Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Victorian Perspectives, Domestic & Foreign (Albumen Prints)

Anonymous photographer
Fernery
ca. 1880
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

from The Old Country

Every point was a point of no return
for those who had signed the Covenant in blood.
Every fern was a maidenhair fern
that gave every eye an eyeful of mud

ere it was plucked out and cast into the flame.
Every rowan was a mountain ash.
Every swath-swathed mower made of his graft a game
and the hay sash

went to the kemper best fit to kemp.
Every secretary was a temp
who could shift shape

like the river goddesses Bann and Boann.
Every two-a-penny maze was, at its heart, Minoan.
Every escape was a narrow escape.

– Paul Muldoon (2006)

Anonymous photographer
Flight of steps and balustraded terrace at Dunrobin
ca. 1860-70
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Benjamin Brecknell Turner
Wooded Drive, Losely Park
ca. 1852-54
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

William Donaldson Clark
Trees at Braid
ca. 1864
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

George Washington Wilson
Drummond Castle Gardens, Crieff
ca. 1870
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Anonymous photographer
Unknown group in front of unknown house
ca. 1870
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Giorgio Sommer
Vesuvius Erupting
1888
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

James Schuyler

I went to his sixty-sixth birthday
dinner: sixteen years ago this past
November. I remember that it was at
Chelsea Central (his favorite restaurant:
great steaks) on 10th Avenue, and
that Ashbery was there, and a few
others, including Joe, impeccably
dressed and gracious, who picked up
what must have been (I thought
at the time) an exorbitant bill.

I remember him saying more than
once, "Joe always picks up the bill,"
then smiling a slightly wicked smile.

Sitting with him (those excruciating
silences!) in his room at the Chelsea,
my eyes would wander from his book-
shelves (The Portrait of a Lady stood out)
to the pan of water on the radiator
to the records strewn on the floor
to some scraggly plants (ivy? herbs?)
in ceramic pots at the base of the French
doors that opened to the balcony and
balustrade and sound of traffic on 23rd
Street six floors below. He read me
"White Boat, Blue Boat" shortly after he
wrote it, and a poem about Brook Benton
singing "Rainy Night in Georgia" that
didn't make it into his Last Poems, though
I remember thinking it beautiful. He
complained, in a letter to Tom, about
how much I smoked, and how emotional
I'd get during movies: he must have been
referring to Field of Dreams (he had a yen
for Kevin Costner). When he took me
to see L'Atalante, a film he loved, I was
bored. Once, we took the subway (he
hadn't ridden it in years) to the Frick;
I remember admiring Romney's Lady
Hamilton. It hurt that he didn't invite
me to the dinner after his Dia reading
or to the reception after his reading at the
92nd Street Y, though he did, at the latter,
read "Mood Indigo," dedicated to me.
When he said my name from the stage,
Joan and Eileen, sitting to my left, turned
and stared at me; frozen by the enormity
of the moment, I couldn't look back.
When he came to a reading I gave at
St. Mark's, Raymond impressed upon
me what an honor it was: Jimmy didn't
go to many poetry readings. What else
is there to say? That when I visited him
at St. Vincent's the day before he died
Darragh said, "He likes to hear gossip."
So I said, "Eileen and I are talking again."
That at his funeral I sat alone (Ira couldn't
come); that that was the loneliest feeling
in the world. That afterwards Doug said
"You look so sad." How should I have
looked, Doug! And that a year after he
died, I dreamt I saw him in the lobby of
the Chelsea Hotel. He was wearing a
hospital shift and seemed to have no
muscle control over his face – like in inten-
sive care after his stroke. He saw me
and said, "It's nice to see some familiar
faces." I approached him, but he
disappeared.

– David Trinidad (2007)

Julia Margaret Cameron
"If you're waiting, call me early, call me early, mother dear"
ca. 1860
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Julia Margaret Cameron
La Madonna Vigilante
ca. 1860
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Anonymous photographer
Column Capital, Palazzo Ducale, Urbino
ca. 1880
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Carlo Ponti
Scala Giganti, Palazzo Ducale, Venice
ca. 1850-70
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Carlo Ponti
Grand Canal, Venice
ca. 1860-70
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Giorgio Sommer
Dolphins, Cascata di Caserta, Naples
ca. 1870
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Giorgio Sommer
Actaeon attacked by his own dogs, Cascata di Caserta, Naples
ca. 1870
albumen print
National Galleries of Scotland

Poems from the archives of Poetry (Chicago)