Failed Artist

My wife called from Thailand. Mam needed money for Fenway’s school. I told her that I’d sent some in the morning, which wasn’t quick enough and she started crying about having married an artist.

“I’m not an artist. I”m a failed writer.”

Artists are just as poor in Thailand as they are in the USA, unless you’re a big star and I’m not even a 40 watt lightbulb.

Of course I didn’t say I was a failure.

That ‘nah sia’ or loss of face would have sealed her opinion about artists.

Sometimes the best truth is the one you never say.

Guns And Kids

Back in 2006 Bryan Le Bouef, a rodeo painter from Lousiana, emailed this letter.

Mom sent me a photo depicting my brothers and me when we had yet to face the most troubling parts of life.

I was much younger than the others.

I believe that I had just been introduced to hard drugs the previous day as my body language would seem to indicate that I couldn’t stop moving and I wouldn’t shut up for a photograph with my favorite brother and the other one. Immediately after this was taken, John subsequently shot Bert Jr. in the leg with the gun that he kept in that Mazda directly behind us as Bert tried to leave to go to what I believe would have been his prom.

The last picture of all 3 boys together for many years.

Guns in America.

It’s a family thing.

Now?

The other evening I was at a party for the painter Jonathan Gent. The UK native’s work covered the apartment walls of a Wall Street banker, who had been gracious enough to support a live artist. His patron was a basketball player. They always have cred with me.

The mini-paintings sold fast and Jonathan was in a good mood.

I was too.

There was plenty of rose wine, the evening was warm, and conversation was easy.

Later in the evening the great B Movie actor Eric Mitchell showed up. We spoke about publishing a collection of my short stories. I have hundreds of them. Eric and I traded stories from the 70s and Jonathan joined us, as I recounted a tale of Eric defending James White, the sax player from the Contortionists, at CBGBs.

“It had to be 1978. A biker busted James’ nose and you protected him.”

“By getting my nose smashed.”

“The hardest punch I ever saw thrown in CBGBs.”

Jonathan has gone to school in Edinburgh. The Scottish capitol is renowned for its toughness. Somehow Eric challenged Jonathan to a duel. Jonathan whipped off his jacket and said, “Right. Outside.”

He was ready for a knuckle dust-up.

It wasn’t my fight and the wine was having too much an effect, but Eric was my boy. We went back in time and I took a couple of steps closer.

“I was joking.”

“We never joke about that.” Jonathan picked up his jacket with a left hand.

No one should joke about fighting around fighting men.

It always goes bad when they don’t get the punch line.

And I went back to my wine.

There was plenty of it.

Best Punch At CBGBs


CBGBs was a rough bar. The Hell’s Angels used the Bowery bar for away play and no one questioned their right to act like they owned the place,since they scared off most other asshole bikers, although not every night.

The night of the Cramps’ first show at the Bowery club was packed with affectionados on garage trash music and the Cramps played, as if tomorrow the world was diving into the sun.

I Was a Teenage Werewolf, Sunglasses After Dark, Strychnine, and a cover of the Trashmens’ Surfer Bird highlighted the show. My hillbilly girlfriend loved them. She wasn’t white trash, but Alice didn’t live far from the hollows.

During the encore the scrawny saxist James Chance of the Contortions took the stage not to perform, but to fondle two biker chicks from Jersey. He had a reputation for trouble.

Their boyfriends were in the front row.

James stuck out his tongue.

The girls thought he was funny.

One of the biker boys had no sense of humor and jumped onto the stage.

It wasn’t much of a fight. Chance was skin and bones. The biker had a body of of mechanic muscle. A solid right to Chance’s nose sent the sax player into the drum set. Blood poured onto James’ dirty white shirt.

Eric Mitchell, film actor extraordinaire, scrambled onto the stage to rescue his skinny friend. The actor was part-Cherokee and warned the biker to stop.

The band kept playing Surfing Bird.

The audience watched the show. Alice grabbed my arm. This wasn’t my fight.

The biker looped a slow overhead right and his fist impacted on Eric’s nose louder than the band. Blood splattered everywhere. Merv the bouncer threw out the bikers. He was 6-6 and looked like a family member of the Addams family. Even the Angels respected Merv.

The next night Eric entered the club with a black eye.

James was wearing the same badge of dishonor only for both eyes.

That night the two were everyone’s darlings in a bar filled with losers.

Exhaustion


Working at the metal shop is exhausting. We construct objects from steel, zinc, tin, and bronze. Everything is heavy and the work is hard, but better than being broke, since my old spot on 47th Street is gone. No one is buying diamonds these days and even my old friend and boss Richie Boy is crying the blues.

“I’ve never seen business like this.”

Last night I came home and went to sleep, listening to the Bruins-Rangers playoff game.

I had intended to write something.

My fingers were swollen from carrying bronze rods.

I barely made it to the 2nd period, although the loud celebration after Marchand’s OT goal woke me long enough to hear that the Bruins had beaten New York.

After that more sleep.

And this morning I’m off to the shop in Greenpoint.

It’s been a long week.

ps that photo is from 34 West 47th Street and my co-worker is out cold on the job.

Those were the days.