ALDEN PROJECTS™ Richard Mcguire: Art for the Street – New

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ALDEN PROJECTS™ Richard Mcguire: Art for the Street – New ALDEN PROJECTS™ 34 Orchard Street New York, NY 10002 212 229 2453 [email protected] www.aldenprojects.com Richard McGuire: Art for the Street – New York 1978-82 September 27 – November 18, 2018 Richard McGuire: Art for the Street – New York 1978-82 is a revelatory exhibition focusing on two strains of protean artist Richard McGuire’s early work: the Ixnae Nix street drawings and his original art created for band posters, including Liquid Liquid, the influential downtown post-punk band for which he co-founded. The exhibition opens September 27, 2018 from 6 - 8 pm at Alden Projects and contains 50+ original works in spray- paint, crayon, collage, and silkscreen (through November 4, 2018). A newly released 144-page book published by Alden Projects, Richard McGuire: Art for the Street – New York 1978-82 (2018) accompanies the exhibition. Edited by Todd Alden with a foreword by Luc Sante, this is the first monograph on the artist’s early work, including black-and-white photographs (1979) which McGuire commissioned his friend, Martha Fishkin to take alongside McGuire after periodic nights of wheatpasting, registering the downtown New York contexts the Ixnae Nix works occupied, including St. Marks Place, Houston Street, and White Street. Richard McGuire arrived in New York in 1979, and that same year, befriended a young Keith Haring, who quickly became an early promoter of McGuire’s Ixnae Nix street works. Haring subsequently included McGuire in several exhibitions he curated at Club 57 (1980), Mudd Club (1981), and Danceteria. (McGuire’s 5 x 7’ Ixnae Nix drawing for Haring’s 1980 show at Club 57, Sudden Anatomy [1980] is in the permanent collection of The Museum of Modern Art, New York.) The artist also befriended Jean-Michel Basquiat in 1979, whose band–– later called Gray––shared early stage bills with McGuire’s at a Broome Street loft space called A’s (both shows 1979); Basquiat’s band was then billed as Test Pattern and Samo Is Dead Jazz Band. Basquiat loved the music of Liquid Liquid, according to Maripol, particularly the song “Cavern,” which was included in two key scenes of the film, Downtown 81 (released in 2000). McGuire created the recurring Ixnae Nix avatar by applying spray-paint through a hand-made stencil, itself ripped from a newspaper sheet and surrounding this black, spectral silhouette with elliptical, hand-drawn poetics in crayon and all caps on different-sized newspaper sheets; ultimately, they were wheatpasted on the streets of lower Manhattan between July 1979 and early 1981. The prankster-like character’s name derives from the word “ixnae”––Pig Latin for “nix”––rendering his full full name a double negative; like the tag “Liquid Liquid,” it also doubles as a tautology. “…The Ixnae Nix drawings” [were], as Luc Sante writes, “posters that advertised nothing but themselves. They followed a formula: newsprint sheets of variable sizes that include a rectangle within, usually aslant…inside is a silhouetted figure, generally in motion, surrounded by a brief text that, like Latin inscriptions, is unpunctuated and paced without regard for the beginnings and ends of words, so that reading it requires a bit of decoding (although most of the phrases begin at lower left and run clockwise). Taken together, the Ixnae Nix drawings might represent something like a subjective diary, one that the passerby can identify with.”1 The second focus of this exhibition is Richard McGuire’s band posters. Around 30 original collages and maquettes for band publicity at Alden Projects were executed in a variety of techniques, mostly collage, ink, and Letraset, but sometimes with airbrush and silksilkscreen.2 Luc Sante writes, “McGuire’s fliers were noticeably more stylish than the bulk of the competition. You could tell that he had spent a lot of time looking at El Lissitzky’s and László Moholy-Nagy’s collages of the 1920s and had absorbed their geometry, their shifting perspectives, their use of negative space. He never sought historical irony for its own sake, but employed