Julian Faber

Requiem

The last time I burned somebody I was sixty two years old. I had worked on the Station for thirteen years after the funeral home moved up there. I was chief in charge of Cremations and I loved my work. After all, I was helping people to fulfil their last wishes and that was truly satisfying. Nothing else in my life ever meant as much to me; I had only ever had one true love, and my work was it.

* * *

I still remember the day of the first request. It was a Wednesday morning and the air-con wasn’t working. This happened every so often, and so we were all rugged up in the big thermal suits they kept in a closet just for this purpose. They’re actually fuelled on body warmth and kinetic energy, so the longer you wear them, the warmer they got. They had an auto-release valve that let a fair amount of the heat out every two hours, or else you’d end up slowly roasting yourself.

Anyway, we had just brought the bodies in off the ship and were stacking them onto the racks when Gerry, my boss, came up to me and said:
„Elliot, we’ve got a special request from some Political bigshot. Can you handle it?“
„What’s the guy want?“ I asked. Gerry and I went back twenty seven years and I was his right hand man and personal friend.
„A jettison. Sculpted into a shape and jettisoned.“
„Sculpted?“ I replied.
„Sculpted,“ he said, and catching my look, added, „And jettisoned.“
„What do you mean?“
„Some heroic pose. Him with one arm outstretched and looking bravely into the distance. Just bullshit, but you know these Politicians,“ he said and laughed. I laughed as well, but that was as far as the laughing went. Tacky as it may have been, the dead are always afforded the luxury of dignity where we work. After all, everyone who worked at the station knew that one day they would end up in here, just like everyone else.
„Alright, Gerry. No problem,“ I said, removing my smile and taking the Death Record before he walked off, leaving me to my task. I finished helping the guys rack the bodies and carry them through to Treatment. All the bodies that went up there had been autopsied and had their organs removed for donation on Earth, so all we did was cremate or bury according to the deceased’s wishes. People used to be buried on Earth once, but times and populations had changed a great deal in the years since that was common. Even though we sent bodies out into space, they still got a coffin and we still called it ‚burial.‘

Twenty five years ago, World War Three finally occurred after centuries of narrow escapes. As they had banned all nuclear weapons in the far-flung past, they fought with Quakers. All they had to do was aim them at an area where tectonic plates of the Earth’s continents met, and fire. The super large missiles would burrow down kilometres and detonate when they sensed a certain pressure shift in the ground, thus causing massive upheaval in the plates. Instant earthquake. Great regions of land were destroyed and millions lost their lives. The (surviving) nations of the world all realised what a grievous error they had made and met in Australia – a nation mostly unharmed by the Quakers, and comparatively politically sound – to sign the now-famous ‚Nobel Peace Accord.‘ It was during this three week convention that it was decided to begin shipping the deceased off-world, as the remaining land on Earth now stood at just a little over one-fifteenth, compared to the former one-eighth. Everything else was just dirty ocean. More people survived the war than were killed, so all land suddenly became one hundred times more precious; and more crowded. Where to bury the dead? No room on Earth, so where else? In space of course, and so our funeral home moved up into orbit.

As Gerry and I were the two foremost surviving employees of our funeral home, we became funeral directors by default. Of course there were thousands of other homes who made the move as well, and soon they were all up there with around twenty two thousand other funeral parlours, crematoriums and cemeteries. Some have large warehouses where the dead are ‚buried‘ in fields of concrete, and some have large halls that contain endless rows of urns and ashes. The treatment of the dead is, of course, up to the deceased’s wishes and family, and if they’re willing to pay the large sums to have them ‚buried‘ and in a place they may wish to visit them at some stage, then that is entirely up to them. Personally, I wish to be cremated and have my ashes scattered on the moon. It was the Moon that I remember seeing one night during the war. I was outside when the radio announced that the entire West Coast of America had fallen into the sea. I remember looking up at the Moon and thinking how safe and still it looked, and how calm it made me feel in the midst of all that turmoil.

Anyhow, that’s how Gerry and I – formerly just body handlers – became manager and TwoIC of Still Life Funerals Pty Ltd. We had a few teething problems at first, but that’s to be expected with new managers. The building of the funeral homes was a boost to the newly-formed Peace Alliance and finally the world had a real purpose, a definitive goal that could unite everyone. And it did. Hatred and intolerance finally died natural deaths, as did racism and terrorism. For the first time in the history of the world; there was true and uniform peace.

* * *

So; after we had stacked the bodies in Treatment, I looked at the file of this guy. His name was Pierre le’Strange and he had been a minor figure in the actions of the Nobel Peace Accord. His name, I read, was placed ninety-sixth in the list of signatures on the Accord, well into the small print and an unrecognised name. Regardless though, he had the right to be buried as he wished and I would take care of things for him.

