Isis Solarized Because I Can
Saturday, March 14, 2026
 | | Isis |  | | Kathleen Deas |
In that
other century, particularly when we were living in Kerrisdale I would tell my
Rosemary, “I am going into my darkroom for a while.” What I did there was to
fiddle, although a loftier term would be to experiment. One experiment was a
complete accident that I have never repeated. I put an exposed 8x10
photographic paper of an ecdysiast friend called Isis into the developer tray.
The phone rang so I turned the light to answer when I realized my mistake. I
quickly turned it off and I was rewarded by a perfectly solarized print.(Man Ray pioneered this technique).
My grandmother used to tell me, “Cuando el diablo no
tiene nada que hacer con el rabo espanta moscas.” That translates to, “When the devil
is bored he swats flies with his tail.”
Because
living alone with two cats produces a lot of idle time I experiment further in
this 21st century in my well lit oficina. Why do I do this? I like
that American expression, “Why does a dog lick its di..? Because it can.”
The other
photograph here is a sandwich of the now gone Polaroid Instant Negatives. In
that past century, without a scanner, all I could do was to print them. Now
here I put the two sort of sided by side and scanned them.
I hope that
these images do not bark as I am not yet a dog. But I can…
George Bowering - Barefoot He Was
Friday, March 13, 2026
 | | George Bowering - 12 March 2026 |
My Valencia,Spain educated grandmother often told me, “Más
sabe el diablo por viejo que por diablo.” That translates to, “The devil knows more not because he is
the devil but because he is an old man.”
George
Bowering, the First Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate (2002-2004) who was 90 this past December, is ample proof
on my grandmother’s wisdom. Consider that at his age he is about to publish a
book of his memories of having lived in Mexico – Barefoot Gringo (UBC Press -
May 12) and a book of poetry – Pearl (Talon – Mar 31).
Because we
have been friends for many years I know that his Mexican Spanish is good.
Speaking Spanish at his home yesterday in the company of his wife, Jean
Baird, for me was a pleasure. On December
1st I went to Mexico City to photograph a 91-year-old blind
photographer, Pedro Meyer who is actively publishing books and taking
photographs as he can discern light and movement. I took my Asahi Pentax S-3
film camera that I bought used in Mexico City in 1962. The idea was to take the camera to it source. I photographed him with a softbox flash. The experience of
finding inspiration in a man older than I am, pushed me to pursue the idea of
taking portraits of Bowering with the same camera. Pedro Meyer - the Active Photographer
Because I
was keen on taking his portrait and assembling my equipment I did not listen
well when he told me that he had found a different way of writing poetry. But I
did hear that the cover for Barefoot Gringo is his photograph. And because
his Mexican Spanish is good he pronounces correctly the knife’s name “machete”
and not “mashete.”
 | | To be published May 12 - UBC Press |
While there,
Jean Baird clued me in on something I had no knowledge of. She talked about the
Al Purdy A-frame Association project. The house on the water where Purdy lived
at one time was going to be torn down. It has been saved and when it was raised
from the ground for repairs, Baird told me that they then built a new basement.
Now the house is used for writers-in-residence. I gather that Baird was a tad
shy about telling me how active she was and is with the project. The Al Purdy A-Frame Association
I asked
Baird and Bowering to provide me with either a first paragraph or a last one
from the the Barefoot Gringo. Before I purchase a book I always look at those
two paragraphs. With mystery novels I avoid that last one!
Here is the
last paragraph of Barefoot Gringo
and eating no
chocolates. I had apparently got myself in danger with dehydration, being an
old guy and all. I recovered slowly from that, and went back to my usual
collection of illnesses and imperfections. I also, for a while, continued the
habit I’d acquired down south – once every so often I would sit idle instead of
writing or reading, which coincidentally was the title of my new book.
Oh, little
waves
coming to
the beach
at La
Manzanilla,
I will miss
you.
Oh, big
round planet,
I will miss
you.
Because my
nickname for Bowering is “The Great Contrarian” I was not surprised at his
reaction when I placed his hand over his heart for my portrait. He said, “Alex
that is not my heart, that’s my pacemaker, my heart is further down.”
