One way or another, the entire past, whether recognizable or unrecognizable, stands between me and the present world.
---PAUL VALERY CAHIERS/NOTEBOOKS 3/ p.369
FROM WALKING THROUGH CHELSEA, N.Y. ART GALLERIES on 12 April, 2017.
I saw only one work of art: a painting by LAMAR PETERSON at Fredericks Freiser of course it needs no words.
NOTHING ELSE REMAINS EXCEPT THESE words gathered from the handouts pretending or seriously explaining the stuff in the 12 galleries I walked through
--replicated, altered and spread
--luminous green surveillance images
--nothing on the scanner bed
--an ongoing series of sculptural objects
--image dispositions that are wrought
--an iconic Los Angeles-based artist
--activates the negative space and narrates the scene
--explores the boundary
--reverence and inscrutability
--with forebears as disparate
--Los Angeles based artist
--implied challege to the doctrine of painting
--houses, computers, spaceship interiors
--assimilating the ironies and contradictions
--address how digital technology is changing
--playful take on action painting
--computer-animated stars of the 1995 film
--faces appearing like ghostly
--Drawing on the range
--a sputter and an utterance
--frenetic visual culture--
--during the post-Reagan malaise of the early 1990s
--dancing expressionist rifts on classicist techniques
--Great White Male pantheon
--subconscious manipulations
--seemingly contradictory conceit
--careful attention to ancestry
--volcanic stone is a recurring
--long beloved by artists and architects
--explore the complexities of political anxiety
--dialogue around the contentious state of global
--also engages and subverts the quotidian
--World-renowned sculptor
--eye of
--on an ongoing basis
--explores and illuminates
--conformity and isolation
--conflicts and complications
--twin roles of the observer
--knowing savaging
--for further information
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Monday, March 27, 2017
CITY STREETS VERSUS FEED LOTS
I walked out yesterday afternoon as it is always yesterday afternoon after a certain point and walked south from my slum apartment on East First Street. This walking out is not possible in the suburbs---any suburb for that matter though of course I am thinking of the one where I now spend time. In the suburbs it is always rare to meet other people walking, there are only other houses to look at and rarely does one see a person entering or leaving these dwellings. I could not avoid thinking: feed lots, holding pens as one sees in the Arizona desert for cattle whose only destination is the knife.
To walk out from my place one passes the variety of people, the traffic, the shops and again on this walk the art galleries south of Houston Street. This walking midst people dissolves the isolation one is always heir to... one's moods are shifted about as one can't avoid all of the possible versions of human life... and again I met no one I knew yet I was...
I saw in GALLERIE RICHARD paintings by STEFAN HOENERICH which at first seem to be examples of photo-realism but then upon closer inspection they are of an invented realism and I had the impression of walking through streets near the Duomo in Milan--the narrowness of the streets and the profound gloom and feeling of being crushed by the stone faced buildings... and the absence of human figures in his paintings was as I felt, even though I was walking with Anna years ago in Milano--- to be sent right back into the isolated monad each person truly is...
Though as in Milano when we came out on to the square in front of Duomo and met our friend Marina, human sociability returned as it did for me crossing to the north west corner of Grand and Chrystie Streets and the Chinese market spilling out onto the sidewalks...
And while I looked into other galleries: Elizabeth Houston, Arsenel, Betty Cuningham, art.ltd, Artifact, Miguel Abreu... there remains ALDEN PROJECTS which was showing Eleanor Antin's 100 BOOTS: The Lost Picture Show.
Alden Projects had on display recently JENNY HOLZER'S Street Posters which reminded me of the time when SOHO was a place where art seemed to reside and when I lived at Prince and Thompson and worked at New Morning Bookstore on Spring Street ..but what it recalled more was the nature of so much of the art then: its ephemeral nature, its discardability except for those who like myself save "stuff"... and this show of Eleanor Antin's based in part on the mail art of that time also reminded this viewer of change, the constant change and the inevitable passing of buildings, "scenes", moments and one's own gradual disappearance--- but is that not one of the goals of great art to make the viewer understand this simple constant truth: you are going to die and this artist is also going to die YET with these objects, as frail as they sometimes are have a real possibility of surviving for a time.
I long ago discovered the pleasure of reading and looking at books that documented all the art which was destroyed in the two World Wars and then even with the very greatest painters.... one is always heartened in some mysterious way when certain paintings remain only as titles-- of course these artists have achieved that recognition that allows for such catologues--- and then one thinks of all the artists, writers for whom not even their names are to be remembered...
