Transient observer
Friday
– photo by Mitch Waxman
For once, I wasn’t suffering while walking. The gamey ankle was playing ball, it was neither too cold nor too hot, and I didn’t have to pee urgently. The ‘minimum kit’ camera bag wasn’t biting into my back. If anything, I was a bit peckish but you can’t walk for miles and miles with a full belly.
I like to analogize my physical state using certain Norse religious concepts, specifically the ones which revolve around the divine squirrel Ratatoskr running up and down the world tree Yggdrasil, except in my case it’s not a divine messenger that’s accidentally causing earthquakes, eruptions, and storms while moving about and it’s instead a ‘pain squirrel’ that is crawling about on my personal world tree. The bugger is found on a different branch of the tree each and every day, randomly and unpredictably.
It isn’t ’how did I hurt my shoulder while asleep,’ rather it’s ’what did that rascally squirrel Ratatoskr do while I was dreaming’?
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Another interesting religious building caught my eye.
They really love their gods in these parts. There’s a Hindu temple in nearby Monroeville, for instance, that’s incredible to behold but they forbid photography there. The Catholics of Pittsburgh weren’t shy when decorating their churches either, and they usually don’t mind photos if you ask nicely.
Shame about the Hindus, someday I’ll try and talk my way inside their temple with the camera. Maybe I’ll end up shooting an event there sometime.
‘Sacred Spaces’ is a project I’ve long talked about but haven’t truly started.
Basically, I want to take pictures of your church, or synagogue, or temple, or meeting room, or the open field where you gather around a fire with others and worship your gods. I’m not terribly interested in recording your rituals, joining your observances, getting evangelized, or doing any photography revolving about or of the humans your organization services. Just the masonry, architecture, and so on. In return, should you invite me in, you’ll get to use my photos until the pixels wear out and will get invited to any potential ‘openings’ and a free photo book of images associated with the effort.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Yet another magnificent religious building is found along this path, this time the landmark First United Methodist Church.
Now… allow my ignorance to shine here, as I grew up Jewish. I can tell you what the finer points of difference are between the ultra orthodox and the ordinary orthodox, and what the beef between Conservative and Reformed Jewry is. My perspective is somewhat warped, as most of the ‘Christ worshippers’ I’ve known over the years were either Roman Catholic or some stripe of charismatic evangelical. My parents actually worked for the RC church at the NY Foundling Hospital, so in my mind Christianity is pretty much ‘Catholic’ and then ‘everybody else.’
What I know about Methodism or Presbyterianism wouldn’t fill a shot glass, and other than being able to offer odd historical anecdotes about heretics and apostates in the Dutch Reformed Church, dating back to the 17th century in Dutch owned New Amsterdam and Breuklyn…
– photo by Mitch Waxman
This church sits at one of those invisible demarcation points in Pittsburgh where one neighborhood suddenly transforms into another.
So, we’re out of ‘East Liberty’ and will spend the next few blocks moving through (I think) the edge of ‘Shadyside.’ This is where pedestrians can be observed walking about in hospital scrubs, and there’s an enormous complex of hospitals and specialist medical offices found nearby.
‘Eds and Meds’ was Pittsburgh’s formula and plan for recovering from the abandoning of the City by manufacturing industries. The ‘Eds’ part revolves around giving the University of Pittsburgh and the other colleges most anything they want, and the ‘Meds’ part is based around an 800 pound gorilla in Western PA. that is called ‘UPMC.’
The ‘Eds’ provide a low cost work force who labor while training for their occupations, and the ‘Meds’ employ them. When literally everybody asks me ‘why Pittsburgh’ I have to answer that one of the reasons is that the medical system here is top notch, and comparatively well staffed. No lying on a gurney in the hallway of Brookdale Hospital’s ER for 28 hours out here, yo.
Hell, they cured Polio out here.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
The church sits on a bit of a prominence, and I walked around it a bit.
This was still just the ‘first mile’ of my day, after all, and didn’t want to bog down. Didn’t even try the door to this church, figuring that I’ll make it a point of visiting the interior when convenient or when I’ve secured an invitation.
A good moment to police one’s personal area network was at hand. The bag and camera straps were adjusted, as was the relative position of my waist belt to the ground (I pulled my pants up.) A quick bit of camera maintenance saw me blowing some dust off the lens, and then off did I scuttle.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
This house, which seems to have recently been used as a restaurant, was sporting a realtor’s signboard suggesting it as being an excellent development opportunity. Hard to argue against density in this area, to be honest. It’s a proper city here in East Liberty, with walkable streets and lots of sidewalk level shops and restaurants.
Leaving it behind, I have to offer one of my NYC analogies for this area – Bushwick, it’s a lot like 1990’s gentrified Bushwick.
Back next week with more – at this – your Newtown Pentacle.
“follow” me on Twitter- @newtownpentacle
Buy a book!
“In the Shadows at Newtown Creek,” an 88 page softcover 8.5×11 magazine format photo book by Mitch Waxman, is now on sale at blurb.com for $30.





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