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Alexis Laurent's sculpture "Be A Flaneur"

A Letter from San Francisco:

Last night I went to a party at an art gallery in an industrial space in the Mission District. The gallery was owned by Alexis Laurent, a Frenchman who grew up in the south of France and didn’t decide to be an artist until he was 34. In 2009, at the age of 40, he and his wife and daughter moved to San Francisco where he began to paint and do sculpture.

I didn’t know any of this when I went to the party. In fact, the party wasn’t about Alexis or even about art; it was about food. Canadian food. A group from Calgary had rented out the space from Alexis in order to have a party there showcasing “the best of Calgary cuisine.” But during the party I started walking around the gallery looking at these amazing sculptures. I came around a corner in the warehouse that separated one room from another and there, leaning against a wall, was what looked like a giant chunk of concrete sidewalk, ripped from the street. There was a little medal medallion in the concrete, like you might find indicating a sewer line or a gas line, and dried weeds in the cracks. And there were words in the concrete too. As if someone had taken their finger and dipped it into the still-wet concrete to write their name. Except it wasn’t a name. It was this: “BE A FLANEUR.”

I about went crazy. Do you know what page on my blog gets the most hits? “What’s a flaneur?” Because nobody, evidently, knows what a flaneur is. And here was a giant concrete piece of art with the words “BE A FLANEUR” etched into it. It was amazing to me.

So I asked around until I discovered that Alexis Laurent was actually at the party. After some searching, I finally found him and the two of us spoke. He told me that he came up with the idea for the art piece after seeing those words written in chalk on the sidewalk in front of his daughter’s French school near The Panhandle. And the installation includes his daughter’s ballet shoes at the bottom (look at the bird’s beak). Because kids were always leaving their shoes on the sidewalk with the chalk graffiti. This is the exact same neighborhood I wrote about earlier this week where I found all the abandoned shoes on the sidewalk. So Alexis had noticed the same thing.

I can’t tell you how much I’d love to own this artwork. Even though it probably weighs several tons and costs tens of thousands of dollars (when I asked Alexis how much the piece cost, he wouldn’t even tell me; he probably was just being nice and didn’t want to shock me).

But I’m wondering if there is any way I could get Alexis to make me a smaller version of this sculpture. After all, it was almost exactly four years ago that I told myself to “Be a flaneur.” It’s as if, even without knowing me, Alexis had made the piece specifically for me.

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A Letter from San Francisco:

According to my buddy Mark Orwell, editor of Travel + Leisure, one of my favorite San Francisco bars, The Tonga Room, in the Fairmont Hotel on Nob Hill, may be closing. Mark writes: “Since 1945 the Tonga Room has been a local favorite for its bamboo-heavy Polynesian” decor, dance floor made from an old schooner, rattan furniture, floating bandstand in the room’s “lagoon,” and simulated thunder-and-lightning rainstorms. How many umbrella drinks have been emptied here? How many anniversaries celebrated? How many lonely sailors have met the girl of their dreams, her silhouette cast against the glow of a tiki torch, head swaying to the music of ukuleles and steel guitars? There have been tentative offers to buy the room’s fixtures and relocate it elsewhere. But if that doesn’t happen, it may be time to say aloha to a sentimental slice of Bay Area history.”

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Word on the street in San Francisco.

A Letter from San Francisco:

There’s graffiti everywhere in Los Angeles but it’s usually on the walls (when it’s not scratched into bus windows or sprayed across freeway overpasses). Walking around San Francisco I’ve discovered that much of the graffiti is chalked or etched on the sidewalk. And, for the most part, it’s not the lame gang tags that inflict themselves on the City of Angels but words of wisdom, sarcasm, and poems—sometimes combined. Like this little gem I found down in the Mission District near 24th Street. It’s like you can read it and decide which side of the issue you prefer. Either way, it will make you laugh.

I wonder if anyone has started a blog site to document all the wonderful San Francisco street graffiti? If they haven’t, someone should.

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Bill Bryson and the cheese plate

In the middle of the night, the weather turned. I woke up hearing rain and got up to close the windows. It wasn’t raining hard; just a soft, regular rain. I rather liked it.

I try not to get up in the middle of the night because it’s so difficult to then go back to sleep. I fought it for half an hour or so but it was no use and around three or so I turned on the light next to my bed and read. I’ve been reading Bill Bryson’s new book, At Home: A Short History of Private Life, which is quite good. He uses the old refectory he lives in in eastern England, which was built around 1850, to discourse on everything from the gluttony of 18th-century Englishmen (he records a typical dinner, in 1784, of one country parson: Dover sole in lobster sauce, spring chicken, ox tongue, roast beef, soup, fillet of veal with morrells and truffles, pigeon pie, sweetbreads, green goose and peas, apricot jam, cheesecakes, stewed mushroom, and trifle) to the complicated drudgery of washing clothes (back in the day, before laundry detergents, stale urine was often used to remove stains).

