William Eggleston - Untitled (Gingham Woman, Albers Wall) |
"Are you a vegetarian, Ira?" someone asks idly. "Yes. Yes, I am." "Tell them, Ira," Joan Baez says. "It's nice." He leans back and looks toward the ceiling. "I was in the Sierra once." He pauses, and Joan Baez smiles approvingly. "I saw this magnificent tree growing out of bare rock, thrusting itself . . . and I thought all right, tree, if you want to live that much, all right! All right! O.K.! I won't chop you! I won't eat you! The one thing we all have in common is that we all want to live!" Where The Kissing Never Stops - Joan Didion, Slouching Towards Bethlehem
Except for one rainy afternoon in DC, we were absolutely blessed with the weather. Interesting though, in a worrying trend continued from Athens, locals throughout our trip were concerned with the unseasonably warm weather. A guide in the mountains of North Carolina was telling us they’d usually we’d have 2-3 Winter snowfalls by now (early March) and had yet to have even one. It was unseasonably warm in Boone NC, Asheville NC (both high elevation towns) and Nashville TN. A scary trend with scarier outcomes to come no doubt. Someone said "Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get." I guess we were mostly getting weather on this trip. Despite the complexity of the combined itinerary where Marc was traveling from Tokyo to meet me in DC there were no major hitches, few minor glitches, lots of brainfood, foodfood and plenty of memories.
The next couple of posts feature random notes taken on my phone, photos, plus follow up notes written after the trip. My goal as always is merely to capture the chronological. Coherency is an unintended side effect. Turns out, for quick emphasis when taking notes on the phone, the notes contain some ineloquent swearing, so apologies in advance where I've let sleeping ineloquence lie. Any quotes are likely lyrics from songs on the playlist. Have fun tune spotting.
Eggie Pockets |
Wednesday (12.8k Steps): Travel. Unravel. 1447 Safe. Big conversations outdoors. “While I’m alive I’ll make tiny changes to Earth” Exhausted on an early morning table top @ Burger King in T2 Dublin Airport. Greasy, unclean. Infected into my marrow with tiredness. Nina asks what have I got? Why am I alive anyway? Going the distance. Chunky French plaits, sweat pants and perspex spectacles a la mode. The rocking back and forth of early boarding. The Thinkpad is the Snickers work wear for the knowledge worker. Everyone on wheels. Radiohead’s National Anthem all shard and sway. Cliché Cliché. Clenched ends. Neurosis. Exoskeletons in high footfall infrastructure terrify me. An entire infrastructure built on timeslicing. US immigration pre-clearance. “Is that how you pronounce your surname? I’ve been pronouncing that pub's name wrong all along!” Egg pittas and Bombay Mix. Shit (shit!) airline food. It’s OK to be hungry – even in America. Especially in America. DC: Holiday Inn checkin. Located overlooking the Hungarian embassy and within the Embassy belt. Neighbours with Serbian and Kasakh embassies. I guess this city has a second tier embassy belt and our Holiday Inn was smack in the middle of it. Definitely the least salubrious place we stayed, although nowhere near the cheapest. Absolutely the smallest bathroom I’ve ever seen, including Japan – knees knocking door from the dunny. After a couple of days walking the city, my overriding impression is that DC is ditch-dull, a horribly careerist town with mostly ignored, mostly black, social issues. I got an insight into what grinding poverty might be like in the Verizon store I went to for a SIM (best advice ever). Some day, free access to Internet connectivity will be available to all. It's as necessary as oxygen over here. “All of my role models were murdered by the government” – on a hoodie seen in DC. Two (why not?) ragged old flags flapping on the roof of a building I could see from my bed through the 8th floor hotel window.
Embattled FBI HQ |
I had a strong feeling, seeded no doubt by media we've all been consuming over the past few years but re-enforced early and often on this trip, that America's current state is is a bit raggedy, slightly unraveling, coming undone – and this in the seat of its power. America seems at war with itself and finds itself in a phase of its history where any individual citizen's “freedoms” take precedence over any general good. While other experiences elsewhere gave hope, this feeling persisted for me throughout the trip.