I skimmed through his will until I saw the familiar word: Interment. Next to this his lawyer had written:

After the mourning of my death has ceased, I wish to be ‚buried‘ in
the manner of the Nobel Peace Accord, and have my body consecrated
to the Stars and God Himself, in a pose befitting my role in the
development of The Nobel Peace Accord of 64.

There was more like this, but I’m sure you get the picture. I put down the notes on le’Strange and pulled back the sheet from Toetag 893046. It’s strange that in death, most people look just like everyone else. Some truly great people still wear a strange power on their faces in death, but this was not the case with le’Strange. He was an average looking, formerly bald man in his late fifty’s. I say ‚formerly‘ bald, in that he had obviously had very expensive implants that looked real enough, but when you work constantly with the deceased you soon pick up the difference between real and unreal.

I pulled the sheet back over him and looked at my watch. It was time for lunch and I went to the tall sinks to wash my hands. Pierre would have to wait another hour.

* * *

Two days later, le’Strange was ready to be interred. His pose was certainly heroic. I had had one of my assistants pose for the stance, and I worked with a series of photographs I had taken of her. Le’Strange now stood on a small concrete pedestal, one leg slightly higher than the other, resting on a smaller bump of concrete. His name had been stencilled in the wet cement as it set. He was looking vacantly into space and his right arm was bent in the air, as if he were shading his eyes. I was fairly happy with the results, and thought it pretty good for someone who hadn’t done it before. In fact, about the only modelling anyone had ever done was stiffening the body’s joints and attaching the cadaver to the coffin, to prevent the two coming apart.

We had added an anti-freeze compound to the skin, to save it freezing in the cold of space (and the air-con was still broken!). Gerry had told me that before the statue went outside, there was a small delegation of Politicians coming up to see him off. This occurs quite often, but with family. Le’Strange was the only real celebrity we had had though, and certainly the only Politician with enough sway to warrant an official send off. Mostly, people can’t afford the tickets to get up here, and instead opt to view the funeral through our video service.

So, the Politicians arrived and with them, as usual, were several members of the press. They filmed the service to a waiting, (and unexpectedly large) Earthside audience and after le’Strange was sent gently turning into Eternity, they stayed and toured our complex before heading back to Earth. And then I assumed that that was that and we could all go back to our work in the regular fashion. And so we did, for the next month or two.

* * *

„Hey, Elliot! Remember le’Strange?“ asked Gerry, calling loudly across the delivery dock to be heard over the whine of the hydro-jack.
„That French Politician we posed? What about him?“ I asked Gerry, as he arrived and stood in front of me.
„Well, it seems that this other Politician saw the whole thing and had his will amended to include a similar deal.“
„What? Really?“
„Yeah, and now he’s dead and the family want to have him done,“ said Gerry, „Will you do it?“
„Well, yeah, no problem. Hey,“ I added, smiling at Gerry,“ If this catches on, we’re gonna need more staff.“
„If this catches on, we’ll build a new wing,“ he said, smiling back as he handed me the papers and left. I briefly flicked through them and put the folder aside, not even considering the scope of what he had just said.

* * *

Soon after the burial of the second Politician we started getting calls about the service. This prompted us to construct a price list for different services in this line. Then, we had two more cases arrive for the service. A week after this we had four more people and soon we were getting around sixty to seventy cases a week. We began construction on a new wing to cope with this workload, and I noticed in trade news that other homes were starting to offer the service. This made little difference to our cases which were now coming in at the rate of two hundred a week. See, the ships came in once a week and delivered, on average, four hundred bodies at a time. That meant that the Poses were equal to the regular services! But it didn’t stop there! Two years after we had done the first Pose, we were handling over three hundred a week! We converted most of the old labs into new Pose labs, and were handling all sorts of different things.

People wanted to be posed with loved ones, or held in storage until loved ones died. People wanted to be placed into glass coffins. People wanted to be posed holding valuables of their lives; trees, tools, art, clothing, anything and everything. The one major difficulty we experienced was reconstructing people who had died violently…car accidents (rare), fires, murders (crime never died, unfortunately…some things never change) and the like.
The trouble began though, when a very rich rockstar had a very large final request.

* * *

It was in September, another Wednesday delivery, when I received the orders of New Arrivals. There was an extra large crate with the shipment, and I learned that it was something that one of the deceased aboard wished to be Posed with. It was a late model Halcien Streetcar, complete in every detail. Nothing had been removed to sell beforehand. In other words, it wasn’t just a poseable shell, it was a fully-functioning motor-car. We hydro-jacked it into the back docks, as it wouldn’t fit through the lab’s locks. This case would have to be posed and jettisoned from the Main Docking Gate. That wouldn’t really be a problem, it just meant that all on the project would have to wear oxygen during the jettison.

