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The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Spotlight on … John Hawkes The Lime Twig (1961)

 

‘In a recent interview, Ben Marcus resisted being called an “experimental writer,” asking rather impatiently, “Does anyone self-identify as experimental? Anyone?” Apparently Marcus is not much aware of his predecessor, John Hawkes, who once told an interviewer, “Of course I think of myself as an experimental writer,” regretting only that “the term ‘experimental’ has been used so often by reviewers as a pejorative label intended to dismiss as eccentric or private or excessively difficult the work in question.” Marcus seemed to be decrying the expectation that he should always be sufficiently experimental, but Hawkes never wavered in his determination to challenge entrenched habits and complacent practices in both the writing and reading of fiction. In the same interview, he asserted that “I began to write fiction on the assumption that the true enemies of the novel were plot, character, setting, and theme, and having once abandoned these familiar ways of thinking about fiction, totality of vision or structure was really all that remained.” Hawkes endeavored throughout his career as a writer to validate this assumption, producing a series of novels that do indeed discard the “familiar ways of thinking” and attempt to substitute for them a “totality of vision or structure.”

‘By both articulating a commitment to “experimental fiction” and putting into practice a coherent conception of what such fiction should do, John Hawkes established himself as perhaps the most important experimental writer in the postwar period, perhaps in all of American literature. Furthermore, his novels remain as thematically provocative and aesthetically fresh as they were when published — Hawkes’s first novel, The Cannibal, was published in 1949, while his final novel, Sweet William, was published in 1993, five years before his death at the age of 72. Unfortunately, these novels have largely faded from literary-cultural consciousness, as has Hawkes himself, perhaps precisely because he did make such an effort to create radically varied works, each novel taking experimental fiction in a somewhat different direction (in some cases even critiquing the previous novel) so that no one work can really be identified as a “typical” Hawkes novel — all of them are typical. While any one of the novels provides its own rich and unique experience, to “get” Hawkes might require reading all of them, and perhaps that is more effort than most readers want to make.

‘However, those readers who are willing to devote some time to Hawkes’s work, and to judge the novels on their own terms — since Hawkes himself devoted much effort to establishing those terms — would sure find it a rewarding, if at times also rather disquieting, experience. And although appreciation of Hawkes’s achievement can’t finally rest in singling out his “best” or most “representative” novel, it is possible to focus first on a particularly dynamic period in Hawkes’s career, a period in which Hawkes produced several novels that both illustrate his inveterate experimentation and stand on their own as satisfying works of literary art. The set of novels beginning with The Lime Twig (1961) and including Second Skin (1964), The Blood Oranges (1971), and Travesty (1976) could serve as the foundation of a revival of interest in Hawkes’s fiction. Each of them succeeds in redeeming the ambitions of experimental fiction, while, together, they are as impressive a group of books as any written by a postwar writer.

The Lime Twig calls more on “established” strategies than his earlier novels, although it would still be a mistake to expect that the effect of those strategies is a reassuring return to a familiar aesthetic order. In this novel, Hawkes once again employs genre parody, this time of the crime thriller, but The Lime Twig reinforces few if any of the formal or thematic assumptions of the genre. Instead, it explodes those assumptions, turning them back on the reader. As Donald Greiner, who has perhaps offered the most insightful consideration of Hawkes’s work in his book Comic Terror, puts it, “All of the violence, sadism, and general sordidness which we associate with the world of detective fiction are used and mocked” even as Hawkes further “suggests that while outwardly repelled, we subconsciously long for the thrills of violence and possible death which we normally experience vicariously while reading a detective novel.” The Lime Twig offers the reader enough of the recognizable elements of character and plot associated with crime fiction to sustain the possibility it might resolve itself into a conventional “good read,” but along the way it presents an even more violent and disturbing account of the criminal milieu it portrays than the typical crime novel, and ultimately provokes a kind of disgust with the notion that stories of murder and brutality would be the basis of a “good” read in the first place.

‘Numerous commentators have singled out the notion of “design and debris” as perhaps a name for the aesthetic philosophy at work not just in this novel, and not just in Hawkes’s work as a whole, but in the collective practice of “postmodern” experiment in general: the existing conventions of fiction are smashed but this smashing is itself purposeful and amid the debris a new design can be discerned. This is a compelling enough argument, but in the case of The Lime Twig, Travesty, The Blood Oranges, and Second Skin “design and debris” could be applied even more specifically to the effect of Hawkes’s experiments in point of view. Hawkes so thoroughly hollows out the presumptive authority of the first-person narrative that this mode collapses of its own weight. Yet the novels still reveal an “innate design,” partly to be found in the artful way that collapse is effected, through which the dominating “vision” is expressed. And while the terms of that vision are distinctive to each individual work, it is the kind of dark vision one might expect from a writer who believed that fiction should compel readers to confront the realities of human experience, not through the formulas of “realism” but through a kind of experimental writing that doesn’t allow us our own usual evasions.’ — Daniel Green

 

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Further

John Hawkes @ Wikipedia
All That Remains: On the Fiction of John Hawkes
John Hawkes on Writing, Fiction, Nightmare, and More
A Conversation with John Hawkes By Patrick O’Donnell
The Enemies of the Novel: DG Interview With John Hawkes
John Hawkes @ goodreads
Obituary: John Hawkes
John Hawkes Is Dead at 72; An Experimental Novelist
Remembering John Hawkes
An Appreciation of John Hawkes
AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHN HAWKES
Practicing Post-Modernism: The Example of John Hawkes
Pseudo-Intellectual Reviews: John Hawkes
‘The Universal Fears’
Buy ‘The Lime Twig’

