THE LAST SUMMER
Sometimes the works of Jorge Macchi seem like a long love
letter. The kind you might find hidden between the pages of
an old book in the library of a house rented over the summer.
His works are about the fragility of things, the remains of
the day, distant flutterings of quivering beauty. They are
made of absences that command the scene as powerfully as any
presence. Sad images that represent that essential condition
of being locked inside one’s own head known as solitude.
In Macchi’s work, the key word is dispossession. Macchi
starts with very little, with what the waves leave behind
after breaking on the shores of our conscience, and ends with
even less. He is an artist of loss and nostalgia, who has
built a body of work that provokes the sensation of being
in an absolutely private and highly secret place and suddenly
feeling that someone else is there. Like a lover whom we haven’t
seen for years. Or, better yet, like his ghost.
December
Or the instant the wave grows
There are things in this world that make you think of Macchi:
the gushing white trail left by a plane as it disappears into
the clouds, the circles trembling in the water once the little
stone has sunk, the evaporated perfume that remains stuck
to the walls of a glass bottle. It’s more an effect
than a result. If it were smallpox, it wouldn’t be the
marks on the skin but the feeling of weakness in the legs
from staying in bed so long. It’s what remains, vibrating.
Every work of Macchi’s captures something that has lost
solidity.
It’s a substance that slips between our fingers in the
very moment we try to close our hands. In Macchi, it is never
the form that makes the space but rather the space that breaks
up the form, pulverizing it. The pages of an obituary in Monoblock
have been soaked to the point of erasing each and every word.
What is left are thread-like grids shivering on the wall,
buildings, cities, cemeteries evoking the emaciated specter
of existence.
And yet the ghostly element, the breath on the back of the
neck in his works, is barely scary. There’s nothing
terrifying or uncanny, simply because they weren’t brought
forth in fear but in sadness. In Mar Muerto, the
shadows of glasses containing salt lurk against the wall,
like a melancholic X-ray recording an illness. In Vidas
Paralelas, two glasses are broken in the exact same way:
birthmarks, lines in the palm of a hand that open up and heal
at identical points, rivers of pain that run in twin beds.
If man is, irremediably, an island, these couples don’t
seem to be so much characters separated from a single life
as elements of a tandem reality, in which neither could exist
without the other. In Still-song, the lights thrown by a silver
ball twirling in a room have pierced the wall with holes.
These are the footprints of a party that is over and won’t
happen again. Maybe also of a happiness that lasted an extra
minute, or of a light so strong that it overexposed the memory
on the wall, as when the sun burns circles in the grass.
In order to find their most achieved form, all of Macchi’s
works have needed a minimum displacement. The kind that occurs
when, suddenly, the wave starts to climb. It’s not the
big cataclysms, nor the abrupt changes of pressure nor the
colossal imbalances that produce his images, but rather an
imperceptible shake. A silent displacement, inoffensive in
appearance, yet implacable, like the needle on the clock that
pushes the days along in millimetric leaps.
There’s a rainy atmosphere, an eternal Irish rain, like
the one in Beckett’s Mercier et Camier, that
acquires in Macchi’s work the status of a metaphysical
idea. A mysterious tranquility, a gravity or calm. A second
before, everything seemed to be falling apart. A second later,
the situation has stabilized. In Les feuilles Mortes,
the lines in a notebook seem to be sinking away. Rushing toward
the floor, they capture the irreversible tendency of bodies
to pass from order into disorder and then, possibly, to fade
into thin air.
And, nevertheless, in The Speaker’s Corner,
where the quotation marks swing along the wall as they embrace
empty quotes, in Blue Planet, where the continents
of the map have been swept over by water, disorder doesn’t
emerge as the negation of order but, principally, as the ordinary
condition of every movement: the result of a random and automatic
mixture of loose molecules floating around. The strength of
Macchi’s world lies in being born precisely in the same
instant in which imbalance takes charge.
Curiously, Macchi’s work is not only the record of an
emotion, but the mental space in which a struggle is progressing:
between the destruction of the image and the search for a
possible image. The poet Jacques Dupin, used to say: “In
the forest, we are closer to the woodcutter than to the solitary
wanderer. No innocent contemplation. No high forest crossed
by sunlight and the songs of birds, but their hidden future:
cords of wood. Everything is given to us, but for violence,
to be forced open, to be almost destroyed -- to destroy us.”
As if the image could only be born when all the other chances
for life have been destroyed, Macchi explores the margins,
the endings, the debris, what’s left behind. It is a
question of keeping a silent vigil over the world until the
last moment, when it begins to break apart under the pressure
that’s been placed on its shoulders. And so Macchi picks
up the smithereens.
January
Or the sound of water breaking against sand
If one of the strong points of Macchi’s work is the
swiftness and dexterity of his thought – the way he
unifies two poles of an idea without the pulse quivering and
with no need of a fencing foil – the other, to tell
the truth, is its inexorable consequence: why, having been
reduced to the essential, deprived of ornament, Macchi’s
works give the same formal pleasure as music. And so it becomes
clear that the artist is actually interested in problems that
extend outside the field of visual arts and that what he embarked
upon, a number of years ago, is an enormous poetic project.
