from Sandy Needham

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Happy 2009 from Brazil

CHANCE

I arrived in this seaside garden no gardener.
My skill consists of trimming brown-edged leaves
Grazed by the sand and salt ‘marezia ‘ on the ocean breeze,
Or pummeled by the marezia on the ocean wind
That turns coconut palms ragged.

Depends on the season.

Unsuspecting beauties face the onslaught
Wearing this year’s latest green.
These suffragettes change their withering aspect
when I intervene,
And, first coquettishly, then with burgeoning
Defiance of ‘pot-bound’ become top-heavy matrons.

Brown ferns get hacked in half,
But turn their cheeks with graceful, pointed fronds between
This coif and the next.

Some pruning turns to ruin.
A lush bush - now a scarecrow - once a screen,
Is bemused through each veranda repast
By its own revealing ridicule.

Yellow folds of sun, lacy shadows cling
To chameleon-colored flagstones,
While black hummingbirds, the odd helicopter, ants,
Small yellow butterflies, rain – traverse the scene
Of growth and age.

I am cowed before a stringy naked limb
By the unlikely red hibiscus preening at its end -
That even the iguana spared;
I cut -
The beginning of all faith.






HAVE A BEAUTIFUL 2009!

Love,

Sandy, Newton, Elise and Jake

Monday, January 5, 2009

Brazil Dispatch 22

January 5, 2009

Just ahead of the holiday season we hit the streets for a local, early version of Carnaval. We turned the corner from the live, dancing samba and frevo groups in the street to a large avenue lined with parked cars, all blasting music from the deafening macho speakers in the open trunks. There were as many (bad) songs bludgeoning my ears as there were cars. I felt as if I were walking this gauntlet on the set of a surrealist post-apocalyptic movie (filmed in low neon).

Much more reassuring was the magical lighting of the city's gigantic Christmas tree soon after... well, the tree is actually only lights. The weather was as lovely as it gets, with a happenstance full moon quietly presiding over the ocean to complement the pyrotechnics of the tree, lit fountains, a shimmering Santa's house , and fireworks. New to me: the mayor spoke with his hand and voice in a sort of Roman oratory style...apparently a tradition in the third world, but HILARIOUS. Our eyes were watering, trying not to burst out laughing, and we still giggle about this. The mayor was thundering that Natal was the only city in the world named Natal - "Christmas" in Portuguese. The arrival of Santa on a truck-mounted sleigh with ear-splitting recorded music was simultaneous with the lovely women's choir singing Christmas carols in matching plunge-neck gowns. And in the sparkle refelected in dazzled young eyes, my Christmas spirit was officially ushered in.

Preparations for Elise and Jake's holiday arrival suffered a bit of a set-back when the ex-wife of our caretaker, Marcos, threatened to "put a bullet through the head" of our pretty two days/week maid, Lucia, if she continued to work here. Lucia and the terrorista, Suziane, had never met, but apparently Suziane found a pair of women's underwear at Marcos' house when she was in town with their two daughters that weekend, then found Lucia's number on Marcos' cell phone (for work purposes)...and got jealous and called her. Why? Mind you, since breaking up with Marcos, she already had a baby with another man (who has since abandoned them). Poor people rarely marry and divorce around here because the fees are too high. Perhaps Suziane is worried about sharing Marcos' money with someone else since he supports her and the three girls faithfully. Obviously, the innocent and terrified Lucia came to resign, her husband accompanying her for safety. She was now jobless, we were maidless, and Suziane was banished from ever appearing on our property again. Good thing she doesn't know about Marcos' fiancée in the interior. After some ups and downs, we now have a very nice, homely maid from another part of town.
Newton decided to wind tubular Christmas lights around the coconut trees on each side of our front yard - one in red and the other, green. It looked fantastic! That prompted even more Christmas spirit and made us more impatient than ever for our kids to arrive. Our local, large iguana appeared one morning soon after and started up the cocnut tree with the red lights (not on). He just clung there for the longest time staring at the red tubing, peering around to the side of the trunk to see if any path opened up there. He then very gingerly started up, licking and examining as he went. Then he plopped over onto the branches of the hibiscus bush and started eating the beautiful red blossoms in a single gulp. That's when I was no longer amused and went to shake the hibiscus branches. He returned to the tree and, after staring at the red tubing again for a long while, started up.

Elise and Jake arrived with lots of great presents and all the crucial Trader Joes items we make them schlepp down to us. We had a fantastic two weeks with them here before they went to visit their cousins in São Paulo. All of us hit Cotovelo Beach many times, as well as favorite restaurants and clubs, a boat trip, the largest cashew tree in the world, and a fun New Year's Eve at home. We joined the anonymous neighbors (recently arrived from the city to their beach houses) at midnight on the beach - everyone in white - to jump over seven waves for good luck.
Later we drove over to Ponta Negra Beach to catch a more crowded celebration. On New Year's Day we went to the beautiful Hellenus restaurant atop a cliff. It transports one in the imagination to a Greek isle with all its curving white gesso and ocean view. The fish and shrimp transported us, too!













































