Otra Pregunta

photo caption: End Times, Old San Juan, PR, 2012

>-----Message-----<

>>From: Buckeye - Middlebury, VT
>>Sent: Jan 29, 2012 9:27 AM
>>To: Galligan - Santa Olaya, PR
>>Subject: RE: otra vez


>>It has been dark and cold all week... Some people I knew at work wanted to see what kind of a writer I was. So for a period of several months, I would think of what to write on my walk back from lunch, sit down at my computer for 15 minutes, type it in, e-mail to those who wanted to see it. I did not compose anything in advance and it was a coherent narrative. I know the argument about first thought-best thought, writing that is natural and not mannered, but I always subscribe to Pissarro's notion that the work cannot be sufficiently interrogated.

>>The more I look at it (and revise it) the more I discover what I'm writing.

>>Most of my fiction reaches twenty drafts before it is sent out...

>>Bob


Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]
http://about.me/JanGalligan [about me]

Spoiler Alert : decir un secreto

photo caption: Nature Morte, Santa Olaya, PR - November, 2011


11/22/63
STEPHEN KING

SECTION 3
CHAPTER 24
PART 9 - pg 621
(8/29/63 : Jodie, TX)

"Jake."
"Yes, honey."
"Can you predict the future? You can, can't you?"
I said nothing.
In a small voice she said, "Did you come here from the future?"
I said nothing.
Her face was very pale, "Jake, did you?"
"Yes." It was as if a seventy pound rock had rolled off my chest...
"How...how far?"
"Honey, are you sure you --"
"Yes. How far!"
"Almost forty-eight years."
"Am I...dead?"
"I don't know. I don't want to know. This is now. And this is us."
She thought about that.

[Espanol]

"Jake".
"Sí, cariño".
"¿Puedes predecir el futuro? Usted puede, ¿no?"
No dije nada.
En voz baja me dijo: "¿Has venido aquí desde el futuro?"
No dije nada.
Su cara era muy pálido, "Jake, ¿verdad?"
"Sí". Era como si una piedra setenta libras había
   rodado fuera de mi pecho ...

"¿Cómo ... ¿hasta dónde?"
"Cariño, ¿estás seguro de que -"
"Sí. ¿Qué tan lejos!"
"Casi cuarenta y ocho años."
"Estoy...muerto?"
"No sé. Yo no quiero saber. Esto es ahora. Y esto somos nosotros."
Pensó en eso.

[translation via google]


 

 

Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]
http://about.me/JanGalligan [about me]

Pronto o poco

photo caption: Oller Medical Plaza building, Rt 167, Bayamon, PR (Francisco Manuel Oller y Cestero : June 17, 1833 – May 17, 1917 : was a Puerto Rican visual artist, considered to be the only Latin American painter to have played a role in the development of Impressionism. [Wikipedia])

"Although the visual is divided into special interest categories: painting, photography, lifelike dreams, among others, 'forget-all questioning as essential in a positivist culture' is the true meaning of the visible."

[translated from the spanish via google translate]

John Berger "About Looking"

from: Juan Alberto Negroni via: facebook

 


Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR


http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]
http://about.me/JanGalligan [about me]

un pedazo corto de ficcion

photo caption: Noche Buena, Barrio Santurce, San Juan, PR, 11:59PM 12/24/11

 

THE MAP AND THE TERRITORY
Michel Houellebecq
PUBLISHED 2011 BY
William Heinemann, Random House, London, UK

Part Two
Chapter 12
p. 82

Jed woke up with a start at about eight, on the morning of the 25 December. Dawn was breaking on the place des Alpes. He found a towel in the kitchen, wiped up his vomit, then contemplated the sticky debris of "Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons Dividing Up the Art Market." 


Franz was right: it was time to organize an exhibition. He had been going round in circles for a few months, and it was beginning to rub off on his mood. You can work alone for years, it is actually the only way to work if the truth be told; but there always comes a moment when you feel the need to show your work...for in a social species individuality is little more than a short piece of fiction.


