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Yesterday I went to see The Downtown Show, a terrific survey of transgressive and avant garde art, writing and fashion from the period 1974-1984, held at NYU's Grey Gallery in Washington Square. There were photographs of the Lower East Side looking like a bombsite, early publications by people like Lynn Tillman and Kathy Acker, clips of Spalding Gray in early performances by the Wooster Group, clothes worn by Madonna, photographs of Keith Haring, political protest art by Nancy Spero, a soundtrack of bittersweet rock records by Richard Hell and Tom Verlaine, and much, much more (I'm going to go back and see it again, I only saw half of it).



I came away from the exhibition feeling like someone who'd missed the early, vital episodes of a cult TV show. This was amazing backstory. These were the pioneers, people I knew as affluent middle-aged folk with slightly fusty lofts, restored to their youthful funk and rage. For instance, I'd met writers Tillman and Acker in their later years, in London; Lynn at a restaurant in Soho, Kathy at a wedding reception in Chelsea. They seemed to me like middle-aged, eccentric bohemians. Rather than screaming lines from Rimbaud at the top of her voice, Kathy Acker (whose "Blood and Guts in High School" I'd read in college) talked in shy, measured tones about property prices in Brighton.

Well, Kathy is dead now. She died of breast cancer. The photographer Kaucyila Brooke made an exhibition of pictures of her clothes, which was shown at the Berlin Biennial in 2004. Looking at all those 1980s designer clothes, slightly the worse for wear, felt very like looking at The Downtown Show: fascinating and sad, a generation of mavericks in fast-motion, some dying quickly, others wilting slowly, having conversations in restaurants about selling their papers to universities. When she died, Kathy joined Keith Haring and the other early departees from the Great Generation of Downtown (many, of course, were gay and died of AIDS). She was joined, in turn, by Spalding Gray, who jumped off the Staten Island ferry.



I spent a while watching videos of early productions by The Wooster Group, featuring Gray as a sarcastic doctor. What made the black and white, late 70s video tapes fascinating was the fact that I was due, at 8pm, to see The Wooster Group of 2006, over in a warehouse in Dumbo, performing Eugene O'Neill's play The Emperor Jones. Crossing the East River, I also crossed, in ultra-rapid motion, thirty years. There they were in the lobby, the ageing Great Generation who hadn't died of cancer, AIDS or suicide; the Wooster Group audience. The fifty- and sixty- and seventy-somethings still up for experimentation, still living in lofts. Still, perhaps, shocked and appalled by the conformity of the young. Avant grizzlies in beards and berets. People who remembered when Downtown was punky and funky. People who could tell you a story or two.



And up on the walls all around the lobby were posters for events like "Fire at Keaton's Bar and Grill, a jazzy song cycle" featuring Lou Reed, Laurie Anderson, and Debbie Harry. "The room is smoky and the jazz is jazzy," says the New York Times. Here and there you could see younger names: Antony, the Tigerlillies -- the avant-cabaret acts the grizzlies have embraced and endorsed, people who remind them of downtown theater and their youth.

We filed into the theatre (the ticket-tearers were the only young people in there). "The Emperor Jones" was terrific, a lovely layering of ostranenies, blackface and kabuki and video art and cheesy music that suddenly went Indonesian, and weird gongs and drums, and -- my favourite moment -- the transition from stylised speech to a weird, delicately evil sort of Aubrey Beardsley synchronised dance sequence. The costumes were great, very Laura Ford. The weirdness inflamed my imagination and reminded me of my own attempts at avant-estrangement on my last couple of albums.

But I couldn't help wondering what it means when "experiments", repeated and improved (this was a revival of a 1998 production featuring Willem Dafoe), lead to sure-fire success. And I couldn't help feeling that some sort of whisky-warm avant-grizzly glow suffused the whole place, the feelgood glow of convergence and reassurance and affluence. The great generation of Downtown was coming home, slowing down in their fustifying lofts, preparing their papers, issuing their box sets. I remembered the somewhat lacklustre Robert Wilson production I attended last year at the Lincoln Center, where Lou Reed was sleeping and Laurie Anderson sat with a fixed smile on her face, because of course she loved it. To be honest, I felt a bit sleepy myself. And I smiled a fixed smile, because of course I loved it.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 02:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lucaskrech.livejournal.com
Beautiful writing in this one. I love the style you went with. And thanks for the reminder of the show at the Grey Gallery.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 03:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thefirstman.livejournal.com
a)I'm presenting a paper on Robert Wilson in a couple weeks. I really could care less for him.

b)I wish I had known about this show earlier. I would have attempted to go.

c)You write wonderfully.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 03:35 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
the strange folk album on albion (STRGCD01) is a wonderful thing. we are track 2 with morning sun. between beth gibbons and donovan - strange folk indeed. this site went down but at least it was more mysterious than the reality of going to bermondsey everyday to rehearse. we're off to south africa next week so i'll start taking pictures again. lilac 1, 2 and 3 are being repackaged as i type for a May re release - they look lovely and as they should have back then. i think you look lovely too x




(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 03:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] madge-pastiche.livejournal.com
What they said. What a lovely piece of writing.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 04:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patitamofi.livejournal.com
had a similar feeling seeing the Basquiat retrospective in Houston--the work was still fresh, but everything around it had solidified. the fate of all modernists, to not be able to let go of things after having made it new once?