The Main Docking Gate was quite enormous. It stood about eight metres tall, by sixteen metres wide and was designed to accommodate the airlock doors of the delivery ships. It was quite lovely to look out and see the awesome view of the Earth that the Gate afforded, but unfortunately it was rarely opened whenever a ship wasn’t in. As it opened straight on to space and had no airlock of it’s own, it just wasn’t practical to open it at any time. It had small windows set in it to guide the delivery ships in, but even this was mostly done by computers. Generally, we had to settle for the view of space or Earth, seen through the Major Recreation room or our own tiny bedroom windows.

So, in the days that ensued, I personally worked on the project with two assistants. The car was unpacked and the rockstar, named Jok McRock – a stage name, I assume – was placed in the front seat, behind the wheel. (Although computers drive the cars on Earth these days, the wheel, as everyone knows, was kept as a pretence to being in control.) He had died of a drug overdose (some things never change) and so we had to employ a little bit of repair to the sunken face. Nevertheless, in three days he was ready and in his favourite car, preparing to drive off at a snail’s pace through the Galaxy for all time. As expected, the press were there to film the end and we lent them thermal suits and oxygen. It was quite a beautiful funeral, as all other funerals were on the other side of our station, facing away from Earth. Everything went off without a hitch and Jok McRock was sent into space, staring at an invisible road and driving straight down it.

* * *

One thing, though, became a problem in the days to come. It appeared that McRock’s car was too heavy to escape orbit and he was left spinning for several days around our world. This wouldn’t pose much of a problem, ordinarily, as there are thousands of satellites whizzing about up there; but all those satellites have engines that are designed to hold orbit, and this satellite didn’t. After six days, he was getting perilously close to the upper atmosphere and there was a danger that he may even be dragged down to Earth! This wouldn’t do of course, so the world leaders met via vidöööeophone to converse about what could be done. They were all for shooting him down out of orbit and letting the smaller parts of the car burn up as they fell to Earth. A massive public outcry arose from his legions of fans, who swore that this was a desecration and mustn’t be allowed! Suddenly everyone was talking about this and formulating opinions, and all the while Jok McRock got closer to Earth. And, as it turned out, by the time anyone could agree on a plan, it was too late.

McRock’s car was made of a very dense and valuable alloy that burned only at extremely high temperatures. His car attained planet fall on October 12th. As it hurtled through the upper atmosphere it reached the speed of eighteen hundred kilometres per hour and began to burn, (McRock himself had burned up, practically the first few moments the car hit the atmosphere.) As the car sped toward Earth, catastrophe occurred.
McRock’s car collided with a full passenger aircraft, carrying 1337 passengers and exploded on impact. The plane was virtually destroyed in the explosion and, naturally, there were no survivors. In fact, there were never any body parts recovered from the sparse wreckage at all, and it was concluded, and not without reason, that all of the passengers were killed. What was just as astounding, though, was the fact that this occurred over land, which amassed just one-fifteenth of the surface of the Earth.

* * *

This changed everything for us at Still Life Pty Ltd. There were investigations and enquiries. There were interviews and accusations. But, in the end, Still Life was cleared of any blame, as there were no laws that could condemn us in this arena. Soon after this, there were laws created and the most important of these was that ‚Posing in Death‘, or ‚The le’Strange,‘ was outlawed. From that point on, there could be no more Poses, save Coffins and ashes and urns. No more of le’Strange’s curious legacy, that had swept like wildfire through the population of Earth. And, like most fads, it was soon forgotten in lieu of the next one. As swiftly as it had begun, it was over. We were left with too much room in our new Posing wing, and it was soon closed off. Gerry had been visibly shaken by the whole ordeal, but still struggled through his work. Me too.

Still… we survived the aftermath of enquiries, but our formerly excellent reputation as a home was severely damaged. In the two remaining years before Still Life Pty Ltd closed the Main Gate for good, Gerry and I struggled to keep the place going. We lost lots of money, until it was hopeless. Thankfully, we had a Retirement Fund (that barely survived); and at least all of our employees got 54% of what they originally would have received.

It was not only those 1337 passengers that died that day, I have often reflected, but Still Life Pty Ltd, as well as my friend Gerry, who killed himself just seven months into his (early) retirement. His suicide note stated that he had always felt the burden of guilt for those 1337 and could not forgive himself. After he died, I personally made the trip to the region in Africa where the slight remains of the crash were found and scattered his ashes there. I hope that helped my friend to find the peace he lost in life, for I know all too well how he felt. I had truly loved my career, and now it was all gone. 1337 people had died for nothing more than some punk’s vanity and a grievously thoughtless mistake on my part. I just hadn’t even considered the fact that we were facing the Earth during McRock’s burial. There was no way he could have escaped orbit, and I blamed myself for not having thought this through.

