East Village Eye


"This website has been created to tell the story of the East Village Eye magazine and present as much archival material as possible. Currently, while we work on the East Village Eye Book, our plan is to present a revolving selection of PDFs of issues from the archive. ... From May 1979 to January of 1987, the East Village Eye, a monthly magazine of popular and avant garde culture, exerted a profound influence that eventually reached across the entire world. Coverage in the Eye resulted in development of several key 'scenes' that eventually evolved into movements felt all over the planet. ..."
East Village Eye: ABOUT US
East Village Eye
East Village Eye: Six Most Wearable Eyes
Peep This! Original Copies of East Village Eye Up For Sale
98Bowery

Ballet Mécanique


Wikipedia - "Ballet Mécanique (1923–24) is a Dadaist post-Cubist art film conceived, written, and co-directed by the artist Fernand Léger in collaboration with the filmmaker Dudley Murphy (with cinematographic input from Man Ray). It has a musical score by the American composer George Antheil. However, the film premiered in silent version on 24 September 1924 at the Internationale Ausstellung neuer Theatertechnik (International Exposition for New Theater Technique) in Vienna presented by Frederick Kiesler. It is considered one of the masterpieces of early experimental filmmaking."
Wikipedia
Le Ballet Mécanique: The Historic Cinematic Collaboration Between Fernand Legér and George Antheil
Film Reference
Antheil, Léger, Murphy, Man Ray: The “Ballet Mécanique” (Video)
YouTube: Fernand Leger - Ballet mecanique (1924) 16:10
YouTube: Fernand Léger - Topic
YouTube: Univers Zéro at the Cineteca Nacional, Mexico City on April 20, 2013

Beautiful sailing ships at the South Ferry station


"If you’ve ever taken the 1 train to its last, lovely, looping stop at the South Ferry/Whitehall Street station, you’ve probably seen them—15 beautiful terra cotta plaques depicting a sailing ship on the water. The officials in charge of building the first New York City subway line in 1904 did a lot of things right. Not only did they hire brilliant engineers and planners, but they brought in designers to create inspiring decorative features on platforms. Ceramic plaques like these were installed in the earliest stations. Each plaque reflects something about the station’s neighborhood or history: a sloop for South Ferry, a beaver at Astor Place, a steamboat at Fulton Street."
Ephemeral New York
W - South Ferry – Whitehall Street (New York City Subway)
Google
YouTube: IRT Subway Special! Re-Opened Old South Ferry (1) Station [w/ Minor Tour], New York City's Abandoned Old South Ferry Loop Subway Station to Reopen

Luaka Bop 10th Anniversary: Zero Accidents on the Job (2000)


"Luaka Bop 10th Anniversary: Zero Accidents on the Job celebrates a decade of releases from David Byrne's innovative global music label. The album features Byrne's own 'God's Child,' and includes songs from world music luminaries like Irakere, Paulo Braganca, Vijaya Anand, Lenine, and Amigos Invisibles. ... Tracks from King Chango, Susana Baca, Jorge Ben, and many others round out this extensive, affectionate look at Luaka Bop's impressive roster."
allmusic
Discogs
W - Luaka Bop
YouTube: Luaka Bop 10th Anniversary: Zero Accidents on the Job

Slaperoo Percussion Intros The Electric Spring Doorstop


"Slaperoo Percussion, creators of the Slaperoo Electric Tuned Percussion Instrument, released this video demo of the Electric Spring Doorstop. The Electric Spring Doorstop is built around a standard spring doorstop, modified with a custom SlapStick S-100 pickup. At this point, it’s an experiement, but Slaperoo says that they may turn it into a product, if there’s a demand."
Synthtopia (Video)
YouTube: Slaperoo Percussion - The Electric Spring Doorstop

Art on Screen: A Conversation with Agnès Varda


"For over 50 years, Agnès Varda, the grandmother of the French New Wave, has reimagined the possibilities of cinema. Using her personal history, relationships, and travels as inspiration, Varda expands the documentary genre beyond the screen to the gallery and museum. Join this extraordinary artist for a rare and intimate conversation about her films and latest installations. In recent years, Varda has created a series of exhibitions that combine photography, film, and media installation to explore memory, tactility, and the passage of time."
Getty (Video) 1:38:26

August 2010: Agnès Varda, May 2011: The Beaches of Agnès, 2011 December: Interview - Agnès Varda, 2013 February: The Gleaners and I (2000), 2013 September: Cinévardaphoto (2004), 2014 July: Black Panthers (1968 doc.).

