How to Reclaim Your Skin without Settling for a Menu
Identity & Ownership
How to Reclaim Your Skin without Settling for a Menu
A meditation on specificity, artificial scarcity, and the radical act of choosing the blank page over the flash sheet.
The Ghost of the Mary-Anne
In the autumn of , a merchant seaman named Silas walked into a damp cellar in New York’s Chatham Square with a very specific image of the Mary-Anne etched into his mind. He wanted the rigging to look exactly as it did during the storm of ’88, but the man behind the counter, Samuel O’Reilly, was newly flush with the success of his electric rotary patent and had little patience for the whims of a single sailor.
O’Reilly pointed to a wood-framed board on the wall where rows of anchors, eagles, and generic clipper ships sat in stoic, ink-heavy formation. Silas looked at the drawings, then at his own weathered forearm, realizing that the Mary-Anne was being replaced by a ghost of every ship that had ever sailed: a sacrifice of his own memory for the sake of the artist’s speed. Silas chose the third ship from the left because it was the closest approximation of his life, even though it wasn’t his life at all.
A Tesla Model 3, a pair of Lululemon Align leggings, and a venti oat-milk latte sat metaphorically in the lobby as Marta stood at the counter of a busy Porto studio,
How to Reclaim Your Skin without Settling for a Menu Read More »