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Still Life With Chair by Jericho Parms

February 14, 2024

“A funny thing about a chair; You hardly ever think it’s there.”

-Theodore Roethke

Lately, going batty at the thought of stillness, I can’t help but wonder how sitting by a window feels like being in asylum. The world outside, cycling through its seasons, is complicit in our human associations. When it  rains  or  snows,  we  remember:  birthdays,  anniversaries,  memorials.  When the leaves change and fall, we recollect: an early lesson in death, the  night  I  first  believed  in  love.  It  is  harder,  perhaps,  to  ground  our  perceptions in the consistency of common things: a bed, a desk, a chair.

• • •

I  stood  among  the  boys,  who  had  clustered  in  a  huddle  of  Oxfords  and  low-slung  jeans,  in  a  second-story  room  at  a  campus  house  party.  Each with a whiskey glass and a streaming cigarette, they stood in staged rapture. Ben had waved me into the room as I passed in search of a free bathroom. “Come,” he said. “We could use a feminine eye.” So I joined them, gazing at a painting on the wall.

The  canvas  hung  askew.  Thickly  coated  in  acrylic,  the  painting  bore  the abstract depiction of a chair, singular and empty, in a room of three distorted walls. I didn’t recognize the painting, nor did I particularly care for  it,  but  I  appreciated  the  expressionist  approach.  The  brush  strokes  echoed  de  Kooning;  the  bold  primary  colors  resembled  Barnett  New-man—rich yellows, reds, an underpainting of blue. And it reminded me of the city that I had recently abandoned for the Colorado mountains. “The question is,” Ben began, gripping his drink. “What is the nature of a chair?” He glanced at me from beneath the rim of his newsboy hat and scratched at the thin beard skirting his chin.

• • •

I’ve  been  trying  to  find  order  in  the  disorder  of  memory.  I  wonder  what it means that I can’t recall all of their names. Or have I have tried to forget them? Most days their faces blend in a half-rendered backdrop, except for two, ingrained and juxtaposed in the foreground of one night. The night we lost Ben; the night I found Joe. Sitting here, I can feel the seat of my chair hard beneath my body. The legs creak like dry branches or a slab of driftwood in the wind. I am alone with  just  an  image  becoming  more  and  more  singular,  begging  to  be  objectified  like  the  myriad  common  things  praised  by  Neruda’s  odes—one chair, alone in the jungle.

• • •

Chair: a seat, with support for the back, designed to accommodate one person. The word originates from the Greek cathedra, a compound of kata(“down”) and hedra (“seat”).

• • •

Early evidence of chairs dates to 2680 bc in ancient  Egypt,  where  cave  paintings,  carvings,  and   hieroglyphics   depicted   seated   figures.   Across  the  Euphrates,  stone  funerary  carvings  on monuments revealed the existence of chairs in  Mesopotamia.  The  most  famous  ancient  chair  was  in  fact  a  throne  (from  Indo-Euro-pean  origin,  meaning  “to  hold  or  support”).  Tutankhamen’s  throne,  circa  1333-1323  BC,  built of wood and encased in gold, was excavated from the pharaoh’s tomb in 1923.

• • •

“Consider,”  Ben  continued.  “Did  someone  just get up, or is someone about to sit down?” His grin widened. A friend of mine in the sophomore class whom I knew from back home had insisted I attend the party that night; there were people  to  meet.  Ben  was  one  of  them.  Hard  beats and laughter rose from downstairs as the boys carried on their charade, assuming theatrical gestures and affected accents of Bohemian art junkies. 

One  noted  the  use  of  color  while  inhaling  a   cigarette.   Another—long,   lanky—leaned   in  until  his  nose  nearly  touched  the  canvas.  Foreground brush strokes filled the surface with the  color  of  saffron  and  cornmeal.  Red  sliced  through the frame like rouge to form the angles of a chair, and a pool of blue added depth to the composition.  Even  now  I’m  not  sure  why  the  painting  inspired  such  parody.  But  the  image  has  ingrained  itself  in  the  card  catalogue  of  visual history—one I can’t help but pull from, looking for reference while sitting by a window.