Incidentally, Jok McRock’s career had never been better. He sold over four million copies of his last Disk, 1.3 million of those within eight weeks of the Crash.

Some things never change.

The End

(Transcript above was found with the body of Elliot Rengradier, who was found hanging from a heating pipe in his small one room apartment. His estate paid for his cremation, but funds did not allow for his ashes to be scattered on the Moon. Instead, they were scattered over the Crashsite in Africa with those of his former friend.)

Adam Aitken

Two Poems

To a Hindu Goddess

I drove her to a temple by the sea
on a World Bank moped,
a triple A rice spirit
two hours late for a ceremony.
She showed me a brochure
her face on it,
& practised a vengeful look
in her handbag mirror.
Chanting bamboo pages, annals & spells,
she sharpened her scythe, worn down
by the last imagined harvest.
I loved her then, but she
was spoken for,
underwritten,
payment dates
& the humble gifts I gave that day
deferred
to a distant, fiercer god.

An eine Hindu Göttin

Ich fuhr sie zu einem Tempel am Meer
auf einem Weltbank-Moped,
ein AAA-Reis Elan
zwei Stunden zu spät für eine Zeremonie.
Sie zeigte mir eine Broschüre
ihr Gesicht darauf,
& übte einen rachesüchtigen Ausdruck
in ihrem Taschenspiegel.
Bambusseiten singend, Berichte & Zaubersprüche,
schliff sie ihre Sense, stumpf
von der jüngsten Phantasieernte.
Ich liebte sie damals, aber sie
war vergeben,
verbürgt,
Zahlungsfristen
& die bescheidenen Gaben, die ich an jenem Tag darbrachte
wurden einbehalten
von einem fernen, grimmigerem Gott.

Übersetzt von Gerald Ganglbauer

Catching Breath

Worn out, slow and breathless as a bird
on a ten minute migration, I stop
to catch my breath
at a Foxtel dish on a fruit juice stand.
So this is America – the West Pacific
with height restriction,
gunshots only car exhausts.
The juicegirl turns up the juicer,
then the TV:
„If it sounded close, we ducked“
Venus the Harlem tennis-babe smiled
at the interviewer on Sports Sunday.
‚My biggest weapon’s not
my serve, but Dad’s AK 47!‘
I wonder what to do
when Mormons approach,
souls in training, triathletes of the bible.
Their goody goody looks make me tense.
They shouldn’t jog in suits.
When to sing, when not to: that’s life for a bird in the city.
Senators in thongs
sign footpath licences for friends.
Back at the hardware store
the war against insects hotting up
on a magnetised Creepy Crawly Fumapest chart.
The cockroach thrives on stale air
Public Enemy No. 1
foraging Ben Buckler‘ s stucco bunkers.
Only a fine blue powder
under a poster for new ideas
peeling off the rising damp will keep them there.
And the bird wonders
at the vast space it flew across
braving microwave static
to get here.
Preening on the people’s beach,
the Empire starlight twinkles in its head.

Julian Faber

A Little Knowledge…

„So, ladies and gentlemen, what we have here is conclusive proof – in the DNA strands of all participants in the test – of the existence of Past Lives,“ the speaker said, looking over his glasses at the assembled audience, before looking back at his notes. The crowd was silent for a moment before a ripple of murmuring and whispers went through them, growing in volume as the moments went by.
„Furthermore,“ said the speaker, pausing as he waited for the noise to abate, „Furthermore…there is also proof that our souls grow with each new life, building itself up to God knows what at the end of our existence.
We start as a single celled amoeba or the like and grow through all stages of evolution, until we reach this current stage…humanity.
„I believe now, that there will be more to come in the millennia ahead, until in some far distant future we attain…what? I cannot say,“ he gently shook his head as he looked out silently into the crowd of astounded and amazed scientists.
„All I can say, is that one day – many days from now – we shall all arrive at …the end? The beginning? …Heaven? Perhaps something that our current minds cannot grasp yet, but something…that is certain.“

* * *

Daniel and Barbra Keeling walked through the snowy streets as they left the convention, heads down and hands thrust deep into the pockets of their heavy overcoats. They were a couple in their late thirties and had met back in college where they had studied biology in the same lab. They had married soon after graduation, but had never found the time or the inclination to have children.

