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Martin
Seay
Jim
Simmerman
Bob
Hicok
Alice
Friman
Albert
Goldbarth
G.
K. Wuori
S.
Gruen
John
Brehm
David
Kirby
Lesley
Quinn
Christine
Garren
Natasha
Sajé
Roy
Jacobstein
Rebecca
McClanahan

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Martin Seay
Grand Tour
A great number of
us never thought in ourselves why we went, but a certaine
tickling humour to do
as other men had done.
Philip Sidney
A woman must continually
watch herself.
John Berger
Hell talk to the girl in the orange knit cap, standing by the
Veronese. He wont look at her at first. Hell flip to a fresh
page in his sketchbook, hell glide across the roomhis eyes
fixed on the painting, drifting close to her, but not too closeand
after a moment, hell begin to draw.
Hell pick a small detail from the tableau:
Titians hand on the neck of a bass viol, the toothpick pinched
in the plump fingers of the Marchesa di Pescara, or maybe the glum little
dog perched atop the banquet table. The girl will be standing nearby,
watching his sketch take shape. After a minute or solong enough
to get the rough outlines down, so shell be able to see what hes
doinghell look up at her, and hell smile with his
eyes.
At that point, if he has to, hell say
something. Nothing clever; probably nothing more than hello. Something
to break the iceand to let her know that hes an American
too, if she hasnt already figured that out. Shell talk to
him then. In fact, this time he doubts itll be necessary for him
to say anything at all.
Shes been watching him already. He didnt
notice her walk into the Salle des Etats; hed been absorbed in
Correggios Antiope, a sketch hes been doing on and
off now for three months, when he felt eyes on him. He turned around,
and there she was, still flushed from the cold outside, staring into
the expanse of the Veronese, her head cocked, her lips slightly parted,
her expression vaguely stunned, like shed just fallen out of the
painting, like The Wedding Feast at Cana was suddenly short one
doe-eyed twenty-year-old in an orange knit cap.
Hell ask her where shes from. New
England, he guesses. Connecticut. Shell be a student, from NYU
or Smith or Sarah Lawrence, here on spring break. Or, more likely, shes
studying abroad, in the UK or Italy or Germany, and shes traveling
between terms. Or maybe this trip is her graduation gift, her first
and last chance to put her art history degree to use before she heads
off to law school, or to a job at a Barnes & Noble. Maybe not art
history, he thinks. Maybe literature. Renaissance poetry. She looks
the type.
The specifics arent important. Whats
important is that shes traveling alone, and that she wont
be staying in Paris very long.
Shes not unattractive, although not gorgeous,
either, by any conventional standard. Her face is wide, her mouth large
and slightly crooked. Shes still too bundled up to tell anything
about the shape of her body. Theres something about her, though,
something in the way shes standing. An appealing awkwardness.
A jumbled quality, like shes assembled from parts that dont
quite match. Something in her face, too. Not anxiety or fear, exactly.
Anticipation. Excitement about whats going to happen next.
Hell tell her a little about himself as
he works on the sketch, sticking to the official story, the simplest
available version of the truth. Hes from Fort Lauderdale; he graduated
not long ago from art school in Savannah, and now hes spending
a year as a special student at the École Des Beaux-Arts before
he returns to the States for his MFA. Thats really all shell
want to know. It wont do either of them any good, for instance,
if he mentions that he hasnt shown his face in the École
for nearly six weeks, or that hed be unwelcome if he did. Negative
space is the key to any successful composition: you have to know what
to leave out.
Theyll chat for awhile, long enough for
her to get comfortable. Shell tell him about where shes
been, where shes planning to go, what she thinks of Paris so far.
Hell make some easy gibes at the Parisians fussiness and
self-importance, and also at the bleating crowd of tourists behind them,
elbowing each other for a glimpse of La Joconde. If hes
lucky, shell be smart; shell know things. Shell have
a sense of humor and appreciate irony. This will make things much better.
Im on my Grand Tour, she might say. Ive come to
Europe to complete my education.
Yes, hell say. Me too.
Eventually, the moment of crisis. Shell
exhaust her scripted small talk. Then shell notice that hes
stopped sketching. Her eyes will drop to the floor, flit across the
herringbone parquet. Maybe shell even bite her lip. He can picture
it.