WATCH:
Elise loves her job at the UltraStar fan club division of Live Nation, about to end because the company is dissolving the division. Once her college graphic design internship turned into a job, she has had amazing creative control - including video shooting, editing, graphic design for websites, DVD and CD covers, plus animated Christmas cards for several rock groups' websites. She arrived here at Christmas with a show & tell of her fantastic Police DVD and Genesis CD covers, on which she is listed for credit. She traveled to various cities to videotape the Jonas Brothers and Il Divo. There are several irons in the fire by which her amazing resume will propel her to continued employment.
Jake's profession seems to circumvent the economic crisis. We had such a fun evening at a bar here called the Bada Bing (owned by a very sweet Dutch guy who's a Soprano's fan), where a friendly, international Texas Hold'em tournament takes place (in English) every Tuesday and Friday. Jake took till 3:30am to win the damn thing, but then picked up the tab for the entire family with part of his winnings. He has had an excellent year in Texas Hold'em, earning 1,000,000 playing points on his poker site to achieve Supernova Elite status. This will send him for free to two live
tournaments this year: Monte Carlo and again to the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas. He is quite studious about the whole thing and puts his math talent to lucrative use.
We will continue our time with our nascent-adult children next July when we travel to the US. What a relief to inch away from the blame/glory parent role. Oh! They were born that way already. I think I can see that now.
Love,
Sandy

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Essay: Chocolate and Cigarettes

Chocolate and Cigarettes

I’m sitting on my veranda taking tiny stitches. Some are smaller than others because back when I cut out these squares of Japanese indigo cloth, I made some squares crooked and must shore up random tiny seam allowances with tighter stitches. I still had no dining room table then, so I spread the various indigo fabrics out on a bed sheet on the uneven stone floor. The fabric moved; the sheet moved; some of my 10-1/4” squares are barely 10” in some places.

I am sewing this quilt by hand on my front porch after moving to a beach in the northeast of Brazil. My Brazilian husband and I chose this tranquil habitat because he can work from anywhere as long as he has internet access, I was ready to take a breather after decades of working, and we needed to live more cheaply in order to repay our children’s college loans. I can picture my portable sewing machine sitting there in the storage unit in New York. I thought I’d try renting a machine here in Natal – a city in the state of Rio Grande do Norte – but there are none available for rent. The kind woman at the Oficina de Costura who hemmed my dress offered to let me use her heavy industrial sewing machine in the mornings over there. It occurred to me that hand stitching one hundred squares together in the breeze on my veranda sounded just right. I have no deadline. We don’t need a quilt – it is hot here. Whenever I want nothing more than to inch my way across these indigo fields, I sit out in front and practice the heart of craft: patience and presence.

I think of my father often while I stitch. He would have understood this effort of stitching for stitching’s sake. Besides, he’s the one who brought back from Japan in 1945 the most beautiful posessions we owned: a huge rice paper umbrella, which my sisters and I grabbed whenever a summer rain started up back in Tulsa so we could enact “Singin’ in the Rain” on the driveway; two of the most beautiful kimonos imaginable – one, a child’s with blocks of cream, persimmon, marigold, and blue violet, and the other an adult haori jacket with red spider web-like fretwork on a cream background, which eventually hung on my living room wall in New York; a wood and bone abacus that became a little warped, but never lost its mathematical mystery; and a portion of embroidered silk ribbon with the carriage wheel motif in bright jade on a field of fuchsia, which my mother framed and hung on the wall. I am convinced I saw this hanging by my crib as soon as I could see; my affinity for the Japanese aesthetic goes way back. There was also a quilt of kimono silk with a heavy black and spicy orange plaid edge which haunted me almost as much as the jade and fuchsia ribbon. My father bought these with Navy rations of chocolate and cigarettes in Tokyo Bay after the Japanese surrender.

My father died in 1990. All four daughters and our families later came to help Mother clear out the house by keeping the old things that called out to us. There happily was no contention that all remaining Japanese prizes that I had not already ‘borrowed’ went home with me. Mother sold the house to a man who bought up houses for renovation. She became friends with him in her inimitable way. After some months, this man brought her a box that he discovered in our attic crawl space that I never knew existed. It contained the letters my mother and father exchanged during the war. My mother wrote every day and my father wrote every other day. She had accompanied him to San Diego, awaiting his orders from the Navy to ship out. He sailed away while my mother watched his ship disappear over the horizon from the shallow waves by the shore. She told me this story sitting in shallow waves together on the São Paulo coast soon after he died, when she accompanied my family on a visit to my husband’s relatives in Brazil. I knew that my father became the Payroll Officer on the U.S.S. Cleveland, a light cruiser that made its way to the Philippines and on to Tokyo Bay by the end. After two months of reading the copies my sister sent of all the letters from the box, I knew much more about his wartime experiences. My mother’s letters were full of the routine she shared with my aunt, tending my two oldest sisters and twin cousins – all four years old and under – and selling Realsilk hosiery door-to-door. My uncle was in the army in Europe. My father’s letters reported the miserable and monotonous life on the ship, eased by playing bridge with the officers and watching the nightly Hollywood or propaganda films. He included reviews of these. Part of his job was censuring letters, so he found a glimpse into the musings of fellow sailors fascinating. He had to keep strict ledgers of expenditures and take shifts to stand watch. The ship was involved in some action and my father was terrified on occasion, but actually sustained only a scratch from cleaning his gun. He wisely sought the services of a military psychologist upon return for more insidious damage. Perhaps we can attribute the lovely poetry he later wrote and the oneness with creation he diligently sought to the sensitivity that endured. The letter most significant to me recounts his disembarkation in Tokyo Bay on September 26, 1945. On this day he unknowingly anticipated my birth exactly four years later. The Japanese people themselves, bartering their treasures for Navy rations, presented initial confusion: all he had heard for months was that one must hate them, but then he saw the absurdity of feeling anything but common humanity as he selected the precious artifacts of my childhood. Not understanding that the narrow widths of woven silk were intended for kimono but marveling at their beauty, he bought several lengths.