 

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Extras


George Plimpton interviews John Hawkes


THE LIME TWIG by John Hawkes

 

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Interview
from Dalkey Archive

 

Interviewer: You’ve spoken in several interviews about the geneses of some of your novels—an article on cannibalism that inspired The Cannibal, a newspaper story on horse racing in England that inspired The Lime Twig, a trip to two islands that served as the source for Second Skin. It seems that your novels are motivated by what Henry James called ‘germs”: seemingly small events or snatches of conversation upon which the imagination works, creating an entire fictional world from a corpuscular beginning. Could you talk about these beginnings, for some of your fictions?

John Hawkes: I haven’t said enough about how important horses were to the inception of The Lime Twig. The first draft of the novel was written in one summer, and I remember going to a newsstand in Cambridge and finding a magazine on horse racing—that was, perhaps, my first moment of research. Also, my father’s best friend was a steward for the New York racetrack system, and I knew this man and his family from a very early age. I associate with them memories of handsome engravings of nineteenth-century racehorses, sometimes with jockeys on them, sometimes not. Though I loved horses and was intrigued by the idea of horse racing, I had never actually seen one when I was working on the first draft of The Lime Twig. Then I was at a party where I met the poet, J. V. Cunningham. We were talking, and I mentioned horse racing. Cunningham said that he went down to the Narragansett racetrack all the time, so he invited me to go down with him and bet. He made a lot of money, but he wouldn’t give me any tips, so I lost my two dollars immediately. But the one thing I got out of the experience was going down to the rail of the track, along a turn. By standing next to the rail as the horses went by, I could hear the jockeys talking to each other and thwacking the riding crops against the rumps of the great beasts—that impression is in The Lime Twig.

I: You mentioned that the parody of marriage in Charivari is a result of attitudes you were projecting toward your parents and your own marriage at the time of its writing. Is there any carry-over of this attitude in The Lime Twig in the parody of the Bankses’ marriage?

JH: In The Lime Twig I took two very young people and made them very old. The only constant I can see in both sets of characters, starting from the man and woman in Charivari to the pair in The Lime Twig, is that innocence is immediately a dominant theme, along with anxiety and dream. As in The Lime Twig dream and illusion are right at the center of Charivari.

I: I think the greatest gap between publications of your work is that which exists between the appearance of The Owl and The Goose on the Grave in 1954, and The Lime Twig in 1961. Is there any particular reason for the gap? Was the conception or drafting of The Lime Twig especially difficult in any way?

JH: I wrote the first draft of The Lime Twig in 1955, then taught two more years at Harvard, and I was still tinkering with the novel when we came to Brown in 1958. I really can’t explain why it was so difficult to write. As I told you, Guerard did not like the first draft, then Sophie and I worked on it by cutting it apart and making charts, which we had also done with The Beetle Leg. The fact that it took six years before it came out has something to do with very slow revising, going into teaching, being at Harvard and then moving to Brown, which was very disruptive. The reconceiving and revision of The Lime Twig were extensive: I took characters out, I took out scenes, I added Hencher I had to revise it considerably, sentence by sentence. James Laughlin then suggested a gloss for the reader in the novel, which was ironic, because Albert Guerard had thought that The Cannibal needed a gloss, as in “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” I abandoned that idea but when Laughlin raised it for The Lime Twig quite independently, I thought it was good because it added an extra perspective to the novel, and I could ridicule the speaker, I could mock that narrator. In a sense, that idea, which resulted in the presence of Slyter in the novel, heightened its ironic qualities considerably. The Hencher section of the novel came next to last, then the Sidney Slyter column was written last. I didn’t feel any urgency in writing, and I didn’t feel anything unusual about this novel. I worked on it as I could, and it simply took a long time.

I: A sense of ritual gets into your work, I think, in that it is often, structurally, cyclical or repetitious.

JH: I do see things as cyclical and ordered. I have a powerful associative imagination. What I really want to do is to create things that haven’t been created before, even though life itself seems sometimes totally cyclical and totally coherent. I find it very difficult to cope with the notion of being alive, being human; I’m not able to accept us very easily. I think we are so unaccountable. Life is also a constantly terrifying mystery as well as a beautiful, unpredictable, exfoliating, marvelous thing.

I: Your well-known statement about fiction as a matrix of recurring images and events seem to have something to do with ritual, as well as with the use of what I would call obsessive images in your fiction. One example might be the image of the lighthouse in Second Skin, foreshadowed by the shape of Stella Snow’s house in The Cannibal, the castle in The Owl, the airplane in The Lime Twig. Do you see the psychic contours of life or fiction as a series of recurrences?

