DC's

The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Thomas Bernhard Day *

* (restored)

“We had no luck with the weather and the guests at our table were repellent in every respect. They even spoiled Nietzsche for us. Even after they had had a fatal car accident and had been laid out in the church in Sils, we still hated them.” (from ‘Hotel Waldhaus’)

“The thousands and hundreds of thousands of words that we keep trotting out, recognizable by their revolting truth which is revolting falsehood, and inversely by their revolting falsehood which is revolting truth, in all languages, in all situations, the words that we don’t hesitate to speak, to write and to remain silent about, that which speaks, words which are made of nothing and which are worth nothing, as we know and as we ignore, the words that we hang on to because we become crazed by impotence and are made desperate by madness, words only infect and don’t know, efface and deteriorate, cause shame, falsify, cripple, darken and obscure; in one’s mouth and on paper they do violence through those who do violence to them; both words and those who do them violence are shameless; the state of mind of words and of those who do them violence is impotent, happy, catastrophic.” (from a speech, 1970)

“Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Proust, I can’t do that. They are all great. A firmament. But one still has a lot of energy: something is still simmering. That’s a soup, which will never be done. One stirs and stirs and stirs. I have the feeling that what I’m doing is worth doing, otherwise I couldn’t do it.” (from an interview, 1986)
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A visit to Thomas Bernhard’s house

“This city of my fathers is in reality a terminal disease which its inhabitants acquire through heredity or contagion. If they fail to leave at the right moment, they sooner or later either commit suicide, directly or indirectly, or perish slowly and wretchedly on this lethal soil with its archiepiscopal architecture and its mindless blend of National Socialism and Catholicism. Anyone who is familiar with the city knows it to be a cemetery of fantasy and desire, beautiful on the surface but horrifying underneath.” (‘Gathering Evidence’)
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Thomas Bernhard’s Novels

On the Mountain (1959)

“…if that handsome fellow were a cripple he wouldn’t repel me, but he isn’t a cripple, he is that handsome fellow, so he repels me…” (“On the Mountain”)

 

Frost (1963)

“Newspapers were the greatest wonders of the world, they knew everything, and only through them did the universe become animated for their readers, the ability to picture everything was only preserved by newspapers. [. . .] “Of course, you have to know how to go about reading them,” said the painter, “you mustn’t just gobble them up, and you mustn’t take them too seriously either, but remember they are miraculous.” [. . .] “The dirt which people hold against newspapers is just the dirt of the people themselves, and not the dirt of the newspapers, you understand! The newspapers do well to hold up a mirror to people that shows them as they are–which is to say, revolting.” (‘Frost’)

 

Gargoyles (1967)

“What I said and what he said, everything I did and everything I thought and what he did, pretended to do, what I pretended to do and what he thought, it was all this stereotype, this stereotyped idea of the inadequacy, poverty, frailty, inferiority, deathly weariness of human existence, and I instantly had the impression that a sick man had entered my house, that I was dealing with a sick man, with someone in need of help. Whatever I said was spoken to a sick man, Doctor, and what I heard, Doctor, came from the lips of a sick man, from an extremely submissive, morbid brain which is filled with the most fantastic but embarrassingly derailed notions that in themselves reveal him for what he is. . . . The man had no idea of what he wanted, and I made him aware of this in the most forceful way; I said that what he was doing was morbid, that his whole life was a morbid life, his existence a morbid existence, and consequently everything he was doing was irrational, if not utterly senseless.” (‘Gargoyles’)

 

The Lime Works (1970)

“All that was left was the recollection of having had a good idea, a recurrent experience of having had a good, an excellent, a most important idea, a truly fundamental idea, but one never remembered itself the idea from one moment to the next, memory was something you simply couldn’t depend on, a man’s memory set him traps he’d walk into and find himself hopelessly lost in, Konrad said, a man’s memory lured him into a trap and then deserted him; it happened over and over again that a man’s memory lured him into a trap, or several traps, thousands of traps, and then deserted him, left him all alone, alone in limitless despair because he felt drain of all thought; Konrad had come to observe this geriatric phenomenon and had begun to be more and more terrified of it, he was in fact prepared to state that a man’s youthful memory was capable of turning into an old man’s memory from one moment to the next, with no warning whatsoever, suddenly you found yourself with an old man’s memory, unprepared by such warning signals as a failure , from time to time, in trifling matters, brief lapses of omissions, the way a mental footbridge or gangplank might give a bit as one passed over it; no, old age set in from one moment to the next, many a man made this abrupt passage from youth to age quite early in life, a sudden shift from being the youngest to the oldest of men, a characteristic of so-called brain workers, who tended, basically, not to have a so-called extended youth, no gradual transitions from youth to age, with them the change occurred momentarily, without warning, suddenly, mortally, you found yourself in old age. (…) An old man needs a crutch, he needs crutches, every old man carries invisible crutches, Konrad said, all those millions and billions of old people on crutches, millions, billions, trillions of invisible crutches, my friend, no one else may see them but I see them, I am one of those who cannot help seeing those invisible billions, trillions of crutches, there’s not a moment, Konrad said, in which I do not see those billions, those trillions of crutches. Those millions of ideas, he said, that I had and lost, that I forgot from one moment to the next. Why I could populate a vast metropolis of thought with all those lost ideas of mine, I could keep it afloat, a whole world, a whole history of mankind could have lived on all the ideas that I lost. How untrustworthy my memory has become!” (“The Lime Works”)

 

Correction (1975)

“We mustn’t let ourselves go so far as to suspect something remarkable, something mysterious or significant in everything and behind everything. Everything is what it is, that’s all.” (‘Correction’)

 

Yes (1978)

“We brood about what we should have done differently or better or what we should not have done, because we are doomed to do so, but it does not lead anywhere. The disaster was inevitable, is what we then say and for a while, if only a short while, we are quiet. Then we start all over again asking questions and probing and probing until we have gone half crazy. We constantly look for someone responsible, or for several persons responsible, in order to make things bearable for ourselves at least for a moment, and naturally, if we are honest, we invariably end up with ourselves. We have reconciled ourselves to the fact that we have to exist, even though most of the time against our will, because we have no other choice, and only because we have again and again reconciled ourselves to this fact, every day and every moment anew, can we progress at all. And where we are progressing to, we have, if we are honest, known all our lives, to death, except that most of the time we are careful not to admit it.” (“Yes”)

 

The Cheap-Eaters (1980)

“Right from the start, he said, he had never made things too easy for himself, seeing that everyone was of course ceaselessly being seduced into making things too easy for himself, and in effect was time and again and continually making things too easy for himself. He had, even as a child, possibly at first still quite unconsciously, resolved to live at the highest possible degree of difficulty, which to this day he has never failed to do.” (“The Cheap Eaters”)

 


Concrete (1982)

