Times Square of the 1980s: A Short Documentary


"Siegel captures a pre-Disneyfied Times Square at night two decades past. As seen from a teenager's point of view, the short film includes voice-over interviews with local teenagers. A great blast from the past and a reminder of the importance of an era where so many of our current influential artists gained traction."
Juxtapoz - Times Square of the 1980s: A Short Documentary

Dion and the Belmonts


Wikipedia - "Dion and the Belmonts was a leading American vocal group of the late 1950s. The group formed when Dion DiMucci, lead singer, (born July 18, 1939), joined The Belmonts - Carlo Mastrangelo, baritone, (born October 5, 1938), Freddie Milano, second tenor, (born August 22, 1939), and Angelo D'Aleo, first tenor, (born February 3, 1940) in late 1957."
Wikipedia, W - The_Belmonts, YouTube - I Wonder Why, A teenager in love, Donna the Prima Donna, Runaround sue, The Wanderer, Ruby Baby, Abraham, Martin And John

Simon Schama's Power of Art - Rothko


"A documentary about the american abstract expressionist painter Mark Rothko. A BBC program."
Simon Schama's Power of Art - Rothko, part 1 of 7, 2 of 7, 3 of 7, 4 of 7, 5 of 7, 6 of 7, 7 of 7

African Women Djembefola


"African women playing djembe in Guinea, West Africa"
YouTube

Joanna Neborsky


"The rise of the literary animation. As previously reported, Teleportal Readings has begun producing delightful animated videos of author readings. Also Electric Literature has been makingĂ‚ beautiful animations of single sentences. One of our favorites was Joanna Neborsky‘s take on a line from Patrick deWitt‘s 'The Bastard'."
MobyLives, Joanna Neborsky, A Journey Round My Skull

In Your Dreams


"Shoveling snow away from the movie entrance, Chilicothe, Ohio: photo by Arthur Rothstein, February 1940"
Tom Clark: Beyond the Pale

David Rawlings And Gillian Welch: NPR's Tiny Desk Concert


"David Rawlings is a remarkably gifted producer, session guitarist and singer who's most widely known for his contributions to other musicians' work — particularly his longtime partnership with folk and traditional country artist Gillian Welch."
npr - David Rawlings And Gillian Welch

February 2009: Gillian Welch

Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond


"Michael Nyman's book is a first-hand account of experimental music from 1950 to 1970. First published in 1974, it has remained the classic text on a significant form of music making and composing that developed alongside, and partly in opposition to, the postwar modernist tradition of composers such as Boulez, Berio, or Stockhausen."
amazon, Google

RE/Search Publications


Wikipedia - "RE/Search Publications is an American magazine and book publisher, based in San Francisco, founded and edited by Andrea Juno and V. Vale in 1980. It was the successor to Vale's earlier punk rock fanzine Search & Destroy (1977–1979), and was started with $100 from Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. RE/Search itself began as a tabloid-sized magazine."
Wikiedia, Pranks, Punk and Industrial Culture from V. Vale, YouTube - John Waters on RE/Search's "Pranks!"

Trouble Funk


Wikipedia - "Trouble Funk is an American R&B and funk band from Washington, D.C. They helped to popularize the Washington, D.C. funk subgenre go-go. Among their well-known songs is the go-go anthem 'Hey Fellas'."
Wikiedia, last.fm, wat - HEY FELLAS, YouTube - Good To Go, Still Smokin' (The Tube 1986), Drop The Bomb (1982), Let's Get Small (1982)

Kraftwerk and the Electronic Revolution


"I thought I knew something about Kraftwerk, and Krautrock for that matter, till I saw the documentary DVD 'Kraftwerk and the Electronic Revolution' by Thomas Arnold. The DVD takes us on a journey through late 60s, early 70s Germany where lingering depression and shame from WWII inspired a new generation of youth to find new freedom and expressions in pop music."
Synth ME, amazon, veoh - Kraftwerk and the Electronic Revolution

