Founder/ Publisher of Provincetown Arts magazine |
PROVINCETOWN ARTS: An annual look at the visual and literary
arts.
Article by Doug Holder
I have had the pleasure to host Christopher Busa, founder
and publisher of Provincetown Arts, at the Ibbetson Street Press Visiting
Author Series at Endicott College—where I teach. Busa, a man hovering around
70, has an urbane presence, a plethora of anecdotes about artists, writers,
academia, and the love of his life Provincetown, MA. This magazine, published
annually since 1985—appears every summer—the height of the season for this
artist enclave at the tip of Cape Cod.
This magazine has beautiful production values (Even the ads—especially
for the galleries—are candy for the eyes), and the writing is as artful and
evocative as the town itself.
The summer 2017 edition is no exception. I told Busa I
wanted to write a small piece about the current issue. Busa told me to focus on
things that “spoke to me.” So I of course pursued the literary offerings. I
found that Busa’s piece “Alec Wilkinson and the Poetry of Witness” spoke very
loudly. Wilkinson—a longtime writer for the New Yorker—has written many
profiles of people who are off the beaten path. In some ways he reminds me of
Joseph Mitchell (and Busa points this out too), the Southern gentleman and New
Yorker writer who wrote about Greenwich Village eccentrics (most notably
Professor Seagull- a man who claimed he wrote the history of the world in the
language of seagulls, and carried his tattered notes on the street with him),
bearded ladies, characters he encountered in Mc Sorley’s Bar in NYC, and the
flophouses of the old Bowery. Like Wilkinson's work—these were not simply journalistic
accounts, but they were infused with creative use of language, imagery, etc...
Wilkinson told Busa, “I think of myself as a descriptive writer because I don’t
think writing divides itself between fiction and non-fiction.” Wilkinson’s
non-fiction is infused with poetry.
Wilkinson has written about his year as a Wellflett , MA. police
officer; he has written about sugar cane workers, in his book “RIVERKEEPER” he
has accounts of men who live by rivers or venture out to the ocean, as well as
features about Pete Seeger, Paul Simon and the infamous John Wayne Gacey (who
ironically had a distaste for murderers). He is
able to capture the authentic way his characters speak—he leaves you with the
feeling that real people do talk this way.
Busa points out that Wilkinson is a man who embeds himself
with his subjects. Busa compares the writer to the painter J.M. W. Turner , the
artist who strapped himself to the mast of a ship to experience a storm. Busa writes about the
artist,” “He wanted to paint the inner turbulence of the storm itself, rather
than view it safely from the shore.” And indeed it seems Wilkinson is able to
capture that turbulence in his subjects.
Wilkinson reveals to Busa his experience with the late, longtime fiction editor the New Yorker, William Maxwell. Maxwell, a well-respected novelist -acted as a mentor to the
young writer. Wilkinson gave this account of Maxwell’s thoughts on the
maturation of a writer,
“There is no way to begin as a writer or anything else than by imitation. You find, by chance or design, the works or the philosophies that appeal to you and begin to make use of them. At first it appears that you are no writer (or musician, painter or lawyer) at all, but only a collection of gestures and observations other people have already made and of references to them… they become absorbed, they settle into you, so that instead of being the patterns that determine how your own works sounds or looks or proceeds, they become the technical means you might make use of to describe another person’s face… the weather, the impressions of a landscape…”.
The article “Downtown on the Beach: The Path from Greenwich
Village to Herring Cove.” by Brett Sokol, examines current artists’ nostalgia
for the less-commercialized sensibility of artists back in the 50s and 60s. Sokol, uses an exhibit at New York University’s
Grey Gallery titled,” Inventing Downtown: Artist-Run Galleries in New York City
1952 to 1965 “as a center which spirals out to examine the connection of
P-Town, and Greenwich Village in that era.
Busa also penned an excellent profile on performance artist
Karen Finely, who in her recent work embodies Donald Trump in surreal drag. I
found myself in an ongoing conversation with Provincetown Arts—and only fine
writing can facilitate that.
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