“The only friends I have are the dead who have bequeathed their writings to me – I have no others. And I’d always found it hard to have any relationship with another person – I wouldn’t think of using such an unappetizing word as friendship, a word which is misused by everybody. And even early in my life there were times when I had no one – I at least knew that I had no one, though others were always asserting that I did have someone. They said, You do have someone, whereas I knew for certain that I not only had no one, but – what was perhaps the crucial and most annihilating thought – needed no one. I imagined I needed no one, and this is what I still imagine to this day. I needed no one, and so I had no one. But naturally we do need someone, otherwise we inevitably become what I have become: tiresome, unbearable, sick – impossible, in the profoundest sense of the word.” (“Concrete”)

 

Wittgenstein’s Nephew (1982)

“A prize is invariably only awarded by incompetent people who want to piss on your head and who do copiously piss on your head if you accept their prize.” (‘Wittgenstein’s Nephew’)

 

The Loser (1983)

“Suicide calculated well in advance, I thought, no spontaneous act of desperation.
“Even Glenn Gould, our friend and the most im– portant piano virtuoso of the century, only made it to the age of fifty-one, I thought to myself as I entered the inn.
“Now of course he didn’t kill himself like Wertheimer, but died, as they say, a natural death.
“Four and a half months in New York and always the Goldberg Variations and the Art of the Fugue, four and a half months of Klavierexerzitien, as Glenn Gould always said only in German, I thought.” (‘The Loser”)

 

The Woodcutters (1984)

“While Jeannie always had her Virginia Woolf madness and hence suffered from a kind of Viennese Virginia Woolf disease, Schreker always had the Marianne Moore and Gertrude Stein madness and suffered from the Marianne Moore and Gertrude Stein disease. At the beginning of the sixties both of them quite suddenly turned their literary madnesses and their literary diseases, which in the fifties had no doubt been quite genuine madnesses and quite genuine diseases, into a pose, a purpose-built literary pose, a multipurpose literary pose, in order to make themselves attractive to openhanded politicians, thus unscrupulously killing off whatever literature they had inside them for the sake of a venal existence as recipients of state patronage.” (‘The Woodcutters’)

Old Masters (1985)

“…what depresses me so excessively is the fact that such a receptive person as my wife was should die with all that enormous knowledge which I conveyed to her, that she should have taken that enormous knowledge into death with her, that is the worst enormity, an enormity far worse than the fact that she is dead, he said. We force and we stuff every- thing within us into such a person and then that person leaves us, dies on us, forever, he said. Added to it is the suddenness of it, the fact that we did not foresee the death of that person, not for one moment did I foresee the death of my wife, I looked upon her just as if she had eternal life, never thought of her death, he said, just as if she really lived with my knowledge right into infinity as an infinity, he said. Really a precipitate death, he said. We take such a person for eternity, that is the mistake. Had I known she was going to die on me I should have acted entirely differently, as it was I did not know she was going to die on me and before me, so I acted utterly senselessly, just as though she existed infinitely unto infinity, whereas she was not made for infinity at all but for finiteness, like all of us. Only if we love a person with such unbridled love as I loved my wife do we in fact believe that person will live forever and into infinity.” (‘Old Masters’)

 

Extinction (1986)

“German is essentially an ugly language, which not only grinds all thought into the ground, as I’ve already said, but actually falsifies everything with its ponderousness. It’s quite incapable of expressing a simple truth as such. By its very nature it falsifies everything. It’s a crude language, devoid of musicality, and if it weren’t my mother tongue I wouldn’t speak it, I told Gambetti. How precisely French expresses everything! And even Russian, even English, to say nothing of Italian and Spanish, which are so easy on the ear, while German, in spite of being my mother tongue, always sounds alien and ghastly! To a musical and mathematical person like you or me, Gambetti, the German language is excruciating. It grates on us whenever we hear it, it’s never beautiful, only awkward and lumpy, even when used as a vehicle of high art. The German language is completely antimusical, I told Gambetti, thoroughly common and vulgar, and that’s why our literature seems common and vulgar. German writers have always had only the most primitive instrument to play on, I told Gambetti, and this has made everything a hundred times harder for them.” (‘Extinction’)

 

The Voice Imitator (1997)

“The mayors of Pisa and Venice had agreed to scandalize visitors to their cities, who had for centuries been equally charmed by Venice and Pisa, by secretly and overnight having the tower of Pisa moved to Venice and the campanile of Venice moved to Pisa and set up there. They could not, however, keep their plan a secret, and on the very night on which they were going to have the tower of Pisa moved to Venice and the campanile of Venice moved to Pisa they were committed to the lunatic asylum, the mayor of Pisa in the nature of things to the lunatic asylum in Venice and the mayor of Venice to the lunatic asylum in Pisa. The Italian authorities were able handle the affair in complete confidentiality.” (‘The Voice Imitator’

 

Three Novellas (2003)

“Whereas, before Karrer went mad, I used to go walking with Oehler only on Wednesdays, now I go walking–now that Karrer has gone mad–with Oehler on Monday as well. Because Karrer used to go walking with me on Monday, you go walking on Monday with me as well, now that Karrer no longer goes walking with me on Monday, says Oehler, after Karrer had gone mad and had immediately gone into Steinhof. And without hesitation I said to Oehler, good, let’s go walking on Monday as well. Whereas on Wednesday we always walk in one direction (in the eastern one), on Mondays we go walking in the western direction, strikingly enough we walk far more quickly on Monday than on Wednesday, probably, I think, Oehler always walked more quickly with Karrer than he did with me, because on Wednesday he walks much more slowly and on Monday much more quickly. You see, says Oehler, it’s a habit of mine to walk more quickly on Monday and more slowly on Wednesday because I always walked more quickly with Karrer (that is on Monday) than I did with you (on Wednesday). Because, after Karrer went mad, you now go walking with me not only on Wednesday but also on Monday, there is no need for me to alter my habit of going walking on Monday and on Wednesday, says Oehler, of course, because you go walking with me on Wednesday and Monday you have probably had to alter your habit and, actually, in what is probably for you an incredible fashion, says Oehler.” (from’Walking’ in ‘Three Novellas’)

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‘Das War Thomas Bernhard (German documentary on Bernhard’s life and work)


Thomas Bernhard: Three Days (1970) A Portrait by Ferry Radax (1970)


Rare documentaire Alsacien sur Thomas Bernhard

“I never in my life freed myself by writing. If I had done that nothing would be left. And what would I do with the freedom I gained? I’m not in favour of liberation, of relief. The cemetery, maybe that’s it. But, no, I don’t believe in that either, because there would be nothing then.” (from an interview, 1986)

 

P. 310 of Thomas Bernhard’s Extinction

in manuscript

in print

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Thomas Bernhard on Martin Heidegger
from ‘Old Masters’

‘Stifter in fact always reminds me of Heidegger, of that ridiculous Nazi philistine in plus-fours. Just as Stifter has totally and in the most shameless manner kitschified great literature, so Heidegger, the Black Forest philosopher Heidegger, has kitschified philosophy, Heidegger and Stifter, each one for himself and in his own way, have hopelessly kitschified philosophy and literature. Heidegger, after whom the wartime and postwar generations have been chasing, showering him with revolting and stupid doctoral theses even in his lifetime.

‘I always visualize him sitting on his wooden bench outside his Black Forest house, alongside his wife who, with her perverse knitting enthusiasm, ceaselessly knits winter socks for him from the wool she has shorn from their own Heidegger sheep.