the past as a given, an available raw material, an element of the landscape.”3 One highlight in Alden Projects’ show is a silkscreened poster for Liquid Liquid’s September 17, 1981 show at tiny Tribeca club on North Moore named the Cavern, which later became the namesake for the song, “Cavern” so titled because it debuted at this specific show. “We are mostly known in DJ culture for our song ‘Cavern,’ which was ‘appropriated’ by Grandmaster Flash and Melle Mel for their recording ‘White Lines (Don’t Do It)’ [1983],” McGuire recalls. “It’s now a hip-hop classic. When it was first released on the Sugar Hill label, the song was attributed to Grandmaster Flash, but that soon changed to Melle Mel, who was also part of the Furious Five and did the rapping. The song relies heavily on my bass line. Since then, many others have used this hook with a range of legitimacy.”4 Before Liquid Liquid could claim royalties, the Sugar Hill label claimed bankruptcy. McGuire’s 1981 poster for the Cavern announcing the only show Liquid Liquid ever played at the Cavern “is pure Pop and echt-post punk––the price is the dominant item.”5 The example at Alden Projects is one of three extant examples. Another highlight with another surprising back story is McGuire’s boxing style poster for the August 9, 1981 double bill for the “Konk vs. Liquid Liquid” show at Tompkins Square Park, announced in black and red silkscreened titles on yellow paper. Richard McGuire explains: “I remember visiting a boxing center on East 14th Street called the Gramercy Gym. It was like something out of the 1940s. I went there to study the posters on the walls and take design cues. The idea, of course, was to have one member from each band [e.g. Konk and Liquid Liquid] pose, with each person invited to come up with a catchy stage name and costume…The show was in Tompkins Square Park in the East Village, with an audience of well over five hundred people. A Village Voice reviewer wrote that ‘the hottest thing next to the weather was Liquid Liquid.’ So I guess we won that round!”6 The conceptual and graphic likeness to Jean-Michel Basquiat’s boxing style poster, made for the latter’s collaborative exhibition with Warhol at Tony Shafrazi Gallery in 1985––four years after McGuire’s double bill––is unmissible. The exhibition at Alden Projects explores Richard McGuire’s art for the streets of a very different New York City. He dreams of “an art that does something other than sit on its ass in a museum”;7 he dreams of Russian Constructivists’ negative spaces; of petroglyphs from New Mexico; and of Outsider art alike. McGuire’s art for the street was transmitted in designs and signals for all, but through frequencies found somewhere…left-of- the-dial. How is it possible that works of this finely tuned wit, of this effortless originality, of this infinite variety and made with this fully encompassing generosity…how is it possible that these Ixane Nix drawings and those Liquid Liquid posters––having visibly shared the streetscapes and other formative stages of No Wave New York with Basquiat, Haring, and others––how is it possible that that these perfect secrets have been kept for so long? © Todd Alden 2018 *** The fully illustrated book, Richard McGuire: Art for the Street – New York 1978-82, edited by Todd Alden with a foreword by Luc Sante, is published by Alden Projects, New York (2018, 144 pp.) in a first edition of 1000 softcover examples. Available for purchase from Alden Projects ($40). This book is also printed in a deluxe hardcover edition of 100 boxed, signed, and numbered examples containing a unique painted and drawn work by Richard McGuire. 1 Sante, Luc. Richard McGuire: Art for the Street – New York 1978-82. Ed. Todd Alden. New York: Alden Projects, 2018, p. 4. 2 The band posters themselves were typically off-set printed or Xeroxed in a quantity of “around 100,” according to McGuire. Conversation between Todd Alden and Richard McGuire, August 28, 2018. 3 Sante, op. cit., p. 4. 4 McGuire as cited in Alden, op. cit., p. 17. 5 Sante, op. cit., p. 4. 6 McGuire as cited in ed. Alden, op. cit., p. 21. 7 Claes Oldenburg, as cited by Richard McGuire in ed. Alden, op. cit., p. 10. .