• • •

In 1888, Vincent Van Gogh painted two of his well-known works while in the company of Paul Gauguin at Arles. Vincent’s Chair, housed in London’s National Gallery, vibrates with Van Gogh’s signature golds and blues and depicts a simple  straw  chair  positioned  on  a  wood  slab  floor.  A  crumpled  handkerchief  with  tobacco  and the artist’s pipe rests in the seat. Conversely, Gauguin’s  Armchair,  exhibited  in  Amsterdam’s  Rijksmuseum,  is  darkly  ornate—a  “somber  reddish-brown wood,” as Van Gogh described it in a letter to critic G. –Albert Aurier, “the seat of greenish straw,” with a lighted torch and two strewn novels.

• • •

Plato’s Theory of Forms uses the example of a chair to suggest a material object is merely an imitation  of  its  ideal  form.  The  ideal  form,  in  turn,  constitutes  the  object’s  true  reality.  The  essence of a chair is its “chair-ness.”

• • •

Maybe  it  was  a  riddle  after  all.  “A  trick  question,”  Ben  said,  his  mouth  curling  at  the  taste  of  whiskey.  I  couldn’t  help  but  indulge  him.  “So—what  is  the  nature  of  a  chair?”  He  linked  his  arm  in  mine.  “Wouldn’t  you  agree  that both are truth? Someone stands, someone else   sits   down.   Someone   comes,   someone   goes.”  His  voice  carried  the  scent  of  bourbon;  its   cadence   seesawed   between   playful   and   profound. The other boy, distracted by his own amusement,  rubbed  his  eyeglasses  against  his  shirt and placed them back on the bridge of his nose,  then  offered:  “like  a  glass  half  empty  or  half  full.”  I  felt  the  wine  I  nursed  in  slow  sips  begin to flush and color my cheeks, and chose not to prolong the discussion by noting that the perspective  of  a  chair  and  the  nature  of  a  chair  are,  in  fact,  two  different  things.  By  then  it  hardly mattered. The boys broke character and began roughhousing over a bummed cigarette. The  sight  of  them  morphed  into  a  tangle  of  limbs and choke holds.

• • •

The American painter Andrew Wyeth all but immortalized the Windsor writing chair when he  placed  the  lone  object  in  the  center  of  his  composition. Realistically rendered against the dark  beige  walls  of  a  Pennsylvania  bedroom,  Wyeth’s Writing Chair, c 1961, is empty except for a dark captain’s jacket draped over one arm.

• • •

In  Latin,  the  phrase  ex  cathedra,  meaning  “from  the  chair,”  was  once  commonly  applied  to  the  Pope’s  declarations  on  faith  or  morals  as  contained  in  divine  revelation  or,  at  least,  intimately connected to something greater.

• • •

Why do we remember certain details? What is  it  about  them  that  holds  us?  Before  the  window I assume the restive pace of a captive. Sitting again—in a throne of unkempt velvet ...the  plush  of  an  overstuffed  chair—perhaps  I’ll  find the calm sensibility and decorum of a lady. Either way, I will stay here long enough to call upon  the  archival  instinct  to  reconstruct  and  conserve  the  mundane  pieces  of  a  moment:  The way I wrapped a cardigan close around my chest as I waited outside the house that night. How  earlier  that  day  the  campus  grounds  flaunted a palette of autumn, where rusty hues mingled  with  blond  cottonwoods  and  golden  beeches. Or the fact that, just before I saw Joe coming  toward  me,  as  I  gripped  the  porch  railing, trying to seem at ease, I noticed the toe of  my  tennis  shoe  dotted  with  a  fresh  stain  of  red wine.

I  first  saw  Joe  on  his  bicycle  weeks  before  while sitting one morning by the library. With one  hand  gripping  his  handlebars  and  a  book  clamped under his arm, he pedaled effortlessly. And,   because   attraction   really   does   defy   dimension and morph everything it knows, as he  passed,  his  cool  glance  spanned  the  length  of  the  quad.  And  then,  like  every  morning  since, his eyes (brown, docile, animal) reached across the lawn to mine (green, dewy, smitten). So  when  he  stood  beside  me  with  his  hands  in  his  pockets,  toeing  at  a  stone  in  the  grass,  it  seemed  an  inevitable  moment.  We  fumbled  through  introductions.  I  tried  not  to  blush  when I noticed the gap between his front teeth. My  arms  clasped  my  body  in  a  straightjacket  hold because it felt impossible to stand still. He asked if I was cold. Even now I remember the ache  in  the  back  of  my  legs  and  wonder  how  odd it is that we say “weak” in the knees, when it’s so clearly the strength of the pulse running through the body.

