
The final run into Los Angeles Union Station on the Amtrak Surfliner from San Diego is along the LA River. The River is pinned into a wide concrete channel with steeply sloping sides. Unless there is a storm, the water flow is confined to a narrow stream in the middle of the channel, leaving a broad flat concrete expanse on either side. The sloping sides that rise from this, like every other broad surface in the city, are a canvas for graffiti artists and taggers, whose distinctive curly flourishes or brightly colored block letters can sweep from top to bottom.
On my ride this week on the train, it took me a minute to take in the suddenly monochromatic appearance of the channel before I realized that "they" had painted over the tags. It must have been a monstrously big job, covering all the huge tags with pale gray paint--and since no new tags have bloomed, it must have been very recent. In some places the entire wall of the channel from top to bottom is painted; in others, little squares and boxes checkerboard the concrete. Combined with a recent rain that washed trash away, and the whole thing seems oddly clean and bright, reflecting the winter light of the low sun.

Untidy as most of us are, we still crave order and cleanliness. Whoever laid out his clothes so neatly on the side of the LA River made a statement about that. Still, someone washing his clothes with a rock in the middle of a city river -- that's not something we should see in the heart a modern Superpower nation. I feel hopeless and helpless and voyeuristic on the train, as powerless as I feel watching puffed up Congressmen spouting nonsense on the evening news.
2 comments:
OMG! Kayakers!
This is a wonderful, pensive post. Thank you IT.
Yeah, I thought that was pretty funny...all sorts of things by the river.
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