Recommended publications
  • Profiles in Style
    PROFILES IN STYLE spring fashion issue Collection RALPHLAURENCOLLECTION.COM 888.475.7674 FLÂNEUR FOREVER 1-800-441-4488 Hermes.com CHANEL BOUTIQUES 800.550.0005 chanel.com ©2015 CHANEL®, Inc. B® Reine de Naples Collection in every woman is a queen BREGUET BOUTIQUES – NEW YORK 646 692-6469 – BEVERLY HILLS 310 860-9911 BAL HARBOUR 305 866-1061 – LAS VEGAS 702 733-7435 – TOLL FREE 877-891-1272 – WWW.BREGUET.COM CAROLINAHERRERA.COM 888.530.7660 © 2015 Estée Lauder Inc. DRIVEN BY DESIRE esteelauder.com NEW. PURE COLOR ENVY SHINE Sculpt. Hydrate. Illuminate. On Carolyn: Empowered NEW ORIGINAL HIGH-IMPACT CREME AND NEW SHINE FINISH BALENCIAGA.COM 870 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK MAXMARA.COM 1.866.MAX MARA BOUTIQUES 1-888-782-6357 OSCARDELARENTA.COM H® AC CO 5 01 ©2 Coach Dreamers Chloë Grace Moretz/ Actress Coach Swagger 27 in patchwork floral Fluff Jacket in pink coach.com Advertisement EVENTS HOLIDAY LUNCH NewYOrk,NY|12.1.14 On Monday,December 1, WSJ. Magazine hosted its annual holiday luncheon at Le Bernardin Privé in New York. The event welcomed WSJ. Magazine’seditorial and advertising partners and celebrated their 2014 collaborations. Publisher Anthony Cenname toasted WSJ. Mag’sstrongest year in history and stirred excitement about the new year ahead. Photos by Kelly Taub/BFAnyc.com Robert Chavez, Heather Vandenberghe, Shauna Brook Frank Furlan, Rosita Wheeler, Lynn Reid Brad Nelson, Tate Magner Colleen Caslin, Anthony Cenname Jon Spring, Arwa Al Shehhi Desiree Gallas Sandeep Dasgupta, Kevin Dailey Alberto Apodaca, Julia Erdman Jenny Oh, Dana Drehwing, Maria Canale Kevin Harter, Jason Weisenfeld, Vira Capeci Follow @WSJnoted or visit us at wsjnoted.com ©2015Dow Jones &Company,InC.all RIghts ReseRveD.6ao1412 ART DIR: PAUL MARCIANO PH: DAVID BELLEMERE GUESS?©2015 women’s style march 2015 54 EDITOR’S LETTER 58 ON THE COVER 60 CONTRIBUTORS 62 COLUMNISTS on Ambition 65 THE WSJ.
    [Show full text]
  • TSENG Kwong Chi Curiculum Vitae (Full)
    TSENG Kwong Chi Curiculum Vitae (full) As of October 2020 History - Education - Awards: Page 2 ​ Solo Exhibitions: Page 3-4 ​ Selected Group Exhibitions: Pages 5-13 ​ Performances: Page 14 ​ Film & Video: Page 14 ​ Selected Public Collections: Page 15 ​ Selected Private/Corporate Collections: Page 16 ​ Artists’ Monographs: Page 17 ​ Selected Books & Catalogue: Pages 18-21 ​ Selected Bibliography (previews, reviews, feature articles): Pages 22-27 ​ 1 Tseng Kwong Chi Born in Hong Kong, 1950. Left Hong Kong with family in 1966. Educated in Hong Kong; Vancouver, Canada; Montré​al, Canada; Paris, France. ​ Settled in New York City, New York 1978. Died in New York City, New York 1990. EDUCATION Ecole Supé​rieure d’​Arts Graphiques, L’​Acadé​mie Julian, Paris, France ​ ​ ​ ​ Sir George Williams University, Montreal, Canada University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada AWARDS Yale Brachman Award for Distinguished Cultural Contribution, Timothy Dwight College, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut Award for Distinguished Work, Asian American Arts Institute, New York City 2 SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2020 TSENG KWONG CHI: East Meets West, Yancey Richardson Gallery, ​ New York, NY Two Friends: Tseng Kwong Chi and Keith Haring, Galerie Hervé ​ Perdriolle, Brussels, Belgium (catalogue) Tseng Kwong Chi: East Meets West 2020, Ben Brown Fine Arts, Hong ​ Kong 2016 Tseng Kwong Chi: Ambiguous Ambassador, Carroll and Sons Gallery, ​ Boston, MA 2015-16 Tseng Kwong Chi: Performing for the Camera, Grey Art Gallery, New ​ York University, NY; Chrysler Museum of