Thinking again of Franz's exhortations, he wrote an email reminder to Houellebecq, then made some coffee. 




SPANISH

Jed se despertó con un sobresalto a las ocho, en la mañana del 25 de diciembre. Amanecía en la Place des Alpes. Se encontró con una toalla en la cocina, limpiar su vómito, a continuación, contempla los restos pegajosos de "Damien Hirst y Jeff Koons dividir el mercado del arte." 


Franz tenía razón: Ya era hora de organizar de la exposición había estado dando vueltas en círculos por unos meses, y estaba empezando a borrarse en su estado de ánimo. Que puede trabajar solo durante años, en realidad es la única manera de trabajar. Si la verdad sea dicha, pero siempre llega un momento en que usted se siente la necesidad de mostrar su trabajo ... 


CONTACT: MICHEL HOUELLEBECQ 

 

Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]

TODO PREPARADO PARA NAVIDENA DE SANTA OLAYA:

photo caption: WOW bookstore in Bayamon with YEYITO and Lechonera en Santa Olaya, PR
music: YEYITO - "Navidad en Santa Olaya"


1) lechon asado, check
2) coquito, check
3) musica folklorico del campo, check
4) regalos, check
5) calendario 2012 de YEYITO - alcarde de Santa Olaya, check
6) tarjetas de Navidad, check
7) run de Barrilito (de Bayamon) 3 stars, check
7) que mas?

 

 

Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]

TROPICO NAVIDENA : PARRANDA @ THE BEACH

photo caption: Window display, hardware store, Barranquitas, PR


@ THE BEACH - PUNTA SALINAS,PR NORTH SHORE NEAR SAN JUAN W/ NO OTHERS. HOT CHICKEN, FRESH BREAD, RED WINE & SUNDOWN.


-- DID YOU REMEMBER THE BEACH CHAIRS? LILLIAN ASKS.

-- CHECK.

-- TOWELS AND BEACH BLANKET?

-- UH-HUH.

-- FLIP-FLOPS, SUNSCREEN, READING MATERIAL?

-- YES.

-- WINE AND CORKSCREW?

-- OF COURSE.

-- THE COOLER'S PACKED?

-- SURE.

-- TABLEWARE AND NAPKINS?

-- YEP.

-- ANYTHING I'M FORGETTING?

-- NOPE.

-- O.K., NICE WORK. LET'S GO.

-- CAN I HAVE A BEER?

-- SURE, WHY NOT...

 

"Navidad is the best of Puerto Rican culture. Nowhere else is Christmas celebrated like in Borinquen. Navidad is the time of tradition, aguinaldos, décimas, y de ser jíbaro Puertorriqueño."
http://www.elboricua.com/pr_christmas.html

Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]

Music by Girlhouse, DeathKross and La Secta All Stars

photo caption: Jan Galligan, author, librettist, director and starring as Tomás de Torquemada and featuring Georgie Henley as Queen Isabela in the forthcoming one-act operetta "The Puertoriccan Inquisition (Inquisición puertorricaño)" now in post-production.

To: Jan Galligan, Santa Olaya, PR
From: Steve Fisher, Prague, CZ
Subject: RE: Fitful Thinking - The (curre-megient) View from the Brig
Date: Dec 1, 2011 12:12 PM
No one expected the Puerto Rican Inquisition...especially the Met!Now I'm terrified about having sent my latest piece to you for review, Mr. de Torquemada.-----Original Message-----From: J. Galligan Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2011 10:04AMTo: Stephen FisherSubject: Re: Fitful Thinking - The (curre-megient) View from the BrigSteve:[I'll read your piece, right after I send the letter below]Maybe it's the weather, but my inner cornmudgin is emerging...curmudgeon [n] (plural curmudgeons) 1. An ill-tempered (and frequently old) person full of stubborn ideas oropinions. While numerous folk etymologies surround this word, there is no widelyaccepted etymology. An alternative spelling attested in 1600 is cornmudgin,in Holland's translation of Livy, rendering frumentarius "corn-merchant".This has been suggested as the original form of the word, but OED notes thatcurmudgeon is attested some years before this, concluding that cornmudginwas merely a nonce-word by Holland.