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 04:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
It's funny, the fustiest painting in the Whitney Biennial this year is a canvas by Miles Davis, the musician. It looks like a Basquiat, but fustier. It's "doodly" and "expressive" and "fragmented", but somehow faded too. I had a nice moment yesterday, when I made some reference to Miles Davis being a better trumpeter than painter, and the black guard standing in front of it jumped to life and said, delighted, "See, I knew it was by Miles Davis! I wasn't sure, but I knew!"

Unrelated, but I wanted to add a couple of things about Downtown. First, my ambivalence about the "avant-grandparents" thing (and actually they're more like my parents than grandparents, age-wise, if even that) is made more complex by the nice detail that I went to "The Emperor Jones" with Wendy Raffel, a 20-something publishing assistant with Continuum, with whom I was briefly negotiating (http://imomus.livejournal.com/2005/10/11/) a 33/3 book about none other than Laurie Anderson.

And secondly, it strikes me that the Downtown scene was local in a way that it's impossible to be these days. Artists would bounce between the East and West Villages and the Lower East Side the way people like me and Marxy bounce between New York and Tokyo. You could say that, for our generation, Asia is our "Downtown".

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 04:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
...Which means that China is our Chinatown, I guess.

BTW, yes, I know I'm not the same generation as Marxy. I'm much, much younger.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 05:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
Been dying to see it myself, if for nothing other than to see the wonderful costumes.

And yes, that generation was wilder than any that have followed. I'm sometimes amazed that any of them survived beyond 1987.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 05:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Well, if we both survive until 7pm, see you tonight, Whimsy!

Very much enjoyed your visit to the Museum yesterday (readers, he took the bullhorn and completely took over, regaling visitors with poems about underwear and disquisitions on photo-luminescence).

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 05:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
Had a grand time playing with you, Nick—although my bashful stammering was far from your masterful delivery. I'm sure that after a few hours, one can really get into the swing of it. Great fun! It would be interesting to recruit visitors who wanted to participate in your project on a blindfolded tour of the show, depending solely on your descriptions and misinformation. Thank you for the personal (albeit unreliable) tour!

Gore Vidal's Caligula certainly pinkened the old nethers; I conferred with a fellow on the 6 train, and he agreed.

I certainly hope I can return the "rabbit hole" favor this evening. See you this evening!

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 08:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] petit-paradis.livejournal.com
how is "gore vidal caligula" ? I cannot see it unfortunatlely. there is another film of vezzoni showing now in the art centre here in rotterdam. (I have a temp job there) it shows helmuth berger re-acting a scene from the dynasty soap series (in which he played a role back then). but the sound is terribly displayed, and he has this queeny lisping all the time which makes it quite obscure.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-27 12:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lord-whimsy.livejournal.com
Well, I quite enjoyed it—anything that makes me laugh heartily while engorged is aces in my book. But then, I'm easy to please.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 05:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tassellrealm.livejournal.com
I seem to be having this recurring conversation with my contemporaries...

So what's going on in New York, then?

"Nothing/old stuff."

So what's going on in London, then?

"Nothing/old stuff."

So what's going on in Paris, then?

"Nothing/old stuff - although we had those riots. Did you hear about it? - it was terrible!"

YES!

Date: 2006-03-24 05:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] violetshuraka.livejournal.com
i just saw this exhibit the other night as well.
i was impressed.

the great downtown

Date: 2006-03-24 05:55 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
the great downtown is dead if not dying, stabbed brutally by rising housing costs, stifling gentrification and an apathetic if not negligent city government. its a miserable trade off: clean subway cars or dirt under the fingernails of the arts

maybe cleveland has a roiling underground now

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 08:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tassellrealm.livejournal.com
The French are having a general strike on Tuesday.

micro-downtown / macro-downtown

Date: 2006-03-24 08:58 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
maybe the quality & energy of the downtown period 1974-1984 has spread it's self out. Finding places that will allow it to happen. Small places inside places like providence, rhode island. portland, oregon. and philly, pennsylvania (there might be something special about the letter P). And baltimore, places in michigan, small places in california. and on the other side in large global places. there is still a lot of stuff going on but it's happening in places where the rents dont kill as much as new york, and places where it's more relaxed so people are allowed to find out how they feel. it's easier to look back then to see the now. i'm not a great writer but i hope you get my idea,

visit?

Date: 2006-03-24 09:07 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
would you be interested in coming to the School of Visual arts for a studio visit and maybe "lecture"?

Re: visit?

Date: 2006-03-24 10:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
I would indeed, e mail me at momasu(at)gmail.com

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-24 10:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] goldenmelodies.livejournal.com
Wow... I wish I could see this show.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-03-25 03:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cityramica.livejournal.com
i just noticed, and like, that you change your LJ profile location when you temporarily relocate. i suppose you will be in NY for a while....but that is still a formality many travelling bloggers miss.