Note: Go to :www.aldenprojects.com for
100 BOOTS: The Lost Picture Show opens on February 24th, 2017 (6 - 8 pm) and runs through April 9th at Alden Projects™. This exhibition presents recently discovered vintage photographs by Eleanor Antin from her personal collection, expanding our understanding of the peripatetic adventures of her most celebrated series, 100 BOOTS (1971-73).
To walk out from my place one passes the variety of people, the traffic, the shops and again on this walk the art galleries south of Houston Street. This walking midst people dissolves the isolation one is always heir to... one's moods are shifted about as one can't avoid all of the possible versions of human life... and again I met no one I knew yet I was...
I saw in GALLERIE RICHARD paintings by STEFAN HOENERICH which at first seem to be examples of photo-realism but then upon closer inspection they are of an invented realism and I had the impression of walking through streets near the Duomo in Milan--the narrowness of the streets and the profound gloom and feeling of being crushed by the stone faced buildings... and the absence of human figures in his paintings was as I felt, even though I was walking with Anna years ago in Milano--- to be sent right back into the isolated monad each person truly is...
Though as in Milano when we came out on to the square in front of Duomo and met our friend Marina, human sociability returned as it did for me crossing to the north west corner of Grand and Chrystie Streets and the Chinese market spilling out onto the sidewalks...
And while I looked into other galleries: Elizabeth Houston, Arsenel, Betty Cuningham, art.ltd, Artifact, Miguel Abreu... there remains ALDEN PROJECTS which was showing Eleanor Antin's 100 BOOTS: The Lost Picture Show.
Alden Projects had on display recently JENNY HOLZER'S Street Posters which reminded me of the time when SOHO was a place where art seemed to reside and when I lived at Prince and Thompson and worked at New Morning Bookstore on Spring Street ..but what it recalled more was the nature of so much of the art then: its ephemeral nature, its discardability except for those who like myself save "stuff"... and this show of Eleanor Antin's based in part on the mail art of that time also reminded this viewer of change, the constant change and the inevitable passing of buildings, "scenes", moments and one's own gradual disappearance--- but is that not one of the goals of great art to make the viewer understand this simple constant truth: you are going to die and this artist is also going to die YET with these objects, as frail as they sometimes are have a real possibility of surviving for a time.
I long ago discovered the pleasure of reading and looking at books that documented all the art which was destroyed in the two World Wars and then even with the very greatest painters.... one is always heartened in some mysterious way when certain paintings remain only as titles-- of course these artists have achieved that recognition that allows for such catologues--- and then one thinks of all the artists, writers for whom not even their names are to be remembered...
Note: Go to :www.aldenprojects.com for
Eleanor Antin
100 BOOTS: The Lost Picture Show
February 24 – April 9, 2017
Opening Friday, February 24: 6 - 8pm
![]() |
Eleanor Antin. 100 Boots at the Checkpoint. 1972 Photo © Eleanor Antin |
100 BOOTS: The Lost Picture Show opens on February 24th, 2017 (6 - 8 pm) and runs through April 9th at Alden Projects™. This exhibition presents recently discovered vintage photographs by Eleanor Antin from her personal collection, expanding our understanding of the peripatetic adventures of her most celebrated series, 100 BOOTS (1971-73).
100 BOOTS is a travelogue, along the lines of Huckleberry Finn or Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, featuring the cross-country adventures of 100 stage-photographed rubber boots—Army-Navy surplus boots. They are a unitary protagonist in an allegorical narrative that a then-contemporary audience easily connected with the Nixon era and Vietnam War. The work earned its initial underground reputation as a series of 51 components that were sent through the mail over a two-and-a-half year span, to between 600-1000 recipients, bypassing the conventions of reception and distribution. All of the postcards are accompanied by plot-driving titles, dates, and shooting locations, all printed verso. Bringing the war home in such a direct manner, 100 BOOTS was celebrated for its canny circumvention of the conventions of unique artworks well before the Museum of Modern Art invited Antin to exhibit there in 1973.