    [Show full text]
  • THE CULTURE and MUSIC of AMERICAN CABARET Katherine Yachinich
    Trinity University Digital Commons @ Trinity Music Honors Theses Music Department 5-2014 The ulturC e and Music of American Cabaret Katherine Anne Yachinich Trinity University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/music_honors Part of the Music Commons Recommended Citation Yachinich, Katherine Anne, "The ulturC e and Music of American Cabaret" (2014). Music Honors Theses. 5. http://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/music_honors/5 This Thesis open access is brought to you for free and open access by the Music Department at Digital Commons @ Trinity. It has been accepted for inclusion in Music Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Trinity. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 2 THE CULTURE AND MUSIC OF AMERICAN CABARET Katherine Yachinich A DEPARTMENT HONORS THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC AT TRINITY UNIVERSITY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION WITH DEPARTMENTAL HONORS DATE 04/16/2014 Dr. Kimberlyn Montford Dr. David Heller THESIS ADVISOR DEPARTMENT CHAIR Dr. Sheryl Tynes ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT FOR ACADEMIC AFFAIRS, CURRICULUM AND STUDENT ISSUES Student Copyright Declaration: the author has selected the following copyright provision (select only one): [X] This thesis is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which allows some noncommercial copying and distribution of the thesis, given proper attribution. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305, USA. [ ] This thesis is protected under the provisions of U.S. Code Title 17. Any copying of this work other than “fair use” (17 USC 107) is prohibited without the copyright holder’s permission.
    [Show full text]
  • Night Fever Designing Club Culture 1960 – Today 17 March – 9 September 2018
    Vitra Design Museum Charles-Eames-Straße 2 79576 Weil am Rhein/Basel Germany www.design-museum.de PRESS CONFERENCE 15 March 2018, 2 pm OPENING 16 MARCH 2018, 6 pm Opening Talk with Ben Kelly, Peter Saville, and Konstantin Grcic PRESS DOWNLOADS www.design-museum.de/press_images Night Fever Designing Club Culture 1960 – Today 17 March – 9 September 2018 The nightclub is one of the most important design spaces in contemporary culture. Since the 1960s, nightclubs have been epicentres of pop culture, distinct spaces of nocturnal leisure providing architects and designers all over the world with opportunities and inspiration. »Night Fever. Designing Club Culture 1960 – Today« offers the first large-scale examination of the relationship between club culture and design, from past to present. The exhibition presents nightclubs as spaces that merge architecture and interior design with sound, light, fashion, graphics, and visual effects to create a modern Gesamtkunstwerk. Examples range from Italian clubs of the 1960s created by the protagonists of Radical Design to the legendary Studio 54 where Andy Warhol was a regular, from the Haçienda in Manchester designed by Ben Kelly to more recent concepts by the OMA architecture studio for the Ministry of Sound in London. The exhibits on display range from films and vintage photographs to posters, flyers, and fashion, but also include contemporary works by photographers and artists such as Mark Leckey, Chen Wei, and Musa N. Nxumalo. A spatial installation with music and light effects takes visitors on a fascinating journey through a world of glamour and subcultures – always in search of the night that never ends.