Cave paintings change ideas about the origin of art


"The artworks are in a rural area on the Indonesian Island of Sulawesi. Until now, paintings this old had been confirmed in caves only in Western Europe. Researchers tell the journal Nature that the Indonesian discovery transforms ideas about how humans first developed the ability to produce art. Australian and Indonesian scientists have dated layers of stalactite-like growths that have formed over coloured outlines of human hands. Early artists made them by carefully blowing paint around hands that were pressed tightly against the cave walls and ceilings. The oldest is at least 40,000 years old."
BBC

Jackson Pollock's Mural


"... Mural came to the Getty in July 2012 for study and conservation, providing a rare opportunity to look closely at the painting's material structure, and to explore the paints Pollock used and how they were applied. The study reveals an artist who combined traditional materials and methods of application with more-unconventional ones. It is one of the artist's largest paintings, and the scale of Mural allowed Pollock to develop innovative methods of paint application that would later become the hallmark of his style."
Getty (Video)
Mural - University of Iowa Museum of Art
LA Times: Rebirth of Jackson Pollock's 'Mural'
CBS: Jackson Pollock's painting, "Mural," emerges from restoration brighter, more colorful
YouTube: See The Getty Restore Jackson Pollock's "Mural", Jackson Pollock's "Mural"

Outward Bound - Eric Dolphy (1960)


"The late multi-reed player/composer Eric Dolphy, one of the most pivotal figures in jazz, was a fiercely lyrical, imaginative musician at the forefront of the changes the music underwent in the 1960s. Dolphy, unlike some of his contemporaries, never totally abandoned the bebop approach of soloing over chord changes, but instead took his solos to fresh, expressive heights. Outward Bound, a quintet session from 1960, shows Dolphy in a somewhat transitional phase, his music closer to the hard bop of the late '50s than the free jazz of the '60s."
allmusic
W - Outward Bound
all about jazz
popmatters
YouTube: Outward Bound (1960)

Marianne Faithfull - Broken English short film by Derek Jarman (1979)


"... Along with the original studio album, the reissue will also includethe original 'lost' band sessions recording, a selection of bonus tracks and the Derek Jarman directed short film of 'Witches Song', 'The Ballad of Lucy Jordan' and 'Broken English'. We were sent the following background information: On its release in late '79 'Broken English' was an instant critical and commercial success bringing Marianne a new image, an international following, a Grammy nomination and the confidence to record more of her own compositions. The beautiful blonde muse, the wistful teenager who whispered of tears going by, was reborn. The Marianne who roared out of the traps on 'Broken English' was a different animal altogether: wild, and feral, with a voice ravaged by experience and betrayal."
Antimusic
YouTube: Marianne Faithfull - Broken English short film by Derek Jarman

2008 June: Marianne Faithfull, 2010 November: Marianne Faithfull - 1, 2013 January: Broken English: Deluxe Edition, 2013 November: Before the Poison (2005), 2014 August: Kissin' Time (2002).

Pop International Galleries Showcases UR New York’s New Works in “Product of UR Environment”


Intersection
"UR New York has fashioned an amazing array of works in a range of media for their newest exhibit, Product of UR Environment, that opened this past Thursday evening. On view at Pop International Galleries at 473 West Broadway in SoHo,  Mike Baca’s (aka 2Esae) and Fernando Romero’s (aka Ski) pieces on a range of surfaces — from spray cans to found objects to canvases — brilliantly reflect NYC’s distinct grit and the passion that it rouses. Here are a few more..."
Street Art NYC
Pop International Galleries

The Hermit - John Renbourn (1976)


"John Renbourn's first post-Pentangle (or nearly post-Pentangle) solo album, joined briefly by fellow guitarist Dominique Trepeau and featuring further contributions by John James, is one of his most beautiful recordings, and also among his most spare guitar instrumentals. ... The mood of much -- though not all -- of Hermit is one of serious introspection, as Renbourn stays generally within a classical guitar mode. He has fun with the material, and the CD booklet also includes musical transcriptions of some of the tunes on the record, for the benefit of Renbourn's fellow guitarists."
allmusic
YouTube: The hermit, Three Pieces By O'Carolan, Faro's Rag, Lord Willoughby's Welcome Home, Goat Island, Bicycle Tune

2011 September: Faro Annie, 2011 April: Cruel Sister (1970) - Pentangle, 2012 November: John Renbourn - Sir John Alot, 2013 May: The Lady and the Unicorn, 2014 February: Bert & John (1966).

Electric Guitars Made from the Detritus of Detroit


"When Frank Norris plays a guitar made by Wallace Detroit Guitars, he says it 'feels like home.' And maybe that’s because Wallace Detroit Guitars are made with reclaimed wood from abandoned Detroit homes. Following the financial crisis of 2008, perhaps no American city fared worse than Detroit. The city found itself with 10,000 vacant homes. And eventually the city purchased entire blocks and razed the houses to the ground. According to the Detroit web site Model D, a lot of the wood [from these structures] hasn’t gone to waste."
Open Culture (Video)

Houston Street


Houston Street, George Luks (1916)
Wikipedia - "Houston Street (/ˈhaʊstən/ HOW-stən) is a major east-west thoroughfare in downtown Manhattan, running crosstown across the full width of the island of Manhattan, from Franklin D. Roosevelt East River Drive (FDR Drive) and East River Park on the East River to Pier 40 and West Street on the Hudson River. It generally serves as the boundary between neighborhoods, with Alphabet City, the East Village, NoHo, Greenwich Village and the West Village lying to the north of the street, and the Lower East Side, most of the Bowery, Nolita and SoHo to the south. The numeric street-naming grid in Manhattan, created as part of the Commissioners' Plan of 1811, begins immediately north of Houston Street with 1st Street at Avenue A, although the grid does not fully come into effect until 13th Street."
Wikipedia
Houston Street: river to river

Last Year at Marienbad - Alain Resnais (1961)