What is not widely recalled are the specifics of Antin’s multi-component MoMA installation of 100 BOOTS, which included three distinct sections. The largest in the North West Gallery was Crash Pad for 100 BOOTS (1973), an installation comprising a room-within-a-room, described in the museum’s exhibition materials as “a tenement apartment for the boots”…“complete with mattresses, sleeping bags, radio, and a front door equipped with a peep-hole and a chain lock.”[1] (Crash Pad for 100 Boots is presently in LACMA’s collection). Hanging in the Far West Gallery were the better-remembered 50 postcards (the final, 51st card captioned “100 Boots Go on Vacation,” was sent from California after the show closed). Also notably present were more than two dozen photographs of the “BOOTS adventures in New York” all of which are not otherwise pictured as postcards. The dimensions of the “photograph panels” are listed on the typewritten Checklist as “each approximately 20 x 16 in” (but also corrected by hand to read “each approximately 8 1/8 x 12 in”).
And so this exhibition sets out to clarify that the work we thought we knew so well—what the artist call’s “my fur tea cup”—extends beyond the four corners of the postcards. 100 BOOTS: The Lost Picture Show, curated by Alden Projects™ in collaboration with Eleanor Antin, brings to light “lost” and mostly unknown pictures of the boots in California and New York, most approximately the same range of scale as listed above. On view at Alden Projects™ are photo panels and vintage printed, gelatin silver prints, “showing the BOOTS adventures in New York”. (See below, 100 BOOTS Under the Brooklyn Bridge[1973].) Additionally, a number of arresting scenes of the boots in California, also previously unknown, are also present. Notable among them is the cabinet-sized picture, 100 BOOTS at the Checkpoint, San Onofre (1972), depicting 100 BOOTS stage-photographed at an American immigration checkpoint near the Mexican border (and requiring considerable bureaucratic effort on the part of the artist to realize). In this picture, as elsewhere, Antin’s works are uncanny allegories of discomforting times, strangely familiar to our own. Standing together, we are reminded again that when sorrows come, they come not in single spies, but in battalions.
© Todd Alden 2017
![]() |
Eleanor Antin. 100 BOOTS Under the Brooklyn Bridge. 1973. Photo © Eleanor Antin |
Alden Projects™ is grateful to the artist for the opportunity to work collaboratively on this special exhibition as well as to Ronald Feldman, the artist’s legendary, long-time dealer.
**
Artist’s Statement for 100 BOOTS: The Lost Picture Show at Alden Projects™:
100 BOOTS is my fur cup. Think of the surrealist artist, Meret Oppenheim, and that strange, disorienting fur cup comes to mind. Many people react to 100 BOOTS like that. As Yvonne Rainer once said many years ago, oh, Eleanor Antin, she does boots. Happily, after half a century in the art world, most people are aware of my other works, many people even prefer some of my other works. Sometimes I do too. But I luv 100 BOOTS. He changed my life though it took me 2 1/2 years to realize fully who he was. He was becoming my female version of Kerouac's "On the Road". Two travel narratives, one bad boy literary, the other a leisurely visual odyssey from a respectable American town into a more dramatic, wilder, more dangerous place.
Somehow the images that didn't make it into the final piece were too dramatic, too overtly political, too suggestive of other meanings. So they remained photo prints, not postcards, and stored away in my studio where I forgot them for 50 years. Among them were images from their NY adventure when they moved into MOMA and which were shown at the museum in 1973 and never shown again. I vaguely remember some other MoMA prints but I never found them. Besides, after MoMA, I went on a hunger strike for my new piece "CARVING: A Traditional Sculpture". I was moving on. But when Todd Alden visited my studio in San Diego and told me how much he loved 100 BOOTS, my assistant Pam rummaged around into my deepest drawers and discovered those old photo prints sleeping way in the back. We were surprised. 50 years old and they look so contemporary and yet also suggestive of another time. Many of them have an angst that frankly looks uncomfortably like today.
—Eleanor Antin, February 24, 2017
[1] See 100 BOOTS Head East, The Museum of Modern Art Press Release No. 41, May 30, 1973 and Checklist for Projects: 100 BOOTS by Eleanor Antin (May 30 – July 8, 1973), The Museum of Modern Art Exhibition 1035 Master Checklist.
Labels:
ALDEN PROJECTS,
ELEANOR ANTIN,
STEFAN HOENERICH
Sunday, February 19, 2017
KICKING THE OLD MAN, and how it relates to ST. PATRICK'S DAY another day in Dublin
In ST. PATRICK'S DAY another day in Dublin, the narrator sees put on a very short play he wrote, A BEAUTIFUL GOOD WHOLESOME GIRL, a curtain raiser to the first student production in Ireland of Samuel Beckett's ENDGAME.
