Christmas is a time of tediously ritualistic, formulaic narrative; homilies, platitudes, family small talk, all stuffed and trammelled into narrow, cosy confines. Christmas is when we need the disruptive strategies of the avant garde the most. So why not stuff a little skewed narrative into your stocking this Christmas Eve?

Production of narrative is going on all the time, it's inescapable, it's what you and I do when we blog, it's what the makers of 'Gremlins' do (the 1984 movie, dubbed into German, was being run last night on Berlin cable... I watched a few minutes for the padded shoulders and the appearance of 'Lord Summerisle' in a gen-tech lab). Narrative is mostly produced in a fairly predictable way; it's wearing the stiff padded shoulders of convention. 'It's the end of the year and here are my eleven favourite records'. 'Here's what I did today'. 'Happy Christmas!' Some people -- they're usually artists -- go out of their way to produce more surprising narrative. Yesterday I was in ProQM, my favourite Berlin bookstore, a place I go specifically to find 'more interesting narratives'. I usually can't afford to buy them, but it's important to me to know that they're out there. The fresh narrative-production strategies I encounter in ProQM keep me sane, and keep me believing in humanity.

I spent quite a while leafing through the new edition of Re-Magazine. This is a Dutch-based, English-language 'magazine about just one person'. They pick someone, a rather ordinary person, and make the whole magazine about him or her. The latest issue is about Hester, a failed London screenplay writer (and already narrative is in crisis, right in the foreground) aged 37. There are interviews with Hester about her depression, her feelings of fatigue and frustration with London, there's a photoshoot on Hungerford Bridge, a trip to her mother's house in the countryside, an interview with her more go-getting (but less likeable) sister about her, a discussion between Hester and her mother, who also went to art school and has always been rather competitive with Hester. Re-Magazine have taken the format of the usual magazine and turned it around. Instead of designing a magazine as a parade of stars and other distractions for a rather depressed 37 year-old woman, they make the depressed 37 year-old woman the focus. The magazine becomes a kind of intensive therapeutic investigation of Hester and her weltschmertz. It also becomes a critical self-exploration by a magazine of what magazines are, and ends up being highly therapeutic in the sense that it restores some kind of humanism, dignity and compassion to the magazine format. It vindicates magazines. It's intensive, it doesn't distract but concentrates. Re-Magazine re-vitalises the magazine idea. It's also bloody interesting.
The rest of the day seemed dominated, subtly, by Vito Acconci. Not only was there a tempting stack of catalogues of the exhibition Vito Hannibal Acconci in the ProQM window, but a 1999 interview with Acconci was being projected on the Art Club 2000 floor of 'Ten Years Later On', the exhibition at Kunst-Werke looking at alternative spaces of, um, cultural production in Mitte and the East Village over the last decade or so. (Confusingly, considering its title, the exhibition seemed to go back to the early 80s, with clips of the 1983 rap movie Wild Style).
Acconci started his career in the mid-60s as a poet (Vito Hannibal Acconci), became the most interesting single channel art video maker of the 1970s, and then moved into architecture (he designed the new United Bamboo store in Daikanyama, Tokyo, for instance), but whatever medium he works in, there's a consistent concern with narrative and the production of space. I ended the day listening once again to a really terrific sound piece he made in 2001, The Bristol Project. It's a narrative which produces architectural space, it's architecture which creates fictional space, it's a verbal specification of space. It's sci-fi, it's fantasy, it's a radio play with sound effects, it's Acconci's deep, objective yet weirdly sensual voice sketching out a virtual experience in what sounds like a very strange world. It's tremendously fresh, compelling and original, one of my favourite sound pieces ever.

More sound, more skewed narrative: here's Tod Dockstader giving a tour of his studio and telling us about 'electronically produced organised sound' as it appeared in 1963. And here's Digiki's new release, Animals Don't Care, free online and available for download. Digiki has messed with the narrative of my song 'Beowulf (I Am Deformed)' amongst other pieces, and the results are... refreshing. Fill your stocking free with strangeness, pirate!