JH: It’s terribly hard to say. I may not understand the question. Earlier than my writing The Lime Twig, between 1955 and 1960, I began to get an image of an ocean liner abandoned far out at sea, except that the water is only mid shin high, so that you can walk out to it; you have to walk in low water a mile or so to an enormous black ship lying on its side, with lifeboats dangling from the davits. Such an image is fetal: it is dead but full of potential. Last night, as I was going to sleep, I saw myself on a dark, black sea, at night, with the prow of an enormous ship coming at me. And I had another fleeting image of being on the water and watching the Lusitania on it, going down, with only its stern above the water; there were lights on it, and I was waiting for it to go down. Both of these visions are, of course, related to all of the house-tower images, crashed airplanes–they’re always life/death constructions. Last night, with these two images, I didn’t have any particular emotional reactions, just slight anxiety as the great prow of the ship approached, which to me is a potentially fear-inspiring image. To be anywhere near an enormous ocean liner when you are just like a fish in the water is frightening. Somebody once told me that he thought all of these images–airplanes, ships, lighthouses–are images of sexual fear, sexual destruction, the lighthouse in particular being a ruined, gutted phallus. It’s hard to tell whether the ship or airplane–they’re all the same, I’m convinced–is male or female; it may shift back and forth. Obviously an air plane is male from the outside as you see it start to move through the air, but female in its interior, like a whale. Hencher entering the airplane is a uterine experience.

 

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Book

John Hawkes The Lime Twig
New Directions

‘Many twentieth century writers have written books that read like dreams, often bad dreams. Kafka is the obvious but by no means the only example. These books are typified by having no plot or a non-linear plot, strange often frightening characters, unknown to the narrator/hero, vivid images, distorted landscapes, an unconventional sense of time and, all too often, animals that do not behave as we would like or expect. Hawkes is a prime exponent of this style of writing and this book may be his most successful attempt at it. Indeed, the hero of this book, if hero is the right word, has a dream, which he is able to live, but ends up paying the ultimate price for it.

‘Michael and Margaret Banks live in London. The house they own is where Michael Hencher’s mother lived and died. Hencher now lives in a room of the house as a tenant. Michael Banks has a dream of owning a racehorse and, with Hencher’s connections, becomes involved in a plot to steal a retired race horse and run him in a race. Banks is excited at the prospect of owning the horse; indeed, his excitement can be said to be both sexual (he wants to impress Margaret) and based on the need to put some excitement into his dreary life. However, as in all good dreams, he is somewhat fearful. He has reason to be fearful as the stealing of the horse and the running of the race are under the control of a particularly nasty gang of villains. Of course, he – and Margaret – are unable to deal with the violence from Larry (the leader of the gang), Thick (the heavy) and the others. Michael gets his thrills – including a sexual romp – but the horse – a symbol of sexual power – will kill him as Thick has killed Margaret. Dreams have a way of turning nasty in twentieth century literature.’ — The Modern Novel

Excerpt

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! The new SCAB is great, impeccable, wilder than ever! Amazing, major kudos. I loved everything. I’m going to read through it again now that I’m resettled and can be more specific then. Thank you, master! Stockholm went really well, and my birth certificate is supposed to arrive today, fingers crossed. Love’s Norwegian portion awarding SCAB the Nobel Anti-Peace Prize, G. ** fish, Hi. All the escort texts and photos are found on escort advertising sites. I don’t write them. I sometimes edit the texts a little and mix and match with the photos, locations, etc. but they’re all real. I hope your mood has upswung since you commented. And obviously you’re powerful even when you’re down, and not every down person can say that. xo. ** kenley, Hi. Right, right. Stockholm was good. I don’t think I had either of those Swedish things, at least under that name, but the greatest ramen place in the world that I know of is there, and I did feast on that. How have you been? ** Uday, How did you do with the thesis deadline, he asked hopefully? ** Bill, Stockholm was a quickie, but it went really well. Oh, right, Basel is everywhere. Here too, although not at the moment. Good in the sense that Basel, the city itself, is not very exciting. Hope you’re finding stuff. ** _Black_Acrylic, Ah, nice. I was just reading about that Danny Dyer guy. Not sure the French will see that film as French friendly enough to release, but who knows. ** LC, Hi, LC. Cool. The Stockholm portion of my week went pretty A-okay. Now I have to make Friday live up to it, I guess. Enjoy the blooming. I guess things are probably blooming here too. I have to go look at the park. ** Steve, Hi. The screening went very well. And the blog’s own Mans hosted and did the Q&A, and he was masterful. Mm, the questions don’t really change based on the location, I don’t think. Other than there being many more queries about what home haunts are outside the US. It’s really just what the inquisitor themself is curious about. Saw some of Stockholm, strolled about, hit the ABBA Museum, and a few other things. We only had one day there. ** jay, Hey! We did go to the ABBA Museum. It’s pretty fun, lots of interactive stuff, but, unsurprisingly, it isn’t exactly deep. My faint hopes that it might get into how ABBA’s work got darker and darker in their later years was utterly ignored. It was ‘fun, fun, fun’ top to bottom. You’re near the end of Proust? Wow. Do you feel the utter transformation of your thinking and perceiving faculties that Proust fanatics claim is the novel readers’ destiny? I’m very long overdue a trip to the little manga store street here in Paris, and I’ll see if those two are on sale. Thanks! Best of the bestest! ** Carsten, Thanks. It was a really good screening, excellent large crowd and much appreciation expressed. When the film was first rolling out we did cover our expenses in some cases because it was important to be there, but that was a struggle, and now we only travel if the expenses are covered. That said, we did cover the Stockhom trip because that’s been in the works for at least half a year. A cultural grant would be most welcome and very helpful, but, other than for the films a couple times, I have never gotten a grant in my life. There’s always someone on every committee who’s, like, ‘Dennis Cooper? No fucking way’. I think the ‘tricky’ part of your post was set up adequately. I’ll write to you about the post’s timing shortly. ** Steeqhen, Hi. Stockholm was good. Hm, I didn’t notice anyone there being especially drunk or drinking, but I don’t know. Everyone was super friendly. Hoping the therapy start will add that last ingredient you want. And luck with the book proposal. I was invited ages ago by the 33 1/3 series to do the book on ‘Bee Thousand’, but I decided it needed someone with much better non-fiction skills. ** Malik, Hi. Oh, nice, I know all of those drummers you mentioned. I’ve had my free jazz wormhole phases. I can’t remember his name, but the guy who drummed in Cecil Taylor’s trio was un-fucking-believable when I used to go see him live. Right, I was so excited to see ‘Escape from Tomorrow’, and was so disappointed other than, like you said, watching and imagining how it was shot. Curious about the follow-up obviously or anyway. Happy almost weekend. ** HaRpEr //, Hi. Stockholm went really well, great response, we were happy. I love your piece in SCAB. It’s really impressive. I’m excited to reread it now that I’m not reading it on an airplane, not that it didn’t work perfectly well there. I hope good health is hugging you like a beast again. When that point hits me when I’m working on something, I always put it away and think about anything but that for a while. That works for me, but I imagine one could also power through the snag. ** Okay. Back in the early 80s, a lot of my smartest friends were really into John Hawkes. I tried and tried with him, but I couldn’t get what the deal was. But I randomly picked up his novel ‘The Lime Twig’ recently, and I was seriously into it and thought it was excellent. So I pass that new opinion onto you, blog people. See you tomorrow.