The play was produced by DramSoc the student theatre at University College, Dublin. Beckett himself gave permission for the production and one might think he had taken a tiny ironic pleasure in this as he went to Trinity College, Dublin as his Protestant class background dictated while he well knew James Joyce had gone to this other college, founded by Newman and where Gerard Manley Hopkins taught classics and my little play was performed in the complex where the famous argument between the priest and Stephen takes place in A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN
I did write another play which had come out of this little poem and the thought of my dead father: KICKING THE OLD MAN.
I showed the play to two people and one theatre. I never heard from the theatre and Roger Dixon, a classmate from Beloit who did direct dismissed it as psychodrama.
The play's second reader was John Benson who was a bartender at The 55, the bar on Christopher Street in NYC. He had had a small role in THE BLOB and directed summer stock. He thought the play funny and sad and well worth putting on... but of course where and and and...
I used a few pages from the play at the beginning and end of JUST LIKE THAT... another unpublished book that I think of as about THE end of the so-called Sixties of the last century. The Notre Dame Review some years ago published a section from this book centered upon the narrator's life encounter with Anthony Burgess
FOUR
down the street
down the street
as hard as you can
kicking the old man
kicking the old man
down the street
down the street
he knows and looks
kicking my old man
as hard as you can
down the street
down the street
laughing at you
laughing at you
kicking my old man
kicking my old man
as hard as you can
as hard as you can
kicking me
kicking me
with a smile
The play was produced by DramSoc the student theatre at University College, Dublin. Beckett himself gave permission for the production and one might think he had taken a tiny ironic pleasure in this as he went to Trinity College, Dublin as his Protestant class background dictated while he well knew James Joyce had gone to this other college, founded by Newman and where Gerard Manley Hopkins taught classics and my little play was performed in the complex where the famous argument between the priest and Stephen takes place in A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN
I did write another play which had come out of this little poem and the thought of my dead father: KICKING THE OLD MAN.
I showed the play to two people and one theatre. I never heard from the theatre and Roger Dixon, a classmate from Beloit who did direct dismissed it as psychodrama.
The play's second reader was John Benson who was a bartender at The 55, the bar on Christopher Street in NYC. He had had a small role in THE BLOB and directed summer stock. He thought the play funny and sad and well worth putting on... but of course where and and and...
I used a few pages from the play at the beginning and end of JUST LIKE THAT... another unpublished book that I think of as about THE end of the so-called Sixties of the last century. The Notre Dame Review some years ago published a section from this book centered upon the narrator's life encounter with Anthony Burgess
FOUR
down the street
down the street
as hard as you can
kicking the old man
kicking the old man
down the street
down the street
he knows and looks
kicking my old man
as hard as you can
down the street
down the street
laughing at you
laughing at you
kicking my old man
kicking my old man
as hard as you can
as hard as you can
kicking me
kicking me
with a smile
Tuesday, February 14, 2017
THE AFTERMATH OF A CONFERENCE
On the way back from the AWP (Associate Writing Program’s annual
conference) in Washington, I bought THE RILKE ALPHABET by Ulrich Baer at
Dedalus Book Warehouse because under the letter K: For Kafka and King Lear. In the book Baer writes about the storm Rilke
experienced at Duino on the Adriatic coast that in some way precipitated the
great elegies… and this goes on to the storm Lear experiences in the play long
after he has made the famous demand upon Cordelia…
This lead
me: while I had not been to Duino, I was on the Adriatic coast in August 1967
aware the train had gone by Duino and
having left that train at Trieste (the city of Joyce and Svevo, I knew even
then) I was staying at the youth hostel right on the coast to the east of the
city… I met Michael J. Peters who was on
his way to Lebanon to see The Cedars of… we met two South African girls and went
drinking and missed the curfew and found ourselves locked out and as the rain
came down we found shelter in a cabana back from the beach and all night the
rain on the metal roof… the holding of a damp shivering body and being held in
turn…
In the
morning Michael and I found a windowless
room in a shabby hotel in the city… [I know his name as it is inscribed in an
old address book, neatly block-lettered in his hand] we went up to the cemetery that overlooks
the city… the bright garish decorations… the large mostly deserted official
buildings of a city that had once been important... the parody of the canals of
Venice… we took the ferry to Pula—as I knew even then that it was actually the first place
Joyce lived in Italy… we stayed at a mostly deserted grand hotel… complete with
gambling salons presided over by fellows who seemed to have stepped out of Last Year
at Marienbad… in the early evening we sauntered, to be exact, around the central square with all the
other young people looking at each other… we took the train for Zagreb and then
went our separate ways as Michael was going to Athens--- I have not seen him
since but have a few letters from back then when he had returned and was living in Seattle but I
do not know what became of him--- and I was going to Sofia---to meet as I
didn’t know at that moment Lilia, on Hristo Botev Boulevard within an hour of
leaving the train--- and my life would change and be forever walking in the streets of Sofia.
