Jay Myself (2019)
Directed by Stephen
Wilkes
Mind Hive Films, 79
minutes, Not-rated (language)
★★★★
When I was in high school, I went to New York City on my senior
class trip. I recall that we took a Grey Line bus tour of Gotham’s highlights. Though
I didn’t think much about it at the time, one of the “sights” was a trip
through the Bowery where, from the comfort of our seats, we gawked at winos,
drunks, and junkies passed out on slabs of cardboard. Yeah–that was pretty
pathetic in retrospect.
I wish that the bus had swung by the old Germania Bank. It
would have been neat to see what photographer Jay Maisel (b. 1931) was in the
process of doing. In 1966, Maisel bought the building for just $102,000–all six
floors of it. For the next 50 years the 72-room, 35,000 square foot fading Bowery
rockpile was Maisel’s home, gallery, studio, and warehouse. By 2014, it cost
over $300,000 per year to maintain his domain (repairs, utilities, taxes,
salaries, etc.) hence Maisel sold it for a staggering $55 million. He quips that
in the years he lived in the bank he had no money but lived as if he did, and
now he has money and lives as if he doesn’t.
Stephen Wilkes’s directorial debut sheds light on Maisel,
his work, and his move to a 10,000 square foot studio/home in Brooklyn. It is
said that there is no eccentric like a British eccentric. That may be true, but
crusty New Yorkers can give them a run for their money. Maisel is cut from Jimmy
Breslin/Pete Hamill cloth. Salty language is Maisel’s everyday discourse and
he’s seldom seen without a cigar clinched in his teeth. His images not
withstanding, some of the documentary’s most stunning frames are of Maisel
sitting in shadow lighting a stogie, his face going from dark to light to
dark–warm orange glows fading to black and back again.
This is appropriate for a film about Jay Maisel. Although
his most famous shot is probably a black and white image of Miles Davis blowing
his horn as if there was no tomorrow, in my estimation Masiel’s most striking
images are those bathed in vivid colors. He has an eye for strong contrast–saturated
yellow bleeding into rich orange, a blue pants-clad figure dragging a rope past
a deep red wall, and hot reds and cool blues as backdrops for silhouetted
figures. Gray Line presented the Bowery as hellishly exotic, but it was Maisel’s
playground. Although he did commission work around the globe, many of Maisel’s
images were taken in his neighborhood. He spent time on the street but also on
the rooftop where he produced bird’s eye perspectives of the street and people.
Today, skid row is giving way to investors and hipsters. Maisel’s images are a Bowery
documentary in their own right, which gives Wilkes’s documentary a meta tint.
Numerous professional photographers appear on the screen to
talk about why Maisel is an acknowledged master of our time, but Greg Heisler
summed it best when he said that Maisel’s work is about “the joy of seeing.”
Maisel underscores this by picking up an object or peering out the window and
rhetorically asking, “How can anyone not
see that?” Well… most don’t and that’s what makes Maisel’s work special.
Wilkes was once one of Maisel’s interns and the two have
genuine affection for each other. This peeks through the veneer of detachment
that both men try to exude. In Maisel’s case, it’s a New Yorker’s affection made
manifest by a pulled punch not a landed one, and a bemused hint of a smile when
he answers a question that first induces a few swears. Here’s the other thing
about Maisel: his bank building was choked full–and I mean full–of found objects, scavenged junk, scraps, and castoff building
materials–that caught his eye for reasons not even he can always articulate.
One is tempted to think “hoarder” when suddenly he picks up a pane of wavy
green-tinted glass and holds it against another object. Snap! A great photo.
Imagine emptying 35,000 square feet of clutter, building
material, props, photo lights, printers, and untold numbers of framed images.
It took 35 trucks to haul it away, with Maisel lording over the decision of
what to pitch, what to store, and what to move. That process was sometimes
surreal. He tosses a wall full of unopened Kodak film, yet hastily assembles
old VHS cases into a pattern, declares, “There’s a photo,” and tells the crew
the cardboard cases must be saved.
Maisel’s wife and daughter also appear in the film. One is
tempted to nominate each for sainthood until we realize they are quite capable
of taking care of themselves. It might be fun living with such an offbeat
genius, but Maisel is also such a contrarian that I longed for a bit more
exploration of his tics and orneriness and less on the contrivance of whether
or not he will make his moving deadline. At 79 minutes, though, Jay Myself gives us just enough to
appreciate the subject without making us reach for a cudgel. Maisel poses the
question of what do we prefer: a photograph or photographing. For Maisel it’s
the act of shooting which, for him, is a form of New York Zen: moments in which
the world and its problems briefly disappear. The film skirts the edge of
hagiography, but viewing it will alter how you see.
Rob Weir
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