Jeff Keen’s Day

 

‘The fiercely original film-maker, poet and artist Jeff Keen, who has died aged 88, defied categorisation. He produced a vast body of paintings, drawings, sculpture and punchy Beat poetry, but is best known for his films, which incorporated collage, animation, found footage and live action – often all in one work. Keen used highly innovative techniques of superimposition and editing, and frequently etched and degraded the film surface. Works such as Marvo Movie (1967), Rayday Film (1968-75) and Mad Love (1972-78) were shot with his friends and family either at home, on the streets of Brighton or at the local tip; their fantastical, DIY countercultural qualities evoked the spirit of Andy Warhol’s Factory and the early cinema pioneers of Brighton, where Keen lived. Despite making his first film in his late 30s, he completed more than 70 films and videos throughout his life.

‘Keen was born in Trowbridge, Wiltshire, and had a love of wildlife, art and books as a child. He attended grammar school and gained an Oxford scholarship, but this was thwarted by his national service in 1942. Keen was given experimental tanks and aeroplane engines to trial during the war, and would frequently refer back to this period in films such as Meatdaze (1968), which included bombers and sirens on its soundtrack, and Artwar (1993).

‘After the war, Keen developed a love of movies and comics and attended a small art college in Chelsea. London life encouraged his love of the arts, especially surrealism, Picasso and Dubuffet. When he moved to Brighton, Keen took up work as a landscape gardener for the local council. In 1956, he married Jackie Foulds, who was the muse for his films in the 1960s and 70s, playing the characters Vulvana, The Catwoman and Nadine. Keen himself had a B-movie-style “mad scientist” alter ego named Dr Gaz.

‘One of his early films, The Autumn Feast (1961), was made with the poet Piero Heliczer, who was part of the Warhol set. From the early 1960s, Keen experimented with “expanded cinema” (film events that exceed the normal modes of cinema projection), combining multiple projections and live art performance. A regular contributor to the “happenings” scene of 1960s London, at the Better Books shop in Charing Cross Road and elsewhere, he also participated in the International Underground Film festival at the National Film Theatre in 1970 and continued to make expansive, surrealist-informed 16mm epics such as White Dust (1970-72) and The Cartoon Theatre of Dr Gaz (1976-79), as well as 8mm diary films. He painted throughout the 60s and 70s and made artist books inspired by his films.

‘After Keen temporarily separated from Jackie in the early 1980s, his films became more abstract and introspective. He worked in front of the camera more, sometimes donning absurdist paper disguises, almost as if life had not only merged with art but fully collapsed into it. In Blatzom (1986), he became a moving sculpture/drawing hybrid. His friends and family were still involved: his daughter, Stella, operated a second camera and the editor Damian Toal came on board to help with violent, industrial-style videos such as Plasticator (1990s). Artwar was commissioned and broadcast by Channel 4.

‘Keen’s interest in myth, surrealism and romantic painting complemented his love of movies and comics, and he continually absorbed new references into his work. His highly frenetic videos of the 1990s included homages to Apocalypse Now, Rambo and Predator as well as Budd Boetticher westerns. Although his work has always been featured in historical surveys of British experimental and avant-garde cinema, these qualities distinguished his films from more purely formalist works made at the London Filmmakers’ Co-Operative, an organisation he helped to found in 1966. It meant his work was often more appreciated by skaters and punks than followers of the canonical avant garde. The extreme, short edits in his playful, visceral films have helped to keep his work fresh and alive; they still zap with energy decades later.

