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| Illustration by Nico Jaimes |
Yesterday, one of my favorite writers, Robert Sullivan, posted a delightful “Culture Desk” piece on newyorker.com titled "A Young Artist Confronts the Sinking of the Titanic." It’s a note on the opening of “The Titanic,” an exhibition of drawings at the Sweet Lorraine Gallery, “a small exhibition space on the third floor of Treasure Island Storage, a self-storage facility in Red Hook, Brooklyn.” The drawings are by ten-year-old artist Nico Jaimes. Sullivan writes,
Nico answered questions about the drawings, which show the
ship from many angles of the disaster—views of the lifeboats, the deck, the
hull in various degrees of submersion. “That’s people getting off the Titanic,”
he said of one. “I know that the first-class passengers got off first, and the
second class got off second, and they made the third class wait for the
lifeboats, but then there were no more lifeboats and everybody just panicked.”
His drawing of the evacuation emphasized the less orderly aspects. “Yeah,
panic,” he said, nodding.
Sullivan’s piece reminds me of some of his great “Talk of the Town” stories, e.g., "Say Cheese," "Super-Soaker," "Rabbit Ears," "Shredding Party," and "The Crossing." He’s a master Talk writer, right up there with Ian Frazier and Mark Singer. But he produces only one or two pieces a year. All the more reason to treasure them when they appear.

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