    [Show full text]
  • Woodward Gallery Established 1994
    Woodward Gallery Established 1994 Richard Hambleton 1954 Born Vancouver, Canada. 1975 BFA, Painting and Art History at the Emily Carr School of Art, Vancouver, BC 1975-80 Founder and Co-Director “Pumps” Center for Alternative Art, Gallery, Performance and Video Space; Vancouver, BC; The Furies: Western Canada’s first punk band played their first gig at Richard Hambleton’s Solo Exhibition, May, 1976. Lives and works in New York City’s Lower East Side. SOLO EXHIBITION S 2013 “Beautiful Paintings,” Art Gallery at the Rockefeller State Park Preserve, Sleepy Hollow, NY 2011 “Richard Hambleton: A Retrospective,” presented by Andy Valmorbida and Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld in collaboration with Phillips de Pury and Giorgio Armani at Phillips de Pury & Company, New York 2010 “Richard Hambleton New York, The Godfather of Street Art,” presented by Andy Valmorbida and Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld in collaboration with Giorgio Armani at The Dairy, London “Richard Hambleton New York,” presented by Andy Valmorbida and Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld in collaboration with Giorgio Armani at the State Museum of Modern Art of the Russian Academy of Arts, Moscow “Richard Hambleton New York,” presented by Andy Valmorbida and Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld in collaboration with Giorgio Armani, Milan “Richard Hambleton New York,” presented by Andy Valmorbida and Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld in collaboration with Giorgio Armani, amFAR Annual Benefit, May 20, 2010 2009 “Richard Hambleton New York,” presented by Andy Valmorbida and Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld in collaboration with
    [Show full text]
  • Andy Warhol 'Jean-Michel Basquiat'
    Basquiat Boom for Real 2 Introduction 4 New York /New Wave 9 SAMO© 12 Canal Zone 15 The Scene 20 Downtown 81 22 Beat Bop 25 Warhol 33 Self-Portrait 36 Bebop (Wall) 40 Bebop (Vitrine) 42 Art History (Wall) 45 Art History (Vitrine) 46 Encyclopaedia (Walls) 52 Encyclopaedia (Column) 55 Encyclopaedia (Vitrine) 57 Notebooks 59 The Screen 64 Interview Jean-Michel Basquiat was one of the most significant artists of the 20th century. Born in Brooklyn in 1960, to a Haitian father and a Puerto Rican mother, he grew up amid the post-punk scene in lower Manhattan. After leaving school at seventeen, he invented the character ‘SAMO©’, writing poetic graffiti that captured the attention of the city. He exhibited his first body of work in the influential group exhibition ‘New York/New Wave’ at P.S.1, Institute for Art and Urban Resources, Inc., in 1981. When starting out, Basquiat worked collaboratively and fluidly across media, making poetry, performance, music and Xerox art as well as paintings, drawings and objects. Upstairs, the exhibition celebrates this diversity, tracing his meteoric rise, from the postcard he plucked up the courage to sell to his hero Andy Warhol in SoHo in 1978 to one of the first collaborative paintings that they made together in 1984. By then, he was internationally acclaimed – an extraordinary feat for a young artist with no formal training, working against the racial prejudice of the time. In the studio, Basquiat surrounded himself with source material. He would sample from books spread open on the floor and the sounds of the television or boom box – anything worthy of his trademark catchphrase ‘boom for real’.
    [Show full text]
  • Dancecult 8(1) Reviews
    Reviews Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor 1980–1983 Tim Lawrence Durham: Duke University Press, 2016. ISBN: 978-0-8223-6202-9 RRP: US$27.95 <http://dx.doi.org/10.12801/1947-5403.2016.08.01.05> Charles de Ledesma University of East London, UK Cultural historian Tim Lawrence’s first book Love Saves the Day adopted a chronological approach to East Coast disco’s dramatic arc through the 1970s. Then his follow-up Hold On to Your Dreams widened the timeline, honing in on a valuable contributor to New York’s downtown music scene—cellist and composer Arthur Russell. While LStD ranged widely across many spaces, DJs, artists, assorted characters and issues, the Russell biography was an intimate portrait of a key player, who died from AIDS-related complications in 1992. Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor 1980–1983 (henceforth Life and Death) is the third segment in Lawrence’s New York project. Now he narrows the timeline and brings a forensic examination to just four years in the party scene. On the title, Lawrence explains, “the reference to life is intended to evoke the way that New York party culture didn’t merely survive the hyped death of disco but positively flourished in its wake”. And he clearly and convincingly argues that the short period was one characterised by a stirring artistic ferment, across music, art, dance and club space innovation. Lawrence explains: “instead of depicting the 1980–1983 period as a mere bridge that connected the big genre stories of 1970s disco and 1980s house and techno, I submitted to its kaleidoscope logic, took my foot off the historical metronome, and decided to take it—the book—to the bridge” (ix).