Speaking of Athens... and identity. I've never seen a people so desperate for a depth of history that just isn't there. The architecture which dominates Civic and Federal government buildings in DC borrows heavily from Classical architecture, ancient Greek in particular. It also feels like there's an attempt to compensate with scale what the country lacks in history. It's impressive, no doubt, but not wholly convincing. I loved this bendy marble staircase at the National Art Gallery though.
Books: All small tomes.
Thursday [38k Steps]: Slept in to 6am (11am) despite being wide
awake @ 3 for an hour. An amazing cortado at the excellent Aussie Coffee Bar to kickstart my day. This kickstart (with chaser) became a feature of the trip. Ozzie Barista:
“Perfection is worth waiting for.” Eggs for Breakfast from the Eggie Rockets
diner that doubled as the Holiday Inn hotel restaurant (see photos above and below). Decent, although the eggs may have been either powdered or inflated with a bicycle pump.
Foyer, National Gallery Of Art, West Building |
Not sure when I decided to go the NationalGallery Of Art but it was the best idea I’ve ever had. Art was afoot and it was inspirational. I made my way directly to the Modern Art building. The Philip Guston retrospective was a huge highlight of the entire trip. Probably the best curated exhibit I’ve ever attended. I went from never having heard of him, to spending hours immersed in a huge collection of his life's work. I highly recommend the documentary Philip Guston– A Life Lived which was shown at the end of the exhibition. There’s also this BBC documentary (shorter and not as good but still worth a watch.)
Bombardment - Guston's Guernica |
Fantastic inspiration and food for thought at the start of a cross-state
trip through modern America, with Charlottesville as our first stop (for
reasons mostly unrelated to Confederate symbols.) His life story is fascinating. A Russian Jew (originally from
Odessa in modern day Ukraine), emigrated with his family to Montreal very early
in the 20th century to escape the pogroms. This left him at an early
age with a lifelong hatred of any form of oppression. He had early brushes with
the Ku Klux Klan in LA in the 1920s after he painted his response to the Scottsboro Boys case. He was vocally critical of Fascism in the 20s
and 30s and themes of political violence and symbols of hooded figures dominate
his work. His paintings… “frequently depicted racism, antisemitism, fascism and
American identity, as well as, especially in his later most cartoonish and
mocking work, the banality of evil.”
City Limits |
Marc arrived into DC around 11pm having taken the metro from the airport to a stop 8 blocks away from the hotel. Good job his luggage had wheels. I vastly over-packed and my luggage had no wheels – a mistake I won't make again. He made some friends as he tried to get a steer towards the hotel without phone signal. One thing I learned from Marc on this trip…. for recommendations, I look to crowd-sourced review data (multiple sites) from the Internet which works well most of the time. Marc takes the old-school, yet somehow novel approach of chasing on the ground information from actual humans. When you get an in person recommendation like that the information is generally far superior and more current e.g. CiCi’s (the Kimpton valet) Midtown Cafe breakfast recommendation in Nashville.
Asheville |
Marc’s sister Cecelia had forwarded a care package to the hotel in DC. It consisted of many, many, many things from Cowboy cookies to rolls of quarters for tolls / parking, from an emergency stars 'n' stripes bandana, to a large consignment of high quality homemade granola, sunscreen, peanut butter, protein bars, butter knives…. The list goes on. Very sweet and very well received. I learned that not only are myself and Marc highly compatible travel companions, we’re very similar. At one point I noticed that we’re both walking down the street in DC with large cameras, the same unbranded and comfortable shoes and clothing, layers of quality outdoor gear and a wooly hat each. We spoke again about never having an argument in all the times and all the different accommodations where we lived together. And so it was on this trip. Now, were there any patterns of behaviour which got on each other’s nerves? Absolutely there was, but we flowed, we floated. It worked and it’s something special. “Dragged me far enough to know.”
Smithsonian African American History Museum |
History Vs Banality |
Almost
Heaven (Just Like Heaven), West Virginia (Jr.)/ Blue Ridge Mountains,
Shenandoah River / Life is old there, older than the trees / Younger
than the mountains, growing like a breeze
Lesser Spotted Red Yellow Cab |
Saturday [12.5k Steps] The taxi we took to the car hire place for 9am to properly commence the roadtrip was a red Yellow cab. The receptionist at the Holiday Inn desk who checked us out and ordered our cab (“No Uber?”) had the most kind and beautiful soul. She became completely distracted by a cute puppy being led through the lobby. And why wouldn’t she when the alternative is an endless stream of soul-crushing admin. Crazy amazing Eritrean eyes. May the bottom rungs of the hospitality industry ladder be kind to her.