The year
before in Dublin in a UCD lecture hall I had heard Denis Donoghue lecture on King
Lear and use as the center of his discussion of silence in Shakespeare
the line of Cordelia’s in response to the demand of her father: I cannot heave/
My heart into my mouth
-->
To this day and until I die I will never…
so these books these sentences… my new book’s failure, the absence of readers, my publisher’s failure---none of that
equals the failure I feel in thinking about all of this and writing this as I
wonder as surely any person would do::: to what end does a man buying a book, a
remaindered book at that, have himself back in a storm near Trieste on the
way East to…
Wednesday, February 8, 2017
FLEUR JAEGGY
On the
anticipated publication by New Directions of two new books by FLEUR JAEGGY : THESE POSSIBLE LIVES
and I AM THE BROTHER OF X.X. in July
2017.
Here is a review
that was never published of SWEET DAYS OF DISCIPLINE by Fleur
Jaeggy. New Directions. I forget why either the Washington Post or
Chicago Tribune refused to publish my review back in 1993.
Sweet
Days of Discipline is a masterpiece.
Probably there is no overcoming a reader’s skepticism at reading such a
sentence. Frankly, I was also skeptical
about my own initial reading of the book and so to check it I took the advice
in the blurb by Joseph Brodsky, “Reading time is approximately four hours. Remembering time as for the author, the rest
of one’s life.”
INTERJECTION:
I wrote this review in 1993... so 24 years later… not a word has to be
changed.
Rereading
Jaeggy’s novel I found myself increasingly sadder because the novel is short
and the inevitable last page gets closer and closer: I wanted to continue to
live in the world of the author’s sensibility and dreading the difficulty of how
to convince another to read it…
Like all truly
great works of literature the story can be summed up quite simply. The un-named narrator is remembering a year,
among many years in the 1950’s spent at a boarding school in Switzerland. But this year was different because it
was the year that a new girl, Frederique, was also a student at the same
school. The novel traces out the course of that year and the growing friendship
between the two girls.
Every cliché
that such a situation might suggest is avoided:
there is no sadistic headmistress, no randy kitchen help, no lesbian
sexual encounters. Instead Jaeggy
creates an entire world populated by the children of the high bourgeois of
Europe who are destined to be equally comfortable in Zurich, as in Paris, Milan
or Munich.
The opening of the novel suggests in
the sureness of the language what is to come:
“At fourteen I
was a boarder in a school in the Appenzeel.
This was the area where Robert Walser used to take his many walks when
he was in the mental hospital in Herisau, not far from our college. He died in the snow. Photographs show his footprints and the position
of the body in the snow. We didn’t know
the writer. And nor did our literature
teacher. Sometime I think it might be nice to die like that, after a walk to
let yourself drop into a natural grave in the snow of the Appenzeel after almost
thirty years of mental hospital in Herisau.
It really was a shame we didn’t know of Walser’s existence, we would
have picked a flower for him. Even Kant,
shortly before his death was moved when a women he didn’t know offered him a
rose.”
Upon re-reading
this opening paragraph I am again captivated by the tone of elegiac sadness and
the author’s ability to both distance and involve the reader. I am flattered in my knowing who Robert
Walser is and having seen those famous photographs of his death steps and I appreciate
the apt detail from the life of Kant which avoids the commonplace of the
citizen of Koenigsberg setting their clocks to the punctuality of his daily
walk through the town.
Such a paragraph
sets the tone and allow the reader to enter Jaeggy’s world by remembering too
that he or she has probably had a similar experience of growing up. Going to grammar school in Patchogue on Long
Island I did not know and my teachers did not know that Henry David Thoreau had
passed through Patchogue on his way to look for the bones of Margaret Fuller
who had drowned off of Fire Island, opposite Patchogue.
Never have I
read such an accurate description of the process by which one attempts to
become the friend of another--- knowing that friendship is the near physical
absorption of the other.
