spatial orientation

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Vertical geography


On the first Thursday of every month, stacks of individuals turn out to climb through the ant's nest known as 49 Geary in south-east Union Square. body temperatures confined to such close quarters raises the humidity to a balmy 85%. yet it is still a cool place. the chill that runs between the bodies of peoples is ever-so-slightly melted, lubricating the glide of the art spectators to pass one another, unaffected. it is too confined for bristly san franciscans. we are used to navigating a lower altitude range - generally not more than about four stories max. Some of this must be fueled by our protective outer ware being brought inside a large box filled with chambers.

Drones march practically single-file, vacant zombie-eyes passing all the works before them. The first bee-line is for the wine table. the social lubricant easing the frigidity inside.

Out a rhomboid-shaped light well, i notice a scene from a science-fiction novel. Almost no one stopped to notice; yet I think the living well is more interesting than a good percentage of the art slung on the gallery walls.

The weather lures us out more, though protected by layers. If there was a deck out that light well, we'd wonder out and get to know each other. The 49 Geary District needs to be rebranded. Why not funnel some of the up-and-coming hipster disposable income into a new global art draw. Unite the San Francisco movement. How do we translate the S.F. culture into a universally understood language?

How we live has a direct impact on who we are. how we navigate our physical spaces teaches us to sort and order our thoughts and justifications in a similar fashion. One might say a San Franciscan is a little spread, and chilly. And we aren't entirely comfortable when squeezed in the constricted vertical geography of First Thursdays.