altering time
by Douglas Messerli
George Deem Three Painter’s
Daybooks / n.d. [in manuscript]
On May 12, 2008, I received a
manuscript from the artist George Deem titled Hey Nurse I’m Worse, consisting of what he described as “painter’s
book” of writings and images.
I had known George for many years, dating back at least as early as the
publication by Sun & Moon Press of his companion-assistant, Ronald Vance,
whose I Went to Italy to Eat Chocolate,
I produced in a side-stapled volume in 1978, the covers of which consisted of my
hand-colored map of Italy. I also published some of George’s work in an issue
of Sun & Moon: A Journal of
Literature & Art.
I met both George and Ronald soon after in their New York apartment, and
then, over the years lost direct touch with them, although George continued to
send me announcements of his art shows and catalogues. I recall most from that
visit with George is their description of having lost nearly everything in a
fire in Italy, which had made them realize their lack of need for possessions.
In 2001, I attended Mac Wellman’s dance-drama, Antigone, where I was seated next to a handsome, somewhat elderly
man, who looked strangely familiar. During the intermission, we spoke, and he
admitted that I too took looked familiar. It turned out to be George Deem.
Although I was enchanted by his new manuscript—which began with
selections from George’s various artists’ books, one group titled, “Three
Painter’s Daybooks,” which ended with “Yankee Vermeer” of 2007, depicting a
scene from a Vermeer painting with a man dressed in a Yankee baseball uniform
attempting to peer through one of Vermeer’s draped windows—I knew immediately
that I would be unable to publish the work. Such a publication needed a larger
format than my small Green Integer volumes, and it would be absolutely
necessary to print the book’s many art reproductions in color, unaffordable on
my budget. Accordingly, I set the manuscript aside, planning to write George a
long letter expressing my admiration of the collection, but also explaining why
it was not a suitable title for Green Integer.
As often occurs in a business centered upon correspondence, a few weeks quickly turned into months. In early August, I determined to catch up with back correspondence, but this time issues of my health intervened. I was taken aback, therefore, to read in The New York Times of George Deem’s death, at the age of 75, on August 11, 2008.
Accordingly, through his combinations of art and literary figures and
the questions his “recreations” evoked, Deem’s art altered time and history,
making us see what we thought we knew in entirely different ways and from
utterly different perspectives. Moreover, as Vance commented on his friend:
“[Deem] was interested in the dimension of time. He wanted the viewer to
experience not only the painting in front of him but also the referenced works
that came before.” And in that sense, Deem’s art was not only concerned with an
altering past time, but in actively linking that past with the present.
Los Angeles, September 28, 2008
Reprinted from Green Integer Blog (September 2008).
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