‘I cannot visualize Heidegger other than sitting on the bench outside his Black Forest house, alongside his wife, who all her life totally dominated him and who knitted all his socks and crocheted all his caps and baked all his bread and wove all his bedlinen and who even cobbled up his sandals for him. Heidegger was a kitschy brain….. a feeble thinker from the Alpine foothills, as I believe, and just about right for the German philosophical hot-pot. For decades they ravenously spooned up that man Heidegger, more than anybody else, and overloaded their stomachs with his stuff. Heidegger had a common face, not a spiritual one, Reger said, he was through and through an unspiritual person, devoid of all fantasy, devoid of all sensibility, a genuine German philosophical ruminant, a ceaselessly gravid German philosophical cow, Reger said, which grazed upon German philosophy and thereupon for decades let its smart little cow-pats drop on it….

‘Heidegger is the petit-bourgeois of German philosophy, the man who has placed on German philosophy his kitschy nightcaps, that kitschy black night-cap which Heidegger always wore, on all occasions. Heidegger is the carpet-slipper and night-cap philosopher of the Germans, nothing else.’


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Liam Gillick 25/5 2013 WWTBD — What Would Thomas Bernhard Do


Sigrun Höllrigl Thomas Bernhard Remixed II

 

Interviewed (1986)

Asta Scheib: Who is Thomas Bernhard?

Thomas Bernhard: One never knows who one is. The others tell you who you are, don’t they? And as you’re told so a million times if you live a long life, in the end you don’t know at all who you are. Everyone says something different. You yourself also say something different each new moment.

AS: Are there people on whom you depend, who influence your life in a decisive way?

TB: One always depends on people. There is no one who doesn’t depend on somebody. Someone, who is always alone with himself, will go under in no time, will be dead. I believe there are decisive people for everyone. I had had two in my life. My grandfather on my mother’s side and another person, someone, whom I got acquainted to one year before my mother’s death. That was a relation that lasted over thirty five years. It was the person everything concerning me related to, of whom I learnt everything. With the death of that person everything was gone. You are alone then. First you also want to die. Then you search. You had turned all people you also had in life into something less important during your life. Then you’re alone. You have to cope.

When I was alone, no matter where, I always knew, this person protects me, gives me support, but also dominates. Then everything is gone. You stand there in the cemetery. The grave is covered with earth. All that meant something to you is gone. Then each day in the morning you wake up with a nightmare. It’s not like you really want to live on. But you don’t want to hang or shoot yourself either. You think that’s not nice and unappetizing. Then you only have books. They swoop down on you with all the terrible things you can write into them. But you act your life to the outside world as if nothing had happened, because otherwise you would be devoured by the world. They are just waiting to see you show weakness. If you show weakness it will be exploited shamelessly and will be drenched in hypocrisy. Hypocrisy means pity. That’s the best term for hypocrisy.

But it is, as I said, difficult; after thirty-five years together with someone else you are suddenly alone. Only people who have gone through something similar will understand that. Suddenly you are one hundred percent more distrustful then before. Behind each so-called human utterance you suspect some meanness. You become even colder than people thought you had always been before anyway. The only thing that saves you is that you cannot starve to death. Such a life surely isn’t pleasant. Then there is your own frailty. A total decline. One only enters houses with a lift. One drinks a quarter of a liter at noon, and a quarter in the evening. Then you get somehow through the day. But if you drink half a liter at noon that night will be terrible. Those are the problems life shrinks to. Take pills, don’t take them, when to take them, what to take them for . Each month you are driven a little nearer to craziness, because you are confused.

AS: When did you last feel happy?

TB: One feels happiness each day, you’re happy to be alive and not dead already. That’s a great capital.
From the person who died, I know that you love life to the very last moment. Basically, everyone loves to live. Life cannot be so terrible that you don’t keep on with it after all. The motivation is curiosity. You want to know: what will come next? It is more interesting to know what will come tomorrow then what is here today. When the body is ill the brain develops astonishingly well.

I prefer to know everything. And I always try to rob people and get everything that is in them out of them. As long as you can do so without the others recognizing it. When people discover that you want to rob them they shut their doors. Like the doors are shut when someone suspect comes near. But if nothing else is possible you can also break in. Everyone has some cellar window open. That also can be quite appealing.

AS: Did you ever want to have a family?

TB: I was always happy to survive. I couldn’t think of founding a family. I wasn’t healthy, therefore I didn’t feel like doing these things. There was nothing left for me but to flee into my mind and to start something on that basis, the body didn’t have any potential. It was empty. It stayed like that through decades. Whether that is good or bad one doesn’t know. It’s one way to live. Life knows billions of different existences.

My mother died when she was forty-six years old. That was in 1950. A year before I had got acquainted with my life partner. First it was a friendship and a very close relationship to a person who was much older than I was. Wherever I was on earth, she was the central point from which I took everything. I always knew: this person is there for me one hundred percent if things get difficult. I only had to think of her, I didn’t even have to visit her, and everything was already in order. Now too I live with that person. If I have problems I ask: what would you do? By that I’m held back from disgusting things which one might still commit at an older age, because everything is possible. She is the one keeping me from doing certain things, teaching me discipline, but also the one opening the world to me.

AS: Have you been content with your life at some moment in that life?

TB: I have never been content with my life. But I always felt a great need to be protected. I found that protection with my friend. She always got me working. She was happy when she saw that I was doing something. That was great. We traveled together. I carried her heavy bags, but I got to know a lot. As far as one is able to say so of oneself, it’s always not very much, almost nothing. For me it was everything.

When I was nineteen she showed Sicily to me, the place where Pirandello lived. She wasn’t eager to stuff a lot of learning into me. It just happened. We stayed in Rome, in Split — but then the journeys more and more often changed into inner journeys. We were somewhere in the country where one lives very simply. Where at night it snowed in onto the bed. There was the tendency to simplicity. The cows lived right beside us, we ate our soup and had a lot of books with us.

AS: Have you accepted your existence as a writer?

TB: Well, one wants to get better at writing, because otherwise you become crazy. That happens when you get older. The composition should always get more concise. I always tried to do something better when going on. To take the next step depend on the one before. Of course one always has the same theme. Everyone has his theme. He should move around in that theme. Then he does it well. There were many ideas. Maybe one wants to become monk, or work on the railroad, or cut wood. One wants to belong to the very simple people. That’s of course a mistake, because you do not belong. If one is like I am something like that is of course impossible, one cannot be a monk or work on the railroad. I was always a loner. Despite that one strong relationship I was always alone. At the beginning of course I thought I had to go somewhere and join in the conversation.

But since almost a quarter of a century ago I haven’t hadcontact with any other writers.

AS: One of your central themes is music. What does music mean to you?

TB: When I was young I studied music. It had pursued me since my childhood. Although I loved music it was like being hunted, chased. I only studied to be together with people of my age. And the reason was this older person. With my colleagues at the Mozarteum I played music, sang, performed. Then music was no longer possible because it wasn’t possible physically. You can only make music if you are together with people all the time. As I didn’t want that, that was that.