On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 10:02 AM, Jan Galligan  wrote:

Letter to Peter Gelb, General Manager, Metropolitan Opera, NY, NY:


The Met HD - Viewing "Satyagraha": The Dis-advantage Point
01-12-11

Dear Mr. Gelb:

Last night I witnessed my first "The Met in HD" performance at Cine Metro in Santurce, PR. Over many years I have attended live opera performances including a couple in person at the Met, and as well routinely listened to live Saturday radio broadcasts of the Met in high fidelity. An ardent fan of the music of Philip Glass, one live performance I saw at the Met was the 1975 presentation of "Einstein on the Beach," so, I was primed with high expectation and careful preparation for this HD version of "Satyagraha." Unfortunately, my preparation did not include watching clips from any of the previous Met-HD productions. If I had, I would have purchased a Sony audio CD via Amazon, and stayed home.

As you said about Met-HD, "We want the electronic medium to give people an equivalent experience to what they'd have if they were here in the opera house. That's why the cameras ... were so hyperactive. The production's kinetic and that makes it cinematic. Some of the cameras are robots and we mounted them on the only vertical dollies in the world. They could rise 30 feet in the air on their internal poles and this created that sense of exhilaration you felt. (the opera) spills off the stage."

I did want the electronic medium to give me an equivalent experience to what I'd have if I were there in your house. Instead, I found myself at the end of a 30 foot pole being flung about from one end of the house to another. Things started out ok. Wide view of the proscenium stage, outside edges of the stage just meeting the limits of the projection screen. Then within moments, I'm flung up out of my seat nearly landing on the lap of one of the principals, only to be swooped up into the Family Circle, then row one of the Orchestra where I'm looking up the nostrils of the leading characters, then wham, I'm back in the Dress circle, and oops now I'm in the orchestra pit for a moment, and then, swooped nearly to the ceiling for a bird's eye view. Well, you get the picture. Maybe this works for most Met productions. It does not work for "Satyagraha."

Philip Glass's opera is a stately, majestic ritualistic pageant - I'm speaking musically - which demands similar staging and production. It is a slow unfolding of monumental events. It is not a story of small intimate details. The viewer should be left to witness for himself, in his own manner and at his own pace the slowly evolving force of truth. For this opera in particular, the viewer should not be forced to view the hairs on the back of Ghandi's hand, Miss Schlesen's rouged cheeks, or the sweat on Kallenbach's brow. We do not need to follow along on Gandhi's or Miss Schlesen's shoulder as they make their way through the crowd. Leave us in our seat, allow us our own view of the action, please.

I left at the end of Act I. Figuring mine is probably a lone voice in the wilderness, I google-searched other opinions of the Met-HD and as I suspected found the results to be generally favorable, although Tom Service, writing in the Guardian UK a few years ago said, "Give me divas - not DJs. More toe-curling attempts to make opera 'cool'? Stop it - it's doing just fine as it is." So, he and I agree. In fact, since the tele-visual production values of this HD presentation of "Satyagraha" seemed to derive most directly from HD football and baseball as seen on FOX Sports, I'd add, "Give me divas - not O.J., the football player or the soap opera character."

J. Galligan
Santa Olaya, PR


=============


From: Contact Us (The Met-HD)
Date: Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 10:03 AM

We have received your form and we will respond or a staff member will contact you, depending on the topic.

Thank you for your interest in the Metropolitan Opera.

