2/1/07 If it looks like a bus from the distance, that doesn’t mean it will look like a bus up close. Especially since both benches were already empty when I got here two minutes late for the #15. That means I’ll miss at least the first half hour of drawing Margot Sappington setting her latest dance for the Milwaukee Ballet. Still, I keep peering down Oakland Avenue, hoping to see a bus, as I write in my little notebook. Huh? Here’s a bus! Is it the last one, arriving late, or the next one, arriving early? Oh, it’s already 12:01. I guess I lost track. It’s the next one, right on time.
I’ve known Margot for over thirty years, and have done hundreds of drawings of her setting her dances (teaching the choreography) and of the performances, both here and in New York. But I haven’t used my Chinese brushes since the last time Margot was in town to set Virgin Forest. So this morning I was on an ink hunt. Only one kind of ink, Higgins Eternal Black, responds to paper the way I want it to, with a wispy dry brush stroke that captures the energy of movement. I finally found an old, still unopened bottle. Then it was a brush hunt for the right Chinese brushes, then a pad hunt, but will I still be able to do this after years of using only a pen?
“It’s gonna get cold out,” says a small man with a bushy white beard to a woman he may or may not know. “Sub-zero.” She silently nods. Now an old man talks to the same woman about his doctor’s appointment, then gets off.
The TV overhead gives the exact time, the location of the bus, and the latest news, weather report, and bits of environmental information. Thousands are protesting a surge in tortilla prices in Mexico City. Are the prices surging in Orizaba, too, where my sister lives? Surge is a popular word these days.
Now another man is talking to that woman. She seems to be a magnet for the lonely.
2/3/07 I never draw dancers when they’re posing, only when they’re moving, and Margot’s dancers are moving in every sense of the word. Watching her set
Common People, I suddenly was feeling the electricity, even though the dancers are still in the learning stage, and I picked up my brush and began to draw where I’d left off years ago.