Toronto Music Garden
Nov. 2nd, 2004 03:10 pm
Photo: Sarabande at Toronto Music Garden, yesterday afternoon."This movement is based on an ancient Spanish dance form. Its contemplative quality is interpreted here as an inward-arcing circle that is enclosed by tall needle-leaf evergreen trees. Envisioned as a poet's corner, the garden's centerpiece is a huge stone that acts as a stage for readings, and holds a small pool with water that reflects the sky."
~~~~~~~~~~
Yesterday
And yet the whole scene had a peculiar bleak, forsaken feeling that visits city waterfronts in winter. It was the kind of emptiness you see in certain movies, you know the ones I mean, where one or two characters wander through a motionless amusement park. Maybe it's in Atlantic City, I don't remember. It always evokes a sense of loneliness or vague, creeping horror.
Even though I was profoundly happy in that peaceful afternoon, I couldn't help thinking of those scenes. I breathed in the rarefied light and the simple pleasure of being alone with my gentle lover.
Toronto Music Garden was inspired by the Bach Cello Suites, conceived by cellist Yo-Yo Ma with landscape designer Julie Moir Messervy. It was originally intended for Boston, but the plans fell through, so Toronto got lucky.
I visited this park once before. It must have been a cold day in December 2000 with Tracey. We went on a long walk that day, all the way from his apartment in the Jamestown Project to Harbourfront. I hardly remember the Music Garden. In fact I couldn't find the one memory I have of metal clanging in bitter wind, snow drifting across the sidewalk and among golden grasses. That clangorous sound was absent yesterday. The garden was still. The lines of walkways and stones interpretted Bach's music in three dimensions of space.
I was most impressed, appropriately, with Sarabande, a reflective space for poets with a reading rock. A plaque stood there bearing verses of joy at the arousal of organic sound and artistry from the bones of urban death. Light fell on golden leaves in the tiny pool on the poet's rock. I would like to take one of my own verses there and sigh it onto the wind, an offering of joy, my own life added to the spirits who gather there celebrating.
We bought pizza and sat listening to pre-election coverage on the news. Then Danny bought me a Cointreau truffle. Later, walking into This Ain't The Rosedale Library on busy Church Street, I found a lucky smudge of bittersweet chocolate still clinging to my palm.
The Toronto Music Garden
The old hard hat geometry of the cities of this world
speed-straighting highways has freed up this ground
out from under its heavy-lid concrete/asphalt sarcophagus.
Reborn in sunlight it is the garden it was meant to be.
HOORAY!
Our heavy-lidded eyes once saw only Fugi-san's
Euclidian perfection. Now Mandelbrot's fractal/quaternion
new millennium geometry refocusses every mountain
and microcosm, the whole Creation into eye-of-God beauty.
HOORAY!
Guerilla fighters saving old humane enclaves in this city
tree by tree, cottage and house, armed with council hearings
whisper this comfort into the branches and your beloved trees:
This is the beginning of the world as parkland regenerated.
HOORAY!
Four parts in time: the Cello Suite; its garden parallel
on paper, paths winding into stillness; that draft sculpture
living; and last, at,last, we have a path trhough the deadwood
mind-entanglement, a choreography — a kiss to awaken Beauty.
HOORAY!
Once a mulberry worm spun her silk wings in fantastic colour
and flew to her kindred spirit in the emperor's kimono
they rested there the four of them —eternal quaternion—
self-reflective — anticipating the millenium flying toward us.
HOORAY!
POLLY FLOCK
The old hard hat geometry of the cities of this world
speed-straighting highways has freed up this ground
out from under its heavy-lid concrete/asphalt sarcophagus.
Reborn in sunlight it is the garden it was meant to be.
HOORAY!
Our heavy-lidded eyes once saw only Fugi-san's
Euclidian perfection. Now Mandelbrot's fractal/quaternion
new millennium geometry refocusses every mountain
and microcosm, the whole Creation into eye-of-God beauty.
HOORAY!
Guerilla fighters saving old humane enclaves in this city
tree by tree, cottage and house, armed with council hearings
whisper this comfort into the branches and your beloved trees:
This is the beginning of the world as parkland regenerated.
HOORAY!
Four parts in time: the Cello Suite; its garden parallel
on paper, paths winding into stillness; that draft sculpture
living; and last, at,last, we have a path trhough the deadwood
mind-entanglement, a choreography — a kiss to awaken Beauty.
HOORAY!
Once a mulberry worm spun her silk wings in fantastic colour
and flew to her kindred spirit in the emperor's kimono
they rested there the four of them —eternal quaternion—
self-reflective — anticipating the millenium flying toward us.
HOORAY!
POLLY FLOCK

Another view of the rock in Sarabande.

Menuett: a formal flower parterre.
no subject
Date: 2004-11-02 02:52 pm (UTC)Please advise.
Paul
no subject
Date: 2004-11-02 03:35 pm (UTC)Then your text should wrap around the image.
Cheers,
Van
no subject
Date: 2004-11-07 12:16 am (UTC)