Joseph Cornell
“Sometimes the romance of the motion pictures seemed to spill over into Cornell’s own life. In what was perhaps the most poignant of his early attachments, he became interested in a young woman who worked as a cashier at the Bayside Motion Picture Theatre. Day after day she stood in a little booth in front of the theater selling tickets, and Cornell grew accustomed to admiring her from afar.
“It gave him pleasure just to walk by and see her encased in the quietude of the glass ticket booth, like a delicate instrument inside a bell jar. Did he ever talk to her beyond asking for a ticket? All that is known is that one afternoon Cornell showed up at the movie house with a bouquet of flowers, which he proceeded to present to her. But when he tried to say hello, he became tongue-tied, so he just hurled the flowers at her. Startled by his gesture as well as by his frightening intensity, the cashier mistook the flowers for a gun and screamed. The theater manager promptly rushed out and wrestled Cornell to the ground, holding him in place until he noticed the bouquet and realized that the suspected robber was merely the most hapless and awkward of suitors.”
from Utopia Parkway: the life and work of Joseph Cornell
by Deborah Solomon
Related Tales
» “Super” (11 of Oct, 2004)
» “"Best of Me Symphony"” (13 of Aug, 2004)
» “Story Time” (03 of Jul, 2004)
Comments
i think joseph cornell was a great artist and we are studying him in our art lessons!!!!!
quoth jade-louise on 20 of Mar, 2003joseph cornell was a brill artist
i wish he did more paintings!!!!!!!!!!
quoth sammi on 20 of Mar, 2003