AS: Your invectives, attacks against the government, the church, are very harsh at times. Catholicism is described as “destroyer, frightener, character destroyer of a child’s soul” in Extinction.Your country Austria has become to you “an unscrupulous business where all that is done is bargaining and swindling.” Do you write this out of some kind of universal hatred?

TB: I love Austria. I cannot deny that. The construction of government and church — that’s the terrible thing, you can only hate that. I think all countries and religions you know well are similarly disgusting. After some time you see that the constructions are all the same, dictatorship or democracy — for the individual all is disgusting to the same degree. At least when you look close.

AS: Isn’t it important to you to be accepted as a writer in your home country?

TB: The human being naturally longs for love, from the beginning. Love the world has to give. If one does not get it the others can say a hundred times that you are cold and don’t see and hear that. It’s very hard for you. But it’s also part of life, you cannot escape from it. If you call into a forest the echo comes back. Basically one loves hatred after all.

AS: Is it correct that first of all you begin with a blank slate in your books? You seem to settle up with certain people. Do you have to pay for it?

TB: Yes. Sometimes it’s almost unbearable. Yesterday a woman almost jumped at me when I was in town. She screamed: “If you go on like this you are going to end up in a slow and horrible death!” You cannot do anything against such things. Or you are sitting on a park bench and all of a sudden you are hit from behind, you give a start and hear someone shout: “Just go on like that!” One causes all that oneself. But one didn’t expect it. In Ohlsdorf, my real residence, I can hardly live any more. The attacks from all sides are unbearable. But praise is equally terrible, hypocritical, untruthful, and egoistic. People get nasty when I don’t open at once, they break the windows. First they knock, then they shout, then they scream, then they break the window. Then the engines of their cars roar, then they are gone. Twenty-two years ago I was so stupid and made my address known, now I can no longer live in Ohlsdorf. People are sitting on the walls there; already in the morning when I go out the door they are sitting there. They want to talk to me, they say. Or at weekends people instead of going to the zoo go out to look at a poet. And it’s cheaper. They drive to Ohlsdorf and position themselves around the house. I look out like a prisoner or a lunatic. Unbearable.

Since twelve years agp I haven’t given readings. I can no longer sit down and read my own stuff. I also cannot bear people applauding. Applause – actors are paid in such a way. They earn their money in such a way. I like it when the money from my publisher arrives on my account. But marching music, hosts of applauding people in the theater or in the concert — I can’t bear that. Nothing but disaster follows from applause.

AS: In Extinction you said that at the age of 40 one should be proclaimed a wise old fool [Altersnarr]. Why?

TB: That method is the only one that makes things bearable. You have asked me how I see myself. I can only say: as a fool, a jester. Then it’s bearable. Only when seeing oneself as a fool, an aged fool. A young fool is not interesting. He isn’t accepted as a fool anyhow.

AS: Was what you were writing earlier in you life, say ‘The Breath” or ‘The Cold,” also a means to come to terms with your illness?

TB: My grandfather was a writer. Only after his death I really dared to write myself. When I was eighteen a commemorative tablet was unveiled in my grandfather’s home town. After the ceremony everbody went to a restsurant that belonged to my aunt. I was also there and my aunt told the journalists that were present : “This is his grandson, he won’t achieve anything in life. But maybe he can write.” One said: “You can send him in on Monday.” And I got an order to write something about a refugee camp. The next day my text was in the newspaper. Never again in my life did I experience such exaltation. A really great feeling that you write something and after one night it is printed even if abridged. But it was in the newspaper. By Thomas Bernhard. I had tasted blood. I wrote court reports for two years. They were in my head when later I wrote my own prose, that’s where the origins lie.

AS: How do you feel today when critics like Reich-Ranicki or Benjamin Heinrichs write admiringly about you? Do you feel exaltation?

TB: When reading criticism I now never feel exaltation. At the beginning, yes, because you believe all these things. But experiencing the ups and downs for thirty years, then you look through the mechanisms. One sends a servant saying: “Go write a negative critique.” That’s how it works

AS: Are you annoyed at negative criticism?

TB: Yes. Even today I fall into every trap. I have always been fascinated by newspapers, that was starting very early. I can hardly bear a day without a newspaper. After some time you know the editors of the various newspapers. Maybe I haven’t seen them, but I know about the situation at a theater, the background in an editorial office, I know publishers, their manuscript readers, their business. The intellect always comes to grief. Taste comes to grief. Poetry comes to grief. Columns of editors ride over it. They stop at nothing creative. That’s also in a way fascinating. It hurts me but it no longer disturbs me in my work.

AS: In one of your speeches you once said: “We have to report about nothing but the fact that we are wretched.” Do you write in order to testify to your failures?

TB: No, I do everything for myself. All people do so. Whether they are rope-dancing or baking bread or conducting a train or whether they are stunt pilots. Though stunt pilots have performances where people look up. While he flies beautifully they wait for his fall. It’s the same with writers. But other then the stunt pilot, who is dead when that happens, the writer will also be dead but will always start again. There is always a new performance. The older he gets the higher he flies. Until one day you can’t see him any longer and ask: “Strange, why doesn’t he fall down?”

Writing delights me. That’s nothing new. That’s the only thing that still supports me, that will also come to an end. That’s how it is. One does not live forever. But as long as I live I live writing. That’s how I exist. There are months or years when I cannot write. Then it comes back. Such rhythm is both brutal and at the same time a great thing, something others don’t experience.

AS: Women in your books are, apart from a few exceptions, not drawn in a very friendly way. Is that your experience?

TB: I can only say that for a quarter of a century I have dealt with women only. I can hardly bear men. I can’t bear conversations with men. They drive me crazy. Men always talk about the same things. About their job and about women. You cannot expect anything from men. A lot of men in one place are terrible. I even prefer gossiping women. Relating to women had always been useful to me. I learnt everything from women — and my grandfather. I don’t believe I learnt anything from men. Men have always gotten on my nerves. Strange. After the death of my grandfather there was just nobody there any longer. I always sought protection with women, who in many things were also superior to me. Above all women let me work in peace. I was always able to work near women. I could never produce anything near men.

AS: After the death of your friend is there anybody you wouldn’t want to miss?

TB: No. I mean, there are hundreds of people, I could dance at a thousand marriages, but there is nothing I would despise more. Recently I dreamt that the lost person is back. I said, all the time you weren’t here was terrible. As if that time had been some interim time and the dead person would now live on. That was very intense. You can’t get that back. It’s no longer possible. Now I take the position of an observer of only a narrow territory from where I look at the world. That’s all.

AS: Do you believe that there is an existence after death?

TB: No. Thanks God. Life is wonderful. But the best thought is that when it ends it ends forever. That’s the greatest consolation to me. But I really enjoy living. It was always like that, except those times when I thought of suicide. That was when I was nineteen, at twenty-six quite strongly, again at the age of forty. But now I love life. If you see someone who has to leave, but still is in this life, then you start to understand that.

