Pages

Tuesday, July 03, 2018

A Nostalgia for an Umbrella







nostalgia



Del lat. mod. nostalgia, y este del gr. νστος nóstos 'regreso' y -αλγα -algía '-algia'.



1. f. Pena de verse ausente de la patria o de los deudos o amigos.



2. f. Tristeza melancólica originada por el recuerdo de una dicha perdida.


Real Academia Española © Todos los derechos reservados


That second definition of nostalgia in my online dictionary of the Spanish language is a killer. It translates to: A melancholic sorrow originating in the remembrance of a lost happiness.

Because I have lived in Argentina, Mexico, Texas and now Vancouver I have a mixed up idea of what nostalgia is. It was in 2000 when upon meeting the two Argentine painters living in Vancouver, Nora Patrich and Juan Manuel Sánchez that I arrived at a startling conclusion: My nostalgia can only happen when I am not in the place missed. A further explanation is that I could not experience nostalgia for Argentina if I were there. Perhaps I could experience there a nostalgia for memories of my past there.

Some years ago I photographed a lovely woman who may have had some Native Canadian in her. She almost looked Latin. Her nickname was Isis but I knew her as Celina.

While posing for me in my studio I had this urge to photograph her with my Vancouver Umbrella Shop (sadly they recently closed) umbrella.

Looking back I can now see myself in beautiful Venice and spotting Celina on a canal bridge and telling her:

Celina I have this unbearable nostalgia for Vancouver. Would you pose for me under an umbrella? “