• • •

In One  and  Three  Chairs,  1965,  Joseph  Kosuth places a chair against a wall. To its left hangs a  life-size  photograph  of  that  same  chair.  To  its  right,  an  enlarged  Photostat  of  the  definition  of  the  word  chair.  The  installation,  on  view  at  The Museum of Modern Art in New York, asks viewers  to  consider  how  these  three  representations  communicate  the  common  fact  of  the  object. We see a chair. We see the visual image of a  chair.  We  see  the  etymological  definition  of  a  chair. How do they differ? Which representation constitutes the true nature of the form?

• • •

On  Walden  Pond,  Henry  David  Thoreau  furnished  his  ten-by-fifteen-foot  cabin  with  a  bed,  a  table,  a  writing  desk,  and  three  chairs:  “one for solitude, two for friendship, three for society.”

• • •

Given  the  chance,  the  more  sober-minded  would probably have known better, or foreseen the danger that night. But autumn was around us. The fall had fallen in leaves of gold, and in its death we were alive and young in that back-to-school-special  sort  of  way,  all  promise  and  adventure.  When  Ben  reappeared,  bounding  from  the  house,  he  slung  an  arm  around  Joe  and,  glancing  between  the  two  of  us,  seemed  to slow down for a moment—to come back to earth  again,  just  long  enough  to  say,  “So  you  found him.”

The two of them jabbed elbows and laughed like schoolboys before Ben spun away, singing a  scat-style  tune,  waving  and  yelling  alongside  another  guy  that  they’d  meet  us  at  the  dorm.  Their bodies held in shadow against the campus lights, the brim of Ben’s newsboy hat outlined in a sharp yellow glow.

• • •

Years ago, riding the subway in Manhattan, I  watched  a  man  offer  his  seat  to  an  elderly  woman.  She  nodded  politely.  Once  seated,  she turned and recognized the woman next to her  was  a  childhood  friend.  The  two  women  reunited,   tearing   with   disbelief.   Then   the   woman  stopped  short  and  looked  around.  “Where’s  that  sweet  young  man?”  she  kept  saying. “Where’d he run off to?” I looked, too, but he was gone.

• • •

Details  are  as  relentless  as  they  are  invaluable.  Memory  is  maddening.  I  want  to  stand  and  spin  my  chair  like  a  prop  in  a  musical.  Sitting  backward  now,  my  thighs  stretch  wide  to  straddle  the  seat,  my  chest  hugs  the  carved  wooden rods of the straight back. Its curves and mine  embrace,  just  for  an  instant.  Then  I  am  up  again,  swinging  one  leg  over  the  side,  like  Liza Minelli in Cabaret, because I cannot bear to sit still.

• • •

Later  that  night,  as  Joe  and  I  walked  east,  away  from  the  mountains,  he  explained  the  tradition  of  exploring  the  catacombs  of  cam-pus—a  grid  of  utility  tunnels  nestled  below  school  grounds.  I  asked  if  it  was  dangerous.  We bit our lips and laughed, and his laughter, somehow  familiar,  warmed  the  air  around  my  cheeks.  We  continued  across  campus  to  meet  the  others,  beneath  the  soaring  contour  of  Pike’s  Peak  stenciled  against  the  indigo  sky,  above  the  underworld  carved  in  the  earth  below, amidst the dry leaves still whispering at our feet. In a way, I think part of us is buried in those whispers, the risk, the romance, the way we relished in uncertainty and believed it could never harm us.

• • •

Presenting  the  chair  as  portrait,  Van  Gogh  may have intended his two paintings to evoke the  artists’  contrasting  temperaments.  In  art  books or on the occasion they are exhibited to-gether, Vincent’s Chair and Gauguin’s Armchair often appear side by side facing away from each other, as if to suggest a volatile relationship be-tween the two men. But much depends on how you look at it. Facing each other, the paintings may  speak  to  a  mutual,  although  grudging,  respect.