“In our lives
at school, each of us, if we had a little vanity, would establish a facade, a kind of double life, affect a way of
speaking, walking, looking. When I saw
her writing I couldn’t believe it. We
also most all had the same kind of handwriting, uncertain, childish with round wide
‘o’s. Hers was completely affected. (Twenty years later I saw something similar
in a dedication Pierre Jean Jouve had written on a copy of “Kyrie.”)
(LATER: again I was flattered as of course I knew the French writer,
didn’t everyone at that moment who really read even only in English)
Of course I pretended not to be surprised, I barely glanced
at it. But secretly I practiced And I still write like Frederique today, and people
tell me I have beautiful handwriting.”
And I too remembering
a boy who came to my school in four grade in Patchogue who wrote with the left
hand and of how I tried to write with my left hand so as to become this
friend. And to think how far away a
boarding school in Switzerland is from Patchogue!
But the novel does
not isolate the narrator: she takes walks dislikes her roommate rejects another
girl who wants to be her friend. The
narrator suggests a complete world and that is what we demand of an author:
invent a world into which we can fall, slide, insinuate our own experience.
Of course
Frederique is not destined for great happiness but for something more
interesting: she has taken up residency in the memorial heart of both the
narrator and the reader.
An anthology
of epigrammatic items of truth could be culled from this book and to set it in
its proper context the reader would have tocall to mind such books as Rilke’s The
Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge or Cocteau’s Les Enfants Terribles or
Glenway Wescott’s The Grandmothers or Fred Uhlman’s Reunion.
-->
Years after the
year at the school the narrator runs into Frederique at the cinemateque in
Paris. They go back to her attic room,
“Frederique was about twenty now. She
dressed as she always had. A dark zinc
grey over body, narrow hips, long neck.
The jugular was pulsing. She had pushed back her hood. The pale oval of
her face, legs crossed. The perfection
of school days had taken up residence in this room of hers… She lives, I
thought, as if she were in a grave.”
PS I did not describe Jaeggy's other books, LAST VANITIES, SS PROLETERKA, THESE POSSIBLE LIVES, I AM THE BROTHER OF XX... I did not write about Jaeggy's husband Roberto Calasso... I suspect that SS PROLETERKA belongs in the Pantheon of the greatest of modern books... I guess you can say I hold Jaeggy's book in the same imaginary hand that I also hold the books of Hannah Green, ERNST JUNGER, GLENWAY WESCOTT, JULIAN GREEN, JUAN CARLOS ONETTI, JOSE LEZAMA LIMA, PETER NADAS...
Wednesday, February 1, 2017
trees on the hill ain't talking
trees on the hill having nothing to say
---Nick Drake
-five-
On a Thursday I went walking out... walking is shedding the recent present moment while in response to what is seen... a bringing back to life that something, that someone, that moment, in the garden between Second and First Avenue...
---five---
....so along First Street to HOWL HAPPENING where they had AMPLIFIED SPACE an installation by Jonnny Detiger. You could sit in a series of plastic cubicles on a pillow covered cube and listen to versions of disco music. Howl in a space that tries to capture the ephemeral aspects of the present and the recent past and more ephemeral the better... the one word that is always avoided: why?... There are usually nicely printed catalogues that sell for $20+ dollars and written in a language defying criticism or understanding.
And then.
---five---
SPERONE WESTWATER on the Bowery. I have been going to this gallery since the 80s when they were in SOHO. Their building is a very functional modern building and the space is made up of three floors. I often think it is the best gallery in NYC, the most sensual, the most... and today paintings by KATHERINE BRADFORD (the photographs do no real justice to her work because long ago as a result of reading THE ART OF ARTS by Anita Albus who definitively for me anyway showed that any work of art had to be seen for one's self and not to rely on reproductions, no matter the quality. And I was glad to have never taken a art history class with those awful slide shows I had heard about. There was a reason people went on tours of the grand places in Europe: to see for the self...)
and a second painting
A certain mystery and a depiction of powerlessness, stasis, a hoping... the unwell in great baths... each isolated within his or her own pain.
Or not...I guess we are to talk of paint, color,...
