I discovered poetry…. It wasn’t to have
propositional clarity. It was an auditory warmth, not like the bars of a song
but an excitement in representation, an ontological subversion.
-Leigh Davis
ka mate ka
ora, 9, 2010
Arriving at Hopetoun Alpha, the symbol on the
entrance beckons me like a court jester: a golden circle shooting a cross and
arrow. I’m already attuned to Davis’ play on language and symbols.
I
enter. The red strikes me – warmth. The crowd is buzzing. Bees. The final flag in Time, Text
& Echoes, no 30, ‘Bees.’ The yellow flag has no words, just stitches of red
lines from two black rectangles on the bottom far left and right. The echoes of Davis’ work is buzzing. Was it the criss-crossing of
bees that signify Te Kooti? The great prophet who watched text, who informed so
much of Davis’ flags, the prophet who will return.
The first image in
Bambury’s REDUX are the HAU flags exhibited in Station of Earth Bound Ghosts at the
defunct Auckland Railway Station concourse in 1998. One red, the other black:
Hauhau – breath to the power of itself – divine breath. Not the ‘unfriendly
Maori’ (Te Tangi a te Matuhi, Davis
107). The red HAU flag opened Time, Text
& Echoes, the final
exhibition after Davis’ death which celebrated his life and work, and closed with the black HAU
flag before the final flag not from the original series, ‘Bees.’ A lot has
happened between Willy’s Gazette and Nameless.
The screen near the
stage is paused at the start of the beginning on the ‘fly through’ - figures
waiting at the entrance. The back screen, opposite the front screen, is
projected with London plane trees. This
green foliage projection spills over the walls. The London plane trees have
been projected around the ‘Hope Town’. Along with the red (the warmth) is the
garden, and the pollinating buzz.
I am saying ‘Leigh’. It feels odd to call him ‘Davis’
or even ‘Leigh Davis’, not that I ever had the good fortune to know him. Here
in this red-warm, projected green-life, pollinating buzz, he is ‘Leigh.’ This
is the warmth of something expanding – like a family. And they are all here.
Leigh and Susan’s four: Greer, who lives in Auckland; Henry has come from New
York; India - who will write Leigh’s JAR
into her Art History
dissertation, and Betty - over from Tokyo.
Also at least one of Leigh’s three brothers - the hallmark Davis height
- head and shoulders taller than the rest - Campbell, and I’m told Julian might
be here also. Later, Amanda, Leigh’s sister will turn out to be the friendly cashier
who will generously introduce herself as she sells another Nameless box set on what had been a fully stacked table, now dwindling
handful.
The young crowd is
peppered with New Zealand’s finest but they will remain nameless, or let’s keep
this warmth of first names: Alex, Ian, John, Murray, Michele, Phil, and Roger.
Susan will thank her sister too, Loran. Many names are missed but they are not
nameless. Susan will thank as many as she can and those key players: Bruce, Alistair,
Christine, and Roger.
First, Wystan, is on
the spot. He talks about language being on the spot: ‘Poetry is in the act of
imagining itself in spaces.’ The naming rights have been lifted. Wystan assures
us Leigh does not leave us at a loss, but at a ‘threshold where the words find
us at a second world and we find ourselves here.’ The buzz of the crowd
continues in these beginnings.
The exception as to who
is nameless, Wystan concludes, is Susan, for she has been what has made ‘Leigh
Davis’ see the light of day. Wystan read from Leigh’s own words on poetry, I discovered
poetry…. It wasn’t to have propositional clarity. It was an auditory warmth.
Stephen opens with
how it takes a village to read a poem. He ran through Leigh’s awakening of
poetry off the page and explained how the five years of the nameless project
saw just one year with Leigh. Stephen, when concerned he may be a little
emotional, or not speak as well as a writer , offers adages Leigh would say, ‘It’s better to beg for forgiveness rather
than to ask for permission’. Stephen acknowledged how we are raised by the
questions. How Leigh has raised him by the question of ‘how to do it?’ His
energies with Leigh are parallel rather than collaborative. Stephen coins the
term, ‘transactional practice action.’ A synesthetic relationship: Leigh would
describe, and Stephen saw pictures.
Stephen finished
describing how Leigh would know when something was working, how the work worked
if it was what he called ‘fresh’. Leigh would ask, ‘is it fresh’?
Susan, the last of
the Leigh trinity for the evening, speaks. She is asked to ‘step into the
light’ so she is lit properly. The pun is enjoyed, the reference to her being
what has ensured Leigh’s work has seen the light and day, and here she is;
simple, (un)broken, and beautiful.
Susan thanks many
people. So many, she acknowledges, have helped support the family, and Leigh’s
work. She asks, ‘what to leave you with?’ She has decided to read Act V Garden, Weather Play Scene 8.
Where the final lines end with the London plane trees and the image on the back
cover of Nameless shows the London
plane trees in Victoria Park – an important
place for Leigh. And of course there is the drone, in language and
sound. The play is infinite in a
subtle yet generous Leigh-way. Nevertheless, the act Susan has read ends the
play. Of course it isn’t that simple – after the end of the play there is the Rehearsal. Where the direction is given:
The play is ended. The audience leaves the theatre.
On the way out, to one side, a video. Several of
the players are heard singing.
This was an earlier rehearsal of a section not now
in the play.
As I leave, the
space is reluctantly emptying and people are still milling about outside. This
crowd doesn’t want to go. The same way we didn’t want to ‘fly through’ the exit
at the end of the DVD – but at least it was an EXIT sign with more language in
it. This beginning, this second world has only just begun – how can it already
be over?
I leave with my
nameless paper bag wondering where to from here? Walking up Beresford St I see
the restaurant sign ‘THETA’ followed by a shop sign, ‘CHOICE’ and feel full of
fresh play.
Once home, I look on
line for what the symbol at Hopetoun Alpha means:
The circle represents the earth, universality -
the globe - our home, the cross symbolises a blend of female and male and the
arrow is our forward and upward direction as we all move into a brave new
future as one (http://www.hopetounalpha.co.nz/main/heritage.htm).
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