‘I worked with Keen throughout 2008 on a series of restorations, a film season and a BFI DVD boxset, GAZWRX: The Films of Jeff Keen. The process was undertaken at great speed, much like the pace of his films. We discussed everything from B-movies to Wagner to William Blake. I followed his instructions diligently along the way, but discovered that in speeding up some electronic drawings made on a children’s toy, and turning them into a two-channel video, we had made a new piece of work, Omozap Terribelis + Afterblatz 2. He grew excited and wanted to make more new things, despite his declining health. It was typical of what had been his persistent desire, even need, to make art. As he said in the early 1960s: “If words fail, use your teeth. If teeth fail, draw in the sand.” Whatever it takes, art must happen.’ — William Fowler

 

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Stills


































 

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Further

Jeff Keen Website
Jeff Keen @ IMDb
Jeff Keen @ Experimental Cinema
Jeff Keen @ Hales Gallery
The Estate of JEFF KEEN
GAZWRX: the films of Jeff Keen
Jeff Keen ‎– Noise Art
“When words fail, use your teeth!”
Shoot the Wrx, Artist and Film-maker Jeff Keen
Jeff Keen: Artist and film-maker celebrated for his playful approach
Jeff Keen @ letterboxd
DR GAZ
R.I.P Jeff Keen
ART WAR! An Appreciation Of The Films Of Jeff Keen
Stewart Home on the films of Jeff Keen

 

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Extras


Jeff Keen’s Noise Art


Jeff Keen in drawings, paintings and film


A brief rummage through the Keen studio.


(Jeff Keen) Shoot the Wrx! exhibition walkthrough

 

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Interview

 

WONDERLAND: Why are people finally taking notice of your films?

JACKIE KEEN: A year ago I wrote to the BFI saying that it was disgusting that my husband had been sidelined. I explained that I had seen him devoted to making movies for decades working on a shoestring, doing the whole thing by himself, and never stopping –

JEFF KEEN: Well, I’ve stopped now. [Laughs]

WONDERLAND: Why have you been ignored for so long?

JACKIE: Partly it’s his fault, because he’s not interested in chatting people up. He’s too shy. In fact, I said in the email to the BFI that if Jeff knew I was writing at all, he’d be cross with me.

JEFF: Oh well. It’s old stuff, that is, Jackie. I’ve given up film now.

JACKIE: Yes. But it hasn’t given you up.

JEFF: Well, it has in a way, I think.

WONDERLAND: How do you mean?

JEFF: I’ve kicked the film habit.

JACKIE: But you haven’t kicked the drawing habit.

JEFF: No. I can’t kick that. I fall back on that. I’m still drawing all the time.
[Jackie goes into the next room and comes back with her arms full of boxes, plastic wallets and folders. She hands over the sketchbooks]

WONDERLAND: These are incredible.

JEFF: These are just from the top of the pile… It’s all part of it. It’s all part of the story.

JACKIE: He was never //not// drawing, were you Jeff?

JEFF: No, love. [Little laugh] I used to sit in my flat; I have a chair that’s convenient, and I used to sit there until it got too dark, every night. So I’ve got quite a lot of books lying about.

WONDERLAND: These are the contents of your mind, Jeff!

JEFF: Pouring out. But they don’t want to see them, that’s the damn trouble. The BFI obviously are just thinking in terms of film and I understand that but… I have been bored by it. To be honest, I am exhausted by it. And I don’t want to talk about it.

JACKIE: Now, don’t say that.

JEFF: Anyway, a lot of my stuff was outdoors. It’s gone.

WONDERLAND: Did you used to go around Brighton graffiti-ing?

JEFF: I started doing graffiti in the 60s. I remember the first time, it was the other end of town, the road running underneath the railway bridge where the London trains go over.

JACKIE: I was keeping watch to see nobody came to arrest him. And you were spray-painting ‘Deep War Hurts Says Doctor Gaz’

WONDERLAND: Why did you first move here?

JEFF: I came on a chance a few years after the war. It was a very different place then, almost like life on another planet. I got a summer job working in parks and gardens and stayed on for 12 years. That job came to an end in ’63: we had a very bad winter, and I remember going along the seafront scraping up sludge and snow, throwing it into the road for cars to spin it back at me again as I walked along the road, and that was the end for me.

WONDERLAND: And how did you get into film?

JEFF: I wasn’t thinking about film at all when I was younger. I was an artist, really, from the start. It was only much later that filmmaking was thrust upon me, when Jackie was at the art college.

JACKIE: There was no film society, so Jeff did everything, behind the scenes. It was ostensibly me, but it was all Jeff: he was the backroom boy.

JEFF: I found I liked getting behind a camera. I was the only person with spare time, so I finished up making the films to show.

WONDERLAND: Did you teach yourself?

JEFF: Yeah. Nothing in it really. [Laughs] You can learn to use a camera in a few days, and the rest follows.

WONDERLAND: Do you think in pictures?

JEFF: I suppose I do.

JACKIE: That was one of your slogans, ‘Kill The Word’ –

JEFF: ‘Don’t Let It Kill You!’

WONDERLAND: How did you meet?

JEFF: In a coffee bar called Tinkie’s.

JACKIE: Jeff saw me in the street first.

JEFF: Oh yes, actually, when I first saw her, it was rather terrific. She was walking down from the Clocktower, all in green: green hat, green coat, green shoes. And I thought, ‘God, there’s someone with style.’ [Laughs] She was being chased by a loping man.

JACKIE: Oh Jeff you make it sound –

JEFF: No, it’s true. [Laughs]

WONDERLAND: Have you always felt like an outsider?