„So, what do you think?“ Barbra asked Daniel, without looking at him.
„I’m not sure,“ replied Daniel, „It seems perfectly reasonable, but it’s just so … so –“
„Improbable?“ Barbra offered.
„More than that. I’d always thought evolution was so cut and dried, but now Carmichael is proposing that we evolve on a spiritual level as well as on the physical. The idea that we carry the same…soul…throughout millions of years is just…well –“ he trailed off as they rounded a corner.
„It’s a bit of a shock, that’s all. It makes sense to me, but it will take some time to sink in, I think,“ said Barbra, looking across at him and trailing mist from her mouth over her shoulder.
„I’m wondering how the rest of the world is going to react as well. I mean, this isn’t something you hear everyday. Religions may collapse! Holy wars could start! It’s pretty startling!“ said Daniel, raising his head to look at her. Her cheeks were red from the cold air, and she was breathing a little heavily.
„I hadn’t considered religion,“ said Barbra, and again she looked up at him, „Although this could support Creationism.“
„Many things will change, Barb,“ said Daniel looking at her a little grimly, „This is one of those moments in History that no-one ever forgets.“

* * *

Two weeks later it was all anyone could talk about. It was on the news, it was on talkback radio, it was all over the newsstands. People everywhere were suddenly guaranteed another life than the previous isolated existence they knew. The fear of death began to disappear, and as it did, the new religions began to start up. The Church of Eternal Life, the Church of Posterity, the Church of the Holy Resurrection, and more.

Everywhere, attitudes to life itself changed. People were happier and more giving. Killers in the jails were freed and exonerated of their crimes. Murders and killings all started dying off (excuse the pun). And then, in the following months, suicides and murders began to increase again, suddenly twice as strong as they had previously. As murder was no longer a crime, there was nothing to stop anyone doing it. People who tired of this life killed themselves in droves as they realised another life – a better one? – would be forthcoming.

Then came The Church of Advancement.

Saturday the 21st of November, The Church of Advancement opened it’s doors, calling the faithful into the Act of Advancement. They believed that to create life anew, they could kill animals of a lesser distinction than Human to Advance them up the spiritual ladder. Humans too, could progress to the next level. Handguns, rifles and knives were their crosses and bathing in the blood of beasts their Baptism. The popularity of the Church swelled, increasing it’s fold to swallow all other new religions, as well as the old. Two years from the original announcement of Ultimate Proof of Past Lives, the Church of Advancement was the only religion within the world. People everywhere were killing on Sundays (the traditional Saturday of the Jew’s was forgotten, for some unexplained reason), and killing everything in sight. Smiling as they did it, for after all, they were advancing singular lives into the next level, and that was something to be proud of, wasn’t it? Finally, the devout could get in and actually do something with their belief, and not just turn up on Sunday to chew on Christ’s Body.

This religion soon become the top business in the world. After all, they had swallowed the funds of all other religion and many businesses along the way. The Church of Advancement was given donations from all over the world, to cover costs of ammunition and guns. Knives had to be resharpened and bombs needed to be built. Trees and grasses needed flamethrowers. But the people paid it willingly, blindly.

Soon, many species of animal became extinct. Bumper stickers read „Extinct isn’t forever,“ „Kill to live again,“ „If I should die before I wake, ALL THE BETTER!“ and so on. Death had suddenly become the world’s favourite game. But …

As species disappeared from the world the food chains and the delicate balance of ecosystems started to falter, and in some cases, collapse entirely. As these things died, a chain reaction started to spread throughout the entire world. People started to get hungry, but there wasn’t the food there to feed them. Babies started to get sick and die. And all the while, people smiled, because there was a new life waiting for them on the other side of Death.

The one thing that nobody considered though, was that the Immortal Soul, for all of it’s continuing evolution, needed a cage of flesh. And if there wasn’t anything to support that cage, then nature would make sure that they weren’t built. And if the cages weren’t built, then no souls could advance, as there was nothing to contain them.

Less than six years after the Announcement, the Earth lay silent and almost entirely devoid of life, floating around the Sun as it had for thousands of millions of years before Humanity turned up. The dinosaurs had never figured it out and they had lived for 300 million years, until they were killed by accident. The mammals had lasted the blinking of an eye.

Maybe the Insects would be smarter. Or the Fish.