Production of narrative is going on all the time, it's inescapable, it's what you and I do when we blog, it's what the makers of 'Gremlins' do (the 1984 movie, dubbed into German, was being run last night on Berlin cable... I watched a few minutes for the padded shoulders and the appearance of 'Lord Summerisle' in a gen-tech lab). Narrative is mostly produced in a fairly predictable way; it's wearing the stiff padded shoulders of convention. 'It's the end of the year and here are my eleven favourite records'. 'Here's what I did today'. 'Happy Christmas!' Some people -- they're usually artists -- go out of their way to produce more surprising narrative. Yesterday I was in ProQM, my favourite Berlin bookstore, a place I go specifically to find 'more interesting narratives'. I usually can't afford to buy them, but it's important to me to know that they're out there. The fresh narrative-production strategies I encounter in ProQM keep me sane, and keep me believing in humanity.

I spent quite a while leafing through the new edition of Re-Magazine. This is a Dutch-based, English-language 'magazine about just one person'. They pick someone, a rather ordinary person, and make the whole magazine about him or her. The latest issue is about Hester, a failed London screenplay writer (and already narrative is in crisis, right in the foreground) aged 37. There are interviews with Hester about her depression, her feelings of fatigue and frustration with London, there's a photoshoot on Hungerford Bridge, a trip to her mother's house in the countryside, an interview with her more go-getting (but less likeable) sister about her, a discussion between Hester and her mother, who also went to art school and has always been rather competitive with Hester. Re-Magazine have taken the format of the usual magazine and turned it around. Instead of designing a magazine as a parade of stars and other distractions for a rather depressed 37 year-old woman, they make the depressed 37 year-old woman the focus. The magazine becomes a kind of intensive therapeutic investigation of Hester and her weltschmertz. It also becomes a critical self-exploration by a magazine of what magazines are, and ends up being highly therapeutic in the sense that it restores some kind of humanism, dignity and compassion to the magazine format. It vindicates magazines. It's intensive, it doesn't distract but concentrates. Re-Magazine re-vitalises the magazine idea. It's also bloody interesting.
The rest of the day seemed dominated, subtly, by Vito Acconci. Not only was there a tempting stack of catalogues of the exhibition Vito Hannibal Acconci in the ProQM window, but a 1999 interview with Acconci was being projected on the Art Club 2000 floor of 'Ten Years Later On', the exhibition at Kunst-Werke looking at alternative spaces of, um, cultural production in Mitte and the East Village over the last decade or so. (Confusingly, considering its title, the exhibition seemed to go back to the early 80s, with clips of the 1983 rap movie Wild Style).Acconci started his career in the mid-60s as a poet (Vito Hannibal Acconci), became the most interesting single channel art video maker of the 1970s, and then moved into architecture (he designed the new United Bamboo store in Daikanyama, Tokyo, for instance), but whatever medium he works in, there's a consistent concern with narrative and the production of space. I ended the day listening once again to a really terrific sound piece he made in 2001, The Bristol Project. It's a narrative which produces architectural space, it's architecture which creates fictional space, it's a verbal specification of space. It's sci-fi, it's fantasy, it's a radio play with sound effects, it's Acconci's deep, objective yet weirdly sensual voice sketching out a virtual experience in what sounds like a very strange world. It's tremendously fresh, compelling and original, one of my favourite sound pieces ever.