Wikipedia - "L'Année dernière à Marienbad (released in the US as Last Year at Marienbad and in the UK as Last Year in Marienbad) is a 1961 French film directed by Alain Resnais from a screenplay by Alain Robbe-Grillet. The film is famous for its enigmatic narrative structure, in which truth and fiction are difficult to distinguish, and the temporal and spatial relationship of the events is open to question. The dream-like nature of the film has fascinated and baffled audiences and critics; some hail it as a masterpiece, others find it incomprehensible."
Wikipedia
Criterion (Video)
Roger Ebert
NY Times: Last Year at Marienbad (1961)

Possession: A Romance - A. S. Byatt (1990)


Wikipedia - "Possession: A Romance is a 1990 bestselling novel by British writer A. S. Byatt that also won the 1990 Booker Prize. ... The novel follows two modern-day academics as they research the paper trail around the previously unknown love life between famous fictional poets, Randolph Henry Ash and Christabel LaMotte. Possession is set both in the present day and the Victorian era, pointing out the differences between the two time periods, and satirizing such things as modern academia and mating rituals. The structure of the novel incorporates many different styles, including fictional diary entries, letters and poetry, and uses these styles and other devices to explore the postmodern concerns of the authority of textual narratives."
Wikipedia
NY Times: Unearthing the Secret Lover
The New Canon
amazon

Fripp & Eno - Live In Paris 28.05.1975


"As a historical document, this release takes some beating. Recorded during the short – and only – tour that Fripp & Eno undertook as a duo, it captures a pivotal moment, not only in the development of both players, but in the live music experience itself. Here was a 'rock concert' (or 'superstar show' as the poster for the less glamourous Tunbridge Wells gig had it) where two of the leading lights of the art prog scene sat in near darkness improvising a series of dronic, ectoplasmic mood pieces for an hour and a half. No hits, no big riffs, no exotic costumes. In 2014, that description could be analogous to any number of live electronica events, but in 1975, it led to booing, walkouts and open hostility."
The Quietus‎
amazon: Live In Paris 28.05.1975
‘Lost’ Fripp & Eno Album, Live In Paris 28.05.1975 Now Available
YouTube: "Even Spaces" Live Paris Olympia May 28th 1975 Pt.1, Pt.2, Pt.3, Pt.4, Evening Star (FULL ALBUM), No Pussyfooting - Swastika Girls Part 1, Part 2, The Heavenly Music Corporation, John Peel's Fripp and Eno - No Pussyfooting (played backwards)

Annie Kevans


Dorothea Tanning, 2014
"Annie Kevans’ paintings reflect her interests in power, manipulation and the role of the individual in inherited belief systems. It is important for the artist to examine the duality of truth and falsehood throughout her work, which she does by creating 'portraits' which may or may not be based on real documentation. She believes that a person’s identity is not preset but is a shifting temporary construction and her work questions our verdicts on history and perceptions of intellectual solidity. Kevans uses people’s familiarity with portraiture to imbue her works with truth and to explore difficult ideas."
Annie Kevans - Works
W - Annie Kevans
Young Dictator Portraits: Annie Kevans' Paintings Of Hitler, Mao And Mussolini (PHOTOS)
Guardian: Why were so many female artists airbrushed from history?
Annie Kevans: Women and the History of Art
YouTube: Saatchi Gallery, London

Welcome to Twin Peaks


Honey Kennedy
"Welcome to Twin Peaks was launched on January 20, 2011. Not coincidentally David Lynch’s birthday and 20 years since I consciously watched Mark Frost and David Lynch’s show for the first time in my life. ... Inspired by the show’s ever-growing influence on today’s art, fashion, music, film, television, design or just about any other aspect of popular culture, Welcome to Twin Peaks aims to demonstrate that even though more than two decades have passed, Twin Peaks is still relevant. Maybe even more than ever. If you want to learn more about my ever-lasting obsession with Twin Peaks, please refer to Dr. Jacoby. He has all my tapes. Twin Peaks wasn’t my first encounter with the work of David Lynch."
Welcome to Twin Peaks

2008 September: Twin Peaks, 2010 March: Twin Peaks: How Laura Palmer's death marked the rebirth of TV drama, 2011 October: Twin Peaks: The Last Days.

Lars Lerin - Arkiv / Archive


"... With an iconography that to some extent is new to [Lers] Lerin, we find ourselves in front of stern filing cabinets, dioramas and vitrines. With transparent layers of paint and characteristic technical brilliance, Lerin evokes images of human recollections and the physical manifestations thereof. Binders, folders, book spines and magazine files – the messy and the arbitrary, supposedly comprehensible and organized in apperance. Binders, folders, book spines and magazine files – iterations in the severe austerity of the filing cabinets. The pale umber of the aged folders indicate the passage of time as they stand next to the brightly coloured crimson red binders. The past and the present gazing into the future. Or, the sometimes washy colours of the binders that seem to imply that the very information of the archive is about to fade."
Lars Bohman Gallery
Lars Bohman Gallery: Lars Lerin Arkiv / Archive
Lars Lerin Museum


