Last
Friday,
on
April
12,
our
neighbor
Rudy
Bram
passed
away
in his
sleep
–
96
years
old,
an
artist
of the
found
object
that
festooned
his
house
with
many,
many
found
objects.
A New
York Times article in 1996 (posted on April 21, almost 28 years to the day of Rudy’s passing) called his abode, which he then co-habited with his wife, Grace Samburg, a “jungle of the imagination.”
In
that
same
piece,
Rudy
explained
why he
turned
the
façade
of his
house
into a
gallimaufry
of the
found,
the
retrieved,
the
salvaged:
“This
is a
very
old
tradition
in
contemporary
American
art,
the
found
object,
and I
use it
in
assemblage.
If
somebody
originally
sees
it as
junk,
that
may be
its
origin,
but I
hope
it's
transformed
and
evolved
into
something
more
sublime.”
If
there
is a
memorial
service
for
him,
and if
there
is
call
for
people
to
share
their
Rudy
stories,
this
is
what I
will
say.
-----
I met
Rudy
about
ten
years
ago,
occasionally
running
into
him as
I
finished
my
sprint
to
home
on my
morning
run.
He was
short,
gruff
—
“grizzled”
might
the
word
to use
—
and we
always
talked
about
this,
that,
and
the
other
thing.
Nothing
deep,
but
more
in the
vein
of
neighborly.
Over
time,
I
learned
about
his
life
in the
Army,
his
attendance
at the
Art
Students
League
in the
late
1940s,
thanks
to the
G.I.
Bill,
his
second
career
in the
postal
service
for
three
decades.
We
talked
a lot
about
Jews
—
I was
working
for a
Jewish
fundraising
organization
at the
time,
and
after
prefacing
his
talk
with
an
attestation
to his
own
Jewishness,
we’d
talk
about
things
Jewish.
He
never
considered
himself
particularly
observant
–
being
Jewish
for
him
was
more
about
an
attitude
toward
life
than
the
following
of the
613
commandments,
an
attitude
that
always
tried
to
dodge
the
suffering
God
visited
upon
his
creation
through
art,
laughter,
and a
fair
dose
of
resignation.
“Man
proposes,
God
laughs”
was a
favorite
of
his, a
good
distillation
of how
he saw
life.
After
Grace
died,
I
convinced
him to
go on
one of
the
sponsored
tours
to
Israel
that
my
organization
ran,
which
he
did.
He had
a
great
time
telling
everyone
else
on the
tour
what
they
should
know
(he
was of
that
strain,
the
know-everything
with a
strong
set of
lungs),
and
from
what
my
colleague
who
ran
the
tours
said,
he
managed
to
drive
everyone
a
little
bit
crazy,
but
not so
much
that
they
abandoned
him by
the
side
of the
road.
He
would
consider
that a
success.
After
Grace
died
–
such a
gentle
soul
she
was.
As she
became
more
frail
and
helpless
and
disoriented,
The
Marvelous
MarÃa
Beatriz
and I
often
went
over
to
their
house
to
help
him
out.
One
time,
as
Rudy
was
helping
her go
to the
bathroom,
she
managed
to get
herself
wedged
between
the
toilet
and
the
wall
next
to the
toilet,
and
there
was
nothing
Rudy
could
do to
free
her.
MarÃa
Beatriz
and I
gently
scooped
her up
and
sat
her
back
on the
throne,
and
though
she
was
half-naked
and
barely
focused,
the
embrace
of two
humans
brought
this
big
wreath
of a
smile
to her
face.
We
helped
Rudy
clean
her up
and
dress
her
for
bed,
and
Grace
so
loved
being
tucked
in.
Rudy
was
able
to
lower
his
anxiety
enough
to
treat
her
gently,
with
the
weight
of the
caretaking
shared
with
us for
the
moment.
This
brings
us to
Rudy’s
purchase
of a
red,
red,
red
Audi
A5, a
car I
surely
thought
would
gobble
him
alive,
seeing
as
how,
because
he was
so
short,
he
could
barely
see
over
the
steering
wheel
–
and
the
car
had a
manual
that
was a
daunting
300
pages
thick.
But he
did
manage
to get
it on
the
road
and
home
again
without
mishap
many
times,
and
though
he
eventually
traded
it in
for a
more
sensible
car,
the
loss
of
Grace
must
have
triggered
the
latent
rebel
in
him,
the
talkative
Jew,
the
outside
artist
–
time’s
wing’d
chariot
came
in the
shape
of an
Audi,
and
how he
must
have
loved
being
enveloped
by its
technology
and
power.
I have
not
seen
Rudy
in
quite
a
while.
As he
got
older,
he
retreated
more
to his
apartment,
helped
by an
amazingly
caring
tenant
who
had
become,
whether
by
chance
or
contract,
his
caretaker,
making
sure
he got
to his
doctors’
appointments
and
managing
to
keep
him
upright
and
moving
forward.
A
lasting
image
I have
of him
is
from
the
back,
as
he’s
walking
down
the
street.
The
condition
of his
spine
made
him
list
to
port,
but he
would
still
manage
to
make
his
way
forward
toward
the
sublime
that
worked
for
him,
letting
the
jungled
façade
of his
house
speak
for
him
when
he
wasn’t
there,
an
artist
who
tried
to
make
good
on his
idea
about
art,
and
succeeded.
----
So,
there
it is.
We
check
in
with
his
caretaker
to
make
sure
she is
all
right
–
she is
managing
his
loss
as
best
can be
expected
while
also
wondering
if she
can
keep
her
apartment
(the
house
and
all
its
belongings
have
gone
to
Rudy’s
close
companion
of
many
years)
and
being
gifted/burdened
with
having
to
make
new
arrangements
and
shift
her
life
into a
different
gear.
I’ll be 72 next year. Makes one think.
|