Little Forrest in the Big City

From a Tipi to Times Square

Little Forrest in the Big City

Little Forrest in the Big City
Location
New York, New York, USA
Birthday
March 28
Bio
From a Tipi to Times Square: I am a transplant to New York City from the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. I grew up in the mountains and deserts of the southwest, where my hippie parents taught wilderness survival. I, of course, went to art school to earn two art degrees which have lead me on a penniless journey producing work in my tiny apartment in uptown Manhattan. I'm trying to embrace the city and find my own place somewhere within it while writing about my experiences along the way.

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APRIL 11, 2011 2:00PM

The gift of nobody: A private day in the Met...

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The mezzanine of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's modern collection, while closed to the public...


Although I like to constantly remind myself (mainly because if I do not, then nobody will) that I am still both young AND fun, sometimes I need a little coaxing to actualize such a belief. As the once beautiful golden hairs that so loyally adorned my knobby head slowly say their goodbyes, leaving an ever-growing bulbous forehead in their place, I am coming to terms with the fact that youth is fleeting and aging is inevitable. I've traded acne for developing crows' feet and I've become acquainted with the joys of late-night heart burn and the fact that all of my belly skin seems to be slowing migrating south for the winter. I suppose this is just one of life's little passive-aggressive paybacks for the hell we all put our parents through during our teen years. This year, as I approached another birthday, once again commemorating my descent into the inevitable senility that awaits me near the end, I decided that I would focus on the fact that although I'm living paycheck to paycheck (paychecks which I earn through a job that it is no way related to my educational background or my lofty "career goals"), I am still a neat guy.

As I have made mention in the past, since moving to the city, my refuge to which I always default during any times of trouble or instability is the Metropolitan Museum of Art. If ever I am in need of re-assurance or a replenishment to my own sense of purpose in the world, an afternoon wandering through the galleries in the Met sets me back on course in no time. Upon hearing my birthday woes, a very kind friend of mine offered me the best birthday present that I've ever been given...

Every Monday, the Met closes to the public to take the time for maintenance and also to give the building one day of reprieve from all of the grubby snot-nosed children and their equally endearing aloof parents who trample upon the sanctity of the museum the other six days of the week. It is also a time when museum employees are able to come into the galleries for their own private study and enjoyment of the collections. This year, my birthday just so happened to fall on a Monday, and my friend, who happens to be a Met employee, invited me in for my own private day to see anything my little heart desired without the intrusive presence of the masses usually present in the space. Owing to my love of art and my abundant misanthropy, this was the best possible of all ways I could have imagined to celebrate the start to another year of aging and accelerated hair-loss.

Having the entire museum at my disposal was sort of a spooky, but wonderful sensation. I spent a whole afternoon wandering through the vast galleries, most of which hadn't a soul in sight (aside from an occasional guard listening to an iPod). It was eerie to see everything in the huge structure perfectly lit and set in place, but silent and still. I felt like the world had ended and my friend and I were the only two people left, although the fact that the cameras were still on and security teams were still in place killed most of my urges to run about dancing and touching things behind the ropes. I was able to get up close to many paintings that are always surrounded by large crowds and have my own personal interaction with them. Seeing images that I've known since childhood in books, and standing before them all alone is as close as I can imagine it would be to stand in the presence of God. Being alone with beautiful works by Van Gogh, Degas, Klimt and so many others that I love was an experience for which I haven't the adequate words to describe. Art museums, to me, are like beautiful cathedrals where I can go and deepen my sense of what it means to be human and inspire myself to become something more and feel uplifted. For all of my foul personality defects and my apparent neuroses, on the inside I am still the little kid who spent most Saturdays at the public library pouring over pictures in art history books and dreaming of what life had in store (although I don't let him out to play often enough). My special day in the museum helped to heal the numbness of spirit that can so quickly take over unnoticed while living in an adult world full of obligations and compromises. For one day, I was in a little world where everything was available and anything seemed within reach.

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Comments

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This is a fantasy of mine! What a magnificent gift.
No roller skates? :)

My unachievable goal is to have something displayed at MoMA. I strive for it knowing full well it will never happen. Reach for those stars!
Wonderful gift. I try purposely to go to museums and galleries on off days and hours to avoid crowds, a perfect present.
Nicely written post.
yes I am glad to hear that you are an neat guy and young to have fun. Happy birthday and what a wonderful gift.!!! Van Gogh my favorite.
I saved what you DELETED.
I shARED ref my son @ So-Ho.
Who/Why was my comment DELTED?
I saved the DELETED comment. Why?
Why DELETE? Be courageous? Tell me.
Happy birthday from another Aries!! I love your description of aging. So funny and so true!
Here is another gift - A Editor's Pick! Nice!
rated
Happy birthday from another Aries!! I love your description of aging. So funny and so true!
Here is another gift - An Editor's Pick! Nice!
rated
Happy birthday from another Aries!! I love your description of aging. So funny and so true!
Here is another gift - An Editor's Pick! Nice!
rated
wow, I felt your joy. I am an artist who also cherishes the Met. What a great friend to give you such a gift. Recently I had a fiasco there, you can read about it on Open Salon "No Art At The Met" Nice Writing, Dori Spector