Bad News Beards


"Baseball. Hot dogs. Apple pie. Facial hair? Lots and lots of facial hair. Epic hair. We’re talking Grizzly Adams meets Nordic god-type hair. A tradition that is believed to have started in professional hockey as a show of team unity — or laziness, depending on who you ask — playoff beards have been trending in baseball. Those Boys of Summer oft look like the Mountain Men of Fall by the time the Series rolls around. Of course, not all ballplayers are suspected of using performance-enhancing shampoos or waxes to cultivate their burly growths. ... How do we know all this, you ask? The Washington Post combed through more than 1,000 photos between Sept. 20 to 28. Yes, by the time we were done with the analysis we had the facial hair to show for it."
Washington Post

Walker Evans: The Magazine Work


LABOR ANONYMOUS November 1946
"One of the pivotal figures of 20th-century photography, Walker Evans’s austere and formally precise images of the American vernacular helped define a stylistic approach to photography that continues to resonate with contemporary artists. His work received critical acclaim during his lifetime, and in 1938 he was the subject of the first solo photography exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art. But he also spent a large portion of his creative life working for magazines, both small avant-garde publications like Hound & Horn and Dance Index, and mainstream commercial outlets like Fortune, Vogue, and Harper’s Bazaar. And while individual works within this magazine corpus have appeared in anthologies and exhibitions since his death, the work has largely been ignored or, worse, as in the case of his later work at Fortune, dismissed as the work of an artist past his prime."
Brooklyn Rail
TIME - Walker Evans: A Rebel Rises at Fortune (Photo)
Guardian - Life, Time and Fortune: how Walker Evans mastered magazine photography
amazon
vimeo: David Campany: Photography Between Page and Wall - March 11, 2014

2011 June: Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, 2011 May: A Revolutionary Project: Cuba from Walker Evans to Now, 2013 June: Cotton Tenants: Three Families, 2014 May: “Walker Evans and Robert Frank – An Essay on Influence by Tod Papageorge” (1981),

The Distortion of Sound


Wikipedia - "The Distortion of Sound is a 2014 documentary film about the decline of sound quality for recorded music, narrated by various artists who explain the decline in the sound quality from the last two decades. It was directed by Jacob Rosenberg, written by Michael Abell and Kevin Gentile, and produced by Hana Lasber, Dennis McKinley, and Suzanne Hargrove. The film features interviews with vocalists, guitarists, producers, writers, rappers, film composers, mixing engineers, mixers, music journalists, acoustic researchers, loudspeaker engineers and chief engineers—including such artists as Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park, Slash, Quincy Jones, Snoop Dogg and Steve Aoki."
Wikipedia
The Distortion of Sound
YouTube: The Distortion of Sound | Official Trailer
YouTube: The Distortion of Sound [Full Film] 22:02

J.B. Lenoir - Natural Man


"This collection of J.B. Lenoir's mid-'50s tenure at the label -- originally issued in the '70s -- duplicates two songs from the Parrot collection (a label which Chess later acquired), but the rest of it is more than worth the effort to seek out. The rocking 'Don't Touch My Head,' the topical 'Eisenhower Blues' and the sexually ambiguous, chaotic and cool title track are but a few of the magical highlights aboard. Either this or the Parrot sides will do in a pinch, but after hearing this, you won't be able to imagine being without either one."
allmusic
YouTube: Natural Man, Don't Touch My Head, Eisenhower Blues, Man Watch Your Woman, Let Me Die with the One I Love, Talk to Your Daughter, If I Give My Love to You, Five Years, I've Been Down For So Long, Korea Blues, Everybody Wants to Know

2011 May: J.B. Lenoir

UNEDITED HISTORY, Iran 1960-2014


Kamran Shirdel (video projection)
"The Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris is presenting UNEDITED HISTORY, Iran 1960-2014 at ARC. Comprising over 200 works for the most part never shown in France before, the exhibition brings a fresh eye to art and visual culture in Iran from the 1960s up to the present. Its survey of the contemporary history of the country is arranged in sequences; the years 1960–1970, the revolutionary era of 1979, the Iran-Iraq war (1980–1988) and the postwar period up until today. Bringing together twenty artists from the years 1960–1970 and representatives of the new generation, the exhibition focuses on painting, photography and cinema, as well as key aspects of Iran's modern visual culture: posters and documentary material ranging from the Shiraz-Persepolis Festival of the Arts to the revolutionary period and the Iran-Iraq war."
MAM Musée d'Art (Video)
Universes in Universe
artforum
NY Times: Rare Glimpses of Iran’s Lost Underworld
Dailymotion: 50 years of Iranian contemporary art on show in Paris (Video)

Louis Faurer


Wikipedia - "Louis Faurer (August 28, 1916 – March 2, 2001) was an American fashion photographer and a master of candid or street photography. ... It is Faurer’s personal work from the '40s, '50s, and '60s for which he is best remembered. He photographed the streets of New York and Philadelphia, capturing the restless energy of urban life. His sensitive lens probed the great variety of the city's human face, especially 'the lonely Times Square people for whom Faurer felt a deep sympathy.' Faurer experimented with blur, grain, double exposures, sandwiched negatives, reflections, slow film speeds, and low lighting to achieve the effects he was seeking. As exacting in the darkroom as he was in the field, he was notorious for being a tireless perfectionist when it came to cropping and printing his work."
Wikipedia
NY Times: The Streets, Frozen in Neon
The Art Institute of Chicago
amazon: Louis Faurer
NY Times: 'Time Capsule' (Video)