In the tradition of her pioneer heritage, my grandmother made the quilt I still treasure from this cloth. She artfully composed the narrow lengths of silk into diagonal stripes, backed them with batting and red wool, and stitched fancy stitches along the diagonal edges with bright embroidery thread. My mother and her twin brother’s real mother died the day they were born in 1914 on the Oklahoma City homestead claimed by my great-grandfather in the 1889 land rush. Their father married the quilt maker when the twins were two years old. This Oklahoma/Japanese quilt also ended up in my New York home on a wall. I think of it particularly as I fudge seam allowances and piece some squares together on my indigo quilt, as those diagonal lengths of silk ran out at opposite corners and had to be pieced by my grandmother to approximate a rectangle. The Japanese would approve of this imperfection, their requisite tradition of craft. I am able to accomplish this imperfection in my craft by way of uneven cutting and heavier wind some days on the veranda.

I was given a beautiful book in the 1970’s about the Living National Treasures of Japan. The first honoree in the book is a little old woman who was the country’s master indigo dyer. I remember there being many steps between gathering the plant and ending with permanently blue hands. The romance of it all was absorbed into my Japanophile repertoire. Later in the ‘80’s my husband was sent on assignment to Japan by his computer software employer…well, I encouraged him to volunteer for the year-long post. We rented out our little house on a New Jersey lake as a weekend retreat for a Manhattan couple. We actually owned only one piece of furniture worth concern – an exquisite dresser by the Japanese-American woodworker, George Nakashima – but our luck was providential enough to leave it in the hands of a tenant who was a woodworker by avocation and a Nakashima devotee.

We landed in Tokyo with our three-year-old daughter and our eight-month-old son. While my daughter attended preschool, I could sometimes leave my son in a nursery during those morning hours and make shopping treks to stores with used kimono and bolts of kimono textiles. Among my keepsakes was yardage of hand dyed indigo batik prints.

I found two more bolts of Japanese indigo in the Hudson River village where we lived before moving to Brazil. There was a store owned by an American Japanophile who had thoroughly internalized the Japanese aesthetic. The store was always serene, as the quieting design and the gently running water in small stone fountains had an effect on the customers. The deep yet vibrant blue of the indigo cloth has this effect on me, as well. The color is alive with the essence of the plant and the human intention in the dye. Sometimes the sky over the ocean in Natal turns this inky blue in the evening when it appears to be illuminated from behind.

I had a 27-year career as a textile designer for the home cotton print industry, which hardly exists anymore in the United States. My specialty was coloring the designs in various combinations on painted colorplates and going to giant printing plants to supervise color matching. There is no color formula that produces anything near the range of hand-dyed indigo blues. One just can’t get a color that rich and alive. The limits of this mechanized process drove me to my passion for folk craft hand prints with their vegetable dye colors and human imperfections. Sometimes I have to scrape tiny bits of batik wax left behind on the off-white designs as I sew my indigo cloth. This did not roll off a machine.

I will continue to stitch. I have found some cotton in Natal for a border the red-orange color of persimmon. Japanese laborers brought this fruit to Brazil in the early twentieth century, which is why it is called “kahkee” in both countries (caqui in Brazil, kaki in Japan). It is a color evocative of Asia, especially in combination with indigo. I will back the quilt, knot the two sides together at intervals, and attach this delicious border.

What I imagine as I sew is a child holding this quilt someday. It will be faded, though the blues will remain unmatchable; it will be frayed, especially where the seams are too small. But I do dream of a child who will cherish the old thing, imbued as it will be with Japanese tradition, South American ocean breeze, and an old woman’s stories.

On a recent trip, a contingent of Japanese senior citizens disembarked right behind me after our plane landed in São Paulo. They had come to participate in the city’s commemoration of 100 years of Japanese immigrants in Brazil. The group was all wearing yellow hats like a swarm of school children in Tokyo! I was telling the little old man with a perpetual grin who was beside me in the immigration line about how I came to acquire my love of Japanese art by way of my father’s bartering in Tokyo Bay in 1945. The man’s face lit up as he exclaimed: “Oh! That was our first chocolate! We always think of chocolate as American.” The world is surely round.

- Sandra Needham, 2008
Click on left arrows below for Archive Dispatch titles.

Blog Archive