For this reason, in his works, as in poetry, we encounter
crossroads between the visual image and acoustics. There are
silent works that allude to music in a direct way: in Nocturno
the nails on a stave seem to be the desperate attempt to cling
to a melody. There are openly musical works: in La Ascensión,
an elastic bed placed below a Venetian fresco registers the
Ascension of the Virgin Mary and, like the taut drumhead of
a bass drum, evokes the blow of a mallet, while the music
of a viola da gamba sadly recreates the effort of a human
being to gain immortality: the awkward jump, its brief stardom
and inevitable fall to earth; and finally, there are works
with neither musical accompaniment nor direct references that,
even so, appear to hide a silent metronome marking an interior
rhythm. Fuegos de Artificio captures the explosion
of a shoe’s footprint: one of these works in which the
pauses and visual hiatuses, rather than breaking the musical
cadence, appear to occur under its influence. Or else Horizonte,
where the springs that hold up a photo of the sea become the
waves of a mysterious string instrument, and the horizon,
a fermata, the notation in a musical score that suspends or
prolongs the sound beyond the established time.
When we were children, we were told that if we brought a conch
shell to our ears we could hear the night murmur of the sea.
Later, we understood that what was actually occurring was
that the shell was amplifying the vibrations of the fainter
sounds of a place: the air that stirs the leaves in a garden,
the breathing of a sleeping dog in the sun, the mowing of
a lawn far in the distance. Macchi’s works are just
this, amplifiers that capture and reproduce sounds that the
human ear would ignore under normal conditions. Works like
nights that propagate over kilometers the softest whispers,
the grazing caresses that forgotten things provoke, the surrounding
music of the universe.
February
Or what remains when the surf pulls back
The philosopher Richard Wolheim used to spend four hours
on the clock in front of a painting. He wrote: “I developed
a way of looking at paintings that took up enormous amounts
of time, but was immensely gratifying in its way. I came to
understand that it generally took me at least an hour to get
rid of all the dispersed associations and faulty perceptions.
From that point on, the more time I had left over, the more
I felt that the painting was delivering its secret to me.”
Macchi’s works on the other hand do not demand so much
time face to face because more than an intense look they are
images that require absorption. And in this they come ponderously
close to literature. So much so that you finally begin to
get a sense of the artist as the creator of visual fictions.
Days after seeing them, his works grow in your memory. They
bounce around the rooms of your mind in slow motion like objects
inside a space ship. They are images that could be book covers
in their power to condense stories, but are rather more like
what we would find in opening a book if we could, literally,
distill the tale to its essence.
Each person with a coherent identity is, in every moment,
telling himself the story of his life, following the thread
of his own story. In forgotten love, time that won’t
turn back, kindred souls, detective stories, landslides, building
collapses, chance encounters and accidents, Macchi finds images
to tell the stories that haunt him. And in the process, he
captures something of their old scent, in the same way that
certain stories of Bioy Casares and Cortázar smell
like the wilting flowers at summer’s end.
But good stories do not have a beginning, a middle and an
end, rather they have a beginning that never stops beginning
or an end that never stops ending. Old country bells that
resound in the distance. In the Happy Birthday message published
in the diary of Love Story, the memory floats abandoned, a
little paper boat in the ocean of time; the bag over the mirror
of an armoire hopelessly tries to capture a reflection without
realizing that this same gesture will end up suffocating it.
Because Macchi’s work is without a doubt a fiction that
meditates on miscommunication, on places where, beyond language
that reflects a conception of the world and supposes human
relations, all that remains are singularity, the inexplicable,
the unspeakable. But also the incontestable reality of existence.
The universe is made of stories not of atoms. So Macchi’s
works seem to murmur. In Einstein’s Dreams,
Alan Lightman tells how in 1905 an office clerk in Berna who
is about to finish a job which he calls Special Theory
of Relativity has a different dream every night for thirty
nights: in each one of the dreams, time functions in a different
way. In one, time is circular, people repeat their triumphs
and errors over and over again; in another, there is no time,
only frozen moments. It is a book that examines the nature
of possibility and chance, ideas that also keep Macchi awake.
But far from the pragmatism of Lightman’s protagonist,
who describes sadness as “nothing more than a little
acid transfigured in the cerebellum,” Macchi has decided
to live in a place where an emotional truth can have the same
solidity as a scientific truth.
March
Or turning your back on the sea
Macchi’s works are what begins when a woman leaves
the room. What an instant afterwards becomes past. In an episode
of the series Twin Peaks by David Lynch, the mad
brothers Horn, thrown in the berths of a prison, recall their
childhood. They lose themselves in the cloudy image of Louise
Dombrowksi, a girl with a fluttering lantern in her hand,
who dances like a bewitching candle flame in a darkened room.
This memory that goes on hypnotizing them years later is the
fantasy of love. And it is this which makes one of them ask
himself the same thing that we ask ourselves each time we
pause in front of one of Macchi’s works: Oh, brother,
what has become of us?
By María Gainza
Translation: Maxine Swann
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