The Compact Traveler (featuring wheels!) |
The Avis staff only allowed one customer per teller into the office. This with a howling gale blowing outside on our luggage… and Marc :) I struggle with transitions on the best of days so this was a frustrating start. Renting a car these days is usually a multi-person endeavor - so much swapping of documents to complete the validations. Same circus with a group beside us. The only goal seemed to be keeping the counter area as quiet and uncluttered as possible for the staff. We got some bogan, obnoxious white Toyota Sienna instead of the bastion of German engineering (Passat) which I’d booked. We also had to deal with a dysfunctional external navigation device which caused us no end of trouble through the trip. The car worked OK (can i haz wheels?) and got us to where we needed to go, but the "take it or leave it" attitude of the staff and the poor logistics which got them to the point where they were offering us a pick up truck for a 1000 mile trip was a poor customer experience. Anyways - most importantly, we figured the tunes out. Apple Play refused to work so we hard-patched my new, red, Plan B phone into the Sienna's mainframe with a fiery red USB cable and we were in fucking business. The shittest set of speakers I’ve come across in a long time. They had the dynamic range of a spring doorstop. Everything about this car was sub-par with hidden annoyances which we'd discover at inopportune times. But we couldn’t complain because we had TUNES! Ulysses Grant playlist played hard for the entire trip and it was good. 215 songs was perfect 😊 Marc was introduced to Big Star. The Replacements taught me that you can’t go far without Big Star. Advice to keep in mind for all road trips.
Fugazi - In On The Kill Taker |
As we’d settled in to the decision to skip the Washington Monument due to time constraints, Last Chance For A Slow dance from Fugazi’s In on the Kill-taker featuring the self same monument (albeit blurred) on its cover came on the playlist. I'm a big believer in signs. Under normal circumstances I would have heeded the sign. But in this instance we needed to keep moving. Agreed we’d take day on / day off driving and the driver would deal with whatever came including fill ups flat tires etc. With assistance of course. That's kinda how it ended up being until right towards the end. So, DC into Virginia. Marc had suggested a visit to Monticello. We hit Monticello for one-ish and booked straight onto a tour.
Monticello |
(Notes plundered, supplemented and re-edited from Wikipedia) Located outside Charlottesville, Virginia, Monticello was the primary slave labor plantation of Founding Father Thomas Jefferson (3rd president of the US). He began designing Monticello in 1769 after inheriting land from his father at age 26. As the eldest son, it was expected that he would inherit his father’s entire estate. Instead, Jefferson was given his choice of building site and adjacent fields and the task of dividing up the remaining land between the other sons. Jefferson designed the main house himself and he reworked the design
through his presidency.
Outbuilding at Monticello |
Situated on the summit of an 850 ft (260 m)-high
peak in the Southwest Mountains, the name Monticello means "little
mountain" in Italian. Jefferson used a combination of free workers, indentured servants and slaves to build (and then re-build) the home. The working plantation was originally 5000 acres and used the labour of slaves for tobacco growing.
SO much PHOTO! |
The house (including grounds) is a National Historic Landmark and is the only private home in the US to be designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.The US nickel features Monticello on its reverse side. Monticello is also depicted on the reverse of the 1953 $2 bill. At Jefferson's direction, he was buried on the grounds, in an area now designated as the Monticello Cemetery. Jefferson's gravestone features an epitaph he wrote himself and interestingly makes no reference to his Presidency. Culinary factoid of dubious provenance: Monticello is also known as the birthplace of macaroni and cheese in the United States....! It’s more likely that it was merely made popular there. Jefferson's slave and cook James Hemings brother of Sally Hemings, Jefferson’s mistress, perfected the dish and made it similar to the way it served today.
Our guided tour was fun, informative and interesting. As much of a polymath as the guy was I get the impression that TJ may have been painful to be around. The idea of a piece of land and a dream home built from the ground up and only from ideas tugged at the heart strings a little given our own disappointments but this should be treated purely as an inspiration.