One of the most marvelous things I experienced was that you hold another one’s hand in your hand, you feel the pulse, then it becomes slower and slower, then that’s it. It’s something enormous. Then you still hold that hand, then the nurse comes in, bringing with her the number for the corpse. The nurse wheels her out once more and says: “Come back later.” Then you are immediately confronted with life again. You calmly get up and put things in order; in the meantime the nurse comes back and attaches the number to the corpse, you empty the bedside cabinet, the nurse says: ” Don’t forget the yogurt, you have to take it too.” Outside you hear the crows — it’s like a theatrical play.

Then the bad conscience comes. A dead person leaves you with an immense guilt.

All the places I had stayed with her, places I wrote about in my books, I can no longer visit. Each of my books was created at a different place. Vienna, Brussels, somewhere in Yugoslavia, in Poland. I never had a desk in mind. When writing was going well it didn’t matter where I did it. I also wrote with the greatest noise around me. I’m not disturbed by a crane or a noisy crowd or a screaming tram, or a laundry or a butcher’s. I always liked to work in a country where I didn’t understand the language. That was stimulating. A strangeness where you are one hundred percent at home. For me it was ideal to live together in a hotel, my friend took walks for hours and I was able to work. We often met for meals only. She was happy when she recognized that I was working. We stayed up to four or five months in a country. Those were highlights. While writing you very often have a very good feeling. If in addition to that there is someone who appreciates that and who leaves you in peace — that’s ideal. I never had a better critic. You cannot compare that to a dumb public critique that never looks deep into the text. This woman always provided a very strong positive criticism that was very useful to me. She knew me with all my weaknesses. I miss that.

I still like to be in our apartment in Vienna. I feel protected there. Maybe because we had been living there together for years. Now it’s the only nest of our togetherness. The cemetery is also not very far away.

In life it’s a great advantage if you have already experienced something like it. Things don’t affect you as much after that. You’re neither interested in failure nor success, neither the theater nor the directors, nor the editors or critics. You aren’t interested in anything. The only interesting thing is that there is money on your account so that you can live. My ambitions were no longer as great as they had been earlier. After her death that ceased entirely. I’m not impressed by anything any more. One still likes some old philosophers, some aphorisms. It’s almost like fleeing into music. For hours you enter into a wonderful mood. I still have plans. I once had four or five, now I have two or three. But it’s not necessary. I don’t need it and the world doesn’t need it either. When I feel like writing I write, when I don’t feel like it I don’t. Whatever you write it’s always a catastrophe. That’s the depressing thing about the fate of a writer. One can never put on paper what one thought of or imagined. That gets lost when it is put onto paper. All you deliver is a bad, ridiculous copy of what you had imagined. Basically, one cannot communicate all that. No one ever managed to do so. It’s especially hard in the German language because that language is wooden and clumsy, disgusting. A terrible language that kills everything light and wonderful. The only thing one can do is sublimate that language with a rhythm to give it musicality. When I write it’s in the end never what I had thought it would be like. That’s less frustrating with books because you think the reader has her own imagination. Maybe the flower will blossom after all, will unfold its leaves. In the theater only the curtain unfolds. Those are human actors who suffered for month before the first performance. Those people were meant to be the persons one had made up. But they are not. The persons in your head, that had been able to do everything, are of blood and flesh all of a sudden, water and bones. They are clumsy. In your head the play was poetic, great, but the actors are business-like translators. A translation doesn’t have a lot to do with the original. So the play that is performed in a theater does not have a lot to do with what the author had created. The stage, the boards were to me boards that always destroyed everything. All is trampled down. Each time it’s a catastrophe.

AS: But you continue writing. Books and plays. From one catastrophe to the next.

TB: Yes.


Resources

“You won’t find books here. I don’t know anybody who reads less than I do. And I only deal with people who hardly read anything. Books are spooky, strangling.”

 

The Thomas Bernhard Resource (in English)
Thomas Bernhard Official Website (in German)
The Thomas Bernhard Archive (in German)
Thomas Bernhard Interviewed in 1986

 

Thomas Bernhard was born in 1931 in Heerlen, Netherlands. He died in 1989 at home in Ohlsdorf near Gmunden, Upper Austria, where he had moved in 1965. In his last will, Bernhard prohibited any new stagings of his plays and publication of his unpublished work in Austria. His death was announced only after his funeral.

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Ghostofcock, Interesting. What astrological category do you fall into? Apparently I’m a Capricorn. You’re in Ukraine! I only know the situation there from the news, and I know from living in France how, say, the situation in the US can get very simplified/exaggerated by news coverage, but I imagine that must be a very stressful place in which to make art or even live day to day. I’ve always been really driven to make art, so I don’t really need to set up rules for myself. I’ve always made things whenever I can. It’s strange, and I’m not sure why. I have not read ‘The Shards’, though I want to. I know Bret’s other books. He’s said he’s influenced by me, so I guess that’s true. I’m not sure which of Vollman’s books are in that trilogy. I like ‘Whores for Gloria’ very much. My favorite of his is ‘The Rainbow Stories’. Is that part of the group? Yes, I’ve met him. I did a reading with him once. He had this blank gun — a gun that makes the sound of firing but without bullets — and he kept shooting it during his reading. The audience hated that, but I thought it was funny. I like him. He’s very polite and sweet, although people say he can be kind of a jerk with women. Do you have/need rituals to write? Do you write fiction? Thanks, it’s really nice to get to talk with you. ** _Black_Acrylic, I think Bieber is big in France, but actually I don’t know for sure. Huh. Swift certainly is. Oh, Lucy McKenzie, yes. She’s a friend of mine. She’s great, really funny. She lives in Belgium. She came to the ‘RT’ screening in Ghent. She’s a pip. ** fish, Hi. BDSM and its accoutrement mostly interests me in the sense that it has become kind of the standard, ‘mainstream’ structure and guard rails for post-vanilla sex. It’s like the sitcom of transgression. I can see why sculptors especially see the physical structures as an interesting template. I totally relate to your thinking about how writing about sex works. ** Adem Berbic, It interests me that BDSM is the acceptable way to go crazy in sex. It’s like the dark side of the libido’s official bodyguards or something. A lot of the time it feels like watching a theater piece I’ve seen too many times. Or something. I don’t think I think cruelty itself is boring. Maybe I meant representations of cruelty are usually superficial and reductive. Enjoy the noise festival. Envy. Oh, shit, sorry about the phantom cat sighting or whatever it was. I still retain hope. ** julian, Thanks, j. I’m happy you’re into The Left Banke. That first album’s great. Second album is more hit or miss but has great stuff on it. There’s a really good compilation of everything they recorded called ‘There’s Gonna Be a Storm: The Complete Recordings 1966–1969’ that has some rare, wonderful things on it. I think Michael Brown, the mastermind, was kind of a minor genius in some way. If you haven’t heard it, the very first Electric Light Orchestra album ‘The Electric Light Orchestra’ (1971) when Roy Wood was still in the band is very worth checking out on the ‘baroque instruments playing non-classical music’ front. ** Carsten, Hi. The meeting with the students was great. They were really smart and sweet, and they had great thoughts on ‘The Sluts’, and it was a total pleasure and honor. All but one of them were women, which was very cool. I haven’t heard the Waits/Massive Attack song yet. I’ll tiptoe over there. The Fugs were kind of more interesting in theory than in practice. I remember they were considered kind of a lesser version of The Mothers of Invention. I do remember liking an album of theirs called ‘It Crawled into My Hand, Honest’, but I haven’t revisited it in many decades. ** Gustavo, Hi. ‘Alien Lanes’ is totally amazing. One of their best. I think ‘The Sluts’ is the only book of mine that has a plot, or I mean where I actually made a plot deliberately. Thank you. The Zoom was really nice. What are you up to this weekend? ** HaRpEr //, Hey. I adore The Fall. Especially the Brix era that I know some hardcore fans are less into. They’re a band where I’ll listen to a track by them and then I can’t listen to anything but The Fall for days. I always think of that track ‘Hit the North!’. I feel like people can spend fifteen seconds with me and know I’m from LA, but I don’t know if that’s actually true. Sure, I would look at it. But I’m really, really slow. I always have to warn everyone about that. But yes. For most of my writing life I had a friend, the poet Amy Gerstler, who I always showed my novels to first when I finished them. She was the only person I trusted to tell me if the novel was finished or if it had anything lingering problems. I hope your burgeoning sickness was just a tease. ** Steeqhen, Hey, welcome back. Sleep is important. I’m glad you’re reading and watching those things because they are things I would never read or watch. Except for the Ballard, which I did read. I don’t remember ‘Concrete Island’ so well. I think ‘High Rise’ is better, but don’t hold me to that. People were fisting in the early ’70s, but not commonly like they are now. Or at least not as openly. ** Hugo, Hi. I’m not that big on Polanski’s films, so I don’t keep up with them. Well, me being me, I would suggest not thinking about ‘the world’ as something you can define and judge since the supposed wisdom and insight, etc. derived from generalisations are always complete bullshit. The world is all kinds of things. I don’t know what ‘Icarly’ is. I can see Vollman getting into waterboarding some interrogatee if he was in the wrong mood. ** Bill, Hi. Never saw ‘Crimes of the Future’. Cronenberg is mostly a miss for me. Taipei. We just submitted ‘RT’ to film festival there that seems like it would want our film but probably won’t. I like Li Yi-Fan’s work. I’ve only seen it online. Huh. Travis has become such an art writer guy. It’s interesting. ** rewritedept, Yummy is good. I’ll take that, thanks. Feet = ouch! ‘Harold and Maude’ was my mother’s favorite movie, weirdly enough. The 40s can be great, the best years, or I got a lot better as a writer in that era at least. So, yeah, buckle down while you still can. And have a pain free weekend. Possible? ** Okay. This weekend I’ve restored the post up there regarding one of contemporary literature’s greatest, biggest dudes. See you on Monday.