George Bowering - The Great Contrarian
More Serendipity & Less Zemblanity
Thursday, March 12, 2026
 | | Joe Wai |
Zemblanity,
coined by novelist William Boyd in his 1998 book Armadillo, is the opposite of
serendipity. It is defined as "the faculty of making unhappy, unlucky, and
expected discoveries by design". It refers to the inevitable discovery of
unpleasant truths or, more broadly, the inevitable onset of misfortune, often
brought about by one's own actions or system designs.
 | | George Bowering |
Because of
the blog I just wrote about George Bowering I have been thinking of that
expression I was told in my youth (forgotten who it was) that,, “Coincidence
happens more often than not.” George Bowering - Barefoot He Was
The reason
for my thought on this is that two architects, Joe Wai and Abraham Rogatnick
lived on the same street (9th Avenue) at the corner and their homes
were just separated by a wall. Across the street and on the corner is where
George Bowering lived. I wonder if they became friends because they were
neighbours or somehow they met somewhere else.
 | | Abraham Rogatnick |
There is
another moment of serendipity. I had my eldest granddaughter Rebecca in the car
when I went to pick up Bowering to go to a burlesque show at the Russian
Community Centre on 4
The Four of Us
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
 | | Niño & Niña - 13 March 2026 |
My Rosemary
died on December 9, 2020 and after those 5 years I am no better today than I
was when she died.
I have
finished reading one of the best books I have read in the last 5 years. This is
Departure(s) by Julian Barnes. I have written about his discovery through
reading what happened to Proust when he dipped a madeleine into tea. Barnes
calls it IAM which stands for Involuntary Autobiographical Memory. Julian Barnes - Death & the Lemon Table
This happens
to me constantly, even in my dreams. Thoughts circulate in my head of people I
have known who are now all dead. They are friends and family. A couple of days
ago a school chum in my high school in Austin, Texas, died of lung cancer. Of
that class of over 50 there may be at the most five of us left.
Without
controlling the thoughts I see moments in my life that randomly happen in my
old street in Coghlan in Buenos Aires or of going to see a play in Vancouver
with Rosemary. As I drive in Vancouver and I see the closing of shops and all
those towers n our former home in Burnaby the thought automatically comes to
me, “Rosemary, you would not recognize our Vancouver.”
But I must
now state here that I have discovered something that I call IAT which stands
for Involuntary Autobiographical Talking. I cannot explain that I might get
into my car and I blurt out “te quiero mucho” (I love you lots) or when I am
sitting in my living room I speak out, “Rosamaría”.
My only
relief (if relief it is ) is to constantly somehow put Rosemary in my blogs.
Sometimes when I am on my bed with my cats I say “Rosemary” or the endearing “Mamuchi”.
I don’t think my cats remember the name.
What has
been happening to me of late is that I stare at Rosemary’s portrait on the wall
opposite my bed (like the one here but framed) and I think, “The four of us.”
Indeed we are three and by adding Rosemary’s absent presence we are four. And
if it is bedtime I put out the light with a smile on my face.
Miss Mew - Devon Cream
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
 | | Kathleen - Fleen - Topaz - Miss Mew |
A couple of
pleasant women are presently embarking on making a documentary on the exotic
dancer scene in Vancouver in the late, 70s, in the 80s and until now.
In those
times I photographed many if not most of these ecdysiasts.
This endeavour coincided with me doing the same with the Vancouver punk bands.
It was one
afternoon in the early 80s that I was walking to the Carnegie Centre on Main
and Hastings after having had a few soda waters at the Number 5 Orange. Those
of us who frequented it simply called it The Five. On my walk I noticed a
dancer I had seen minutes before. She went by the name of Topaz. Those who knew
her called her Fleen and her real name was Kathleen.
I asked her
where she was going. She was going like me to listen to the punk band D.O.A.
From that moment we became friends until she died on November the 17, 2021.
The two
documentary women have already interviewed me with a tape recorder. They are
returning today Tuesday to film me. For this occasion I decided to get a
haircut and I did on Monday at noon.
In my new
interview I will further explain how I felt all those dancers had style, grace
and intelligence. In this age of 21st century red-carpet
pornography, I can only assert that these women had style. That style is gone.
I called
Kathleen Miss Mew because she reminded me of a cat. She had this flawless
complexion that looked like Devon Cream. She came a few times to our Railway
Club lunch gatherings and I was shocked to find out her face was all freckles!
She used good makeup.
The main
reason for writing this blog is something that happened between us. In those
late 80s I did a gallery show of dancers that I called Homebodies. The
procedure was that I would ring the bell and be allowed in. I would be offered
coffee and I would look around before I photographed them nude in their home.
It was not supposed to be erotic. They were full-length portraits of nude women
doing household chores.
When I was
just about to finish the project, Miss Mew called me and said, “Alex I want to be in your Homebodies. The fact that I live in that fleabag hotel,
The Niagara does not mean that it is not my home. It is." At the time she
may have been taking drugs and or drinking. I showed up at her hotel room and
my heart was broken when she posed right next to a little display that she had
of flowers, high heel shoes and an apple.
I hope nobody
will become offended by placing that photograph here. The third one is of her
dancing. She always made eye-contact and she liked to dance to Lou Reed.
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