Playing with Pictures: The Art of Victorian Photocollage


Mary Georgiana Caroline, Lady Filmer (English, 1838–1903)
"Most often, our special exhibitions highlight important aspects of the Met's collection or explore areas of curatorial expertise, but occasionally they give us the chance, instead, to present a type of work that's entirely absent from the collection. Playing with Pictures: The Art of Victorian Photocollage is one such instance."
Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYT - The Pastime of Victorian Cutups, YouTube - Women's Work: Albums and Their Makers

Swoon


"Swoon is a street artist originally from Daytona Beach, Florida. She moved to New York City at age nineteen, and specializes in life-size wheatpaste prints and paper cutouts of figures. Swoon, real name Caledonia Dance Curry, studied painting at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn and started doing street art around 1999."
Wikipedia, gothamist, SWOON, YouTube - Walrus TV Artist Feature: Swoon Interview from "The Run Up" , Swoon presenting her work at MoMA, (Part 1 of 2), (Part 2 of 2)

Hand Catching Lead (1968) - Richard Serra


"1968's Hand Catching Lead was Serra's first film (youtube will try and tell you it was made in 1971, but that's youtube). Serra claims it was an attempt to break into the 'intimidating' medium of film, inspired by the 'great freedom' he saw expressed in Warhol's work and the 'tentative, experimental' nature of films like Yvonne Rainer's Hand Movie and Line."
UbuWeb

‘A Vanguard of Friends’ - Dan Chiasson


Jane Freilicher: The Painting Table, 1954
"Tibor de Nagy, the iconic midtown gallery, has been celebrating its sixtieth anniversary with a show that doesn’t so much trace its history as distill its early essence. 'Painters & Poets' includes drawings, chapbooks, letters and well-known paintings that emerged from the fantastic collaborations between Frank O’Hara and Larry Rivers, O’Hara and Joe Brainard, Brainard and John Ashbery, James Schuyler and Grace Hartigan, among many others."
NYR Blog

"Adios Nonino" - Astor Piazzolla


"It's useless to understand the somber poetry nestled beneath these melodies thirsty of calm and hope whose sleepless inspiration always searches elusive roots, he is the son of immigrants who desperately left their native lands and never returned, so this genetic heritage makes the Argentinean gazes America with European lenses, loaded of a devouring blend of nostalgia and homesickness that never finds shelter. Let these sounds convey you to unknown landscapes and unexplored horizons, due the tango is the loyal swan's song and inseparable partnership of a never-ending journey. - Hiram Gomez Pardo"
amazon, YouTube - "Adios Nonino"

Betye Saar


Record for Hattie, 1974
Wikipedia - "Betye Irene Saar (July 30, 1926 in Los Angeles, California) is an American artist, known for her work in the field of assemblage. ... In the late 1960s Saar began collecting images of Aunt Jemima, Uncle Tom, Little Black Sambo, and other stereotyped African American figures from folk culture and advertising. She incorporated them into collages and assemblages, transforming them into statements of political and social protest."
Wikipedia, Betye Saar, npr - "Life Is a Collage for Artist Betye Saar", YouTube - Racism - Part 1, Part 2, The Liberation of Aunt Jemima, The Resurrection of Aunt Jemima, The Influence of the African Diaspora, Artistic Style

Different Trains (1988) - Steve Reich


Wikipedia - "Different Trains is a three-movement piece for string quartet and tape written by Steve Reich in 1988. ... The work's three movements have the following titles: America-Before the War (movement 1), Europe-During the War (movement 2), After the War (movement 3). During the war years, Reich made train journeys between New York and Los Angeles to visit his parents, who had separated. Years later, he pondered the fact that, as a Jew, had he been in Europe instead of the United States at that time, he might have been travelling in Holocaust trains."
Wikipedia, amazon, Literature of the Holocaust
vimeo: Different Trains part 1-America before the war, part 2-Europe during the war, Different Trains part 3-America after the war
Neil Haydock: different trains - part one (Video), part 2, part 3, part 4

Brion Gysin exhibition ‘Alarm’ in Paris at Galerie de France


William S. Burroughs and Brion Gysin, The Third Mind, 1965
"‘Alarm’, a new Brion Gysin exhibition in Paris at Galerie de France opened on 19th February and runs until 02 April 2011. La Galerie de France was one of the private galleries that supported and exhibited Brion Gysin’s work during his life time. This exhibition features works from private collections."
Brion Gysin - Video