BDSM 2

_________________
Monica Bonvicini Never Again, 2005
Galvanized steel pipes, black leather, black leather men’s belts, galvanized chains, clamps 350 x 1600 x 1100 cm

 

_________________
Genevieve Belleveau Sacred Sadism, 2021
‘Sacred Sadism: a Proposed Methodology was commissioned by Lindsay Howard for NewHive.com as a series of gif performances created in collaboration with Sarah Sitkin. This new media piece illustrates and explains the methodology and proposed practices of Sacred Sadism as an alternative BDSM based healing modality.’

 

_________________
Nayland Blake Various (1988 – 1994)
‘Take Blake’s early sculpture Restraint Chair (1989), for instance. To a sleek Breuer chair – the classic coil with two taut pieces of black leather for one’s back and buttocks – Blake attaches extra leather restraints, presumably to hold the sitter’s arms and legs. Rope hangs below the base of the chair for another user or play partner. Blake conflates Bauhaus minimalism with restraint play, turning sleek modernist design into an erogenous zone of sexual enactment. The work articulates their private preferences concerning sexual behaviour while also functioning within a porous public space – that of the gallery – as a realization of possibilities originally created within queer spaces. As Blake writes in a 1995 essay about Tom of Finland’s drawings of well-hung, half-naked men, these works provide ‘the props for the viewer to hang a fantasy on rather than a specific person for the viewer to be aroused by’.’


Restraint Chair, 1989
Breuer chromed metal, leather, chains, steel cable and mirror, 84 × 61 × 62 cm.

 


Work Station #2 (Restraint), 1988
stainless steel, rapier, galvanized iron and leather, 30 x 39 x 48 inches

 


Restraint: Ankle, Wrist, Ankle, 1988
metal, leather, 54 x 8 x 8 inches

 


Satanic Ritualized Abuse, 1994
two stuffed bunnies, wood, leather, rope, plastic knife, birthday candles and plastic bell, 31 × 31 × 24

 

______________
Emma Sulkowicz The Ship Is Sinking (2017)
‘For Sulkowicz’s new work,, titled The Ship Is Sinking, she wore a white bikini adorned with the Whitney logo. An S&M professional who goes by “Master Avery,” playing a character called “Mr. Whitney,” bound Sulkowicz tightly and hung her from the ceiling on a wooden beam, periodically whipping and insulting her. As Sulkowicz explains below, the piece was meant as a multilayered exploration of ideas surrounding sex and consent, societal standards of female beauty, the personal nature of making and sharing art, and the art world in the age of Donald Trump.’

 

______________
Xu Zhen Rainbow, 1998 & Play-Expectation, 2014
‘Xu Zhen came to prominence at the 49. Biennale di Venezia with Rainbow, a visceral video performance of his back being slapped, turning red, with hand marks visible but never the hands.’

 

 

_________________
Catherine Opie O, 1999
‘Opie created the dreamlike O series in 1999 as a reaction to Mapplethorpe’s X Portfolio, which focused on the gay S&M community in 1970s New York. O, the title of the series was meant to engage with Mapplethorpe’s X series to form the colloquial X-O, meaning hugs and kisses. O could also represent various orifices, or stand in for Opie, as the artist often places herself in her work. She sees O as being more inclusive than Mapplethorpe’s series, which focused almost exclusively on gay men. “Mine is about the whole queer community,” the artist said about the series.’

 

______________
Taietzel Ticalos While the Future Unfolds, 2018
‘How does technology shape the way we perceive sexuality? Talking about VR sexual experiences, the use of deep learning in porn movies, tech-domination and gray areas of sex work, Romanian digital artist Taietzel Ticalos focuses on findom – financial domination – an online BDSM niche. For her latest work While the Future Unfolds, she developed the 3D character Cherie Pie to artistically examine how an online environment influences fetishization and sex work differently.’

 

______________
Tom of Finland Various (1968 – 1988)

 

______________
Tiona Nekkia McClodden Various, 2019


THE FULL SEVERITY OF COMPASSION (20190 is made of a manual cattle squeeze chute similar to those used by animal scientist and autism advocate Temple Grandin to calm cows before slaughter. The piece ties together McClodden’s interest in ideas of security with the diagnosis she received earlier this year that she falls somewhere within the Autism Spectrum.’