----five five---
And one continues to walk south of Bowery...by the men's shelter... the frantic remodeling.... after saying goodbye to W.H. Auden... which recalls and I even discovered that I have been quoted:
https://books.google.com/books?id=8e6ECgAAQBAJ&pg=PT52&lpg=PT52&dq=%22Goodbye+W.H.+Auden%22+%2B+%22thomas+McGonigle%22+%2B+%22Village+Voice%22&source=bl&ots=5QY-fNmfEk&sig=Yh2DipjkSCWb09c_BB0rtq82dlU&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjkhuadrOPRAhWIRyYKHYwGA88Q6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&q=%22Goodbye%20W.H.%20Auden%22%20%2B%20%22thomas%20McGonigle%22%20%2B%20%22Village%20Voice%22&f=false
Which was a story I wrote about being at the moment W.H. Auden left NYC... that aftermath took place in a loft opposite the shelter...the woman... a go-go dancer of... a model... living with a dealer and another... years later I ran into this woman who had survived in some fashion...
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=KEtq3P1Vf8oC&dat=19720504&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
---five five---
Walkartexhibition.com. Of shoes designed by art students in Israel in the form of a pop-up display of shoes right down from a show of outsider art...complete with a pleasant friendly talkative hostess who tolerates me going on about shoes in TRASH...the memorable scene of Holly Woodlawn resisting the welfare worker's demand for the shoes she is wearing and I am even talking about my Daughter in the musical Guys and Dolls because there is a shoe dedicated to Lady Gaga, and I am saying my daughter was in the play with the then girl who would become Lady Gaga... of course the photographs were only focused on the daughter rather than on the other girl who was going to be...though Elizabeth is now in this gallery and
---five---
In another gallery 11R on Christie Street the truly useless and vulgar and am surprised by my thinking this... a horse peeing by TM DAVY... to what purpose, what wall to bear such a work... the cock lake of Joyce opening..
---five five five---
Near the end of the walk and the finding myself back again living up MiLady's on the corner of Thompson and Prince in a tiny three room apartment to which ruth and I moved from the Earle Hotel, back then when the woman who had the apartment was moving to a better one, a garden one at that, for less than what we would be paying $160 a month... and the working as a messenger for Maple Vail and also at New Morning Bookstore on Spring Street...
....but the reason for being back then was looking at the work of Boris Lurie that is on display t Westwood Gallery on the Bowery
I should have taken other pictures of his work as he was doing something that must have caught my eye: great collages using photographs from men's magazines and combining them with news clippings... Lurie was a survivor of the Nazi murder camps, lived as bohemian anti-artist in NYC while slowly and very quietly acquiing a vast fortune in penny stocks and slum properties so that his estate is now keeping his work alive... that impulse embedded in the great dadaists of another time... but my own homage I still have and took a picture of part of it...and this hung on the wall of the apartment above MiLady's. You can see Brezhnev makes an appearance as does Joan Crawford and Catapult 70 was a construction on the top of the tall building on the southwest corner of Houston and Broadway...I don't remember the name of the guy..but you climbed up this ladder and then further as if to be thrown into space
---five---
A review of a book that still remains of interest.
http://articles.latimes.com/2005/mar/13/books/bk-mcgonigle13
A CONSEQUENCE: My article in the Village Voice on W.H. Auden followed by another one A SON'S FATHER'S DAY allowed me to believe the delusion that I was a published writer and did not need a second Master's degree, in this case from Columbia..so I didn't bother to type up the pages I had written in the two years I was at Columbia..though being at Columbia I was given among others friends and acquaintances such as Hannah Green, John Wesley, William O'Rourke, Anthony Burgess, Nicanor Parra, Julio Marzan, David Black, Jakov Lind, Nelida Pinon, David Huddle, Richard M. Elman, Al Levine, Marcia Cebulska, T.E.D. Klein...
---Nick Drake
-five-
On a Thursday I went walking out... walking is shedding the recent present moment while in response to what is seen... a bringing back to life that something, that someone, that moment, in the garden between Second and First Avenue...
---five---
....so along First Street to HOWL HAPPENING where they had AMPLIFIED SPACE an installation by Jonnny Detiger. You could sit in a series of plastic cubicles on a pillow covered cube and listen to versions of disco music. Howl in a space that tries to capture the ephemeral aspects of the present and the recent past and more ephemeral the better... the one word that is always avoided: why?... There are usually nicely printed catalogues that sell for $20+ dollars and written in a language defying criticism or understanding.
And then.