More sound, more skewed narrative: here's Tod Dockstader giving a tour of his studio and telling us about 'electronically produced organised sound' as it appeared in 1963. And here's Digiki's new release, Animals Don't Care, free online and available for download. Digiki has messed with the narrative of my song 'Beowulf (I Am Deformed)' amongst other pieces, and the results are... refreshing. Fill your stocking free with strangeness, pirate!
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 12:42 pm (UTC)---when ISN'T? Not usually so obv, I spose. One must learn to enjoy/accept these things or PERISH tho surely!
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 01:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 01:50 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 04:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 04:36 pm (UTC)mail@re-magazine.com
But don't say you're depressed, they done 'depressed' already with the current issue! And maybe '37' and 'writer' is last month's thing too... 'black' might be good, though, I don't think they've done anyone black yet.
Re me
Date: 2004-12-24 05:41 pm (UTC)I've read an older Re-issue about a guy named John. The narritvie of John was completely made up from a variety of sources: literature, news, music, fashion etc. The story told of the total disappearance of John. Leaving all personal things and issues aside, John went on a Situationist derive. I think the narrative was partly inspired by the disappearance at sea of artist Bas jan Ader. So it was actually a magazine about a fictional character specially made up for a mag.
I recently flipped through a similar magazine called Josh at the Atheneum Bookstand in Amsterdam. I guess Josh himself was the designer of the mag and he had invited friends to talk about their relationship with him.
erik
Re: Re me
Date: 2004-12-24 05:57 pm (UTC)BUTT
Date: 2004-12-24 06:10 pm (UTC)http://www.buttmagazine.com/
erik
Re: BUTT
Date: 2004-12-24 10:07 pm (UTC)Ah yes, I read Butt religiously, of course. American Patchwork artist Phiiliip was even a cover star a few months back.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 06:14 pm (UTC)I'm a magazine junkie. I love them all from Harpers and The Economist to Bloom, Nest, Frieze, Dog Fancy, LRB, Ad-Busters, Stay Free!, Toy Fair, Cometbus, Ben is Dead, McSweeneys, Grand Royal, Lingua Franca, Science, IdN, Vice, Cabinet, Italian Vogue, etc.
But Re-Magazine sounds better than them all!
And Vito Acconci is a demi-god. He's like a Level 15 Artist (Master) with an 18 Chr, 18 Int, 16 Wis and a 92% artist skill.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 06:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 07:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 08:39 pm (UTC)(The second half of the white mp3 is, according to the liner notes (http://www.plunderphonics.com/xhtml/xnotes.html#WHITE), a mix of tango orchestra and pygmy tribal vocals.)
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 09:03 pm (UTC)Surely it is the 1990 sequel you mean.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-24 10:09 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-25 01:38 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-25 02:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-27 12:55 am (UTC)tv
Date: 2004-12-24 09:25 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-25 02:24 am (UTC)Even if the user info and posts make it seem like it's not your thing, I assure they're actually very cool people to talk to once you get to know them and are capable of great music discussions. They're not the typical hipster communiter. They really know their shit.
Give it a try. We'd like to see you there!
thankyou
Date: 2004-12-25 04:46 am (UTC)thankyou,
kim
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-25 11:18 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-25 12:06 pm (UTC)I tend to be me or be quiet ('absent without leaving'), and being me is pretty much being the person on this blog. Then again, what you don't see on this blog is me having sex (which I do a lot), or running around the flat and speaking in a stupid voice and bouncing on the inflatable furniture and getting annoyed if you try to touch my nipples but loving it when you scratch my back or my hairy arms, that sort of thing...
who can't stand his grandma
My family is cool, although there's a divide between the 'expressive' Curries and the 'discreet' ones. (I'm an 'expressive', but there are still people like you who say, not wrongly, that amongst the screes of information there's not much personal revelation going on...But, you know, maybe the personal realm is over-rated and the public realm is under-rated. I certainly think so.)
gets really hurt when somebody talks to him like he's some weirdo.
Hmm... I'm very easy to get along with. I'm not at all aggressive, although I can be passive aggressive if I'm trapped in a situation. I tend to have a calming, de-escalating effect on crisis situations, and I tend to try to break vicious circles of recrimination and start virtuous ones. I'm not at all into celebrations of assertiveness, for instance, and I don't think they equate to personal strength (that's a constant theme of this LJ, in fact).
I got hurt when the director of the play I was working on recently told me off for making timing mistakes in the music as if I were a schoolboy. I had a talk with her and explained that I was an adult and that theatre directing is also 'people management' and that it's possible to correct people without scolding them, and after that we were fine.
something REALm man
Well, 'REALm' on LiveJournal does tend to be this kind of micro-personal 'coping' stuff. Sometimes it's compelling, but I'm afraid most of the time it feels like watching a car crash. Sometimes literally (there have been a few LJ car crashes recently, with utterly tragic results).
all this CULTURE shit (makes me sick)
I'm sorry to hear that culture makes you sick, especially since you like Cassavetes, which counted as culture last time I checked!
where is the love of life, humanity, people (IN A NON ABSTRACT, INFORMATION GATHERING, CONNECTING ALL THINGS NEUROIS way)
Well, you know, culture is made by people. They pour their heart and soul into it. Ignoring it is not 'loving people'.
just diggin bringin ya moms some Tea huh???? I LOVE THAT SHIT!
I bring my girlfriend tea several times a day, and I'll be hanging out with my moms in a couple of days. But do you really want me to fill up my LJ with 'made two cups of cardomom chai and Hisae was quite appreciative...'? Or how I cooked pasta last night and didn't see that there was chai mix in the pot, so the pasta had this weird spice flavour? Hmm, maybe now that The Dullest Blog in the World (http://www.google.com/url?sa=U&start=1&q=http://www.wibsite.com/wiblog/dull/&e=9901) is no longer updating...
(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-25 12:20 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-12-26 06:57 pm (UTC)