand on the bottom of the bottle, sending a fair-sized splat onto his patty melt, and a fair-sized one onto my pie case. Before he left, I saw him sneak a small brown paper bag to Pat.

    Pat said I might as well order my shift meal as long as the grill was dirty, so she wouldn’t have to clean it twice. She yelled back to Donnie to do the same. Ten minutes later, she told us to have a seat in one of the back booths. “Today, we can eat like human beings at the table, at least.” I plugged the buck that Vanoni gave me into the tableside jukebox, and entered some Mitch Miller tunes.

    Pat brought over three cups of coffee; when I sipped mine it turned out to be laced with Wild Turkey. I looked at her in surprise. She smiled. “Doncha know that Santa always comes on Christmas?”

    Pat closed her eyes and bent her head to pray. I thought it was a joke at first, what with the whiskey and all. Donnie followed her lead. I looked down, but admit I kept my eyes open. I still heard the words.

    “Heavenly Father, thank you for this day, and this good food.”

    The whipped cream on Donnie’s sundae smelled wonderful as it melted into the waffle squares.

    “Thank you for our families. At home, at work, and in Christ your son our savior.”

    I looked from Pat’s strong face to Donnie’s earnest one, and I felt as close to them as anyone else in my life.

    “Search our hearts, God, and please bless and keep us in the path of your everlasting light. Amen.”

    In that instant, before either of them opened their eyes, I felt if God had searched my heart, he would have found it as spotless as the pie case. It felt new, and shiny.

    In the past twenty years, I’ve had family Christmases and orphan Christmases. Work Christmases, hospital Christmases, Christmases when the tree fell down and the turkey caught fire, and Christmases when everything went just right.

    My Christmas at the diner taught me that Christmas is transferable. The only responsibility you have to Christmas, wherever you are, whoever you’re with, wherever you’re headed, is to put it in a to-go box.

  • Busted and Disgusted

    People are talking about whether Rev. Randolph (Randy) Staten will run for his old seat representing North Minneapolis in the Minnesota House of Representatives. If he did, and won, he would become Minnesota’s version of former Washington mayor and convicted felon Marion Berry: a political player who went through a very public crash-and-burn, followed by a triumphant return to prominence. African-Americans are a forgiving group (just ask Bill Clinton), but would black Minnesotans re-elect a man who so publicly betrayed his community?

    Staten was one of the first African-American recruits for the University of Minnesota’s football team in the early 1960s. After a cameo appearance in the National Football League, he returned to the Twin Cities and dabbled in Republican Party politics.

    Then he found a home in the DFL and in 1980 became the state’s lone African-American legislator. Staten used his natural eloquence and visibility to push for programs to help his economically challenged district. Along the way, however, he made powerful enemies who were waiting to pounce on any misstep. Staten was soon tripping up all over the place. He faced criminal charges for writing eighty-two hundred dollars’ worth of bad checks to finance a drug habit. Then he was accused of filing late and incomplete campaign expense reports with the Minnesota Ethical Practices Board. After narrowly dodging expulsion, he became the first legislator in state history to be publicly censured. He eventually did jail time.

    By the late 1980s, Staten found himself, in a phrase, “busted and disgusted.” He refused to fade off into oblivion, however, and instead took to heart advice from Broadway lyricist Dorothy Fields: “Pick yourself up. Dust yourself off. And start all over again.” Like other disgraced politicians before him, it was religion—more specifically, the black church—that provided a road map to redemption for Staten. He eventually became an ordained Baptist minister.

    Since then, Rev. Staten has reconnected with many of the North Siders who once shunned him. He is now chairman of the Coalition of Black Churches and spokesman for the African American Leadership Summit. He led the successful fight to block David Jennings’ permanent appointment as superintendent of Minneapolis Public Schools. (Incidentally, Jennings, a former Republican speaker of the House, was one of Staten’s chief tormentors during his 1980s fall from grace.) The major local dailies regularly look to Staten for quotes, and even his detractors concede that he is extremely articulate and knows how to play a political crowd.