---five---
SPERONE WESTWATER on the Bowery. I have been going to this gallery since the 80s when they were in SOHO. Their building is a very functional modern building and the space is made up of three floors. I often think it is the best gallery in NYC, the most sensual, the most... and today paintings by KATHERINE BRADFORD (the photographs do no real justice to her work because long ago as a result of reading THE ART OF ARTS by Anita Albus who definitively for me anyway showed that any work of art had to be seen for one's self and not to rely on reproductions, no matter the quality. And I was glad to have never taken a art history class with those awful slide shows I had heard about. There was a reason people went on tours of the grand places in Europe: to see for the self...)
and a second painting
and a third painting
A certain mystery and a depiction of powerlessness, stasis, a hoping... the unwell in great baths... each isolated within his or her own pain.
Or not...I guess we are to talk of paint, color,...
----five five---
And one continues to walk south of Bowery...by the men's shelter... the frantic remodeling.... after saying goodbye to W.H. Auden... which recalls and I even discovered that I have been quoted:
https://books.google.com/books?id=8e6ECgAAQBAJ&pg=PT52&lpg=PT52&dq=%22Goodbye+W.H.+Auden%22+%2B+%22thomas+McGonigle%22+%2B+%22Village+Voice%22&source=bl&ots=5QY-fNmfEk&sig=Yh2DipjkSCWb09c_BB0rtq82dlU&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjkhuadrOPRAhWIRyYKHYwGA88Q6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&q=%22Goodbye%20W.H.%20Auden%22%20%2B%20%22thomas%20McGonigle%22%20%2B%20%22Village%20Voice%22&f=false
Which was a story I wrote about being at the moment W.H. Auden left NYC... that aftermath took place in a loft opposite the shelter...the woman... a go-go dancer of... a model... living with a dealer and another... years later I ran into this woman who had survived in some fashion...
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=KEtq3P1Vf8oC&dat=19720504&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
---five five---
Walkartexhibition.com. Of shoes designed by art students in Israel in the form of a pop-up display of shoes right down from a show of outsider art...complete with a pleasant friendly talkative hostess who tolerates me going on about shoes in TRASH...the memorable scene of Holly Woodlawn resisting the welfare worker's demand for the shoes she is wearing and I am even talking about my Daughter in the musical Guys and Dolls because there is a shoe dedicated to Lady Gaga, and I am saying my daughter was in the play with the then girl who would become Lady Gaga... of course the photographs were only focused on the daughter rather than on the other girl who was going to be...though Elizabeth is now in this gallery and
---five---
In another gallery 11R on Christie Street the truly useless and vulgar and am surprised by my thinking this... a horse peeing by TM DAVY... to what purpose, what wall to bear such a work... the cock lake of Joyce opening..
---five five five---
Near the end of the walk and the finding myself back again living up MiLady's on the corner of Thompson and Prince in a tiny three room apartment to which ruth and I moved from the Earle Hotel, back then when the woman who had the apartment was moving to a better one, a garden one at that, for less than what we would be paying $160 a month... and the working as a messenger for Maple Vail and also at New Morning Bookstore on Spring Street...
....but the reason for being back then was looking at the work of Boris Lurie that is on display t Westwood Gallery on the Bowery
I should have taken other pictures of his work as he was doing something that must have caught my eye: great collages using photographs from men's magazines and combining them with news clippings... Lurie was a survivor of the Nazi murder camps, lived as bohemian anti-artist in NYC while slowly and very quietly acquiing a vast fortune in penny stocks and slum properties so that his estate is now keeping his work alive... that impulse embedded in the great dadaists of another time... but my own homage I still have and took a picture of part of it...and this hung on the wall of the apartment above MiLady's. You can see Brezhnev makes an appearance as does Joan Crawford and Catapult 70 was a construction on the top of the tall building on the southwest corner of Houston and Broadway...I don't remember the name of the guy..but you climbed up this ladder and then further as if to be thrown into space
---five---
A review of a book that still remains of interest.
http://articles.latimes.com/2005/mar/13/books/bk-mcgonigle13
A CONSEQUENCE: My article in the Village Voice on W.H. Auden followed by another one A SON'S FATHER'S DAY allowed me to believe the delusion that I was a published writer and did not need a second Master's degree, in this case from Columbia..so I didn't bother to type up the pages I had written in the two years I was at Columbia..though being at Columbia I was given among others friends and acquaintances such as Hannah Green, John Wesley, William O'Rourke, Anthony Burgess, Nicanor Parra, Julio Marzan, David Black, Jakov Lind, Nelida Pinon, David Huddle, Richard M. Elman, Al Levine, Marcia Cebulska, T.E.D. Klein...
Labels:
BORIS LURIE,
KATHERINE BRADFORD,
TM DAVY,
W.H. AUDEN
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