Danielle Mastrion


"Danielle Mastrion is an NYC-based Artist: a painter, muralist, and street artist. Born & raised in Brooklyn, New York, Danielle gained a B.F.A in Illustration at Parsons School of Design. Her specialty is portraiture, and she works regularly on public and private commissions. Danielle has painted walls all around NYC, the US and abroad. Her murals in NYC include the recently painted Beastie Boys tribute on Ludlow & Rivington Street in the LES; the mural was featured in Mass Appeal, Rolling Stone, Spin Magazine & Billboard Magazine. She is currently painting a series of commemorative murals for The Yankees at Yankee Stadium in The Bronx along with Lexi Bella. Her other mural work in NYC can be found at The Bushwick Collective (Biggie Smalls) , Welling Court Mural Project in Astoria Queens (Bring Back Our Girls Wall); Centrefuge Public Art Project, the Myrtle-Broadway intersection wall, and was on the historic 5POINTZ building."
Danielle Mastrion (Video)

Lola - Rainer Werner Fassbinder (1981 BRD Trilogy)


Wikipedia - "Lola is a 1981 West German film directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and is the third in his BRD Trilogy. ... In 1957–1958 in Coburg, in post-World War II West Germany, Schuckert (Mario Adorf) is a local construction entrepreneur whose methods of gaining wealth include shady business practices such as bribing the local officials. His latest scheme is endangered with the arrival of von Bohm (Armin Mueller-Stahl), a high-minded building commissioner. Von Bohm tries to institute gradual change of the system from within, rather than exposing the participants. Meanwhile he falls in love with a beautiful woman named Lola (Barbara Sukowa). They are attracted to each other, and von Bohm starts thinking of marriage. Von Bohm finds out that she is a cabaret singer and prostitute in the town brothel, where most of von Bohm's adversaries are her clients, and that she is the 'personal toy' of Schuckert, and he collects evidence against Schuckert to expose the corruption."
Wikipedia
W - BRD Trilogy
Mirroring History: Fassbinder’s The BRD Trilogy
Fassbinder's BRD Trilogy
Looking Back: The BRD Trilogy (1979/81/82)
Candy-colored decadence: Fassbinder’s ‘Lola’ (1981)
TCM: Lola (1981) The Soul Is Sad, Your Mother's A Leprous Whore, Ten Years Of Peace
YouTube: Lola (1981) 1:55:02

2014 May: Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 2014 June: Effi Briest (1974), 2014 July: Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (1974), 2014 September: A Little Chaos: A Short Crime Film by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Enfant Terrible of New German Cinema.

Fear and Trembling - Søren Kierkegaard (1843)


Wikipedia - "Fear and Trembling ... is an influential philosophical work by Søren Kierkegaard, published in 1843 under the pseudonym Johannes de silentio (John of the Silence). The title is a reference to a line from Philippians 2:12, '...continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling.' - itself a probable reference to Psalms 55:5, 'Fear and trembling came upon me...' (the Greek is identical). Kierkegaard wanted to understand the anxiety that must have been present in Abraham when 'God tested [him] and said to him, take Isaac, your only son, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah and offer him as a burnt offering on the mountain that I shall show you.' Abraham had a choice to complete the task or to forget it. He resigned himself to the three and a half day journey and to the loss of his son."
Wikipedia
Fear and Trembling by Sören Kierkegaard

2011 July: Søren Kierkegaard, 2013 April: Repetition (1843), 2013 December: The Quotable Kierkegaard.



Money - Henry Hills (1985)


"Money (1985) is an historical document of the early days of 'language poetry' and the downtown improvised music scene. A manic collage film from the mid-80s when it still seemed that Reaganism of the soul could be defeated. Filmed primarily on the streets of Manhattan for the ambient sounds and movements and occasional pedestrian interaction to create a rich tapestry of swirling colors and juxtaposed architectural spaces in deep focus and present the intense urban overflowing energy that is experience living here. ..."
Henry Hills
PennSound: Money

2012 May: Henry Hills

The Anarchist Movement in Barre


Italian-American stone cutter monument
"For a few years prior to World War I, Barre was a center for anarchist ferment in the United States. It was a time of rapid growth for Barre village and town, with the population increasing by 73 percent between 1890 and 1900, and another 27 percent from 1900 to 1910. Barre’s expanding granite industry fueled this population boom, composed largely of foreign-born skilled stone-cutters and quarrymen from Scotland, Spain, and especially northern Italy, making it Vermont’s preeminent melting pot, blue-collar community. By 1914, almost one-quarter of the town’s population was Italian. ..."
Vermont Historical Society (Video)
Times Argus: Luigi Galleani and the anarchists of Barre
YouTube: The Unconquered and the Unconquerable, Barre's undergoing a tremendous transformation
W - Socialist Labor Party Hall
[PDF] Italian Anarchism as a Transnational Movement, 1885–1915
Historic French and Italian Newspapers in Vermont

Wayne Thiebaud Acquavella Galleries


'Yo-Yos', 1963
"... Wayne Thiebaud is one of the most celebrated artists working today. Best known for painting everyday objects from gumball machines to bakeshop windows, Thiebaud uses tactile brushwork, saturated colors and luminous light for a range of subjects he describes as 'people, places and things.' Although associated with Pop art of the 1960s, Thiebaud depicts subjects that reflect a nostalgia and reverence for American culture that sets him apart from the stark commercialism of Warhol and his contemporaries. Thiebaud takes a formal approach to issues of color, light, composition and space, stating that his only intention when he paints is to 'get the painting to a point of resolution'.”
Acquavella Galleries
New American Paintings
amazon: Wayne Thiebaud: A Retrospective

