Edwin Morgan: “Clydegrad, Sonnets from Scotland”

Images from a Collection: Just…Muckin’ Aboot

“It was so fine we lingered there for hours.
The long broad streets shone strongly after rain.
Sunset blinded the tremble of the crane
we watched from, dazed the heliport-towers.
The mile-high buildings flashed, flushed, greyed, went dark,
greyed, flushed, flashed, chameleons under flak
of cloud and sun. The last far thunder-sack
ripped and spilled its grumble. Ziggurat-stark,
a power-house reflected in the lead
of the old twilight river leapt alive
lit up at every window, and a boat
of students rowed past, slid from black to red
into the blaze. But where will they arrive
with all, boat, city, earth, like them, afloat?”

—Edwin Morgan, Clydegrad, Sonnets from Scotland, 1984

Born in Glasgow’s West End in April of 1920, Scottish poet and translator  Edwin George Morgan was associated with the Scottish Renaissance, the modernist literary movement which incorporated folk influences and held a strong concern for Scotland’s declining languages.

Edwin Morgan entered the University of Glasgow in 1937, where he studied Russian and French. During World WAr II, his studies were interrupted by his service as a conscientious objector member of the Royal Army Medical Corps in Egypt, the Lebanon, and Palestine. Morgan continued his studies after the war and graduated in 1947 with a first class Honors degree in English Language and Literature. Upon graduating, he took an offer as a lecturer in the English Department of Glasgow University; he was appointed a full professor in 1975 and retired from the university in 1980.

Morgan first published his work in the High School of Glasgow Magazine in 1936 under the name ‘Kaa’, and continued that nom de plume for his published work in the Glasgow University Magazine. Working after the war as translator and reviewer, he reverted to his own name in works published in a variety of periodicals. Morgan’s first collection of poems entitled “The Vision of Cathkin Braes” and his translation of “Beowulf” were both published in 1952. For fifty years, he continued the dual task of publishing his own work and translating others’ work from Russian, French, Italian, and Old English.

Edwin Morgan’s “A Second Life”, published in 1968, contained subjects which ranged from the marginalized populations of Glasgow and the misery of the tenements to times of laughter in the city and the famous lives of personalities such as Edith Pilaf and Marilyn Monroe. “A Second Life” became the volume that established his importance and signaled a private change and a public achievement in his life. In 1963 Morgan met and had fallen in love with John Scott, to whom he remained attached until Scott’s death in 1978. Though a concealed love due to the laws at the time, this union and Morgan’s discovery of the Beat poets’ writings formed a new awakening for him.

Morgan’s wide reading habit, his love of the cinema, and his defined musical taste all contributed to his poetry. He was always inquisitive and interested in the changes to technology and science, the whole history of the earth, and the dynamism of invention. A master of the classic form of poetry, Morgan continued through his career to invent new verse forms from his first concrete poems in 1963, which relies for part of its effect on the visual impact in the arrangement of words and spaces on the page, to the new stanzaic forms in his 2002 “Cathures”, with its poems’ cadence set to music, both classical and jaxx.

Throughout his early career Edwin Morgan had kept his sexuality hidden as homosexuality was not decriminalized in Scotland until 1980. At the age of seventy, he revealed his sexuality in the 1990 work “Nothing Not Giving Messages”, a collection of talks, poems and interviews, in which was included an interview with the Scottish poet and novelist Christopher Whyte about Morgan’s life and orientation.

Edwin Morgan’s work has received a number of prestigious accolades and has assumed an increasingly public role. In 1999 he became Glasgow’s first official Poet Laureate and a year later received the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry. In 2004, Morgan became Scotland’s first official national poet or ‘Scots Makar’, who is charged with ‘representing and promoting Scots poetry’.

In the years after his appointment to the Glasgow laureateship, Morgan was an active supporter of the repeal of Section 28, a law passed in 1988 that stopped councils and schools from “promoting the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship”. In many public appearances he criticized Church and business leaders for their support of the ‘Keep the Clause’ campaign. This endorsement of gay rights and inclusive attitudes to social and cultural difference characterized Morgan’s publicly liberal stance in the 1990s and into the twenty-first century. Edwin Morgan died in Glasgow on August 19, 2010.

Additional information on the life of Edwin Morgan, as well as a small collection of complete poems, can be found at the Scottish Poetry Library located at: https://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poet/edwin-morgan/

Kenne Grégoire

The Paintings of Kenne Grégoire

Kenne Grégoire,a painter often associated with the movement New Dutch Realism, moves between still-life paintings and more surreal scenes that capture a humane sadness and other complex emotions, rendered in acrylics. The artist uses techniques derived from the 17th century, yet he approaches his work in a way that pushes the form, twisting perspective and hues to create ambiguous points of view and situations.

”In all his compositions one can find decay and beauty. The objects in the still lives are never new. They are damaged, dented and rusty because they have been used and have had a life on their own.”- Galerie Mokum, Amsterdam

Calendar: June 2

A Year: Day to Day Men: 2nd of June

Truly Blessed

June 2, 1904 was the birthdate of the competition swimmer and actor, Johnny Weissmuller.

Johann Weissmuller was an ethnic German, the elder son of Peter and Elisabeth Weissmuller, immigrants who entered the United States through Ellis Island in New York. At the age of nine, young ‘Johnny’ Weissmuller contracted polio. At the suggestion of his doctor, he took up swimming and eventually earned a spot on the YMCA swim team. As a teen, while working at the Illinois Athletic Club, Weissmuller began training under swim coach William Bachrach. In August 1921, he won the national championships in the 50-yard and 220-yard distances.

