upper waypoint

Sandman

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

During the lowest of tides, Jim Denevan will find a piece of driftwood on a beach and use it to carve out gigantic images of perfect, massive spirals, each hundreds of feet across. After six hours of labor, the drawing is finished but within minutes, it will be reclaimed by the rising tide, leaving barely a trace. With their huge scale and gossamer life span, the drawings may seem illogical, insignificant, or even impractical. However, one glimpse of the drawings and the spectator's notion of time, mortality, as well as art and its meaning, will change. Jim's life has been marked by tragedy: the loss of his father when he was just five years old; three of his eight siblings falling to schizophrenia; his mathematician mother becoming demented from Alzheimer's; the death of two brothers. Irrevocable changes. How does one deal with such absolutes?

After years of this Sisyphian task, Jim has realized that permanence is a delusion to which people retreat in order to occlude our inevitable mortality. Living in fear of death proves unnatural to Jim. "Change is beautiful. I don't want to lie by making something permanent." This acceptance of impermanence has allowed Jim to understand his tumultuous childhood, but isn't evident when it comes to the relationship with his son. Jim's son Brighton is the only tangible reward Jim has received in his irrational life, and he fights the thought that his son may eventually want a life of his own. So he does whatever he can to preserve their moments together. Every night Jim writes stories, as many as Brighton wishes, to prolong the minutes before he falls asleep.

But perhaps one day, Jim will realize that whatever happens between him and Brighton will be acceptable, not unlike the problems of his childhood, his relationship with his mother, and the demise of his artistic efforts on the beach. When he walks onto the sand to begin a drawing, he sees that "... a season has returned. It shows a new time. It shows that time has passed. It shows that I'm still around and everything is okay."

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
The Bay Area’s Great American Diner Is a 24-Hour Filipino Casino RestaurantTicket Alert: Billie Eilish at San Jose’s SAP Center in December5 New Mysteries and Thrillers for Your Nightstand This SpringNetflix’s ‘Baby Reindeer’: A Dark, Haunting Story Bungles its Depiction of QueernessThe New UC Berkeley Falcon Chicks Are Running Their Parents RaggedBon Jovi Docuseries ‘Thank You, Goodnight’ Is an Argument for RespectIs Bay Area Ballroom Doing Fashion Better Than Everyone Else?A New Bay Area Food Festival Celebrates Chefs of Color and Diasporic UnitySFMOMA Workers Urge the Museum to Support Palestinians in an Open LetterEast Bay Street Photographers Want You to Take ‘Notice’