Vivien Eime

Instructions Towards Joy

The Tragedy of Vivien Eime
Instructions Towards Joy
Performance Piece

how is it possible to offload history
take the multitudal hooks of sadness
and depart
whooooosh
through tears
or rinsed out through the ears of friends.

we receive no specific
instructions toward joy
are merely directed toward good

that is

warned away from bad

but how often this just does not work

nearly all of us are not animals in the woods
most need tracks to joy after treading over asphalt

ahhhhhh

the source for optimism is

change

where once I
in my curvaceous form
trod the asphalt in heels

I might now throw them away
wear a skirt
even if I do choose to wear sandshoes.

for little of us know that responsibility for self
resounds towards others…
is the anchor to the heart.

so,
alert your focus to shift slightly
start for a sense of beginning with
the rope.

feel it in your hands
and leave the connecting linking
chain to an eye in future.

do
not
consider
taking hold of the main shaft
which
of course
leads to the arrow’s head

feel the rope

for it is that you will
eventually heave

lassoo out into the void

in effort to claim one’s roots.

when all is familiar

suddenly

and the mind is loose enough

not to consider itself.

„DELEGATE!!“

„ah, yes… but to whom???“
responds the whimper.

Circumstance and
La!
our race becomes.

God
or our creator
can not
or will not
admit to mistake
and so,
we exist
as an accident.

are set off emulating this sense of
what is done is done
and just get on.

swerve to acclimatise
skim to make do
regret weaknesses innate
and keep to ourselves as much
as is possible
when chances to be among friends
does not warrant itself.

we are shown the way
and given choice.

slowly we recognise ourselves and each other.

wide eyed
we peer at what we may have
and wobble dance toward

IT

a tragic king’s chair

life

all outside us

until

we are gifted with

a chair

[in this day passing I will unhesitatingly note all that
pleases me so that it can be remembered I at least identify
that which leads to joy]

INSTRUCTIONS TOWARDS JOY

I was gifted with an arm chair

mmmmmmmmmmm

mmm

one that swivels

I have yet to truly take this seat as my own
prefer to offer it to guests
who brave the downward staircase

oh it pleases me to see such pleasures taken
as a chair that swivels

and

I neglected to say

rocks

ah…

the breath out that this friend
takes
who sinks into my chair.

they who have come pale and
slip shod
over asphalt
and to cement – my steps –

their choice of shoes
creating sensation

fresh rubber being
virgin knicked as a
ham on a bone

below the level of asphalt
they now sit
hands conduct a telling of
their journey
dodging traffic
consciously surfing
information tides

withstanding requests for
small change
and desires for larger

sipping tea or drafting beer
they discuss the relentlessness
of life’s tidings

television as the communicant

line thrown to a point

with these instructions to think:

does one use a lily pond to catch a
rhinoceros?

does one simply write it all
down
then leap it out
to feed fish?

the venice captain offers marriage
whilst more intended men snigger
and wink

and all I see is a livid
doctor
at the stern side…
a kiss is not a brand –
‚tis an act of old to
honour love

a sudden full circle turn of chair
makes a creak knock us to laughter…

oh

spin    spin

spin    this

laughter

one could sit in a field of strawberries
and wait for an angel or simply
listen to that captain

and I speak his words
not mine
for you to apply
as I am told the
world is expanding
and spins

will one day stop

as I will

further away from the mystery
straight as ye goe
or not

we die
yes
but as this sounds
we are alive

three holes midway down the slope of the wall of a
reservoir.

so spin    spin    spin this laughter
with your company:

when laughter turns to memory
and you have left this holiday mooring

I will sink into that swivelling chair.

and oh how I will sink…

adjust cushions to my liking
and contemplate all that has led me to this sinking…

what I will rise to when sitting is done

all in my own variety

mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

endings…    goodbyes…

marvellous or monstrous
monumental or mis-timed
momentary splits…

a veering…

to the left is my preference…

mmmm.

‚tis a joy to delegate one’s own.

 

First performed by Vivien Eime 22 June 1996 at CBD Gallery, Sydney

Tim Pohle

Destruktion α

(anfangs überfliegen)

Der Mann schoß der Jugendlichen durch die Backen.

Er schrie und sagte „Das war ich nicht. Das war der Teufel“.

Das Mädchen hatte sich im riesigen Kochtopf in der Küche des Landhauses versteckt. Jetzt hob sich der Deckel, ihr Kopf kam hinaus. Ja, ja. Glück gehabt.

Es war so gewesen, dass ich die Jugendliche hatte hineinlassen wollen und durch das einfachverglaste Fenster die Tür mit der abbröckelnden weißen Farbe und der großen Glasscheibe geöffnet hatte. Sie ging also, da sie wegen ihrer Größe nicht durch das Fenster klettern konnte, den verwinkelten Gang entlang und war deshalb außerhalb meiner Sichtweite.

Ich wendete mich dem Mädchen zu und hörte den Schuß. Aufblickend sah ich den dicken Mann mit Gewehr.