JEFF: Living here in Brighton I’d always been outside the mainstream. From the very outset I never really fitted in, even as a filmmaker. Not that it mattered much, you know, I didn’t mind. I just carried on filming.

WONDERLAND: Did you want to be accepted?

JEFF:No. Not really. I never really tried for it.

WONDERLAND: Let’s talk a bit about your childhood. Where were you born?

JEFF: Trowbridge, Wilts. I remember the road. I don’t remember the house. It was a bad birth. My mother was quite old, forty-something. And I was the first one. And it was November and from then on it has been a difficult road!

WONDERLAND: What did your parents do?

JEFF: My mother took on local nursing. And my father didn’t do anything really. He was out of the war, the First World War, where he’d been in a minesweeper off the coast of Ireland, rescuing bodies from the Lusitania, when it sank in 1915, all that sort of thing. Over a thousand people died, a hundred children. And he didn’t want anything more to do with that.

JACKIE: Jeff’s father was amazing. [Jackie goes to the shelf and brings down a photo album] He had the most fantastic sense of humour, and he used to love dressing up.

JEFF: Actually these photographs say far more than words. They need sticking back in again, Jackie.

JACKIE: [Takes one out, a headshot of Jeff in soldier’s uniform] I love this one of him as a soldier. His face radiates warmth, intelligence and his poetic nature.

WONDERLAND: Did you do a lot of destroying things when you were a kid?

JEFF: No I don’t think I did. I was very mild-mannered. [Laughs] I didn’t like the destruction of birds’ eggs, all that. The things I destroy in my films don’t answer back! I remember my cousin, who lived next door, he had this habit of shooting little birds, he got a Diana air pistol for Christmas. He had these starlings down from the nest, on a little table and he put them out on there and shot them and it was a bit of a shock. That night I felt this irritation in the throat, and that was the Scarlet Fever starting.

WONDERLAND: What did you want to be when you grew up?

JEFF: I think I always wanted to draw. I used to draw birds, natural history. My first job was at the local store in Trowbridge just before WW2. Sainsburys, actually, and I remember drawing aeroplanes there. Bombers and things like that. Everyone was talking about war. It was in the air.

WONDERLAND: Comics are obviously crucial to your art. Did you read them when you were a boy?

JEFF: I discovered comics when they started to become popular in this country in the late 50s. They were quite sensational: you could buy them in corner shops, you’d get a collection of comics down beside the door as you went in, mostly national comics, not Marvel then. But I don’t draw like comics. I love them, but I don’t set out to imitate them, you know?

WONDERLAND: Do you remember your first trip to the cinema?

JEFF: My mother took me. It was Chaplin’s film about the circus, I was less than five and I remember screaming out: I was upset when the horse goes on the loose, and everything started to fall about. I was frightened… It’s difficult to imagine really how important the cinema was to us. During the war, of course, it became even more important. People would just flock to them, it was the only entertainment… and the smoke from all the cigarettes used to rise.

WONDERLAND: What did you do in WW2?

JEFF: Nothing much! I was at a secret location about ten miles inland from Great Yarmouth, fitting reject flying fortress engines into Sherman tanks for D-Day.

WONDERLAND: You said earlier that you’ve given up film –

JEFF: I haven’t been making films for some time. And I feel now I’m too weak. [Laughs] You’ve got to be strong, I think, to make films. Unless you’ve got other people to help you. I work in that precarious place of being without money most of the time… It’s strange, you know. I was always happier making films than trying to explain them. Now it’s come to an end, I should be stopping and thinking, but I’m not really. I’m trying to forget.

 

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13 of Jeff Keen’s 49 films

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Wail (1961)
‘The realities of brutal gang violence collide with war paintings and a horror movie werewolf in this extraordinary action and animation mix. Keen recognises the dynamic links between different cultural forms plus popular culture’s potential for violence and subversion.’ — Lux

 

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Instant Cinema (1962)
‘This early quick-fire cut-up animation melds machine gunfire with scratched film. The soundtrack was made by Keen in 2007 with a wasp synthesizer and a shortwave radio.’ — letterboxd


Excerpt

 

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Flik Flak (1965)
‘Comics, monsters and a zombified Keen are gently desecrated in this paint-flecked film that also features a picture of Jackie Keen crying heart-shaped tears.’ — letterboxd


Excerpt

 

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Cineblatz (1967)
‘In Cineblatz, the viewer is subjected to a high-impact barrage of evolving images, at once comic and terrifying. Glossy magazines are cut up and reconfigured, newspaper pages are defaced with animated squiggles, comic-book superheroes fly out, over and through at superspeed. Pictures appear only to burn up or be torn apart, toys dance in ferocious stop-motion before melting into pools of plastic decay, a hammer plunges down on an image of the assembled House of Commons – all to a crackly soundtrack of treated shortwave static. It is a hyperkinetic panorama of 1960s popular culture in meltdown, where seemingly nothing stays still for more than a single frame, as the artist ejaculates ideas onto the screen faster than the eye can properly register. Lasting just three minutes, Cineblatz is exhilarating, orgasmic even–but also thoroughly exhausting.’ — letterboxd


Excerpt

 

