BORGES GLAUQUE

By: Alfredo Troncoso
September 19, 2024

“The Minotaur” is an 1885 painting by George Frederic Watts.

One in a series of posts investigating what specific colors signify — via specific material contexts — to 25 semiotics practitioners from around the world. Cross-posted from our sister website SEMIOVOX.


BORGES GLAUQUE

As a child growing up in Montevideo, I developed a curious fixation with the elusive hues of the “river-sea,” the Río de la Plata. Sometimes a muddy brown, others a deep Atlantic blue, but for the most part, an ever changing grayish, greenish blue that defied my childish efforts at representation with a 12-pencil color set.

Ever since, I have had little patience for the primary colors dogma and its abhorrent offshoot, the tertiary color catalogue; a color is not a thing! Far from tertiary indecisiveness, I am always on the lookout for that murky, transient green which in my mind is the decidedly ambiguous color of mystery.

I have found some approximations in some coppery stone slabs in Oaxaca, a few marble walls here and there, some ’80s car paint that was, however, too uniformly bright. Closer to the present, I’ve thought I’d seen it in some soaps and fashionable drinks. But I have always known these to be poor approximations.

I confirmed this after an encounter with the dense refractions of Watt’s Minotaur at the old Tate Gallery. The Hellenic subject matter seems to have led to further clarification: on the one hand, I learned that for the Ancient Greeks there was no such thing as blue, just gray green manifestations of Glaukos. On the other, that Borges himself had been bewildered by the helpless melancholia of that Minotaur1. From there it was just a further step to conclusive confirmation in the words of the blind author of Poem of the Gifts.

Glaucoma runs in my family so I was ready for the question concerning what it is that the blind see. When I read Borges’ answer2, namely, that he lived in the center of a gray bluish mist, I knew for certain that he was talking about my color. I call it Borges Glauque.

1 In The House of Asterion

2 In a collection of American interviews published as Borges at 80.

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COLOR CODEX: SERIES INTRO by Josh Glenn | Martha Arango (Sweden) on FALUKORV RED | Audrey Bartis (France) on KYOTO MOSS | Maciej Biedziński (Poland) on SKIN-DEEP ORANGE | Natasha Delliston (England) on MARRAKECH MINT | Whitney Dunlap-Fowler (USA) on RESURRECTION CANARY BLUE | Josh Glenn (USA) on TOLKIEN GREEN | Aiyana Gunjan (India) on LETTERBOX RED | Sarah Johnson (Canada) on ARMY GREEN | Lucia Laurent-Neva (England) on TEAL BLUE VOYAGER | Rachel Lawes (England) on DEVIL GREEN | Charles Leech (Canada) on STORMTROOPER WHITE | William Liu (China) on PINING GREEN | Ramona Lyons (USA) on GOTH PURPLE | Sónia Marques (Portugal) on RUNAWAY BURRO | Max Matus (Mexico) on CALIFORNIAN BLUE | Chirag Mediratta (Canada / India) on AUROVILLE ORANGE | Clio Meurer (France) on PARIS LUMINOUS GREY | Serdar Patkin (Turkey / England) on AMBIENT AMBER | Maria Papanthymou (Russia / Greece) on AGALMATOLITE WHITE | Vijay Parthasarathy (USA) on ALPHONSO YELLOW | Greg Rowland (England) on LAUNDROMAT FUTURA | Tim Spencer (England) on ELECTRO-EROTIC COBALT | Ximena Tobi (Argentina) on VILLA MISERIA BRICK | Alfredo Troncoso (Mexico) on BORGES GLAUQUE.

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COLOR CODEX is one of several cross-over series published by both HILOBROW and its sister site, SEMIOVOX. Also see, for example: SEMIO OBJECTS | COVID CODES | CODE-X | TAKING THE MICKEY.

Categories

Codebreaking, Spectacles