2012 November: Wayne Thiebaud

The Slits - Live in Cincinnati and San Francisco 1980


"... The Slits' aggressive and confrontational sound was most definitely their own: the foundation was a stuttering, stumbling rhythm pounded out with grim determination by Palmolive and accentuated by Tessa's thudding, reverberating bass; choppy guitar chords on maximum fuzz (and always ever-so-slightly off-key) scratched through the racket at irregular intervals like jagged shards of cut glass; and undulating over the whole live, solid mass came Ari's signature wobbly, screeching wails and yelps."
everything2
YouTube: Live in Cincinnati and San Francisco 1980 44:04

2010 October: Ari Up (17 January 1962 – 20 October 2010), 2012 July: Subatomic Sound System meets Lee Scratch Perry & Ari Up of the Slits (7″ vinyl)

Sam Dees - Lonely for You Baby


"... Being a proper Northern album there has to be rarities and there's none rarer than Sam Dees' 'Lonely For You Baby'. Released on SSS, this was Sam's first single and the throbbing beater's a world away from the melancholy ballads for which Sam became famous, but it's no less soulful."
SoulandJazzandFunk
Sam Dees
YouTube: Lonely for You Baby

2012 October: Northern Soul, 2012 December: The obsession that is Northern Soul, 2013 November: Poor-Man's Speed: Coming of Age in Wigan's Anarchic Northern Soul Scene, 2014 May: Northern Soul: Keeping The Faith - The Culture Show.

How Edward Hopper “Storyboarded” His Iconic Painting Nighthawks


"Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks (1942) doesn’t just evoke a certain stripe of mid-century, after-hours, big-city American loneliness; it has more or less come to stand for the feeling itself. But as with most images that passed so fully into the realm of iconhood, we all too easily forget that the painting didn’t simply emerge complete, ready to embed itself in the zeitgeist. Robin Cembalest at ARTnews has a post on how Edward Hopper 'storyboarded' Nighthawks, finding and sketching out models for those three melancholic customers (one of whom you can see in an early rendering above), that wholesome young attendant in white, and the all-night diner (which you can see come together in chalk on paper below) in which they find refuge."
Open Culture

2008 July: Edward Hopper, 2010 October: Finding Nighthawks, 2010 December: Modern Life: Edward Hopper and His Time, 2012 Wednesday: Through Edward Hopper's eyes: in search of an artist's seaside inspiration, 2013 July: Hopper Drawing, 2014 May: INTERVIEW: “An Interview with Edward Hopper, June 17, 1959″.

Bootleggers


Thomas Hart Benton, "Bootleggers," 1927
Wikipedia - "Rum-running, or bootlegging, is the illegal business of transporting (smuggling) alcoholic beverages where such transportation is forbidden by law. Smuggling is usually done to circumvent taxation or prohibition laws within a particular jurisdiction. The term rum-running is more commonly applied to smuggling over water; bootlegging is applied to smuggling over land."
Wikipedia
Prohibition, 1920 - Vermont Historical Society (Video)
1920s' PROHIBITION
Bootleggers and Speakeasies (Video)
PBS - Prohibition: Unintended Consequences
YouTube: Rumrunners, Moonshiners, and Bootleggers 1:30:59

A Museum Is in Aspen, but Not of It


"The trend in boutique museum building reached a chilly, sun-gilded peak a few years ago and has leveled out, at least in the United States. These days we mostly get unsexy makeovers and add-ons, and the critical conversation has moved on. Still, celebrity commissions appear. A Renzo Piano-designed satellite for the Whitney Museum of American Art is underway in Lower Manhattan. And last month, a new home for the Aspen Art Museum designed by the Japanese architect Shigeru Ban, winner of the 2014 Pritzker Prize, made its debut here."
NY Times

The Ticket That Exploded - William S. Burroughs


Wikipedia - "The Ticket That Exploded is a novel by William S. Burroughs first published in 1962 by Olympia Press and later published in the United States by Grove Press in 1967. It is the second book in a trilogy created using the cut-up technique, often referred to as The Nova Trilogy. The novel follows The Soft Machine and precedes Nova Express in an anarchic tale concerning mind control by psychic, electronic, sexual, pharmaceutical, subliminal, and other means. Passages from the previous book and even from this book show up in rearranged form and are often repeated. This work is significant for fans of Burroughs, in that it describes his idea of language as a virus and his philosophy of the cut-up technique."
Wikipedia
Reality Studio: Burroughs, Berrigan, and The Ticket That Exploded
NY Times: June 16, 1967 - Cutting-Up

2009 May: Cut-up technique - 1, 2010 March: Cut-up technique, 2010 December: The Evolution of the Cut-Up Technique in My Own Mag, 2012 August: The Nova Trilogy, 2014 February: William Burroughs at 100.

