On
The 500th Anniversary Of The Passing Of Great Painter Hieronymus Borsch
Josh
Breslin comment:
Back
in the day, back in the later part of the 1960s day when guys like Peter Markin,
Sam Lowell, Jimmy Jenkins, Frankie Riley and a few other guys whom I don’t remember
headed west to see what was happening in California, what the fuss was all
about we were crazy for reproductions of Hieronymus Borsch’s intricate, highly
symbolic and to our eyes weird paintings. Now we were all corner boys from
North Adamsville who could have under other circumstances given a rat’s ass
about art, paintings, or painters. Would have passed on such weirdness.
Except
in the wild world of the 1960s when anything was possible, for a while anyway
before the tide ebbed and we had to fight a rear-guard action that we are still
fighting to this day, we had through Markin who had headed out there first wound
up on Captain Crunch’s merry –prankster-like yellow brick road bus which travelled
up and down the West Coast for a few years searching, well, searching for something,
for that good night or dreamland. And along that well-travelled road we all had
as many drug experiences from pot (marijuana) to LSD, mescaline and peyote buttons as any other travelling members
of 1960s “youth nation.”
Well,
you may ask how does the bus, the drugs, the fuss of the 1960s, fit in with a
1500s masterful mad daddy painter of exotic panels and scenes. Here is where it
fits, okay. Captain Crunch had a girlfriend, Susan Stein, road moniker Mustang
Sally, who had graduated from Michigan in 1960 as an art major. She had prior
to our time festooned the yellow brick road bus with several prints by Borsch.
And we, all of us who travelled on that wicked highway, would when high, very high
late at night would talk endlessly about what we “saw” in Brother Borsch’s
paintings. And I for one hope they will be doing it when the 600th anniversary
of the mad monk’s death rolls around. Hats off!
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