-----Original Message-----

From: Dr. M. Jumpower (in guise of Peter Gelb)
Date: Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 11:11 AM


Dear Mr. Galligan:

In response to your thoughtful missive of 12/1/11:

Bah! Humbug! Feathersticks!  Bullfeathers! Hogwash!  Hooey!  Phooey!  Balderdash! Claptrap! Gibberish! Poppycock! Gobbledygook! Babble! Jabber! Bunkum! Hokum! Baloney! Twaddle! Rubbish! Rot! Drivel! Codswallop!

Sincerely,

Peter Gelb


==================


Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]

EXCERPT: former cerpt. (from Soupy Sales - Stop Me if You've Heard It!)

Picture caption: Shoe repair shop (Zapateria), Bayamon, PR


Syllogisms in the news...

1) Article regarding crime in PR. Quoting a sociology professor on how the government response is bankrupt: "We need to give a 360 degree turn to the way we reflect on the problems of crime and violence." (oops, right back where we started. [ed.])

2) Report on Deficit Reduction Supercommittee in DC. Quoting supercommittee Democrat Chris Van Hollen: "We need to find out whether our Republican colleagues want to continue to negotiate or whether they've drawn a hard line in the sand."
(oops, wind's blowing, might have to redraw that line. [ed.])

 

 

 

Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]

No Satisfaction on the Lost Highway

photo caption: Desktop still life with Kara Walker, Santa Olaya, PR, 2011


From the Archives
Monday, June 12, 2000
Albany, NY

I needed to go to our Blockbuster which is on Delaware Avenue to take back my overdue movies: "The Millionairess", with Rock Hudson and Anita Ekberg; "The Long Goodbye", with Eliot Gould; and David Lynch's "Lost Highway". I had wanted to get Groucho Marx in "Night at Casablanca" and "Mambo Kings" with Tito Puente, but the teenage-movie-buff-clerk on duty that night told me both films were in moratorium.

"Both films?" I asked him.

"Yep," he replied.

"What's a moratorium?" I asked.

"Well, I don't exactly know," he said, "but that's where they are."

"Whatever for?" I asked.

"It has something to do with communism, the embargo of Cuba, and other remnants of the cold war," he said.

"What?" I asked...

[click here for continuation]

Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR

http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]

I'm very well, thank you so very much

picture caption: table-top still-life with Donald Judd, 2011.


-----Message-----
From: Robert
Sent: Nov 11, 2011 11:11 PM

To: Galligan
Subject: "I'm very well, thank you so very much."

I think Netflix streams it, might be a good alternative to
leaf-raking this afternoon.

Sent from my iPhoneme


On Nov 11, 2011, at 11:11 AM, Jan Galligan wrote:
>
>> Bob:
>> When is the last time you watched Alphaville?
>> For me it had been many years, but now that I have
>> an almost up-to-date connection to the internet and
>> many lost hours in the jungle, I've been watching
>> movies via google's UTube...


>> >> Here are a few reflections:

>> Ford Galaxie
>> Poetry
>> Eckel & Jeckel
>> 508
>> 344
>> Capital of Pain
>> The Naked Truth
>> "One sugar, or two?" Two.
>> Capital of Sorrow
>> "Story 842" (punchline: two cups of very sweet coffee)
>> Ivan Johnson/Lemmy Caution
>> "Fuck your logic."
>> SUD
>> POLICE
>> Journaliste and Justice, both start with J
>> gold and women
>> Positif
>> Negative
>> NORD
>> car chase in winter
>> forward & reverse
>> "I am time."
>> "We are happiness."
>> "Natasha!"
>> 23.15
>> "Don't look back."
>> "I love you."
>> I+N+F
>> [FIN]

 

-----Original Message-----
>> >> From: "Robert"
>> Thank you for your cooperation. >>


Jan Galligan
75Grand/Sur
Santa Olaya, PR


http://JANGuarte.posterous.com [art blog]
http://cinefestsanjuan.posterous.com [cine blog]