The
district of Jeźyce, in Poznan, Poland, is crammed with art nouveau
architecture. Each building is different, each façade an original
work of art. In Slowackiego there's the old cinema where concerts are
now occasionally performed. Further on there's a school with the
figure of the Archangel Michael built into the walls, taken from the
old fortifications when they were demolished, and given a new home
here high up on the brick wall.
Old cinema |
Further
on there is Staszica, a wide street which used to be lined with trees
– according to J, who grew up in this district – but now only has
a few. Almost all of these once grand buildings, architectural
aristocrats, are now down at heel, their grandeur faded, relics of a
past era of almost century ago, a way of life barely imaginable to
us now. Yet there are echoes of this pre-war era, in almost every
courtyard we go into, the past flickering alongside the near
emptiness and silence of the present. The vast wooden doors, through
which horse drawn carriages must once have passed, hooves clacking on
the cobblestones.
Beyond
the heavy wooden outer doors are courtyards where there used to be
gardens and fruit trees but nowadays the garden areas are used to
park cars, or are made into garages or have simply been left
untended, a mixture of worn earth and gravel, patches of weeds. We
push open these massive doors, designed it would seem to keep out the
front runners of an army fully equipped with heavy spears and
battering rams – for of course I am thinking of an ancient army,
modern ones would calmly toss a grenade though even that might
backfire in the face of such resistant solidity – and go through
into the courtyards. Some of them have a bare, scant and neglected
look to them – gravel, some empty bottles lying around, clumps of
grass. Others still have the occasional fruit tree growing there, and
have been brightened with murals. J says that this project was a
government scheme to get the community involved in smartening up the
courtyards, giving them attention and care.
mural - the cafe |
One
of these murals shows people sitting at café tables, reading
newspapers. Through the first entrance door and the first courtyard
there is another archway, this one with ivy drifting across it, a few
fronds hanging down, hinting at the effect of a bower. Beyond this
archway is the next courtyard or garden, and the mural is painted on
the back wall. The paintings are in black and white, and the café
customers are not modern people, you can tell by their clothes, and
by the café chairs and tables, reminiscent of the thirties or even
earlier. I imagine that the theme of the murals was deliberately set
as an aspect of the past, so that their memories will be preserved.
In
another courtyard a small area has been returned to a garden, with
tended plants and flowers in among stones and rocks, and a bench in
front of it. Behind this rock and herb garden there's a mural, again
in black and white. It depicts a handful of children who seem to be
watching one girl who is standing in front of something.
I
don't know what it is they are looking at says J, and I look more
closely. It has what looks like an iron framework, and rollers
within the framework and the girl is holding something that looks
like a piece of cloth which is attached to the rollers. There's a
large handle for turning, at the side. It's a mangle I say, to help
dry clothes. The wet laundry is put between the rollers, the handle
is cranked, and the water is squeezed out of the clothes, as they
pass between the rollers. I explain this to J who has never seen or
heard of such a thing!
ceiling decorations |
Our
final visit is to an old apartment block whose outer doors stand
ajar. This one does not lead through to a courtyard but has a hallway
with the remains of painted decorations still visible on the ceiling.
The wide staircase is all made of wood, the banisters, and the steps.
They look as though no-one has walked up here in a long time. Silence
hangs over the whole building, as if time has grown thick here,
congealed into a mixture of dust and crumbled plaster, damp with the
passage of old emotions, worn into the wooden steps.
At
the top of the first flight of steps there is a doorway, next to a
window with small grimy panes, some of them still with the delicate
decorations of the original panes. Much of the paintwork on this door
has peeled away leaving distorted curling patterns that talk of
absence, neglect, misfortune even, frayed bonds between persons and
buildings for who knows what reasons, but the past century has
supplied many, wars and conflicts, shifting national boundaries,
displacement and exile, flight and loss. Outside the door stand two
old wooden cupboards and a rolled-up carpet leaning against them. The
atmosphere is of abject and desolate abandonment.
renovation |
But
the buildings are gradually being renovated and the newly painted
outer doors preen themselves like bright birds alongside their more
dowdy neighbours. These new ones are fitted with locks and entryphone
systems so we cannot see inside them. But one of them is ajar and I
push it open, to reveal the gleam of half lit tiles, and the walls
lingering in shadow, the kind of secrets that are kept hidden out of
some inner joy so deeply felt that even in silence they throw beams
of light, emanations of wishes and desires that spilled over into
tiles and walls, into plants and light, into paintwork and
carvings. Suggestions multiply like echoes, like music in a vaulted
building. I pull the door to, carrying the echo of these images with
me. One day the abandoned building may also look something like
this, its wooden steps polished, its doorway repainted, its ceiling
shiny with opulence, a bicycle maybe, propped against an upper
balcony.
Comments
Safe journey home,
Rubyxx
yesterday was lovely, wasnt it. glad you got out in the garden, i was sitting in George Sq Gdns for a while. leaning up against one of the stones for Winifred Rushforth's memorial, did a wee sketch and thought of you sitting in your garden with your hat on... xx