A number of years ago, I had a very brief conversation with Bill Bryson. He called me rather out of the blue to tell me that he’d selected a story I’d written on French cheese to be included in an annual anthology of best American travel stories. At the time I was unfamiliar with who Bill Bryson was and more than a little skeptical of editors who called or wrote wanting to include one story or another in some anthology they were putting together. Of course, the “payment” to be included in these compilations was usually a copy of the book, at best. It wasn’t much of a deal for the authors who were expected to be “honored” to be included.

So when Bryson called me up, I was rather gruff and short on the phone with him, as I recall it. I’m sure he was quite perplexed. It wasn’t until after the book was published that I realized that it really was quite an honor to be included (nonetheless, my “fee” was five copies of the book).

Anyway, I was reading about what gluttons the English were and it made me rather hungry. It’s something books have done to me ever since I was a little kid. I remember reading Robinson Crusoe when I was maybe eight or nine years old and I became quite obsessed about raisins because Defoe talked about them so much. So here I was at three in the morning reading about Dover sole in lobster sauce and cheesecake and I got quite hungry. I started scouring my room. The mini-bar had little bottles of Don Julio tequila and Maker’s Mark bourbon, but that wasn’t exactly what I had in mind. There were also a couple of dark chocolates which had come with turn-down service and I quickly ate those but I was still hungry. Damn those gluttonous Brits. On my desk, still under plastic wrap, was the fruit and cheese plate that had been sent up when I’d checked in. It was looking the little worse for wear but certainly there had to be something still edible on it. I peeled it back and poked a finger at the soft cheese. It had some blue stuff on it, but that was probably normal, right? I spread the cheese on a stale cracker, ate it, then cut a green apple into quarters and ate that as well. Then, because I was thirsty and there wasn’t anything else in the room, I poured myself that Maker’s Mark. And got back into bed.

These are the things you do when you travel alone. You get up at three in the morning and turn on the light and start reading about food which makes you get up and scour your room for a bite to eat and before you know it, you’ve got a bourbon in your hand and cracker crumbs in your bed. After a bit, I turned the light off and tried to go back to sleep. But that wasn’t working out very well. Never mind. In a couple of hours the sun will be up and I can go down for breakfast.

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Go To Sleep or Muscle Ache

In the morning I made myself a coffee from the single-serve Keurig in my room, grabbed the paper outside the door, and climbed back into bed. I’d left the windows open overnight and the sound of the waves and the wind had been both comforting and disturbing. The Santa Anas, cold winds that originate in the north and flow over the Southern California mountains, heating up as they rush down canyons towards the beach so that it’s not unusual to have December temps in the 70s and 80s, were swirling the leaves and sand so that the morning sky looked dirty and fouled.

When I finished the paper I ran myself a bath. I can’t remember the last time I took a bath but it just seemed like the thing to do this morning. The opaque glass shutters on the side of the deep tub opened up on to the room so I could soak while looking out at the palm trees frantically batting their fronds in the wind and see the seagulls careening madly about as they attempted to land on the beach.

In the bathroom was a cabinet stocked with interesting toiletries like Tom’s of Maine Peppermint Toothpaste and cubes of Jane’s Bath Soak Fizzes. One block was called “Go To Sleep” and another “Muscle Ache.” Neither seemed appropriate but I chose the sleeping one because it contained oils of lavender, chamomile, and sage which sounded rather nice. I plopped the bath bomb into the steamy water while it was still running and then made myself another coffee and placed it on the side of the tub next to the turtle-shaped bar of soap and climbed in.

I let the water run until it covered my shoulders and was slopping out of the tub when I slouched down. I thought about what I would do today. I could go downstairs for breakfast but that would involve getting dressed or I could get room service but, frankly, I wasn’t really hungry. There was a plate in my room of grapes and cheese and crackers, under plastic wrap, that had been delivered shortly after I’d checked in and had sat untouched on the desk next to the toy Ferris Wheel. Maybe I’d just have that for breakfast. And with the Santa Anas blowing, there really wasn’t much point in going down to the shore or even walking around the city. Maybe later. For now, I’d just soak in the tub where Jane’s herbal bath bomb continued to fizz somewhere below me and then I’d put on a robe and get back into bed and read South Seas Dream or maybe Poems of the Sea and see how the day progressed. There was no one I needed to see, no place I needed to be, and the day stretched out in front of me like the dark Pacific waters reaching off into the horizon.

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