The Last Saturday: A New Graphic Novel by Chris Ware Now Being Serialized at The Guardian


"Thought you might like a heads up that The Guardian has started publishing on its web site The Last Saturday, 'a brand new graphic novella by the award-winning cartoonist Chris Ware, tracing the lives of six individuals from Sandy Port, Michigan.' It will be published in weekly episodes, with a new installment appearing on this page every Saturday.  The innovative comic book artist, known for his graphic novels Jimmy Corrigan, the Smartest Kid on Earth and Building Stories, will be getting some good support from the , which should make it quite the visual experience."
Open Culture

2012 December: "Building Stories"

BAM: Retro Metro


The Warriors
"Stepping into a train car in New York City can do more than just get you to your destination, it can serve as a way for you to see how the identity of the city is transforming before your very eyes. We all know that NYC has been the inspiration for many great works of cinema and through these snapshots in time, we are able to see how the city has evolved. From street cars to graffiti canvases, the NYC subway has a long history, one that has been captured on film for many decades. From September 26th to October 5th, you can personally see how the NYC subway system has evolved by checking out the newest film series by BAM titled Retro Metro. 16 films, each showcasing a different era of the NYC subway will be shown."
Retro Metro: BAM is Hosting A Film Series About NYC Subway History
WNYC: BAM's 'Retro Metro': Subway History Through Film (Video)
"Retro Metro" and the Golden Age of NYC Graffiti
BAM: Retro Metro

2010 August: The Warriors

Inside the Quartet


"Founded 40 years ago, the Kronos Quartet has broken the boundaries of what string quartets do, commissioning hundreds of new works that have brought jazz, tango, experimental and world music into the genre. The string quartet, based in San Francisco, has released 57 albums, sold more than 2.5 million of those recordings and has become a mentor to several generations of quartets that have followed in its innovative wake. One day earlier this year at a studio in downtown Manhattan, the members — David Harrington and John Sherba, violinists; Hank Dutt, violist; and Sunny Yang, cellist — were game for an experiment: to create a video that would serve as a new way to explain the special mystery of how a quartet communicates."
NY Times (Video)
NY Times: Hurricane Sandy Blows Through Brooklyn Again - Laurie Anderson’s ‘Landfall’ at BAM (Video)
NY Times: The Kronos Quartet as a Dot Cloud (Video)
W - Kronos Quartet discography

2011 September: 30 years - Kronos Quartet, 2014 March: Kronos Quartet Plays Terry Riley: Salome Dances for Peace (1989)

Dear Nemesis, Nicole Eisenman 1993–2013


"Dear Nemesis, Nicole Eisenman 1993–2013 is the most expansive mid-career survey of this major American artist to date. Over 120 paintings, drawings, prints, and sculptures represent Eisenman’s sprawling 20-year output. A painter consistently drawn to figures and faces, Eisenman’s canvases overflow with pathos and humor, tenderness and violence. An early focus on drawing, evident in murals and installations, evolved into large, narrative paintings clustered with bodies—and heads. Often abstracted into planes of color, Eisenman’s heads laugh, cry, kiss, and bend into the glow of cell phones."
ICA
NY Times: A Career of Toasting Rebellions
Dear Nemesis: Figurative painting is alive and well in CAM's survey of Nicole Eisenman's midcareer work
YouTube: Dear Nemesis, Nicole Eisenman 1993–2013

"Baby, Please Don't Go"


Big Joe Williams
Wikipedia - "'Baby, Please Don't Go' is a classic blues song which has been called 'one of the most played, arranged, and rearranged pieces in blues history'. It was popularized by Delta blues musician Big Joe Williams, who recorded the first of several versions of the song in 1935. Its roots have been traced back to nineteenth-century American songs, which deal with themes of bondage and imprisonment. 'Baby, Please Don't Go' became an early blues standard with recordings by several blues musicians. After World War II, it was adapted by Chicago blues as well as rhythm and blues artists. ... Big Joe Williams recorded 'Baby, Please Don't Go' October 31, 1935 in Chicago during his first session for Lester Melrose and Bluebird Records. It is an ensemble piece with Williams on vocal and guitar accompanied by Dad Tracy on one-string fiddle and Chasey 'Kokomo' Collins on washboard, who are listed as 'Joe Williams' Washboard Blues Singers' on the single."
Wikipedia
"Baby Please Don't Go (Origins of a Blues)" by Max Haymes
YouTube: "Baby Please Don't Go" - Big Joe Williams (1935), John Lee Hooker, Big Bill Broonzy, Fred Mcdowell, Muddy Waters, Mance Lipscomb (Live), Lightnin' Hopkins (Live), Rose Mitchell, Big Maybelle, Jo Ann Henderson, Bob Dylan, Them (Live)

The New York Review of Books


"With a worldwide circulation of over 135,000, The New York Review of Books has established itself, in Esquire‘s words, as 'the premier literary-intellectual magazine in the English language.' The New York Review began during the New York publishing strike of 1963, when its founding editors, Robert Silvers and Barbara Epstein, and their friends, decided to create a new kind of magazine—one in which the most interesting and qualified minds of our time would discuss current books and issues in depth. Just as importantly, it was determined that the Review should be an independent publication; it began life as an independent editorial voice and it remains independent today."
The New York Review of Books
The New York Review of Books: Blog
W - The New York Review of Books
amazon: [Kindle Edition]