Hell make it easy for her. The museums
too big to tour in an afternoon, hell tell her. What did you most
want to see?
Shell shift her weight, take a moment
to come up with a good answer. The Vermeers, probably. Maybe the Reubenses.
The Winged Victory. The Napoléon III apartments. The Rembrandts.
The Venus de Milo.
I can show you where that is, hell say.
Hes not bad looking, really, and he can be reasonably charmingbut
he doesnt flatter himself by thinking that his capacity to attract
these girls comes from any quality that he himself possesses. Its
a function of circumstances, and during the months hes lived here,
hes learned how to turn circumstance to his advantage.
It didnt take him long to figure out how
to spot American tourists in the crowds, and thats where he focuses
his attentions. He and Paris have worked out a kind of Scylla-and-Charybdis
routine: the Parisians are reliably brusque to and disdainful of their
American visitors, and the Americans wander the city lost and hungry,
afraid to ask directions or to enter a restaurant for fear of offending
someone, not quite understanding that their offense consists in their
being here in the first place. Its confusion and frustration more
than any genuine interest in art and antiquities that brings them here.
As he himself discovered soon after his arrival, the Louvre is one of
the few places in Paris where one can reliably seek refuge from Parisians.
Therefore the girls he approaches in the halls
of the museum cant help but be positively disposed toward him.
Here is a fellow American who speaks some French and who knows the city,
who can recommend safe and friendly hotels, who can show them around
the métro, who can pilot them through the treacherous straits
of restaurant dining. At the Smithsonian or the Met or the Art Institute
of Chicago, these girls would take great pains to ignore him; in Paris,
he is a kind of hero, a savior.
Their relief is admittedly a fair remove from
erotic interest, but its a foot in the door, and under the circumstances
hell take what he can get.
Of course theres always that bad moment
a few minutes into the conversation, when their eyes drop to the floor,
and they weigh their reluctance to trust him against their reluctance
to face the city alonebut as often as not, with a little careful
handling on his part, theyll wind up placing themselves in his
care. And if it gets past that point, theyll generally wind up
sleeping with him.
After all, isnt it already there, in the
backs of their minds, reinforced by who knows how many films and novels
and shampoo advertisements? Whether she wants to admit it or not, no
American woman visits Paris without fantasizing at least momentarily
about some sort of impromptu dalliance. Even if she dismisses the thought
as ridiculous, silly, a manufactured fantasy, its still in there
somewhere; it hasnt gone away. How could he help but take advantage
of this predisposition? This, for him, is the real beauty of Paris:
its simultaneously the carrot and the stick. From time to time
hes tried to broaden his scope beyond his own countrywomen, but
its never worked out as he intended. German and British girls
will hardly talk to him. Canadians and Italians and Israelis never take
him seriously. Japanese girls make him nervous. Hes met a couple
of Australians who were receptive, and a Dutch girl who actually went
back to his apartment, but he could never shake the suspicion that these
girls motives were even more corrupt than his own, and the encounters
left him depressed and unsatisfied.
Hes never once considered approaching
a Parisian girl. He watches them in small groups on the métro,
often no older than fifteen or sixteen, headed out to the clubs just
as hes going home for the night. He hides behind his sketchpad
and peeks out at them: beautiful, bored, terrifying.
The more time he spends in Paris, the better
he comes to know the city, the less he likes to leave the museums. Anyway,
its not like theres any shortage of American girls at the
Louvre.
By this point in the afternoon, shell probably be starving.
Most of the restaurants in the First Arrondissement are either cafés
to which shed have to budget a couple of hours or American fast-food
chains she wouldnt be caught dead walking into; consequently she
probably hasnt eaten since this morning. Hell take her to
Café Marly in the Richelieu Wing, where theyll buy coffee
and sandwiches, and shell tell him a little more about herself.
Shell be enchanted with Paris, now that
she has a reliable guide. Her visit has been the fulfillment of a childhood
dreamand also a chance to explore her longstanding academic interest
in art history, or possibly Renaissance poetry. After all, shell
say, it was Sir Philip Sidney, wasnt it, who first popularized
the idea of the Grand Tour?
Yes, hell say. I believe it was.