Auch mich erschoß er später. Das Mädchen hat er danach zu vergewaltigen versucht. Aber sie war klar und konnte ihn mit einer zerschlagenen Bierflasche erdolchen.

Ungünstigerweise erlag sie dann doch den Verbrennungen, die sie sich im Kochtopf zugezogen hatte, und ihre Kleider waren immernoch jugendlich und bunt.

(nach auseinandersetzung vernichten)

geschrieben am 5.12.1995

Alexander Curtis

Diana & Actaeon

Six pages from a 33 page investigation into the nature of art.
Sechs Seiten einer 33-seitigen Untersuchung des Wesens der Kunst.

The book is a series of postcard-sized collages made from material collected during travels in the States in the summer of 1988. As such it is the crystallisation of the thoughts I was feeling my way towards at that time. Thus the book is an analogy; the analogy of an intellectual journey and an actual, physical journey.
The book begins with a typical structuralist/Wittgenstein account of art. This in turn is then critisised and it is suggested that a work of art is a meeting point of ideas in our mental landscape. This is then in turn subjected to critisism, the final conclusion being that an artist needs a theory about what he is doing; but that this is not an absolute definition of what he is about, it is a guide to help him manifest the feeling for signification that every artist seeks in a work. (A.C.)

Das Buch ist eine Serie postkartengroßer Collagen aus auf Reisen durch die USA im Sommer 1988 gesammeltem Material. Als solches ist es eine Kristallisation meiner Gedanken zu jener Zeit. Somit ist das Buch eine Analogie; die Analogie einer intellektuellen Reise und einer tatsächlichen, physischen Reise.
Das Buch beginnt mit einer typisch strukturalistisch/Wittgensteinschen Darstellung von Kunst. Diese ist in der Folge kritisiert und es wird nahegelegt, dass ein Kunstwerk einen Treffpunkt von Ideen in einer gedanklichen Landschaft darstellt. Dies wiederum wird Kritik ausgesetzt, mit der Erkenntnis, dass ein Künstler eine Theorie zu seiner Arbeit braucht; ohne dass ihn diese absolut definiert, ist sie vielmehr eine Richtlinie, die ihm zu dem Gefühl der Anerkennung verhilft, die jeder Künstler in seiner Arbeit sucht. (Translation G.G.)

Petra Ganglbauer

Baustelle

Baustelle

Pochen.
Sprengen.
Aufwerfen.
Versenken.
Cold Front.
So beiläufig dahergeweht
mit klirrenden Organen.
Wir können nicht genug kriegen
von dem Anblick durch
die Scheiben,
– aber es zerrinnt uns.

Keine Landschaftsanmut. Umland. Landschaft.
Wir fasern aus.

Men at Work

Banging.
Blasting.
Piling up.
Countersinking.
Kaltfront.
Mentioned casually
with crackling voices.
We can’t get enough
from the view through
the window panes,
– but it fades away.

No charming landscape. Surrounding countryside. Scenery.
We become frayed.

Translated by Gerald Ganglbauer

CANT

1 manuskript

( keine plötzliche entwertung der person wird je vergessen,
sie ist zu schmerzlich,
man trägt sie ein lebenlang mit sich herum, es sei denn,
man kann sie auf einen anderen werfen. E.CANETTI )

JA/doch…

ich war ohne sonntag

&

das 1. objekt im kreis.

deiner stimme.

EIN/

AUS/

greifend.verendet.unter dem sonnenschnitt.

…mit sommerbeschnittenen fingern.

wird sie/sagen zeige ich auf eine

zusammen gesunkene nacht.nacht/gehoben /versenkt.

1 jmd. sagt: löse die versprechung.aus.seiner für recht gehaltenen hülle.

fühle deinen federnden nachlass im blut.ver/ende am sommer/schnitt.

der anderen.

gehe in der luftschlagenden zeit wie 1 vogel

zu fuß.von wand zu wand.ohne 1 zusteigen.

über den federkiel in die haut.eines anderen.

bleibe still/gelegt im blut.bleibe kalt über

dem streifen.der hülle.aber greife deiner

hand nach.lege sie dingfest bereit.am körper.

…das fassende der zügel war 1 bloßes spiel.

der hand in der hand.&.

dein leib-warmes- werden.1 punkt.im schatten.

noch sagt

deine gestalt.antworte.ich dir nicht.

der boden im haus ist voller risse & ohne 1 wort.

der garten 1 hügel/ein/verborgener grad.

jede frucht.pflanzen/wach.der schritt kehltief &

hautbesessen.bei nacht…

der nacht in den fugen.der nacht an beiden händen.

der kehle entstiegen.diese wachsende wunde wird lang anhalten.dicht.

unter dem knie. 1 spiegel umgeben & nass.

diese tropfen einer stimme.

eine stimme die verschlungen werden kann.