I Work the Street. Joan Colom, photographs 1957-2010


"The most acclaimed chronicler of Catalan culture, Joan Colom (born 1921) is one of the most important Spanish photographers of the second half of the twentieth century. This book presents more than 500 photographs spanning the whole of his career. It includes his best-known images of the 1950s and 60s, taken somewhat clandestinely in the red-light district of Barcelona's famous Barrio Chino--black-and-white portrayals of the city's street life and underworld that have since become iconic. Also included is a less familiar side of Colom's career--his reportage of the 1990s, in which he began to use color, surveyed here for the first time."
ARTBOOK@
W - Joan Colom
Laurence Miller Gallery
vimeo: 15:53
Google

Marc Ribot Trio with Mary Halvorson at The Stone


"... The Trio consists of Marc Ribot on guitar, Henry Grimes on upright bass and occasionally violin, and Chad Taylor on drums. I saw them a few times back in November at the Village Vanguard (see my review/video/etc. here), and after those stellar performances I was really looking forward to seeing them in the Stone with a group of good friends. I was expecting them to mix things up a bit since they had invited special guests each night: guitarist Mary Halvorson on Friday and keyboardist Cooper-Moore on Saturday."
Concert Manic!
YouTube: Marc Ribot Trio with Mary Halvorson at The Stone Pt 1, Pt 2, Pt3, Pt4

2011 February: Selling Water By the Side of the River - Evan Lurie, 2012 September: Marc Ribot, 2013 February: Silent Movies, 2013 November: The Nearness Of You, 2014 January: Full Concert Jazz in Marciac (2010), 2014 May: Gig Alert: Marc Ribot Trio.

One painter’s dreamy scenes of New York at play


Rockaway Beach, 1901
"Though he spent much of his life in his beloved Paris, Alfred Henry Maurer was a New Yorker from beginning to end. Born in the city in 1868, he was the son of a German immigrant who worked as a talented lithographer for Currier and Ives. After studying with William Merritt Chase, Maurer took off for Paris, the center of the art world at the time, where he worked in a mostly realist style, depicting beautiful women and cafe life in the city of light. ..."
Ephemeral New York
Ephemeral New York: A lovely day in Brooklyn’s Tompkins Park in 1887
W - William Merritt Chase
William Merritt Chase
YouTube: William Merritt Chase

The Payback - James Brown (1973)


"Originally released in 1973 as a sprawling two-LP set, The Payback was one of James Brown's most ambitious albums of the 1970's, and also one of his best, with Brown and his band (which in 1974 still included Fred Wesley, Maceo Parker, St. Clair Pinckney, Jimmy Nolen and Jabo Starks) relentlessly exploring the outer possibilities of the James Brown groove. Stretching eight cuts out over the space of nearly 73 minutes, The Payback is long on extended rhythmic jamming, and by this time Brown and his band had become such a potent and nearly telepathic combination that the musicians were able pull out lengthy solos while still maintaining some of the most hypnotic funk to be found anywhere, and on the album's best songs -- the jazzy 'Time Is Running Out Fast', the relentless 'Shoot Your Shot', the tight-wound 'Mind Power', and the bitter revenge fantasy of the title cut -- the tough, sinuous rhythms and the precise interplay between the players is nothing short of a wonder to behold. ..."
allmusic
W - The Payback
W - The Payback (Song)
Head Heritage
amazon
YouTube: The Payback album 1:26:35
YouTube: Payback 1974 Live At The Midnight Special

Eugène Guillevic


Wikipedia - "Eugène Guillevic (Carnac, Morbihan, France, August 5, 1907 Carnac – March 19, 1997 Paris) was one of the better known French poets of the second half of the 20th century. Professionally, he went under just the single name 'Guillevic'. ... He was a pre-war friend of Jean Follain, who introduced him to the 'Sagesse' group. Then he belonged to the 'School of Rochefort'. He was a practicing Catholic for about thirty years. He became a communist sympathizer during the Spanish Civil War, and in 1942 joined the Communist Party when he joined with Paul Éluard, and participated in the publications of the underground press (Pierre Seghers, Jean Lescure). His poetry is concise, straightforward as rock, rough and generous, but still suggestive. His poetry is also characterized by its rejection of metaphors, in that he prefers comparisons which he considered less misleading."
Wikipedia
Independent
Justice - The Man Closing Up
Silence in the writings of Guillevic and Beckett
amazon

Prose and Kahn


"In the Spring of 1952, twenty-four-year-old newspaper reporter Roger Kahn, traveling with the Brooklyn Dodgers for the first time, decided to pay Jackie Robinson a surprise visit at the Sir John Hotel in Miami Beach. Kahn was convinced that the integration of baseball was still the most important sports story of the time, and wanted to solicit the All-Star second baseman’s thoughts on the state of integration, six years after his historic 1947 breakthrough, for a Sunday feature in the New York Herald Tribune. Though Robinson had established himself as one of the game’s best players and biggest gate attractions, he and his black teammates were, Kahn was dismayed to learn, still considered second-class citizens in south Florida. While the Dodger clubhouse had become, by this time, a model for progressive attitudes towards race, black and white ballplayers still had to go separate ways when the games were over."
Prose and Kahn
amazon: Rickey & Robinson: The True, Untold Story of the Integration of Baseball

2009 September: Jackie Robinson, 2010 January: Baseball color line, 2010 February: New York Cubans, 2010 June: Red Barber.