Shes on her own now, but she probably
isnt traveling alone. Shell be here because she got a cheap
flight into De Gaulle, and shell be off to meet friends in Venice
or Vienna or Prague in another day or so. Or maybe her friends will
be meeting her hereor maybe shes already visited them, and
now shes on her way back to wherever she came from. In any event,
as long as shes going to be alone in Paris tonight, hell
be happy. If shes leaving town tomorrow, hell be even happier.
After his first few clumsy attempts in the
museum, it occurred to him that he might improve his chances by approaching
American girls traveling in pairs. After all, he reasoned, theyll
feel more secure in responding to his advances when theyre not
alone and vulnerable. His insight, he discovered, was essentially correct,
but too simplistic: these girls were happy to be shown around town,
comfortable with being openly flirtatious, even willing to accept his
hospitality by spending a night in his apartment. But when it came down
to the act itself, the presence of the other girl always spoiled everything.
Sometimes it was due to jealousy: neither girl was willing to risk angering
her companion by abandoning her for a fling with some expat artist.
Or it was concern for what the other girl would think, and for what
shed tell mutual friends back in the States later, when her back
was turned. Either way, these encounters always ended in frustration.
The few instances when he did achieve some measure of success were highly
unsatisfactory, prompted by humiliating desperation, and ultimately
not worth the trouble. He recalls them now with discomfort: hurried
couplings on his chirping mattress, accomplished while the girls
companions were showering down the hall, or curled on his apartment
floor, clenching their teeth, pretending to be asleep.
At one particularly low point, he approached
a girl from Birmingham who was touring the Louvre with her boyfriend.
He did it by accident, of course. The girl and the boyfriend had been
quarreling, and the boyfriend had stalked off somewhere to cool his
head, leaving her alone in the Marly Courtyard. Her immediate receptivity
should have tipped him off that something was wrong, but she was unusually
attractive, so he persisted, and by the time the boyfriend returned
from his sulk, hed already agreed to lead them to Notre Dame,
to guide them through the métro, and to help them find a good
restaurant in Montmarte near Sacré Coeur.
He spent the next five hours maneuvering them
through streets and tunnels and ancient basilicas while they whined
and sniped at each another about the stupidest things imaginable. On
any number of occasions, he easily could have excused himself, could
have blended into the crowd and lost them, but he didnt, and at
the conclusion of his travails, the girl from Birmingham wound up fellating
him on a wooden bench in the Square du Vert Galant below the Pont Neuf
as the lights winked on along the Seine and the boyfriend stomped about
somewhere high above, looking for a Thomas Cook.
When it was done, he took the métro back
to the Place Monge and walked to his apartment and tore off his clothes
and sat naked on the floor in the cold. In the soft blue light bleeding
through the open window, he stared shivering at the pile of used-up
sketchbooks in one corner, and at the stretched, primed, blank canvases
leaning against the wall by the window, and at his abused and sagging
bed in the middle of the room. He sat for a long time, thinking about
what his life had become, until he found himself unable to think of
anything at all. Then he sat and stared and thought of nothing, until
eventually he grew tired and went to sleep.
But those were unusual circumstances. In the
morning, he rose and dressed and returned to the museum.
Theres an inexpensive brasserie on the Rue Des Écoles
where the staff knows him,
where theyll let him speak French, and hell take her there.
The waiters will seat them near the back, theyll smile conspiratorially
from across the room, and theyll murmur amongst themselves between
courses. Non, ce nest pas la même fille. Ce nest
jamais la même fille.
If shes a vegetarian, he knows a decent
Indian place on the Avenue Des Gobelins.
But he hopes shes not a vegetarian.
By now, making conversation wont be any
problem. Shell be so starved for the sounds of spoken English,
for the feel of it on her tongue, that he wont have to do much
aside from listen as she holds forth about her hometown, her career
plans, her passion for art history or Renaissance poetry. Hell
pour more Beaujolais and nod as she talks about the travels of young
Philip Sidney, about how he fled from Paris during the massacre on St.
Bartholomews Day, escaping to be fêted in Vienna and Venice
and Prague, while back in France Henri de Navarre made his conversion
at the tip of a sword, and the corridors of the Louvre were splashed
with blood.
Paris is not always hospitable, hell say.
But in Venice, shell remind him
with a sly smile, Sidney sat for his portrait by Veronese.