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White Lite (1968)
White Lite is something of a mystical film. It feels like we’ve gone through the looking glass and entered another world, despite the fact it was largely shot in the flat of its director, Jeff Keen. The film greets us with the invitation “meet anti-matter and the bride of the monster”, pointing to Keen’s love of B movies and a reference to The Bride of the Atom (US, 1955) or The Bride of the Monster as it was later known, a film by Ed D. Wood Jr. The homage comes some 12 years before Wood achieved considerable notoriety as winner of a Worst Director of All Time Award in 1980 (and 26 years before he was immortalised in Tim Burton’s affectionate tribute Ed Wood).’ — autohystoria


the entire film

 

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Rayday Film (1968-76)
‘‘Rayday Film’ (1968-76) is a sort of crazed homage to comic book superheroes (the title comes from a comic-book Keen himself produced). Sped-up, multi-exposure footage shows Keen’s wife and friends acting the role of various masked or costumed characters, and performing weird, cultish rituals in various locations around Brighton, where they all lived. Thrown into the mad mix are images of toys and dolls being melted, sections of damaged film stock, fragments of stop-motion animation, and a montage of TV clips showing wartime atrocities. Oh, and the soundtrack is a near-constant cacophony of overlaid tracks, forming a pulsing, shrieking vortex of white noise. Needless to say, there isn’t much in the way of a coherent plot. And yet, amidst the sensory assault, certain themes can be picked out: war, and media representations, and the dark mythological energies that lurk beneath the surface of civilised existence.’ — Time Out (London)


the entire film

 

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The Dreams and Past Crimes of the Archduke (1984)
‘The 16mm work is made up of three parts: out-of-date film stock accompanied by evocative piano, a noir style photo-drama set at Brighton train station and – the main piece of the film – a gorgeous blue- and red-dominated poetic psychodrama. The use of old film stock is not untypical for Keen; he would regularly use whatever material was at hand, often using different types of film stock within the same title, as here. As a low-/no-budget filmmaker, he frequently had little choice, but he often exploits the poetics of low-grade material as part of the process. Keen cut his images in the main section to a soundtrack provided by his daughter, Stella Starr, who recorded the cut-up of music and sound effects during a film show at the local cinema. Although not always credited, Stella has provided regular assistance to her father, beginning in the late ’60s and usually as camera operator. She also features as the blind-folded artist painting with a paper brush, a particularly dynamic image. The red- and blue-painted figures look partly to the new romantic art that was happening at the time but also look like ghosts of the people who’d appeared in Keen’s films for the last 20 years. The double-exposure of the ghostly figures, the slow-paced action, colour dominance and interplay between sound and image make this one of his most reflective films.’ — bfi


Keen’s sketchbook for the film

 

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Plasticator (1990)
‘Treating apocalyptic and aggressive imagery with silence and slow washes of colour, Jeff Keen exhibits and works against his usual tropes.’ — letterboxd


Behind the scenes

 

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Plazmatic Blatz (1991)
‘Stealth bombers hover like vultures over crashing waves and a ruined land. Using found footage and several thick layers of video, Keen presents a very visceral version of Armageddon.’ — LUX

Watch an excerpt here

 

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Omozap2 (1991)
‘Jeff Keen stands in overalls, poised with his tools before him. Then he lights a roaring gas-fueled torch, smashes a plate with a hammer, paints a giant esoteric symbol on the wall and starts up his film projector. This snappy one minute video provides a neat evocation of the Jeff Keen live experience and throws us right into the inspired montages to come.’ — LUX


the entire film

 

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ARTWAR! (1993)
‘As its title suggests, the violence in Artwar is more pronounced than in Keen’s earlier work, but the wit, humour and references remain. One section, ‘Draw He Said’, is built on a punning reference to drawing as an art and the action of drawing a gun – guns and cowboys have been referenced by Keen from as early as 1960. Wail from that year features a short animation of blasting cowboys.

‘Artwar was made when the so-called YBAs, a new generation of Young British Artists, centred around Damien Hirst, were developing their reputations and in some instances making works on video. The film’s playfulness and references to popular culture, as well as its darkness, make some connection with the YBAs’ work, but culturally it comes from a different position. Keen’s work is more direct and while it contains much humour cannot be said to be ironic. His articulations come not from being brought up in a culture that is obsessed with war and violence but from experiencing these things first hand. This is why Artwar is so important to him. Keen is also uncertain about the contemporary art world and his work has found little acceptance within it. Despite the fact that he draws and paints, his work has almost always been screened in the context of experimental film.’ — INFECTED SENSES


the entire film

 

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Irresistible Attack (1995)
‘In Irresistible Attack (1995) art is under an “irresistible attack”, more plastic, materialist and malleable than ever, by “a prisoner of art”.’ — Experimental Film Club


Excerpt

 

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Gazapocalypse (2012)
‘Jeff Keen was a pioneer of experimental film, using multi-screen projections, collages, animations and performances to transform cinema into an intense, kaleidoscopic experience. A veteran of the Second World War, Jeff Keen’s work powerfully evokes the violence, colour, speed and noise of the 20th century, incorporating raucous collages of comics, drawings, B-movie posters, plastic toys, burning props and extravagant costumes. His installation at the Tanks, GazapocalypseReturn to the Golden Age, showcases his radical development of multiple screen projection, cut-up soundtracks and unruly live action, and features a special performance by some of Keen’s collaborators, including his daughter Stella Starr.’ — Tate


Excerpt

 

