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"The Fire of 1989"


This instance will be referenced in various places around the site, usually regarding artwork that is damaged or lost.

Here is the story behind it all:

My best friend from Alabama and I decided to move to Rockford --she had a job offer, I wanted the hell away from my family-- and so in May of 1989, we packed what crap we had (along with my cat Miaous, photos of whom will be eventually posted on this site) and moved into a very old and crappy apartment in the heart of downtown Rockford, on 7th Street.

The place had been built in 1902 as business offices, and the first floor was still a clothing store --the owner was our landlord. There were two floors above that, and we were way up on the third. With the 12-foot ceilings on each floor, we were as high up as a modern fifth floor. There were three apartments per floor, and each one was oddly pieced together. Our place had likely been converted from three different offices --we had three outer doors (two were nailed shut) and there were actually windows looking into the hallway (frosted glass, fortunately) that once had business names on them. There were bare light bulbs hanging down on long wires, a single tiny closet (we had to put clothing racks in a back room), and a stove that was literally made in the 1920's (the oven didn't work and replacement parts didn't exist). There was no insulation or air conditioning, and barely functional radiators (there was one heat controller per floor, and it was in someone else's apartment), so of course we spent the summer frying and the late fall freezing. And neither of us was making much money so moving was rather moot point, especially since the rent was pretty cheap.

The only piece of luck we had was that the store directly across the road was owned by the Nielsen's (parents of Rick), and my roomie became quite close to them. We ran into Rick now and again, which was massively cool. I drew and wrote like mad during the time we lived there, and a large part was artwork for Cheap Trick.

But the building was, as you know, very old and had shoddy wiring and no alarm system or sprinklers and you see where this is heading...

On November 30th, 1989, at approximately 2pm, I woke up from a strange dream (about gods and priestesses burning herbs on a hillside over a cave, rather prophetic of me...) because of a phone call that turned out to be nothing -- no sound, no tone, nothing (I still believe it was the fates at work, waking me up). I decided it was useless to return to sleep as I had to be at work in a couple hours anyway. While in the bathroom I thought I smelled smoke, so I went into the hallway and looked around. There was a railed opening between the second and third floors, with a skylight up above it all. And there was indeed smoke in the air. I looked down, and saw the windows of the back apartment on floor two was filled with smoke.

I panicked and began screaming "FIRE!" as loudly as I could. I ran back into my place, dialed 911... and got a recorded message saying that "911 was not yet available in the area" (I am not kidding, it wasn't implemented until several years later). After laughing hysterically, I dialed 0 for an operator, gave the info and prepared to run.

I grabbed my cat, shoved her in her carrier, and ran down the stairs to the second floor which was already filling with smoke. The stairs down to the street were completely filled. I had no choice but take a deep breath, get on my ass, and scoot down the steps one by one (or sometimes two or three, which left my hip bruised as hell and Miaous banged up in her carrier). But I stumbled out onto the snowy sidewalk virtually into a fireman's arms, and was taken across the road to the Nielsens' shop. I didn't realise 'til then that I'd gone out without coat, socks or shoes.

From their shop, I watched water shooting into my windows, and I could see pictures I'd drawn get blasted off the walls. The store on the first floor had mannequins in the window, and they were melting like wax. Then the store window exploded, and you could actually feel the heat from across the road while still indoors. It was very impressive. And I fainted, as much from shock as prior smoke inhalation. The Nielsens promised to handle Miaous, and I was hauled to the ER. The whole thing made the front page of the paper, full colour. My cat and I got a brief mention, as well as a statement from a neighbour who'd been asleep and was awakened by my screams -- he'd had to jump onto the roof of the next building to escape. I still have the article somewhere.

The weeks after this are too garbled and infuriating to detail right now. Suffice it to say, the place we moved to was just as crappy --a dank basement with one warped window looking into a hole into the ground, and, unbelievably, the same landlord (he'd felt a bit guilty, and we'd already paid the next month's rent). Neither my roomie nor I was able to function enough to work for nearly a year, so we were on welfare, food stamps, etc., and in therapy as well --PTSD mixed with bipolarity (both of us, btw) isn't a happy cocktail.

During those first long weeks, I pined deeply for my lost artwork. It was many years of work, years of love and labour and expression. All gone. But as fate would have it... the building still stood. Condemned of course, and considered extremely unsafe, especially the upper floors.

And then I dreamed again, of a ladder reaching up to the top of the building and a man in white climbing it to go inside. I awoke with a passion. Unsafe or not, I didn't give a flying fuck. It was MY STUFF. I deserved to look for it. I would follow that probable guardian angel and climb that ladder.

I met up with two previous tenants --including the man who'd jumped out a window to safety-- and we broke in, removing the nails placed in the doors by the fire department, and went upstairs with backpacks to collect what we could. It had snowed hard that winter, and melted, and snowed again, and the mess was truly impressive. We got covered with wet soot and tar (the roof had melted and fallen in) but we made it safely to our own rooms. I dug through bricks and boards until I got to my art desk --there was nothing remotely salvageable. Anything hung on the walls was disintegrated. But when I got to that one tiny closet where I kept my portfolio, I was stunned to find it was virtually untouched. The spray from the fire hoses had saved it from burning. Everything inside was soaked and stained and beginning to mold. But... it was in my hands again. Miraculous.

Back in our new place, I spent days peeling papers apart carefully, spreading them all over the floors to dry. I realised that some things would be forever marked but acceptable. Others were bad, but could be traced and re-done if I wanted. Other things were simply gone forever, and I had no photocopies of them as I did with some other items. I had only two paintings but the frames were so warped that I eventually scrapped them --I didn't have money to reframe them, the skill to do it myself, nor the sense to keep them for later on. A lot of bad decisions got made that year...

Most of the recent artwork, that done for Cheap Trick, was beyond hope. I'd used cheap marker pens, not India ink, for the comics --"cheap for the Cheap", you see-- and these had bled out like they'd been murdered. The only other copies in existence belonged to the band members themselves. Thus a visit with the Nielsens, and a phone call they made to Rick, who came by very quickly with everything I'd ever given him. I copied it all and returned his copies within the week.

Last I saw him was 1994, I believe. Even if I never get to speak to him again, I hope he understands just how deeply that still touches me.

And now... Any work that survived well enough, but has damage... it all stays in that condition and the viewer must accept it. It has some special character now that it might not have had otherwise.

I feel I was meant to return to that building and dig for my works, I was meant to find all that I did to prove something important. I too am marked for life. But I'm alive. My artwork will always reflect that, regardless of the subject matter. It is a testament. What we create lives on, somehow, somewhere. And I am one of the lucky, to have some of it back in my hands, in my lifetime, and to be able to show it again to others...

...No matter how crappy it is ;)
 


hexxennea [at] gmail [dot] com

 

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