• • •

In  the  fifth  grade,  a  boy  in  my  class  kept  rocking  back  and  forth  in  his  chair.  After  berating  him  repeatedly,  our  teacher  dragged  him  to  his  feet.  “If  you  can’t  sit  still,  then  you’ll  have  to  stand,”  she  said,  determined  to  make  an  example  of  him.  He  stood,  fidgety  and  shamed.  I  looked  across  the  room  and  exchanged a conspiring glance with my friends. And as if by instinct—some act of fair-dealing bravado—we  stood,  wailing:  “If  he  has  to  stand, then we won’t sit.” In minutes our loyal classmates followed suit. The scrape of wooden chairs  on  linoleum  echoed  through  the  room.  In our small-scale triumph, it seemed as if the world had opened before us.

• • •

When  we  reached  the  dorm,  it  was  nearly  midnight.  People  filtered  in  and  out  of  the  confines of someone’s dorm room. I sat on the edge of a crowded couch and watched a couple dancing nearby: the boy’s rutted brow, the girl’s puckered  lips,  hips  swaying  in  abstract  circles,  arms slicing through the air. I caught Joe’s stare across  the  room.  The  crowd  around  us  began  to  thin,  and  I  could  see  the  faint  movement  in  his  shoulders.  My  hands  grew  clammy;  my  cheeks  reddened,  as  if  I  had  stumbled  upon  the  throne  of  lust  and  longing,  and  was  given  a  moment  to  sit—in  a  chair  that  embraces  everything,  the  sound  ground  and  supreme  dignity  of repose—before time continued, and I smiled. I remember the precise moment I smiled, too, as if it marked the moment of my concession, the surge of instinct when something inside me decided I would like this one above the rest.

• • •

In the second grade, I suffered a crush on a boy from my class who, one day, pulled a chair out from under me just as I bent to sit down. My bony ass, and then my hard stubborn head, slammed  against  the  floor.  The  room  erupted  in  laughter.  I  nursed  bruises  for  weeks.  The  next day he told me that I had pretty hair, and then he said, “Sometimes it hurts when we like things so much.”

• • •

Now I am standing again. Nose to window-pane, breath whiting out the leaves outside, I’m thinking  about  how  easily  things  grow  hazy  and obscured. Death carries its own dimension. Shock  inevitably  fogs  the  view.  If  I  stood  on  this chair, circling the seat on tiptoes, and tried to  peer  into  meaning  or  tried  to  unearth  the  epicenter of narrative, I would find little but a balancing act, wobbly legs and all.

• • •

I  still  wonder  how  we  knew  where  to  look  that night, how we determined that something was  wrong.  I  remember  a  shift  in  the  nearby  voices,  which  dislodged  me  from  my  reverie  in the possibility of Joe, to recognize that most everyone  had  been  ushered  out  of  the  room  until  just  a  few  of  us  remained.  Someone  was  pacing,  saying,  “They  should  have  been  here  by  now.  It’s  been  hours.”  We  stood  clustered  in  the  center  of  the  room,  silently,  drunkenly  courting  worse-case  scenarios,  until  someone  broke  trance  and  volunteered  to  stay  behind,  “in case they show,” while the rest of us pivoted toward the door.

• • •

Beginning in 1963, Andy Warhol revealed his darkest work to date with a series of screen prints called Electric Chairs. The series, housed in several museums,  including  the  Tate  and  the  Walker  Art  Center,  is  part  of  Warhol’s  larger  Death  and  Disaster period, and offers a rare glimpse into an execution  chamber.  In  one  purple-tinged  print,  and  another  bathed  in  red,  the  word  Silence appears in the top right corner of the room. The image evokes those that have sat there before, and those who may follow. Yet it is neither condemnation  nor  celebration.  Warhol,  who  often  refused  to  discuss  his  work  beyond  elusive  statements  such  as  “There’s  nothing  behind  it,”  or  “I  like  boring  things,”  simply  provides  a  representation.  Interpretation lies at the mercy of the viewer.