*

p.s. Hey. Heads up that, starting tomorrow, the blog will be going on a short vacation — Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday — while I’m in Stockholm for a screening of ‘Room Temperature’. It will return to normal life on Friday. ** jay, Hi. TheFantasyArchitect won the weekend, clearly. Your masochism is a very trusty companion. I wonder how many masochists can say that? Well, probably quite a few when I think about it. Have increasing fun until our next visit. ** _Black_Acrylic, Thanks for the argument audio peek. I’ll luxuriate in it in a bit. ** Malik, Obvious example, but whenever I see videos of Keith Moon drumming, I usually think, ‘How much would I pay to feel whatever he’s feeling’. Renaissance Faires were and probably still are a kind of nightmare. To work/play there, we had to take lessons to talk like fake Renaissance people. ‘Forsooth, my lady’ and so on. But that was when I dropping acid a lot, and it wasn’t a good combination. As you can imagine, your play being set at a Disney park has my eyes sparkling. Wow. One of Zac’s and my dreams is to set a film at a Disney park, but we will never ever have the millions it would take to rent that location. Anyway, that’s super exciting! ** Thom, Gotcha on the logistical time hampering. Lay some bones down, that’s my vote. You’re going to read Pinget! I bow to or with you. ‘Fable’ is on Internet Archive, but it’s in ugly typewriter script, which might be a little hurtful to it. Steinbeck … I haven’t read him or tried since, I think, high school, so I don’t even know. What’s your take? Landing stuck, per chance? Awesome next few days! ** Bill, Could have been. The lengthy process by which I gather the profiles can make it hard for me to see them in an overall way. Art Basel! You’re in Basel? What’s going on? ** Dominik, Haha, no, though I did check to see if the book was real and really there. Visa: I’m waiting for the required birth certificate to arrive and hoping it’ll get here before the final deadline. So I’m just watching the mailbox nervously. SCAB is real!!!!!! Cannot wait to read it. Probably on the plane to Stockholm. Everyone, High alert! The new issue of Dominik’s legendary and utterly crucial zine SCAB is newly in the world, and it has work by some people from these parts — Dominic Lyne, Harper Stringer, Ellie Chou, lotus eater machine, etc. — amongst the generally gifted horde. Get it. I don’t even need to suggest that. It’s here! So excited! As you can probably tell, Love is into corduroy pants, G. ** Måns BT, Strange, the unusually demure escorts … what can it mean? Zac is down for the ABBA Museum if you’re down. We’ll need to do that on Wednesday, the screening day, because we head back to Paris on Thursday morning. Too quick a trip, but money is the evil curtailer. No other plans yet other than dinner with the great music artist Klara Lewis on Tuesday after we get in. Oh, maybe find that amazing ramen place? I don’t think I’ve read anything by him unless I’m spacing. I am in-between books. Right, I’ll go look for a copy of ‘The Weaklings XL’, and, if I can find one, which I think I can, I’ll bring it for you. Cool! Let’s check in by phone or email or something and make a plan. Can’t wait to meet you. xo. ** Carsten, Peanut butter on almost anything creates a vast improvement. I love Don Cheadle. He should be in so many more movies than he is. I saw the guest-post in my mail, thank you! I’ll set it up and get back to you once I know when it’s going to launch. Pleasant here too, weather-wise. ** Adem Berbic, I’m always amazed by social smokers and always wonder if they’re lying about that. I’m super interested to read Tadhg’s SCAB entry, most naturally. Nice visit with James, yes, of course. ** Laura, Hi! Oh, I’m so, so sorry about the migraine. I have friends who are beset with them, and when they have them they look terrified and dead at the same time. I hope you don’t. I’m trusting or at least extremely hoping that by the time I’m back here again being myself on Friday that you’ll be floating energetically again. xo. ** Steve, Tomorrow morning. Ouch! I really disliked ‘Titane’ so I’ve been meh about seeing ‘Alpha’, but, okay, I think you’ve swayed me. ** kenley, Ha, the ramadhan one was a fave for me too. I guess running Hot Wheels on someone who wants to be tickled is kind of a possibly VIP way to tickle them or something? You got me. No, no favorite actors. Like I said, I don’t really respond to ‘good acting’. Once in a while some actor will give a performance where I think, ‘Okay that was pretty convincing’, but it’s a random thing for me. My weekend wasn’t very oodles of anything, it just kind of did the trick. This and that. Mostly working on a new draft of our new film script. That’s good pleasure for me. I hope your Tuesday through Thursday simultaneously fly by and stir your pot. ** HaRpEr //, I hope you’re further upswinging as I type. ‘The Rainbow Stories’ is my favorite Vollman. You’re like the fourth person to, in so many words, tell me to avoid ‘Sentimental Values’ whatever that takes. I’m dying to get my eyes on the new SCAB and your part in it in particular! Thanks for the backgrounding. ** ⋆˚꩜。darbbzz⋆˚꩜。, Hey, buddy. I’ve been somewhere between busy and not busy enough, I guess. Great to hear you sound so up about the pizza employment. Yay. Oh, right, gosh, the misgendering, you are in the South, aren’t you. I’m sure your instincts will lead you to do the proper thing. And I’m sure your performance as a seeming female has been top notch. Have fun with whatever you decide. My coffee is now entirely in my stomach and doing a minimum wage-level job. ** Okay. The fine, imaginative, outgoing filmmaker Jeff Keen is providing your entrainment and more for the next few days. See you on Friday.

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