Although foreign-born, Weissmuller gave his birthplace as Tanneryville, Pennsylvania, and his birth date as that of his younger brother, Peter Weissmuller. This was to ensure his eligibility to compete as part of the United States Olympic team, and was a critical issue in being issued a United States passport. On July 9, 1922, Weissmuller broke the world record in the 100-meter freestyle. He won the title for that distance at the 1924 Summer Olympics, beating the current champion, Duke Kahanamoku, for the gold record.

Johnny Weissmuller, in his life’s swimming competitions, won five Olympic gold medals and one bronze medal, fifty-two United States national championships, and set sixty-seven world records. He was the first man to swim the 100-meter freestyle under one minute and the 440-yard freestyle under five minutes. Weissmuller never lost a race and retired with an unbeaten amateur record.

Weissmuller’s acting career began when he signed a seven-year contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. In his first film, he played the role of Tarzan in the 1932 “Tarzan the Ape Man”. The movie was a huge success and Weissmuller became an overnight international sensation. The author of “Tarzan”, Edgar Rice Burroughs, was pleased with Weissmuller as his book’s hero, although Burroughs hated the studio’s depiction of a Tarzan who barely spoke English.  Weissmuller starred in six Tarzan movies for MGM with actress Maureen O’Sullivan as Jane and Cheeta the Chimpanzee. The last three also included Johnny Sheffield as Boy.

In 1942, Weissmuller went to RKO and starred in six more Tarzan movies with markedly reduced production values. Sheffield also appeared as Boy in the first five features for RKO. Brenda Joyce took over the role of Jane in Weissmuller’s last four Tarzan movies. In a total of 12 Tarzan films, Weissmuller earned an estimated two-million dollars and established himself as what many movie historians consider the definitive Tarzan. Although not the first Tarzan in movies, Weissmuller was the first to be associated with the now traditional ululating, yodeling Tarzan yell.

Top Insert Image: Photographer Unknown, “Johnny Weissmuller”, 1934, Gelatin Silver Print

Bottom Insert Image: Photographer Unknown, “Johnny Weissmuller”, circa 1930, Gelatin Silver Print

Zacharie Gaudrillot-Roy

Zacharie Gaudrillot-Roy, “Fracades” Series, Part Three, Photography/ Computer Graphics

“Facades” is an ongoing series by French photographer Zacharie Gaudrillot-Ray which strips isolated buildings of everything but their forward-facing exteriors. In his third iteration of the project he presents the facades of small homes, boutiques, and stately mansions at dusk. The structures are lit by the last waning light of day, in addition to a few street lamps that dot the lonely roads.

Gaudrillot-Roy started the project several years ago to examine what would happen when he digitally erased the possibilities that lie behind a building’s front door. In this world, the buildings have no tenants, which prevents any secrets from lurking behind the presented brick veneers.

Calendar: June 1

 

A Year: Day to Day Men: 1st of June

Jumping Rope

June 1, 1890  was the birthdate of the American character actor, Frank Morgan.

Frank Morgan was an American character actor whose career spanned four decades, most of it under contract to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. He was born in New York City, the youngest of eleven children. His family earned its wealth h distributing Angostura bitters, allowing him to attend Cornell University. Both Frank and his brother Ralph Morgan went into show business, first on the Broadway stage and later into motion pictures.

After Morgan’s film debut in the 1916 “The Suspect”, he provided support to his friend John Barrymore in the 1917 “Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman”, an independent film produced in and about New York City. Morgan’s career expanded when talkies began, his most stereotypical role being that of a befuddled but good hearted middle-aged man. By the mid-1930s, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, impressed by his performances, signed him to a lifetime contract.

Morgan’s best remembered film performances, playing six roles, are in the 1939 “The Wizard of Oz”: as the carnival huckster “Professor Marvel”, the gatekeeper at the Emerald City, the coachman of the carriage drawn by “The Horse of a Different Color”, the guard who initially refuses to let Dorothy and her friends in to see the Wizard, the Wizard’s scary face projection, and the Wizard himself. Morgan was cast in the role on September 22, 1938, after the studio tired of negotiating the salary of W.C. Field for his possible participation in the role.

An actor with a wide range, Morgan was equally effective playing comical, befuddled men such as Jesse Kiffmeyer in the 1937 “Saratoga” and Mr. Ferris in 1944’s “Casanova Brown”, as he was with more serious, troubled characters like Hugo Matuschek in “The Shop Around the Corner” and Professor Roth in “The Mortal Storm” released in 1940. A musical-comedy film centering on Frank Morgan was released by MGM in 1946 entitled “The Great Morgan”. The film is a compilation of unrelated short subjects and musical numbers built around the premise of Morgan trying to produce a movie.

Morgan died of a heart attack on September 18, 1949, while filming “Annie Get Your Gun”. He was replaced in the film by Louis Calhern. His death came before the 1956 premiere televised broadcast on CBS of “The Wizard of Oz”, which would make him the only major cast member from the film who would not live to see the film’s revived popularity and its becoming an annual American television institution.

Frank Morgan was nominated twice for Academy Awards: Best Actor for his role in the 1934 “The Affairs of Cellini” and Best Supporting Actor fo “Tortilla Flat” released in 1942. He has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame; one for his work in radio and one for motion pictures. Both were dedicated in 1960.

Ludwig Favre

Ludwig Favre, Photographs of Grundtvig’s Church, Copenhagen, Denmark

Favre is a photographer that specializes in major city landscapes, and has a history of shooting interiors.

Copenhagen’s Grundtvig’s Church is a rare example of expressionist church architecture, and one of the most well-known churches in the Danish city. French photographer Ludwig Favre was attracted to the perpendicular lines that compose the early 20th-century structure, in addition to the nearly six million yellow bricks that fill its interior. Favre decided to shoot the building’s 1800-seat congregation, capturing the minimal ornamentation found in the famous church’s massive vaulted halls and nave.