    Booker Hodges believes that a run by the sixty-one-year-old Staten for his old House seat would be a huge mistake. “Randy’s time has passed,” said Hodges, who is a columnist for the Minneapolis Spokesman-Recorder and a member of the rising generation of North Minneapolis political leaders (he recently made an unsuccessful run for a seat on the Park Board). “It would open up a lot of old wounds. Many of us have not forgotten the shame he brought on our community. We need to bring up some young people—some new blood.” Hodges then went one step further. “Randy and the Coalition have follow-up problems, particularly on economic issues confronting our community. It’s easy to put up your hands, whoop and holler, and sing ‘We Shall Overcome.’ What has he done to help the brother in the street?”

    There is no question that Staten has pulled off a Lazarus-like resurrection. Both Don Samuels and Natalie Johnson Lee courted his support in their battle for the Fifth Ward City Council seat. Certainly, one could understand why a Staten candidacy might appeal to some North Siders, especially those struggling to move past criminal convictions and/or overcome their own personal demons. However, while the number of those folks may be greater in House District 58B than other parts of the Twin Cities, they are still not the norm in that part of town. And, more important, they historically do not turn out in great numbers to vote.

    Most of Staten’s past and future constituents are job-holding, tax-paying, drug-free, law-abiding citizens. Hodges is right—for many of these folks, the old wounds run very deep. They might be empathetic to Staten’s midlife religious conversion and be impressed with his political savvy, but still find it difficult to completely forgive him, or to trust him with one of the few reliably African-American seats in the Minnesota Legislature. Getting the solid core of 58B to give him another chance is probably a political miracle that even the resilient and charismatic Rev. Staten would be hard-pressed to pull off.

  • Made For America

    Why rent when you can own? At my neighborhood shop in Shanghai, well-ordered racks are full of the latest Hollywood releases, the Hollywood catalog dating back to the mid-1960s, and a middling selection of Chinese films and television series, most of which sell for between eighty-five cents and two bucks. The majority have English and Chinese subtitles, and all of them, of course, are pirated. On a recent visit, I slipped past a twentyish professional couple considering a boxed set of Desperate Housewives and greeted the store clerk. He’s a helpful guy—he once located a pirated copy of Martin Scorsese’s The Last Waltz for me—but when I pointed to a poster for Chen Kaige’s The Promise, a $35 million martial arts epic that is the most expensive film in Chinese history, and asked if he had it yet, he shook his head no.

    Quality pirate copies of Chinese films often circulate in the weeks before an official theatrical release. But in the case of The Promise, which will begin screening internationally this month, unusual precautions have been taken to prevent piracy. “Wait until it is released in the theater,” the clerk said. “You’ll be able to go and see it in English.”

    Until recently, Chinese films in English were rare (and, if dubbed, unwanted—in my case, at least). But as Chinese art house filmmakers like Chen Kaige increasingly look to the U.S. for mass audiences and Hollywood-sized money, the option becomes common. China may be the world’s third most prolific filmmaking nation, but its total domestic box office in 2004 was less—by some hundred million dollars—than what Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith brought in on the first weekend of its U.S. release. Indeed, last year China made more money by exporting its films than it did by exhibiting them in its own theaters. Of course, filmmakers there have learned from their American colleagues (and studios) who’ve come to count on foreign box offices to salvage action-film bombs. But in China, foreign sales are essential, which is why in the past five years the country’s erstwhile art-house directors have turned out a host of lush, artsy, martial arts epics geared to please overseas audiences.

    Ironically, though, “made for foreigners” is the blackest insult that can be directed at a Chinese film (or any other work of art, for that matter). To an extent, this is a combination of both pride and insecurity in Chinese culture as it opens to, and confronts, the West. The first group of Chinese directors to emerge after the Cultural Revolution was the so-called Fifth Generation, which was concerned with accurate depictions of rural Chinese life. Films such as Zhang Yimou’s Red Sorghum (1989) were quickly compared by foreign cineastes to the work of the Italian neo-realists of the 1940s and 1950s; however, unlike the neo-realists, the Fifth Generation directors never received a populist embrace in their home country. For example, Chen Kaige’s masterpiece, Farewell, My Concubine (1993), is still little known in China. Meanwhile, Zhang Yimou’s films were unpopular there (though this has changed with his recent international success), and heavily criticized for their unflattering portrayal of the Chinese countryside.