 


‘In this work, titled ‘SORT OF NICE NOT TO SEE YOU BUT TO FEEL YOU AGAIN’ (2019), a Bauhaus-style leather chair is punctured by a razor blade. “Quite frankly, I consider the S&M community to be the intellectual powerhouse of the LGBTQ+ community in terms of the development of literature, thought, practice, engagement in space, etc.,” the artist told ARTnews earlier this year.’

 

________________
ADI 3 APRILE, 1479
‘Two female figures, standing on either side, were holding the arms of a blonde child (a young Christ, a child-saint, or a puer sacer, a sacred and mystical infant, I really couldn’t say). The kid was being tortured by two young men: each holding a stiletto, they were slicing the boy’s skin all over, and even his face seemed to have been especially brutalized. Blood ran down the child’s bound feet into a receiving bowl, which had been specifically placed under the victim’s tormented limbs. The child’s swollen face (the only one still clearly visible) had an ecstatic expression that barely managed to balance the horror of the hemorrhage and of the entire scene: in the background, a sixth male figure sporting a remarkable beard, was twisting a cloth band around the prisoner throat. The baby was being choked to death! What is the story of this fresco? What tale does it really tell?’

 

________________
Jeanelle Mastema Various (2008 – 2009)
‘Jeanelle Mastema is a Mexican American experimental body and performance artist from Boyle Heights, in Southern California. Mastema incorporates ritual into her work through play piercing, hook suspensions, urination and sacred objects. She performs internationally solo and with groups often acting as a medium for group intentions or a symbolic altar for channeling energy. Through performance Mastema enters into a meditative head space to disconnect from mundane consciousness.’


Trust Us, 2008


She Walks The Streets, 2008


AMF Korsets, 2009

 

__________________
kenji siratori Deviations from Code on Geographic Hardweb (2020)
‘corpse state only internal head acid hyper crazy world gram recognition infectious genome body chemical technocrisis emulated convergence and consciousness at the location of script code plug-dog nightmare protocol is a medium-sized dna omotya error hunting mechanism that causes in human cities to break down into apoptotic water mania disease chromosome killing that does malice to the sun virtual horizon of the memory of the memory of the man horizon of the flesh of the man is opened streaming to her mitochondria of world absolute vagina space of the inherited boy breaks the body inoculated endosporoid embryo ecstasy and state brain form hive already shortens the planetary abolition of regional natural system scope of the definition is < grotesque abandoned brain odor artificial down:::abolishes intercourse meat with accelerated brain boy down gene general suck emulated performance artificial nightmare then bit break speed chloroform black roid break secondary acidhuman silence her asphalt embryo bio fly stage of techno suicide eyeball drug pupil herself achieved life of growing pupil retro nature down animal chemical browser acid storage code sec machine down and plug emulation apoptosis tear storage heart penetration nightmare dog …’ (cont.)

 

__________________
Will Munro from Inside The Solar Temple of the Cosmic Leather Daddy (2010)
‘The center-piece is a bum sex sling! You usually see that in a bathhouse, or sex club. You don’t see it in an art gallery or a living room. And you don’t see it with these bright and cheerful colors. I think the colors and the spider plants in macramé holders do create an intimate vibe, but then there’s the leather sling! I made those macramé plant holders myself, and all my friends really helped with the building of the sling and putting all the elements together. My friend Rick constructed the structure and his wife first thought I was making a macramé hammock. It’s not exactly a hammock, but you can lie in it!’

 

_______________
Nancy Grossman Heads (1971 – 1975)
‘Nancy Grossman has been making art for more than fifty years and is best known for her leather-wrapped sculptures of heads, which the artist made from the late 1960s through to the 1980s. This exhibition brings together fourteen sculptures, highlighting the formal and expressive range within the series. While Grossman regularly refers to the heads as self-portraits, they are not made to resemble the artist herself. They speak to the malice and subservience of both psychology and worldly conflict. Though the works are often rendered blind and mute, they still allude to the role of the silent witness amid cruelty and disorder. The creation of the sculptures was inspired in part by the liberation movements of the late 1960s and the Vietnam War, responding to the violence and social upheaval of the era. Today, Grossman’s heads continue to address the anxiety and turmoil that weigh upon the individual and contemporary society. Each head was carved from a block of wood and overlaid with sections of found leather-often sourced from articles of clothing or even boxing gloves-which are sewn, nailed, or zippered together. The life-size sculptures are startling for what they obscure as much as for what they expose. Eyes, ears, and mouths are typically covered, bound, sewn shut, or otherwise restrained. Some heads incorporate found objects that result in horns and other protrusions. The unsettling works have been a source of inspiration for her fellow artists and those of younger generations, and have been notably photographed by Robert Mapplethorpe and Richard Avedon.’

 

 

 

 

 

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Miss Meatface Various (2017)
‘Using BDSM as a healing ritual, artist Kat Toronto aka Miss Meatface, presents a body of work that evokes cinematic visual poetry. Her performance-based images explore cultural ideals of feminine beauty and the objectification of women. By toying with the push and pull of dominance and submission, and the act of revealing and concealing, her artwork presents a voice that uniquely addresses her fantasies and unravels her performance with equal doses of drama and mystery. Miss Meatface recalls the past while celebrating the present through the juxtaposition of contemporary and historical references.’

 

_______________
Toni Schmale waltraud, 2016
‘Vienna-based sculptor Toni Schmale has been thinking a lot lately about ‘transitional objects’, the term coined by psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott in 1953 for the items that young children seize as tools for psychological comfort: dolls, stuffed toys, even blankets. She has created her own ‘family’ of ‘transitional objects’, she explains. It’s a punishing constellation that reaches out to the inner machine. Schmale’s objects dissolve the last vestiges of industry – a language of pulleys, racks, levers – into their simplest elements, rearranging them into compositions that invoke, in equal measure, exercise and BDSM equipment, finished with a military-black polish.’

 

_____________
Wong Ka Ying Various (2014 – 20190
‘Wong Ka Ying has graduated from the Faculty of Fine Arts at the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2013. Because of her young age and her constant desire to provoke her viewers, the focus of Ka Ying’s works has always been quite explicit and radical. She likes to shock and she wants to have a conversation with her audience. Teachers don’t like me, my father doesn’t like me either. I always got fucked up by boys. I hate men the most! Is there anyone out there who would keep me as concubines?, Ka Ying wrote on one of her social media profiles. She maintains an active profile on Behance network, where her most popular pieces are available.’


Buy Feed Me I Am So Cheap I Am So Low, 2016

 


And you are now a star and I’m still no one, 2014

 


Ain’t No Your Fortune, 2019

 

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John Waters Bill’s Stroller, 2014
‘Not only is Bill’s Stroller built to be baby’s first bondage buggy, but the stroller also features fabric covered in the logos of former sex clubs in New York and San Francisco. It’s never too early to teach your baby about Blow Buddies! As John Waters explained in ArtForum, Bill’s Stroller was inspired by Provincetown’s Gay Family Week, commenting on the drive of many in the gay community to conform to normative middle class values. In recent years, the mainstream gay community has exchanged sex clubs for play dates, tubs for kiddie pools and slings for strollers. As Waters himself described to ArtForum, “I’m trying to pay tribute to the passing of time for an outlaw minority that is now eager to be middle class.”’

