Synaesthesia Magazine Sound | Page 27

the duvet. The card was full. As I was flicking through the photos to see which ones I could remove for more space, I suddenly saw the actress and the soldier standing in the open doorway. They had their coats on. I didn’t know how long they had been there. The hall lights weren’t on. I held my camera and looked at the sleeping composer, then pulled a duvet over his lower body. The actress stood in the door but said nothing. She looked at me, then at the unconscious composer, and turned to go to her room. The soldier followed after. Through the door I could hear her telling me to go to bed. ‘You’ve got a flight tomorrow, haven’t you?’ I didn’t reply. I was scared our conversation might wake up the composer. I shut the door. For a while it was silent, but after a short time I started hearing two repetitive sighs coming from the actress’s room. I switched the camera on in the darkness, removed the Paris photos and let the video roll. The pale glow from the window mixed with the bitumen shadows. I watched the video yesterday for the first time in years. It’s impossible to see anything on it, but I know the composer is there. Last month I read about a boy in China, born with an ability to see in complete darkness. For an outsider, and for anyone except this Chinese boy perhaps, my clip is just two minutes of grainy black, with a turgid breath somewhere very near and faint sighs further away. Illustration END Vivian Calderón Bogoslavsky is a Colombia native born to Argentinian parents. She holds a bachelors in anthropology with a minor in history and a postgraduate degree in journalism from Universidad of Los Andes in Bogota, Colombia. She has studied art for more than 13 years with a well known Argentinian art master and studied in Florence and Italy, and fine arts and design in USA. Today she is in Madrid, Spain exploring her art. Visit her website at www.ArteCalderon.com.