    However, Fifth Generation films were generating critical raves on the international festival circuit and in art houses, and also doing serious business. Red Sorghum won the prestigious Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival, while Farewell, My Concubine is one of the most successful Chinese films ever released overseas. Yet as the art house filmmakers prospered internationally in the 1990s, China’s domestic film market shrank, overwhelmed by a flood of foreign films (particularly from Hong Kong and Taiwan) that were more technically proficient and entertaining than the country’s own. So Fifth Generation filmmakers focused even more on generating publicity and awards and thus winning audiences and revenues from abroad.

    It was a risky strategy. Prior to 2000, the last Asian language film that was a major commercial success in the United States was Bruce Lee’s Enter the Dragon in 1973—and that was a Hong Kong production. Though most Americans refer to Hong Kong and China interchangeably, the two entities are linguistically, culturally, politically, and cinematically distinct. Known for their superbly choreographed action and fight scenes (as well as an irritating brand of slapstick), Hong Kong films have a highly developed visual style that continues to influence both Chinese and American cinema (The Matrix films were choreographed by a Hong Kong Chinese.) Chinese film, by comparison, is still in its youth, and remains a follower.

    That may partly explain the Chinese public’s near-insatiable appetite for imperial martial arts epics. According to Xinhua, China’s state news agency, twenty percent of all Chinese television dramas in 2004 involved “Chinese legends,” and that’s not counting all the imperial martial arts sitcoms, feature films, and documentaries. More so than Westerns in the United States, the martial arts period piece—which involves emperors, lavish period costumes, and lots of kung fu—is a well-worn genre, and one that the Chinese see as very much theirs.

    Enter Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Made by Taiwanese-American director Ang Lee (whose retrospective is currently screening at Walker Art Center) and released in 2000, it’s the most successful ”Chinese” film in history, having banked $213 million worldwide and $128 million in the U.S. Made in China with a Hong Kong and Chinese cast, the film appeared on the top ten list of virtually every critic in the U.S., landed ten Oscar nominations, and was declared a “Martial Masterpiece” by Time. In China, however, the reaction was nearly the inverse, with many critics dwelling upon the fact that the film’s story line was utterly hackneyed, even by the perpetually low standards of Chinese network television. Worse still, some of Lee’s Hong Kong cast spoke poor, heavily accented Mandarin that elicited derision in both theaters and reviews. Above all, Chinese critics, audiences, and even some directors seemed to resent the fact that someone from Taiwan—the island is considered a renegade province on the mainland—had profited from an overseas market by exploiting the most Chinese of genres.

    Despite the critical scorn, a $128 million U.S. box office is pretty much impossible to ignore in a country where a $5 million domestic box office is respectable. So when Zhang Yimou came out with Hero in 2002, no one in China was surprised that he tailored it for the American audience thrilled by Crouching Tiger. Even more than that film, Hero relied upon the tropes and clichés of Chinese period television; and again, the enthusiasm of Americans for this film was greeted with confusion in China. When I saw the film on Christmas Eve in a Shanghai theater packed with families, there were plenty of moments in which the dialogue elicited groans and snickers. While American critics praised the film’s three-stage retelling of Emperor Qin’s planned assassination, their Chinese colleagues rolled their eyes—for audiences in the country, the tale was as profound as a ride into the sunset at the end of a Gunsmoke episode.

    Zhang had also hired a Hong Kong fight choreographer and a sprawling team of foreign special effects artists whose credits range from Titanic to Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, while Hero’s U.S. distributor, Miramax, came up with a savvy marketing plan that included a “Quentin Tarantino Presents” tag and targeted both the art house audience and the action-loving cineplex crowd. The result was a $57 million gross in the U.S., helping to make Hero the most lucrative Chinese film ever. “One of Zhang Yimou’s main goals is to recapture the Chinese made film-market share,” said Zhang Weiping, who produced the director’s most recent martial arts epic, House of Flying Daggers (2004).

