Vancouver - Greatness Deferred
Saturday, July 29, 2017
Pacific Blvd - Ian Bateson |
Polis (/ˈpɒlᵻs/; Greek: πόλις pronounced [pólis]), plural poleis (/ˈpɒleɪz/, πόλεις [póleːs]), literally means city in Greek. It can also mean a body of citizens. In modern historiography, polis is normally used to indicate the ancient Greek city-states, like Classical Athens and its contemporaries, and thus is often translated as "city-state".
Wikipedia
In this 21st century I have no idea if Ancient Greece has any bearing in what is taught in elementary and secondary schools. The ideas of ancient Pre-Socratic philosophers and those that followed like Plato and Aritstotle are perhaps gone the way of shoelaces.
Wikipedia
In this 21st century I have no idea if Ancient Greece has any bearing in what is taught in elementary and secondary schools. The ideas of ancient Pre-Socratic philosophers and those that followed like Plato and Aritstotle are perhaps gone the way of shoelaces.
All my life I have lived in a big city (Buenos Aires, Mexico
City) two small ones, Veracruz, Austin, Texas) and now in Vancouver. I could
never survive more than a month in my eldest daughter’s Lillooet where she
happily teaches elementary school with probably no mention of anything Greek. I
could not stand not having dance, theatre, music, art galleries and the rumble
of traffic.
With that out of the way, at my age of 75 I get out less and
I could almost be living in Lillooet. My Rosemary and I are content (happy?) in
our little Kits duplex and going to Safeway seems to be an outing.
Thanks to some concerts that I cannot resist or a friend
like Ian Bateson who nags me to accompany him to art galleries I do manage to
get out.
Bing Thom |
Yesterday was an example of such an event, one that I will
hope to make less rare.
I met up with Bateson in front of the BC Architectural
Institute on Cambie across from Victory Square. We went in to see the Building Beyond Buildings – AIBC Exhibition which runs until August 26. This is a show of
models made by Bing Thom’s firm of building he designed that have been finished
or are being built around the world.
There are a few that are renderings of projects not yet accepted.
The scope of the exhibit is big but the gallery is small.
The buildings are beautiful but the rendering of the exhibit is colourless and
sterile. Bateson and I were the only ones. The person behind the desk was a
temporary. The place felt cold. Bing Thom, whom I photographed many times was a
warm person with an easy smile. He told me that he taught Arthur Erickson to
meditate.
I told a couple of my architect friends about the show. They did not know about it.
I told a couple of my architect friends about the show. They did not know about it.
The exhibit should have had red carpets and trumpets and
somebody there to enthuse us about a Vancouver architect of note (now dead) and
how his influence has left a firm imprint in our city.
I wonder how many people in this city are aware of the
existence of the institute and its location on Victory Square kitty corner with
the Dominion Building and the Cenotaph built by the firm that became Thompson
Berwick and Pratt and Partners. With those three, we have a history of
Vancouver’s polis all in one square.
Ned Pratt |
From the Bing Thom exhibit we went to the Dominion building to look up on Zvonko Markovik the gregarious building manager (on good days he might offer you some of his special slivovitz which he keeps in his desk drawer). As we left from the visit (it was before noon so we did not indulge in any spirits) I did not have the heart that some years ago the UBC School of Architecture had a presence next door in what was a small annex of its school on campus. It was there where they had a show of architecture photographs featuring the photographers who had recorded the city from its inception to its present. I was called and told (not asked) that I had relevant stuff. I did. Seeing my photograph up on the wall on the day of the opening finally made me feel (if only for a fleeting moment) that now I was part of the city of Vancouver. It had become my city because my photographs of Vancouver architects and some of their buildings were up on the wall.
Zvonko Markovik |
That UBC Architecture School presence is gone. I found it most interesting that in the Bing Thom exhibit there was a beautiful maquette of a Thom project that is being built in Surrey. It is and will be the Simon Fraser University in Surrey.
The Deadening of Robson Square
From Victory Square we found ourselves in Sikora’s where I bought a recent recording Tango Nuevo with Pablo Ziegler (Piazzolla’s pianist for many years) and pianist Christopher O’Riley of NPR’s
From the Top.
The music is of course the music of only one city, Buenos Aires. Listening to it much later I was in the throes of a terrible nostalgia for a city that knows and feels that it is a great city.