Robert Grenier


Wikipedia - "Robert Grenier (born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on August 4, 1941– ) is a contemporary American poet associated with the Language School. He was founding co-editor (with Barrett Watten) of the influential magazine This (1971–1974). This was a watershed moment in the history of recent American poetry, providing one of the first gatherings in print of various writers, artists, and poets now identified (or loosely referred to) as the Language poets."
Wikipedia, EPC, Review: Robert Grenier – 64 (The Irony of Flatness, Bury Art Gallery, 19 July – 8 November), Robert Grenier: A Survey, CAPITALIZATION in Grenier's Series: Poems 1967-1971, SENTENCES. Robert Grenier.

A Stanley Kubrick Odyssey - A Tribute


"We received an email earlier this week from Richard Vezina to let us know about a rather impressive homage he's put together celebrating the work of the late, great Stanley Kubrick. Described as a 'visual-analysis', the 13-minute video juxtaposes imagery from all of the director's films (barring Spartacus, which Richard doesn't consider to be an original Kubrick movie), and really is an exceptional tribute to the legendary filmmaker and his unique visual talents."
Flickering Myth

September 2010: 2001: Space Odyssey
May 2009: Stanley Kubrick

The Aggrovators


Wikipedia - "The Aggrovators were a dub/reggae backing band in the 1970s & 1980s, and one of the main session bands of producer, Bunny Lee. The line-up varied, with Lee using the name for whichever set of musicians he was using at any time. The band's name derived from the record shop that Lee had run in the late 1960s, Agro Sounds. Alumni of the band included many musicians who later went to make names for themselves in reggae music. Legends such as Jackie Mittoo, Sly and Robbie, Tommy McCook, and Aston Barrett were all involved with the band at one point or another."
Wikipedia, YouTube - Ten Pieces In One, Sun Is Shining Dub, Jah Jah Dub, Doctor Seaton, Take Five, Blood Version, A Natty Version

Talking Union and Other Union Songs - The Almanac Singer


"Pete Seeger, in a conversation with Tim Robbins for Pacifica Radio (2006), talks about The Almanac Singer, Woody Guthrie, Lee Hays, John Handcox, Theodore Dreiser, Alan Lomax, Millard Lampell, raising money for records (Songs for John Doe), The Daily Worker, Folkways reissue of 'Talking Union' with additional recordings by The Songswappers (including Mary Travers, Erik Darling), Hitler, Stalin, Churchill, Truman etc., and sings (parts of) 'Why Do You Stand There In The Rain?' and 'The Strange Death of John Doe' (model for Bob Dylan's 'Man On The Street')."
YouTube - The Almanac Singers, Smithsonian Institution - Talking Union and Other Union Songs, I Don't Want Your Millions (Almanac Singers.), Talking Union, Pete Seeger & Arlo Guthrie - Union Maid, Pete Seeger - Which side are you on, Pete Seeger - We shall not be moved, Almanac Singers - Roll The Union On, Bucky Halker - Casey Jones, the Union Scab, Miners Lifeguard (Wilsons), Pete Seeger & The Weavers - Solidarity Forever

The Tower


Wikipedia - "The Tower (XVI) (most common modern name) is the sixteenth trump or Major Arcana card in most cartomancy Tarot decks. It is not used as part of any game."
Wikipedia

La Seine


A walkway along the Right Bank near the Tuileries
Wikipedia - "The Seine (French: La Seine, pronounced: [la sɛn]) is a major river and commercial waterway within the regions of the Île-de-France and Haute-Normandie in France."
Wikipedia, Paris History: La Seine, YouTube - The Seine, Paris, La Seine Ă  Paris

On Line


"Drawing conventionally has been associated with pen, pencil, and paper, but artists have drawn lines on walls, earth, ceramics, fabric, film, and computer screens, with tools ranging from sticks to scrapers to pixels. Looking beyond institutional definitions of the medium, On Line ... argues for an expanded history of drawing that moves off the page into space and time."
MoMA

