09 April 2012

The case of the Chimney Pots and the Spy


This was originally posted to JPG Magazine using ShareThis with an unrevised narrative.
Look up.  Don't point your camera at anyone.  These were the thoughts that passed through my view finder and out of the lens toward objects of unsung desire.  I was walking down one of the narrow streets of Cambridge (U.K.).  And, the crowd was growing more dense as the lane ahead narrowed.
Years earlier, while I had been photographing a library in Botswana.  The images were needed to illustrate a report on preservation conditions and structural enhancements.  One of the library's readers, who assumed that I'd been photographing her, took exception.  She broke the silence of the Rare Book Reading Room with a verbally violent attack.  Her index fingers were alternately making stabbing and jabbing motions into the air as she charged toward me.  Nothing short of sharing the images I'd taken with her would satisfy her paranoia.  When she got her fill of shots of doors and windows, glass and metal, and of the sunlight pouring down through the building's perfect diamond-shaped glass ceiling, she turned to me pacified.  Adopting a conspiratorial tone, she remarked simply, "So, you like to photograph things that stand witness."
Chimney Pots
Stand they do: these five red pots on a pedestal, demanding attention.  Five little Rockettes, they might just break out into dance as stand posing.   But, it is the crowd looking on that draws my attention.
The dull pot in the foreground. And, its sibling ducking behind a dormer. A third, revealed only in the shadows, painted on the canvas of white wall.
The north/north-west facing windows, themselves.  Standing poker-faced in hear-no-evilsee-no-evilspeak-no-evil panes of three, they repeat themselves like the name, rank and serial number of a prisoner.   Turned from the interrogation of the sun, they reflect nothing.  They are not illuminated within, the life has literally gone out of them.
The drain-pipe standing sentry at the corner of the background building.  Functionally literate.  Yet, almost unnoticed among the lines of structure.  A quite character in an architectural morality play: black lines for a white building like the stain of sin or of a functional body.  The white trim of the black building, winking: only playing dead.  By nightfall each window will host a play of its own.
And, most of all, the spy in the scene.  The antenna, communicating silently with a subject beyond view.  The lie is put to it.  It turns in the shadows.  Quite unlike the dull chimney pots that present themselves forthrightly, it is smarter. Using lines formed of the painted mortar, it imagines a clock painted on the wall.  It can tell time.
I like to photograph things that stand witness, even false witness.  Everything has a story to tell.

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