Bob Williams |
At the Railway Club (formerly known by the few that knew,
and I was one of them, The Railwayman’s Club we had lunch. The place with the
longest bar in Vancouver has changed a bit since Bob Williams’s time. The model
railroad that went from one side of the bar to the other on tracks suspended
from the ceiling is gone as is the dart board. The round tables have been
replaced by picnic style long tables. The floor is all wood and immaculately
clean. But there has been one thing that has not changed. The food is good as
was my chicken and corn soup. The view of Dunsmuir and Seymour from our windows
is a genuine cityscape full of throngs of language students.
Ian Bateson at the Railway Club, July 28 2017 |
I bid Bateson goodbye and walked a couple of blocks to Macleod’s Books on 455 West Pender. Owner Don Stewart was in residence and I must confess I should have put more effort on the two pictures I took of the used books bookstore. I can honestly say that New York City has The Strand Bookstore and we in Vancouver have MacLeod’s.
Don Stewart, right, MacLeod's Books |
Don Stewart who does not hide his obsession for acquiring books started in another location in 1964. He changed in 1973 to another location that suffered a big fire and has been in the present spot since 1982.
People who enter the bookstore for the first time are awed by the quantity of books everywhere. Stewarts seems to know where everything is.
A couple of years ago I discovered that the bookstore as big as it is has a basement just as big and it is, yes, full of books.
Many of the gems in my library have come from Macleod’s. One of them was a recent acquisition. I dropped in a couple of months ago and Stewart who knows his clientele went to a pile by his long window on Richards and brought me The Book of Imaginary Beings by Jorge Luís Borges. Of course I could not resist and it was marked down to $25.
Another book I went to find. I had read that 19th century Argentine strongman Don Manuel de Rosas had been friends with Charles Darwin and that the two of them had gone horseback riding on the Argentine Pampa. Of course Stewart had Voyage of the Beagle by Darwin in an especially lovely edition.
At one time I would have defined a great city as a city with a fine daily newspaper, good bookstores and because I am a photographer a lab where you could have Kodachrome processed. This might have defined Vancouver some years ago. What is left? One very good bookstore.
Walking back on Dunsmuir to Hamilton where I had parked my car in a back alley (I have municipal plates) I passed the park (it is a hydro substation of sorts) across from Holy Rosary Cathedral. Architecture and political writer Sean Rossiter (now sadly gone with nobody to have picked up his interest in things city), told me that the park had been designed as a place for people to safely shoot up.
I drove home and passed the now two year old mess that is called Pacific at Burrard.
At home I have been thinking that what my city of Vancouver
does not have besides all the stuff mentioned above is something that makes my
Buenos Aires very special.
Tango & Jorge Luís Borges & Julio Cortázar
Argentina has a most interesting tradition of provincial music called folklore but unlike any other country that I can think of, Buenos Aires has its own music. Listening to any tango be it old style or Piazzolla’s Nuevo Tango I am instantly transported to Calle Corrientes and other streets and corners of my native Buenos Aires.
Tango para una ciudad (Tango for a city)
Borges and to a lesser extent by exiled-in-Paris Cortázar are classic examples of a style of writing called costumbrísmo. These are novels, stories and essays about a city, not any city but of Buenos Aires.
La Recoleta - Jorge Luís Borges
I remember that writer Lawrence Gough wrote police procedurals set here. But I don’t remember much else and there is no music of Vancouver with the only possible exception of Art Bergmann’s Hawaii.
Sure we have bike lanes but no affordable housing yet. Few if any would know about the waffle building on West Georgia or that its architect, Arthur Erickson is singly responsible for the curious twist of the Trump Tower.
Arthur Erickson - UBC Library |
We live in a city with a short memory. We all know where the Golf Ball is but do we know that its architect Bruno Freschi is alive and almost well?
Bruno Freschi |
We have a treasure in landscape architect Cornelia Oberlander (over 90) who is the person who contacted Moshe Safdy and told him, “Why don’t you and I enter that competition for the Vancouver Public Library?” And she is now working to install her original garden on the roof of that library.
Who knows that the CBC Building on Hamilton was designed by Paul Merrick and that it won a Governor General’s award?
Paul Merrick's CBC and the beautiful skylights that were removed. |
Who would know that Pyatt Hall and the Orpheum Annex are modern concert venues of the future and that they are designed by bingham + hill architects?
Every time I drive past Brentwood I look up in awe at the Brentwood Skytrain Station built by Peter Busby. It reminds me of Arthur C. Clarke science fiction book covers of the 50 and 60s that showed awesome views of cities of the future.
Peter Busby |
We need to obtain the music for our city, the literature for our city and to honour and marvel at the architects that have built this city that still has some way to go before it finds its path to greatness.
The Pyramids, Vancouver Pot Holes & Pacific at Burrard