    [Show full text]
  • Press Release
    ALICE AYCOCK DENNIS OPPENHEIM PRESS RELEASE on view from 10 December 2020 For press inquiries please contact Appointments encouraged, mask required for entry Lukas Hall at (212) 541-4900 or [email protected] NEW YORK. The Directors of Marlborough Gallery are pleased to present a special exhibition featuring several large- scale works by Alice Aycock alongside an installation by Dennis Oppenheim. The exhibition will be viewable on the ground floor of our newly renovated space located at 545 West 25th Street. This two-person exhibition follows Aycock’s highly successful summer exhibition in Stockholm at the Royal Djurgården hosted by the Princess Estelle Cultural Foundation. With memories of the Mudd Club, the Odeon, Debby Harry and ‘Heart of Glass,’ we take a moment to reunite two kindred spirits in a play of synergistic works that have long and deep histories of particular resonance with the downtown scene in New York. ALICE AYCOCK’s works are intriguing because of their resistance to easy explanations. An early influence was Rem Koolhaas’s Delirious New York: A Retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan. She studied with Robert Morris and the art historian Leo Steinberg at Hunter College where she received her MA. Aycock’s first large-scale architectural work Maze (1972) was created upon finishing her studies at Hunter College in 1971. Her subsequent early show at 112 Greene Street and her association with Gordon Matta-Clark put her solidly in touch with many of the prominent downtown artists of the seventies, such as Mary Miss and Jackie Winsor. Aycock entered into an intense relationship with Dennis Oppenheim and remained lifelong friends, and along with Vito Acconci, were frequently associated by their mutual interests and even greater differences, as shown in the 1979 three-person exhibition at the ICA in Philadelphia entitled ‘Machineworks.’ For a brief time, they even shared a common visual repertoire.
    [Show full text]
  • Press Releaseleathdale2019
    Press Release MARCUS LEATHERDALE OUT OF THE SHADOWS Photographs New York City 1980 - 1992 November 7, 2019 - January 25, 2020 Opening Reception: Thursday, November 7, 2019 from 6 - 8 pm Talk & Book Signing with Marcus Leatherdale / Reading by Claudia Summers: Saturday, November 16, 2019 at 3 pm. Book Available Image: Marcus Leatherdale, Andy Warhol – Issey Miyake, 1983 Throckmorton Fine Art is pleased to announce a special show of portraits and photographs by the accomplished photographer Marcus Leatherdale. Taken from his new book, Marcus Leatherdale, OUT OF THE SHADOWS – Photographs New York City 1980-1992, (ACC Art Books) the show features dozens of black and white portraits and photographs of the celebrities and characters who peopled the often chaotic and clamorous Downtown Art Scene of the 1980s. Spencer Throckmorton says, “Leatherdale was just a twenty-something trying to get by when he began shooting often spontaneous shots of the celebrated personalities partying at the downtown clubs popular at the time. He says he didn’t realize he was archiving a raucous era that would soon be extinct – he was just photographing his friends.” Leatherdale says, “The late ‘70s to early ‘80s was my favorite time in New York. I was in the right place at the right time and I don’t think I have felt that way since. It didn’t matter if I was broke; I felt this was meant to be. I met everyone through Robert Mapplethorpe, Marcia Resnick, and Larissa—and going out to Studio 54 at least twice a week until Mudd Club opened. I was the new kid in town, and I had a New York City guardian angel.” Carol Squiers, a critic and ICP curator, wrote in the London Regional Art Gallery Catalog of Leatherdale’s works, “Marcus Leatherdale is a documentarian of the cosmopolitan netherworld of style.