    The inevitable accusations that Zhang had sold out may be fair, but the truth is that Chinese cinema sold out to foreign audiences long before Hero—and it did so only to sustain itself. From the beginning, the careers of Zhang Yimou and Chen Kaige have been defined by the need to please foreign critics and award committees, which often serve as gatekeepers for directors seeking access to the art-house screens; with their martial arts films they have merely shifted to another, more profitable genre. Hero and The Promise are no more meant for Chinese audiences than Red Sorghum and Farewell, My Concubine. At the least, unlike the gritty plot of Red Sorghum, the martial arts epics are actually representative of the sorts of stories that many Chinese like to watch in their spare time. Ironically, what is new and interesting in these films are the visual innovations that large budgets (and foreign box offices) make possible. The lush cinematography of Hero was unprecedented in the genre, as were its gorgeously choreographed fight scenes. Though I have yet to notice Chinese network television mimicking Hero, there is no question that the film has set a new visual standard in the genre, much as John Ford did for the Western.

    Zhang Yimou recently confirmed that he is in pre-production on a contemporary comedy that will star Jackie Chan, the international kung fu/comedy superstar who is also a Hong Kong citizen. Several days after the announcement, Chan wrote in his blog, “When you watch Zhang Yimou’s Raise the Red Lantern … the most brilliant dialogue might become a YES or NO when translated into English.” Nevertheless, he is optimistic about prospects for genres of Chinese film other than martial arts epics. “If the worldwide audience starts[s] to learn Chinese due to their love of martial arts films,” he continued, “then they would not only appreciate martial arts films in the future, but can also appreciate Chinese dramas.”

    With all respect to Jackie Chan, that seems doubtful. My DVD dealer says that the Chinese director most popular with his customers is Feng Xiaogang. He is largely unknown outside of China, because he has made a career (and a small fortune) writing and directing earthy comedies with distinctly Chinese humor. Last year’s domestic hit Cell Phone, for example, documented an illicit affair largely conducted via text messaging. Since text messaging is a national pastime, the film’s humor was so linguistically and culturally specific that even foreigners with vast experience speaking Chinese were simply unable to laugh along. It would be like screening Fargo, in English, for a fluent, English-speaking Shanghai audience.

    Even without a foreign box office, Cell Phone grossed $6.3 million in China last year and was considered quite lucrative. But China’s most popular director of comedies seems to have become restless for a larger payout. Following Chen Kaige, Zhang Yimou, and Ang Lee down the martial arts path to riches, he secured $15 million in financing from Chinese and foreign investors to make The Night Banquet, a martial arts retelling of Hamlet—set in the Tang Dynasty’s imperial court.

  • In the Bleak Mid-Winter

    Our century has been remarkably efficient in the manufacture of wastelands. In Uptown you can still experience the sort of passageways down which Mr. Eliot smelt steaks, but nowadays they seem to have almost a period charm. It is the same reading about the Algiers described by Albert Camus; the delicious colonial loucheness of the setting tends to put a pastel patina on the jolly old alienation. It won’t be long before someone turns L’Étranger into a colorful Hollywood costume drama—what price the inner life when Passage to India can become a parade of parasols and solar topees?

    To be truly bleak, a landscape must be both familiar and fairly freshly created. The connoisseur might try standing at the entrance of Edinborough Park in midwinter and looking across the glass and concrete tundra of South Edina, all abandoned motorcars and dirty snow and the now-defunct cinderblock multiplex where you once saw flickering pictures of more colorful climes, some of them unspoilt (“Far Away is Close at Hand in Images of Elsewhere,” as the writing on the wall used to say as your train pulled out of Paddington Station, taking you from London to the good green meadows of the West Country).

    But for sustained depression, try one of those self-storage places. Concealed in a dip, to avoid blotting the landscape too obviously, ranks of abandoned garages provide the perfect setting for the unsolvable crime at the center of a detective novel. In the alleys between them rattle the skeletons of last year’s leaves. Cryogenics comes to mind. The only people around are keeping warm in the office, and perhaps a bloke working on his vintage Chevy. As you leave, the automated voice that thanks you at the barrier appears to be that of the late Count Dracula.