Selling Water By the Side of the River - Evan Lurie


"His first solo album, Selling Water by the Side of the River was released in 1990, during a hiatus from the Lounge Lizards. The album, which showcases Lurie's compositional skills, consists of classically-inflected chamber pieces featuring Alfredo Pedernera on bandoneon and Marc Ribot on guitar. ... ~ Matthew Carlin, Rovi"
YouTube, amazon, YouTube - Evan Lurie : Spinster's Waltz, Rintrah Roars, Terraces, The orderly retreat

Slinger - Edward Dorn


"Dorn's high-spirited, crazy-quilt, complex anti-epic is a masterful critique of late twentieth-century capitalism and is one of the great comic poems of American literature. Dorn is one of the few political poets in America; this fantasy about a demigod cowboy, a saloon madam, and a talking horse named Claude Levi-Strauss, who travel the Southwest in search of Howard Hughes, as become a minor classic."
amazon, Jacket 23# - Edward Dorn: A World of Difference, by Tom Clark, Google - "Art Rising to Clarity: Edward Dorn's Compleat Slinger" by William J. Lockwood, Edward Dorn: Gunslinger Book 1......Podcast of opening lines read by Ed Dorn at bottom of blog, Chicago Poetry - "INTERVIEW WITH ED DORN" by Effie Mihopoulos, gary brower gunslinger in new mexico: for ed dorn (1929-1999)

M|A|R|R|S


Wikipedia - "MARRS (stylised MARRS on logo) was a 1987 one-off recording act formed by the groups A.R. Kane and Colourbox which only released one commercial disc. It became 'a one-hit wonder of rare influence' because of their international hit 'Pump Up the Volume', considered the first UK number one to contain samples from other songs, and nominated for a Grammy Award in 1989."
Wikipedia, W - Pump Up the Volume (song), YouTube - M.A.R.S. - Pump Up The Volume, MARRS - Pump Up The Volume [Radio Edit]

Christian Marclay: The Clock


"'The Clock' is constructed out of moments in cinema when time is expressed or when a character interacts with a clock, watch or just a particular time of day. Marclay has excerpted thousands of these fragments and edited them so that they flow in real time. While 'The Clock' examines how time, plot and duration are depicted in cinema, the video is also a working timepiece that is synchronised to the local time zone."
White Cube, Huffington Post, Artinfo, NYT, Paula Cooper Gallery, YouTube

The Social Network


"They all laughed at college nerd Mark Zuckerberg, whose idea for a social-networking site made him a billionaire. And they all laughed at the idea of a Facebook movie--except writer Aaron Sorkin and director David Fincher, merely two of the more extravagantly talented filmmakers around. Sorkin and Fincher's breathless picture, The Social Network, is a fast and witty creation myth about how Facebook grew from Zuckerberg's insecure geek-at-Harvard days into a phenomenon with 500 million users."
amazon, YouTube - The Social Network, YouTube - New York Film Festival, 1 of 5, 2 0f 5, 3 of 5, 4 of 5, 5 of 5

Hugo Keesing


"Hugo Keesing is a teacher and a pop music archivist. I'm not sure he'd refer to himself as an artist (I didn't ask him), but he did produce a piece of work called Chartsweep, which many of us who listen to sound collage couldn't help but think of as art."
UbuWeb

The Blues Accordin’ to Lightnin’ Hopkins


"A 1967 Les Blank film of Lightnin Hopkins visiting his hometown of Centerville, TX '…a gorgeous 31-minute poem of a movie, a series of snapshots from his life as well as a look at an era fast disappearing…Watching the film is something of a revelation, at least if you ever had a doubt where the blues came from.'"
Metafilter, Classic Blues Videos/YouTube - Blues Documentaries

Faith47


"Faith47 is a painter and street artist known best for the giant murals that adorn the city of Cape Town."
Wooster Collective

Bernarda Bryson Shahn


Wikipedia - "Bernarda Bryson Shahn (March 9, 1903 – December 13, 2004) was an American painter, lithographer and widow of renowned artist Ben Shahn, who wrote and illustrated children's books including 'The Zoo of Zeus' and 'Gilgamesh.' She met her future husband during a trip to New York in 1932. Both of them worked for the Depression-era Resettlement Administration, later part of the Farm Security Administration."
Wikipedia, The Visual Literature of Bernarda Bryson-Shahn: Developing a Social Conscience, Google