• • •

It  is  difficult  in  language  to  find  a  worthy  match  for  the  euphoria  of  being  young  and  high and falling in love. So much depends on the quickening pace of everything: breath, the air, everything propelling forward so there is little choice but to follow in oblivion. I remember how  fast  our  feet  moved  as  we  looked  for  our  friend that night. I could hear one boy’s breath heaving as, two paces ahead, he led us across the lawn  and  through  the  vacant  parking  lot  that  lay bathed in the vermillion glow of the campus security  posts.  Another  boy  trailed  after  him,  trying  to  reason  while  keeping  stride—“They  must have lost track of time. What could have possibly gone wrong?” We continued, an anonymous mob of boys and girls parading toward a darkness we sensed but didn’t know. I heard Joe’s footsteps behind me. As we hurried faster, he took my hand and linked his arm in mine. I can still recall how his forearm pulsed against my  own—so  much  life  surging  beneath  our  skin—and  the  sick  happiness  I  felt  amid  the  strangeness  of  running,  as  we  did,  toward  red  flashes wavering across campus.

As our breath shortened, the air felt peculiar. I could hear our feet heavy on the ground, the wind  whistling  around  us.  As  we  neared  the  library,  the  crimson  lights  of  an  ambulance  churned  through  the  dark,  like  a  flaming  car-ousel but quiet—no doors slamming shut, no engine idling at the ready to rush toward help. Just stillness. Red light. Silence.

• • •

Odd  to  think  that  a  chair,  an  invention  of  such simplicity, is an artifact that we have come to  take  for  granted.  We  see  and  touch  chairs  not  with  our  eyes  and  hands  alone  but  with  our  entire  bodies.  When  we  are  tired,  we  sit.  When  we  dine,  we  sit.  When  we  read,  when  we  write,  when  we  confess  our  sins  and  ask  forgiveness.  The  simple  presence  of  a  chair,  like the unbridled promise of life when we are young, is a common assumption: we trust that the structure will hold us. But what if a chair is pulled aside, what if it breaks suddenly beneath you?

• • •

Picking  myself  up,  the  sound  of  my  chair  against the floor must have startled the starlings outside. Back in my seat, I am trying to remain here,  one  leg  curled  beneath  me  like  a  girl,  so  I’m not so tempted to tip forward again to catch a  better  view.  The  breath  on  the  windowpane  has cleared, and the details glow anew. I can see the lines of the leaves again, the composition of the branches, just before the sky turns—Bring me a chair in the midst of thunder.

• • •

Death  by  electrocution  can  be,  but  is  not  always,  instantaneous.  But  I  wonder,  when  Ben removed a manhole cover just north of the library and descended, not into the tunnels as intended, but into an unmarked electrical vault, if  he  knew  he  had  stepped  into  an  accident.  His  feet  were  firmly  grounded  when  his  hand  touched a live wire, and I wonder if he felt the 8,000-volt current that shot through his body? If  he  thought  of  his  parents,  his  first  love,  of  sex or lightbulbs, of leaves and lightning, of the Rosenbergs, of Warhol, or if there was anything at all but the surge and the Silence?

• • •

Even  the  most  common  artifacts  support  multiple representations. Thoreau’s three chairs each   served   a   different   purpose.   Warhol’s   chair mainly served one. Kosuth’s three chairs, seemingly  different,  are  one  and  the  same;  they  question  the  notion  of  representation  itself. According to Roethke, “to know a chair is really it, You sometimes have to go and sit.” Ben’s  definition  of  the  chair  in  the  painting  that  night  was  aptly  ephemeral,  embodying  a  transient  duality  of  arrival  and  departure,  past  and future. Someone comes, someone goes. Death, yet life.

• • •

Am I trying with this recollection to compose a scene or paint a picture? One seems dependent on movement, the other on stillness. The racing adrenaline  of  tragic  accident.  The  numbness  of  loss.  The  view  from  a  window  arouses  and  fragments the narrative of memory into images that resurface like a dream: The morning after the  sky  carried  the  faint  residue  of  siren  light;  Joe  laying  beside  me,  his  breath  steaming  and  cooling  the  back  of  my  neck.  I  inhaled  the  smell of his hands: the balmy trace of soap and cigarettes, the steely salt he had wiped from my eyes. I felt for the small beating just inside his wrist—here, still.

