Last week, I acquired my very own single office at work. When I first learned about this, I was quite sad as my former officemate is adorable and often offered me a much-desired distraction from work by sharing the ongoing tribulations of planning her wedding with me. And though I miss her (well, really, she's now next door to the communal printer and I can get a Celeste fix whenever I really need one), I've realized I can decorate my office with all manner of weirdness and no one can say a word!
This weekend, I bought some images for my walls with the idea that having weird things around me will contantly remind me that I'm weird myself, and will prevent me from assimilating into the corporate morass, even though I feel it licking hungrily at my heels every day.
Here's a list of my purchases:
Symphony for Felicia, Joan Snyder.
Snyder's a neo-abstract-expressionist lesbian painter... and the painting officially lives at the High Museum in Atlanta, a place that I love. This particular painting has slightly more subtle vaginal imagery than most of Snyder's other work, so I figured it wouldn't offend anyone. And hey, one of my colleagues has her little Georgia O'Keefes all over her office... a few more pictures of vaginae aren't gonna hurt anybody.
Blue Mountain, Vassily Kandinsky
This is a really gorgeous early, more representational Kandinsky than most. As I love to read the first books of poets, I find that I often also love the earlier, more formative work of big deal painters-- the stuff that shows where and how they learned their lessons, the stuff that's a little less iconic. Pasiphae, that transitional Pollock painting, has always been my favorite of his... mostly because it so obviously shows all his growing pains. I think this work shows a similar stage in Kandinsky's development.
I, and the Village, Marc Chagall
I once spent an entire afternoon at MoMA stairing at nothing but this painting. I mean, I made a special trip into NYC just to go spend time with it. I love it for all its otherworldliness, its nostalgia, and also because Chagall uses more green in the composition than one can usually get away with. A predominately green painting will, more often than not, fall flat. Trust me, I've tried -- green paintings are just hard to pull off. But this one totally glitters.
Albino Sword Swallower at a Carnival, Maryland, Diane Arbus
Who doesn't need a picture of a circus freak on her wall at work to remind her of her own freakishness?
publicity poster for Cremaster 5, Matthew Barney
Really, this is just a big, slightly creepy photo of some severed doll heads and Barney himself covered in some white powder. However, it has the word "cremaster" in large typeface across the bottom of it. And though I doubt anyone would actually make a big deal about it, I'm really putting it on my wall because not too many people actually know what the cremaster is... and because I know a few folks from my office read my blog, I'll allow their curiosity to goad them into googling it themselves, instead of spelling it out here. They all pretty much know I have the dirtiest mind in the building anyway. But god knows I love the fact that artists like Barney exist (see my July 25th, 2006 post for more about Barney)-- because someone has to do that purposefully rarified, whacked-out stuff, right?
And so, in this way, I hope to not lose track of myself.
10 comments:
did you mean to take away comments on your flim post below? i want to comment on a couple of things but i can't.
no, I didn't-- let me see if I can fix it.
Your office is a beacon of strangeness in a sea of the mundane. You're so lucky to have a circus freak on your wall!
Usually, when the corporate montotony gets me down, I just shut the door and have my own air guitar/dance party, or see how many binder clips I can attach to my hands and face before the pain becomes too much, but perhaps now I will stop by your office for fresh air and weirdness.
And you just reminded me that I don't use the word morass often enough as one should.
I get really claustrophobic when I close the door to my own private windowless tomb. However, now that I do have my own office, I admit I find I'm a little tempted to lock the door, take off all my clothes, and send innocent, work-related emails while naked. I do not think this is a particularly healthy urge. But it exists... and thus far, I resist. I try not to think about it too much... maybe binder clips would help.
I'm concerned that Marjorie may take Ginger's binder clip idea, combine it with the naked-in-the-office idea and end up with clips in odd places.
Whew! If you could only see how the brown rabbits are blushing right now...
what the hell is wrong with people in d.c.? oh--don't worry i was just talking about the politicians--not you guys
What?? Tell me you don't want to join in the naked binder clip fun. Just try and convince me!
Oh no, somebody take away our binder clips! Masochism in the workplace isn't supposed to be this literal.
Really, what do you expect? This place is populated by a bunch of hard-up, exhausted nerds. We do what we can to get by.
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