Tag Archives: psychology

The Fixative.

It came in cans.

To any “artist” of the 1970’s who didn’t paint or silkscreen, fixative was an essential tool in every materials kit.

Sprayed across the surface of any graphite, charcoal, Conte crayon, or pastel drawing what otherwise smudged easily at the slightest touch would be rendered impervious.

I can’t recall what toxic cocktail was required to formulate the product – probably a solvent, some silicone and, of course, a drying agent; but, once the potent smell dissipated, each finished piece was sure to be protected from all invaders, both foreign and domestic, and into perpetuity.

Yes. The smell.

During that era, there were plenty of aromatic fumes. Mineral spirits, the chief deterrent to painting for me, was nauseating and, used to clean both paint and silkscreen ink, produced headaches and diarrhea. Permanent markers would be found decades later to cause kidney and liver diseases. Spray paint was probably a neurotoxin. And, the list went on. In order to make something beautiful, artists had to descend into the pit of outgassing poison.

Enter the digital age. Now, the only real known contaminant is blue light, emanating from the screens of any number of painter products. Even the coloration was now ensconced inside the ever increasing sophistication of the all-in-one printer.

But, back in the day, any work of art not incorporating actual paint was produced by hand using concrete, earthen substances and preserved by a single, aerosolized, rattling can of fixative.

I’d made my share of what were called “finished” drawings. Most of these took hours to complete, under the watchful tutelage of college level instructors. Give me a nude human in the middle of the room, and I could stay focused, first for seconds, then minutes, and finally however long it took ’til completion. I was a twenty-something – virginal, naiive, impressionable, and gullible – but, I had no known emotional problems. My ability to concentrate on completing works of art was just driven by what anyone might call selective, heightened desire.

Enter obsessive-compulsion. That would appear, a decade later, after the Swine flu vaccine and its subsequent panel of allergic reactions.

Dad had expressed symptoms of OCD. But, we’d hardly given them a serious nod; his need to check the door lock five or six times, well, that was just Dad, being quirky. Repeated visits to the bathroom mirror to feel and examine his nostrils; again, probably boredom on that one day off from cutting hair at the shop.

I wouldn’t know that OCD could sort of smolder in the first decades, provoked only by stressors. I couldn’t know that life itself would intensify these, in spades.

But, my first serious relationship break up would set a spotlight on obsession like something out of a horror movie. Could I stop circling his block in my car, accelerating faster each revolution, vitals escalating? Pre-ceding email and text, how many letters would I draft and copy and stamp and send? And, well before answering machines, how many times would his phone ring before he’d yank it from the wall?

OCD invades every aspect of interpersonal exchange. Every business arrangement. All social plans. It lies in wait, to sabotage anything worth sustaining.

Lately, instead of ruminating over the more typical repetitious thoughts, I’d been taken to dwelling on the syndrome itself. What caused obsessive compulsion? Were there catalysts? If so, how to intercept them? Perhaps, if confronted, there could be some welcome neutralization?

I’d read a paper, awhile back, and written about it. There were brain chemical deficits, but whence had they arisen? Rather than replace what was missing, why not get at the root cause?

My primary symptom, of recent date, had been fixation. Something, or someone, would captivate my imagination. Accompanied by mild euphoria, I found joy in riding this. But now, as the much older woman, I could recognize that the object of my fixation was neither responsible either for my actions as motivated OR for defining them; in short, the object, including any desirable traits my mind had assigned, was actually secondary. It was the fixation, itself, which both fueled my energy, drove my behavior, and provided the sought after experience. I had become slave to the fixative.

The conventional kind still comes in a can. For sale at any craft store, their supply can be updated anytime.

Fine art restorers likely have a product which unfixes the surfaces of ancient finds. For something that will liberate me, and release whatever is worthy deeply embedded beneath, I’m still waiting.

Here’s hoping it smells like candy.

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Copyright 12/7/24 Ruth Ann Scanzillo. No copying, in part or whole or by translation, permitted without written release by the author, whose name appears above this line. Thank you for writing your own story, instead.

Erie Chamber Orchestra 2015-2016 Season:

Yes.

You’ve never heard of us.

We’re that free orchestra that plays one concert a month, plus a satellite recital series.

Next season: Roman Mekinulov, principal cello/ Buffalo Philharmonic, opens September.

On Halloween night? PSYCHO, the entire film, underscored by, you got it, the ECO – this concert: Warner Theatre.

And….November 21st:  MIDORI.

The most unheard of chamber symphony in the country scores MIDORI.

Stay tuned.

We’ve got Matthew Kraemer, Maestro.

These? These are good hands.

And, we’re in them.

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Gratitude.

Thankfulness.

[Free.]

Ruth Ann Scanzillo

littlebarefeetblog.com

Word Perfect.

December 21, 1997

She thought they could use a good lesson.

The primary teachers had spent the entire morning in the converted music room training to compose a Christmas form letter, wondering if Mary Pat was still sleeping with Bob from software. Carol knew Mary Pat was better in her own mind than she was in bed. Kate was sure Bob was a putz who probably broke those wet sweats. Helen was outraged at sex in the workplace and wondered whether it was hard to breathe near the end. Bob, fighting a bad case of constipation again, knew that today would be his last running training at this site if he didn’t put out later.

Gina kept giving Bob those two-second indirect glances like she used to when they first met; odd how, after the burn-out, the same moment that once jolted his circuitry now produced no current at all. His system was definitely down; would the bathroom be empty by quarter-past? Tiffany flicked the corners of her long, wavy hair off of her shoulders, arched her back, and sat up. Bob leaned in one more time to check Tiffany’s work.

Mary Pat’s feet hurt. Heels were higher now again. At least they kept her a full inch above the word-processing pool. The haircut, however, was a mistake; too much chin, not enough eyebrow. And, Bob was looking at Gina again.

Elisabeth’s eyes faced the terminal. Her gaze followed the picsiles trickling jerkily into a fully-dressed Thanksgiving turkey. Ephemerata. Fruit flies. Nine thousand dollars per year per anum per one hundred fifty thousand electronic blinking impulses shooting randomly across high chaos. Press Delete. Twink. Constellations again, maddening constellations. The illusion of perspective. Neitszche. Voltaire. Was the Liquid Fire draining the tub, or would there be five inches of standing slime for the Caldwells to see when they took their turns on the toilet before piano lessons? Yeltsin ailing; one lone woman breeding greenhouse beds of resistant bacteria; and, it was clear to anyone, Gina watching Bob think about Mary Pat.

Elizabeth looked at Tiffany. Marvel of instinct. Baboons in the wild. Nobel Prize for Oblivion. A dog-eared issue of Mademoiselle sat on top of the Jostens manuals. Elisabeth picked it up. Horoscope by chapter and verse; sex by five-thirty Tuesday except where prohibited by original bone structure or bad hair. Life by periodical. Love by popular demand. Time to learn.

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Tomorrow would be soon enough. Word would come to them all by phone relay in time to cancel the second session. Ignition. Followed by wonder, excitement, anticipation. The quickening fuel. Brief obsessing over what to wear. (Carol: high-heels – higher than Mary Pat’s; Kate: something loose and cool; Helen: best basic black, for the most respected, cleaned and pressed; Gina: the boat-neck navy, Bob’s favorite; Bob: next suit.) Mid-day, before the weekend, would be best; perfect early out. All present and accounted for. Elisabeth sighed, and set the cursor:

“Dearly Beloved……”

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© Ruth Ann Scanzillo

12/21/97

all rights reserved. Selah.