• • •

During   the   8th   International   Istanbul   Biennial  in  2003,  Columbian  sculptor  Doris  Salcedo  filled  a  gap  between  two  buildings  in  the  city’s  ironmonger  district  with  1,600  wooden  chairs.  Communicating  both  chaos  and  absence,  what  surreal  moment  might  one  discover—what twist of fate to stumble across a once-familiar alley filled with a four-story mass grave of chairs? How do they balance, caught in a still cascade? How do we make sense of such incongruous logic?

• • •

Sometimes  I  think  the  world  is  a  crowded  waiting  room,  which  we  fill,  sitting  and  standing, pacing and leaning, waiting for our name to be  called,  afraid  of  the  crisp  white  coats  and  of  the cool touch of a stethoscope against our skin, which will tell us just how alive we really are. In  just  two  days  we  would  attempt  to  celebrate  Joe’s  birthday—a  week  later,  my  own. When the arrangements were complete for  a  memorial  on  campus,  we  would  plant  a  tree  in  Ben’s  memory  because  that  is  what  people  often  do.  Each  year  its  leaves  change  from  pale  to  deep  green  to  yellow  and  gold,  and  when  the  light  shifts,  as  it  shifts  now,  the  saw-toothed  leaves  would  shimmy  on  their  branches  like  gilded  chandeliers,  before  dropping  to  the  ground  to  spin  beneath  the  feet of lovers and dreamers and freshman and seniors,  just  trying  to  learn  something,  to  outlive the years we all deserve.

• • •

And  what  if  I  were  in  some  ballroom  lit  with  gold  chandeliers—or  for  that  matter,  an  old  gymnasium  full  of  streamers  and  strobe  lights,  and  walls  lined  with  bleachers  and  color-schemed  balloons—waiting  for  a  boy  to  sweep  me  onto  the  floor?  Forget  about  the  electric chair, all that energy surging through a body,  and  raise  a  chair  to  dance  the  Hora,  or  swing one overhead, tap its narrow legs against the concrete courts like the hip hop girls back home  practicing  for  the  homecoming  show.  Or  a  wrestler,  flailing  a  chair  into  the  ring,  challenging the world to a brawl.

• • •

Hans  Hofmann,  the  abstract  expressionist  painter,  once  said:  “The  whole  world,  as  we  experience it visually, comes to us through the mystic  realm  of  color.”  That  night  Ben  and  I  and  the  other  boys  talked  about  the  abstract  image  of  a  chair,  analyzing  the  brush  strokes,  mocking  the  philosophical  nature  of  it  all.  I  woke  the  next  morning  to  an  aching  realization. I wished I could have shared then what I know now—that the nature of a chair exists in how we view it. And that if I had three chairs I  would  paint  them  the  three  primary  colors  from  which  all  others  can  be  formed:  red  for  death,  yellow  for  life,  blue  for  love.  I  would  have told Ben this before he dashed off through the fallen leaves, leaving the rest of us strolling in a bath of moonlight.

• • •

Maybe  I  don’t  have  to  assume  the  lens  of  a  patient  or  prisoner,  but  there  is  a  certain  confinement  to  sitting  by  a  window,  a  sense  of  internment  reserved  for  the  elderly,  the  housebound, or melodramatic children pining away  for  snow,  something  laced  with  longing,  nostalgia,  even  a  little  boredom—just  a  chair  by the window: straight back, timber legs, and the  body.  How  could  I  not  move  restlessly,  spinning and squatting like a burlesque dancer contorting  over  a  chair?  Its  inanimate  thing-ness, its quotidian inertia, instills an endless signaling to the brain—a single chair is the first sign of peace: remember, believe, grow unabashedly nostalgic,  see  in  color,  feel  in  motion,  dance  a  little more.


Jericho Parms is the author of Lost Wax (University of Georgia Press). Her essays have appeared in The Normal School, Hotel Amerika, American Literary Review, Brevity, Passages North and elsewhere. Her work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, noted in Best American Essays, and anthologized in Brief Encounters: A Collection of Contemporary Nonfiction, and Waveform: Twenty-First-Century Essays By Women. She holds an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts and is a contributing editor at Fourth Genre.

Photo credit: Pexels

In Print Tags Still Life With Chair, Jericho Parms, fall 2015 vol. 8 issue 2, Throwback, Archive
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