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Colour me gobsmacked, bollock-chuffed and flyposted all over town. Not only is there a one-page picture of me in Street magazine this month, I've just found another rather amazing picture in another of my favourite magazines.

Leafing through the September issue of British art magazine Frieze I found, on page 155, a picture of Joseph Beuys doing a didactic lecture-performance called The Jimmy Boyle Days at the Canongate Demarco Gallery in Edinburgh in 1980. It's an illustration for an article by Jan Verwoert called "Class Action". You can read the feature here.



"Fuck," I thought, "I went to that!" And sure enough, on closer inspection, there I am, sitting in the front row, a skinny, glaikit student wearing Doc Martens and Metzler Harvard spectacles. I don't even think I have any photos of myself aged 20, but it's me all right, a stern virgin with a big crush on art. How bizarre that it should appear in Frieze magazine, 26 years later! And that I should have morphed in the meantime into some kind of performance artist myself!

I was in that historic, hot little room (it took a lot to make me roll my sleeves up in those days) largely thanks to two people: dynamic Edinburgh curator and culturepreneur Ricky Demarco, who invited Beuys to Scotland several times, and writer Caroline Tisdall, who the year before had published a very big, very stern and grey book on Beuys which I'd bought at the Edinburgh Bookshop. It was full of strange introverted drawings of hares and honey, or grainy black and white photographs of performances. Perhaps I hoped to impress the art student I was currently longing helplessly for, Paula Garcia Sarria, or perhaps the book just tied in with the grim, grey, grainy aesthetic of the latest album from Dome.

"Caroline Tisdall's book on Joseph Beuys, published by Thames and Hudson in 1979, was the first contemporary art book I bought," I wrote last year. "I can honestly say it changed my life. I fell under Beuys' shamanic spell and, when Richard Demarco announced in 1980 that Beuys would deliver a lecture in Edinburgh as part of the Free International University (Beuys' informal university), I made sure I was there. About twenty-five of us sat in a little room in a courtyard off Edinburgh's Cowgate as Beuys, rather enfeebled by his hunger strike in solidarity with Jimmy Boyle, sipped from a glass of water and made one of his tortuously intricate spidery blackboards explaining the connections between the striking British Aerospace workers at Coventry and ancient Celtic snakelore. There is a connection, you know. Let's find that blackboard and I'll prove it."

Well, I know it looks a bit like a scene out of Gnarls Barkley's Smiley Faces video, but proof that I was there in that room with Kunstler Beuys in 1980 is now on page 155 of the current edition of Frieze. For me, it's a giddy thrill.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-09-18 12:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charleshatcher.livejournal.com
i'm surprised you weren't smitten with the ambiguously gendered individual with the atomic-cloud afro seated next to you.

The body language of said individual seems to suggest that any feelings would have been unrequited. Also, Mr. Currie, your posture is terrible -- it puts me in mind of Stephen Hawking, although he has his excuses.

bell telephone laboratories

Date: 2006-09-18 03:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mongoltrophies.livejournal.com
One of the voices in "A Complete History of Sexual Jealousy" sounds exactly like Stephen Hawking's, so maybe their similar physiognomy is reflected in the voices of their computers.

Re: bell telephone laboratories

Date: 2006-09-18 08:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charleshatcher.livejournal.com
No longer, alas. (http://www.gizmag.co.uk/go/2708)

Re: bell telephone laboratories

Date: 2006-09-18 10:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mongoltrophies.livejournal.com
How sad.
At least Momus' computer's voice has, if anything, become less "natural sounding." To me "Sempreverde" is mostly unintelligble, so it's good the lyrics are provided.
Check out this synthesized speech (http://www.box.net/public/j2ny3n9m66) from 1961, on punch cards. (The last part was Stanley Kubrick's inspiration for a certain part of 2001.)

Re: bell telephone laboratories

Date: 2006-09-18 10:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charleshatcher.livejournal.com
Listening to Handheld (http://www.phespirit.info/momus/20010114.htm) always brings a tear to my eye. The only other work of art that can do that is Blake Edwards' Breakfast At Tiffany's, when Miss Golightly almost loses her cat. There's something about the human-pet relationship that just gets me.

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