Shell say this in order to recall the
moment they met. They were both looking at the painting: it is what
they have in common. Perhaps, while she speaks, shell allow her
leg to brush lightly against his own. He will not discourage this.
It is in fact unlikely that she will say any
of these things.
If shes checked into a hotel, hell
walk her back there and invite himself up. If shes in a hostel,
or if she hasnt yet gotten around to finding a room, hell
take her back to his place, a little apartment on the Rue Des Patriarches,
a block east of the Rue Monge. Hell guide her to the squealing
iron gate, the dim vestibule, the cramped and rattling elevator. Itll
be cold, the sun will be down, shell be tired and a little drunk,
and things will progress rapidly. No assurances will be necessary at
this point. No convincing. The artist affirms nothing, Sir Philip Sidney
wrote, and therefore never lies.
Its not the sex itself that interests
him so much as the revelatory aspect of the encounter, the gradual unfurling,
the sense of exploration and discovery. This tipsy American girl, about
whom he knows nothing, who knows nothing about him, displaying herself
for him in a tiny room: its a kind of magic, somehow strangely
pure.
Be that as it may, they will certainly have
sex. It will be awkward or effortless, rushed or slow, inventive or
rote, frantic or desperate or transcendent or sordid. His expectations
in this area are mundane and easily gratified.
Afterward, hell want to talk. Hell
tell her about other cities hes visited, other museums hes
seen: the Tate in London, the Prado in Madrid, the Uffizi in Florence,
the Accademia in Venice. Maybe hell look back to this moment in
the Salle Des Etats, imagine her standing here in front of The Wedding
Feast at Cana, and talk about another Veronese painting, his Last
Supper: how it was deemed vulgar and unacceptable by the Inquisition,
and how, rather than altering a single detail, Veronese simply circumvented
these objections by changing the title to The Feast in the House
of Levi. As he gets older, he appreciates this trick more and more.
When something doesnt meet expectations, just call it something
else.
Maybe shell already know this story. Maybe,
by the time hes told it, shell already be asleep.
Hell probably sketch herbefore, as a kind of foreplay,
or afterward, or the next morning, or even while she sleeps. Maybe hell
do a quick sketch of her whole body; more likely, hell focus on
something specific: her feet, her neck and collarbones, the muscles
in her shoulders and between her scapulae, her fingers at rest in the
hollow below her ribs. The sketch will be on the same page as the detail
from The Wedding Feast at Cana that he used to attract her attention
in the first place. There is a pleasing symmetry in this, hell
think.
The next morning, hell take her to a pâtisserie
on the Rue Lacépède and feed her breakfast, and hell
show her how to get where shes going, or where to meet the people
shes supposed to meet. Shell be somewhat withdrawn; things
wont be going quite as shed anticipated. Shell blame
herself for thisher own stupid expectations. Stupid, shell
think. So so stupid.
Shell ask him for his address here, or
for his address in the States. This isnt something I do casually,
shell say. Hell give her a defunct Hotmail address, hell
take her hand, and hell wish her well. It has been a great pleasure,
hell say. I hope we meet again.
Some months from now, back here in the museum, hell flip open
his sketchbook, and his eyes will come to rest on the drawing of her.
Hell sit on a bench and linger over it, trying to remember whom
it depicts, and the circumstances under which it was drawn.
Hell try to place it in temporal contextto
infer something from its placement next to the pinched fingers of the
Marchesa di Pescara, a few pages down from the parted lips and elevated
chin of Correggios wanton Antiopebut these familiar images
will betray nothing, silently closing ranks with the stranger in their
midst. Recalling the motion of his hand across the paper, hell
shift his attention from the images themselves to the charcoal marks
that constitute them, and then to the mute white regions between those
marks, interrupted here and there by his own sooty fingerprints.
After a few minutes, hell look up at the
gilt frames that crowd the walls, hell scan the steady lifeless
eyes there, and hell feel the soft vertiginous plunge of his own
vanishing. Hell close the book, hell rise from the bench,
and hell rejoin the procession of tourists. Hell drift ghostlike
down the wide warm corridors, his hungry eyes sifting the crowd.
MARTIN SEAY holds an MFA from Queens University of Charlotte and was
a 2005-06 fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. Originally
from Texas, he lives in Tacoma, Washington.
Grand Tour appears in our Summer
2007 issue.
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