A friend with a much-cherished case of synesthesia tells me my surname is brown – “the color of The Band’s second album.” I envy him. Like Nabokov, he is gifted with grapheme-color synesthesia, in which letters and their combinations come in colors. As if the visual world weren’t already sumptuous enough, a veritable Matisse painting, Steve sees letters and words as daubs on a palette. “K” on its own, he says, is consistently brown. Some of the remaining letters shift colors depending on context. Rimbaud wrote about it in "Voyelles."
Almost eighteen years ago
I wrote a freelance story about synesthesia in which I described it as “an
artful and harmless merging of the senses.” After the story was published, I
heard from several people who had the condition or wished they did. All were eager to talk about it. For other
lucky people, music arrives with colors.
In chapter 2 of Speak, Memory, Nabokov devotes several
pages to his synesthesia, including a color key for each letter:
“The long a of the English alphabet (and it is
this alphabet I have in mind farther on unless otherwise stated) has for me the
tint of weathered wood, but the French a evokes
polished ebony. This black group also includes hard g (vulcanized rubber) and r
(a sooty rag being ripped). Oatmeal n,
noodle-limp l, and the ivory-backed
hand mirror of o take care of the
whites.”
He continues, reveling in
his gift:
“In the green group, there are alder-leaf f, the unripe apple of p, and pistachio t. Dull green, combined somehow with violet, is the best I can do for w. The yellows comprise various e’s and i’s, creamy d, bright-golden y, and u, whose alphabetical value I can express only by ‘brassy with an olive sheen.’ In the brown group, there are the rich rubbery tone of soft g, paler j, and the drab shoelace of h.”
Jackson Pollock must have had Tourette's Syndrome.
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