    It is warmer inside these small storage rooms than out in the alleys. One imagines them (for one has seen only one’s own) strewn with the remains of lives, things ugly in themselves (the hideous lampshades, the awful ornaments), which might once have meant something if someone had made them mean it—the gewgaw given as a Christmas joke. Here lies the Nachlass of the maiden aunt whose relations have never got round to sorting out her things; here men (it must surely be mostly men, because the women have the houses) hoard the keepsakes from failed marriages, furniture which no longer lends help or comfort because the couples who owned it are unable to forgive. And the cardboard boxes in which all this is kept give off the sweet but unmistakable smell of decay, as if the things inside were slowly losing the warmth they once acquired from being associated with human life, and are reverting to a mere mineral existence.

    Such gloomy ruminations suggest the need for some concentrated sweetness to share with those you love this Christmas. Try liqueur glasses of a 2003 Muscat from Bonny Doon Vineyards in California; it is called Vin de Glaciere, and a small flask will cost you about eighteen dollars. There is a pleasant goldenness and a sweet nose, then, as you sip, a smooth velvety sensation of dried apricots and slight oiliness.

    This is not sticky sweet wine; the taste reminds me of nothing so much as Setubal, a fortified wine from Portugal made from a different combination of Muscat grapes, which I favored as a dessert wine in my misspent youth. The Bonny Doon would make good dessert wine in the American sense of dessert—not fruit and nuts nibbled after the ladies have withdrawn to the drawing room in the eighteenth-century manner that so annoyed Virginia Woolf, but “afters”: mince pies, plum pudding, even something creamy like bread-and-butter pudding (with many plump golden raisins, known in England as sultanas from their resemblance to sultans’ wives) or a crème brulée.

    Here is no false promise of spring, simply a level winter sweetness. Rabbie Burns walked by the original Bonnie Doon river near Ayr in Scotland and wondered why the birds could sing so sweetly when he was so weary, full of care, having lost his girl (though he seldom seemed to have any trouble finding another). If the bleakness is inside and not simply in the landscape, this Muscat taken as a cup of kindness might cheer things up. What sweeter music can we bring?

  • Mark Mothersbaugh

    It seems like there are a number of rock icons these days who, if they haven’t burned out, haven’t really faded away, either. Take Devo’s Mark Mothersbaugh. For one thing, the most influential of new wave bands never actually broke up; Devo toured again just this year. And Mothersbaugh is constantly working on new music, for film soundtracks (The Rugrats Movie, The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou), videos, and for his own amusement. When we talked with him, he was working on some music he didn’t expect anyone else would ever hear, and having a great time. But we didn’t call to chat him up about music; we wanted to hear about his upcoming Postcard Diaries show at the Ox-Op Gallery, which comprises diminutive artworks that he has produced daily for more than thirty years. We also imagine they’d pack quite nicely into a shirt pocket, should ever Mothersbaugh find himself en route to a desert isle. Here’s what else he’d tote along:

    1. Blank paper, cardstock, 3 1/2″ x 5 1/4″ watercolor paper, and Japanese sumi fountain pens made by Pilot. I would definitely spend a lot of time on my art. It’s a response to everything that goes on around me. Although I’d be on that island, so things might be kind of quiet. One of my favorite art shows was by [Hawaii Five-O star] Jack Lord. Devo was playing in Hawaii and I walked into a hotel lobby that had three hundred of his paintings, and every single one of them was the exact same sunset and three palm trees. Each one was a little different, but they were the same landscape.
    2. An iPod loaded with every Steve Reich album. I’d like to bring something that I didn’t write, and something that is three dimensional and allows me to walk in and out of my head.
    3. Every Dick Tracy comic ever written. Chester Gould is the unparalleled master of black and white in Western art.
    4. A collection of spare eyeglasses. The first time I went to the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, when I was a little kid, I ran out into the water and lost my glasses–both times. I had to read my comic books about three inches from my face for the rest of the trip. Losing my glasses has been a lifelong fear.
    5. One red Devo hat. You can use it for so many things: a cooking pot, a mold for bricks, a flotation device, a weapon, a boomerang, a container to protect small animals. In Devo, we used them to trap the orgone energy that normally humans lose out of the top of their heads. We used the hats to radiate it back down. It would trickle down upon us and make us stronger. We took those hats seriously and wore them seriously.

    Mark Mothersbaugh’s Postcard Diaries opens at Ox-Op Gallery on December 3. 1111 Washington Ave. S., Minneapolis; 612-259-0085; www.ox-op.com