1 hügel an erde.unter.den füssen & der weg sei 1 streifen.

für die langhin nutzlose hand am gelenk.

jeder finger bricht den blatthüllen voraus.

farbe aus der rinde.1 ebenerst erfasstes wort.

MAUERWERK.

diese risse haben einen begreifbaren wert.

werden 1 maß 1 rinnsal

schwacher weg.von dem es herab zutropfen beginnt.

nicht 1x sichtbar 1 weis

auf der zumutbaren haut/

hautweis.weis.wird sie sagen.

geht meine stimme ein.in hohle bereitstehende bäume.

jeder geschlagene ast 1 klang 1 siegel.schrägstehende augen.

im blatt.&.diese schlangenrand erzogene haut.an dir.

1 wirres geschenk von gestern.

1 abstand einer frühen handlung.

1 lippenbedarf.saugend leer.

ich wird sie sagen.

wurde von anderen abgeleitet.hier eine stimme.

da 1 haarbogen & die geschorrene fläche.

einer trommel am arm.dieser klangvolle rest einer hilflosen geste

.&.

der stein in der hand.

kann warm werden.seine form.

seinen abdruck zurücklassen.

er wird an keiner stirn.zusehen sein.

er wird sich dem wurf vorenthalten.

er wird deinen namen nicht nennen & dieses wort nicht beenden.

(in augenhöhe verändert deine hand.das licht.

1 haus weicht zurück.in sein vorgebundenes.

grün.wie 1 ort mit seinem schatten.so wird es auskommen.

1 schatten der an mir vorübergehen konnte.

dein arm mit dem die dinge verbunden waren.

streckt sich anders.vielversprechend.

der gestalt entgegen.der gestalt.

die den ort verlassen

hat.)

eine aufsteigende/geste.am ende.

Jolanta Janavicius

Catching a Wave

I SLEPT SO WELL LAST NIGHT JUST PUT MY HEAD ON THE PILLOW AND WAS OFF INTO DREAMLAND AND WHEN I WOKE UP IT WAS MORNING A MOST BEAUTIFUL SUNNY MORNING WARM NOT TOO HOT AS YET THE BLUEST BLUE SKY YOU COULD IMAGINE THE MOST URGENT THING FOR ME TO DO NOW WAS TO GO TO THE BEACH CHECK THE WAVES AND RUN INTO THE FROTHING SURF MY MAN GOT UP EARLY TOO SQUEEZED ORANGE JUICE AND GRAPEFRUIT JUICE FOR ME WE THEN HOPPED INTO THE CAR IN OUR SWIMMERS AND DROVE DOWN TO FRESHWATER BEACH WE SAW BIRDS FROLICKING IN THE SKY LORIKEETS IN ALL RAINBOW COLOURS THEIR WINGS SHIMMERING THEIR TAILS SPREAD OUT LIKE A FAN AGAINST THE SUN OH SO LUMINOUS THE GREENS AND THE GOLDS IN THE BLUE SKY THE SURF WAS ROLLING IN IN LONG WHITE ROLLS THE WAVES JUST RIGHT NOT TOO BIG NOT LIKE FRIDAY MORNING ROARING RUMBLING TOWARD THE SHORE THE KING TIDE ALL THE BEACHES WERE CLOSED AND ON AUSTRALIA DAY TOO FLOCKS OF DISAPPOINTED CITY PEOPLE JUST WAITING FOR THE HUGE SEAS TO CALM DOWN BUT THIS MORNING OH THIS MORNING THE SURF WAS ROLLING IN IN LONG SWEEPING WHITE ROLLS PLAYFUL SPRAY SHIMMERING IN THE SUN I SHIVERED WITH PLEASANT ANTICIPATION SAVOURING THE REFRESHING COOLNESS OF THE WAVES WHEN THE WATER REACHED MY WAIST I PLUNGED INTO A WAVE DIVING UNDER IT POPPING UP GULPING A MOUTHFUL OF SWEET SEA AIR THEN WATCHING EVERY ON-COMING WAVE WITH A HAWK’S EYE FOR THE RIGHT ONE TO COME ALONG I WAS WAITING FOR A BIG FAT BREAKER WITH MASSES OF WATER BEHIND IT TO GIVE ME A MIGHTY PUSH AND WHEN IT CAME I WAS READY I SWUNG AROUND STRETCHED MY BODY LIKE AN ARROW AND DIVED IN FRONT OF THE BREAKING WAVE OH EXHILARATION I WAS RUSHING FLYING TOWARD THE SHORE IN THE CRYSTAL CLEAR WATERS HAPPY AS A LARK