    [Show full text]
  • Strike Debt and Clobal Ultra Luxury Faction
    YATES MCKEE is a PhD candidate in Art History at CUNY Cradu- ate Center, and has worked with various post-Occupy groups including Strike Debt and Clobal Ultra Luxury Faction. His writing has appeared in October, Grey Room, South Atlantic Quarterly, the Nation and Arf- STRIKE ART forum. He is coeditor of the movement magazine Tidal and the anthology Sensible Politics: The Visual Cultures of Nongovernmental Activism. He lives in New York City. Contemporary Art and the Post-Occupy Condition Yates McKee VERSOV London • New York Chapter 2 The Arts of Occupation: Zuccotti Park, Site-Specificity, and Beyond An occupation is a kind of happening, a performance piece that generates political affects. Hardt and Negri, Declaration We are coming together as bodies in alliance in the street and in the square. As bodies we suffer, we require shelter and food, and as bodies we require one another and desire one another. So this is a politics of the public body, the requirements of the body, its movement and voice. We would not be here if elected officials were representing the popular will. We stand apart from the electoral process and its complicities with exploitation. We sit and stand and move and speak, as we can, as the popular will, the one that electoral democracy has forgotten and abandoned. But we are here, and remain here, enacting the phrase, “We the people.” Judith Butler, address to Zuccotti Park, October 23, 2011, spoken through the People’s Microphone The Arts of Occupation: Zuccotti Park, Site-Specificity, and Beyond 87 86 STRIKE ART took on a new life when its iconic power was turned against itself in Facing up Broadway at the north end of Bowling Green Park in Lower what would become the foundational meme of Occupy Wall Street Manhattan, there stands the monumental bronze sculpture Charging (OWS) released by Adbusters.
    [Show full text]
  • INTERVIEW Jean Michel Basquiat with Becky Johnston and Tamra Davis
    INTERVIEW Jean Michel Basquiat with Becky Johnston and Tamra Davis Becky Johnston: So I'm going to start with your childhood. What were you like as a kid? Jean-Michel Basquiat: Here we're going now, it's going to be terrible now. [ ... ] What was I like as a kid? See? I hate this. BJ: Well, what kinds of things did you do? Did you have a lot of friends or were you a loner? Did you start painting when you were really young? Were you a rebel? Were you a kid who got into a lot of trouble? You know, those are the kinds of questions ... JMB: I don't want to give a one-word answer is what it is. BJ: I know. I want you to go into it. So if you start then we can feed off your answers and keep going .... Did you have any brothers or sisters? You were an only kid, right? JMB: No, I have two sisters. BJ: Oh, you do? JMB: I think I was just pretty naive as a kid, mostly. BJ: What do you mean by "naive" - you believed that if you wanted something you would get it? JMB: I don't think I dealt with reality that much really. BJ: But most kids don't. That's not unusual. JMB: You know, I wasn't [bad]; I wasn't a troublemaker, I just didn't really participate much in school. BJ: Are you younger or older than your sisters? JMB: I'm the oldest. I'm the oldest brother.
    [Show full text]
  • What Is Post-Punk?
    What is Post-Punk? A Genre Study of Avant-Garde Pop, 1977-1982 Mimi Haddon Schulich School of Music McGill University, Montréal April 2015 A thesis submitted to McGill University in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Ph.D. in Musicology © Mimi Haddon 2015 iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract ........................................................................................................................................... vi Résumé ......................................................................................................................................... vii Acknowledgements ..................................................................................................................... viii List of Musical Examples ................................................................................................................ x List of Diagrams and Tables ........................................................................................................... xi List of Figures ............................................................................................................................... xii INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................... 1 Historiography and Genre ........................................................................................................ 4 Genre as Musical Style ..........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]