 

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Hajime Kinoko Cyber Performance (2011)
‘Hajime Kinoko is a Japanese bondage/shibari artist and a photographer, now considered the leading modern rope artist of Japan. Japanese bondage is usually perceived as erotic, but Kinoko prefers to interpret it as “pop” and endeavors to sublimate it into art.’

 

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Brendan Fernandes Restrain (2019)
‘Fernandes uses his knowledge of the human form to remove its pains and pleasures from public discourse. With bronze, leather, walnut, and steel, Shibari bondage sculptures symbolize resistance, pain, pleasure, and freedom. Through the absence of a physical body, Brendan seeks to highlight the marginalized queer communities and demonized BDSM practices.’

 

_______________
Nolan Lem Tentacle, 2017
”Tentacule’ is a site-specific sound machine that houses ten speakers which are mechanically driven by Velcro extrications that occur on top of the speakers’ paper cones. The kinetic dynamics of the Velcro becoming hooked and unfastened is transmitted through large plastic tubes that resonate and transfer the acoustic energy into different parts of the space. The imposing cephalopodic presence of the black machine suggests a cyborgian instrument somewhere in between an organ, a music box, and a Luigi Nono noise machine. The installation examines the sonic materiality of Velcro as it is situated within the ASMR (autonomous sensory meridian response) and BDSM (bondage, dominance, slave, master) communities. This “BDSMR” object complicates our awareness of sound and sensuality by casting materiality as an erotic fetish, one that derives from our darker, more lurid impulses.’

 

________________
Shawné Michaelain Holloway Target Practice (2017)
‘I believe we are all attracted to certain things we don’t immediately have access to whether that’s physically or intellectually. The power of newness and desire mixed with responsibility and/or fear is really powerful. It fades in and out of being a form of self-reflection. It’s clearest when this “protective distance” becomes absolutely necessary to be able to make room for observation and decision making for or against interacting with the desired object. In some ways, and perhaps this what keeps many maintaining the distance instead of breaking through it, it is safety from the active escalation of that desire. Sexually, that’s the foundations of taboo. Protective distance has a lot to do with restraint and restraint is a very desirous quality to be able to maintain. It is my fundamental belief that restraint is the basis of all taboos, all desires, and all pleasure. If we see restraint as in service to itself, it is either the letting go or the maintaining of it that is foreplay in pursuit of a desire. That’s why the separation between screen and reality is so powerful.’

 

________________
Allen Jones Hatstand, Table and Chair (1969)
Hatstand, Table and Chair are three fibreglass sculptures of women transformed into items of furniture. They are each dressed with wigs, and are naked apart from their corsets, gloves and leather boots. Each is slightly larger than life-size. For Chair the woman lies curled on her back, a seat cushion on her thighs and her legs acting as a back rest. Table is a woman on all fours, with a sheet of glass supported on her back. For Hat Stand the woman is standing, 1.85 metres (73 in) tall, her hands upturned as hooks. Each fibreglass figure was produced from drawings by Jones. He oversaw a professional sculptor, Dick Beech, who produced the figures in clay. The three female figures were then cast by a model company, Gems Wax Models Ltd, who specialised in producing shop mannequins. Each figure was produced in an edition of six. Jones explained that they weren’t illustrations of scenes, but rather that “the figure is a device for a painting or a sculpture. It’s not a portrayal of someone – it’s a psychological construction.”‘

 

________________
Deyson Gilbert Questão de Ordem (2019)
‘In Questão de Ordem, Deyson’s dubious physical game of fitting and unfitting; of fragmentation and alienation in body representation; of textual directives and invectives; of the fairly superficial figuration of so-called ‘non-conventional’ sexual practices reveal — not without irony — the dimension of literality typically associated with minimalism: a sort of pornography of form. The same happens with the use of materials: the slippery movement of his monochromatic leather surfaces simulate the scrolling of LED screens; the incessant buzz of a background engine exposes the compulsive mechanics of feeds, posts, and tweets; the tactile appeal of leather conveys the objectively fetishist sociability in which screens offer themselves to the touch: as if skin to the eyes.’

 

_________________
Jim Dine My Angel, 2006
enamel on wood

 

_________________
Ultraviolence BDSM Is Extra, 2013
Harsh Noise and Databending video

 

_________________
Jacques-Andre Boiffard Various, 1920 – 1943
‘Jacques-André Boiffard (1902-1961) was a French photographer, born in Epernon in Eure-et-loire. In the mid-1920s, Boiffard decided to dedicate himself to research in the Bureau of Surrealist Research. Preferring photography to literature, he served as Man Ray’s assistant from 1924 to 1929. During the 1920s, he took portraits of the English writer Nancy Cunard and photographs of Paris which Breton used to illustrate his novel Nadja. In 1928, Boiffard was abruptly expelled from the movement for taking photographs of Simone Breton. He co-founded a studio, Studio unis, with photographer Eli Lotar in 1929, although the studio went bankrupt in 1932. From 1929 onward, Boiffard was closely associated with Georges Bataille and the circle of writers involved in Documents, in which his best-known work was published, illustrating articles such as Bataille’s “The Big Toe” (1929, issue 6), Robert Desnos’ “Pygmalion and the Sphinx” (1930, issue 1), and Georges Limbour’s “Eschyle, the carnival and the civilized” (1930, issue 2). In 1930, he contributed to Un Cadavre, a pamphlet that attacked Breton.’

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

_________________
Peter Clough Peter (you are what you eat), 2017
Digital ink-jet print, acrylic, wood, electronics 60” x 74” x 14”

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! The promise of that is so amazing. Of course it helps me dream of when all of Trump’s horrors will be dismantled. Thanks, yeah, I have an appointment to get my visa on May 7th, barring any last snags, of course. That ‘not for long’ tag, so stealable. I don’t know why the sexiest fuckmeat in Germany ended up with love’s body, but it did, G. ** _Black_Acrylic, Bieber isn’t big in the UK? Really? I guess I assumed his success was a world blanket. So he’s like the American Take That? ** Laura, Hi. You nailed the escorts’ ideal effect. Maybe not for them but for me. I think I’m as physically ok as a lad my age can be, thank you. ‘Intracast’ … I don’t know. Did that term come up? George’s astrological category was Aquarius. They say the LSD when I was young was enormously more pure, and, based on the reports from more contemporary trippers, I assume that’s true. Uh, I don’t know how to describe what it’s like when I write. It just feels like concentration. Your modus sounds much more lively. I would say Aronofsky’s and Lanthimos’s suckiness is apples and oranges. And I would add Refn’s and Eggers’s, just to name two more. Thanks for the link to the short film. I’ll watch it when I’m free. I have wished you luck. xo. ** kenley, I bet there’s a Swiss billionaire out there who would bankroll your wildest dreams. How to find him, that I don’t know. Newfoundland will live forever in your heart? That’s what my mom would have said. I did see ‘Spun’ when it first came out. I don’t remember much about it though. I remember being disappointed by it, but I don’t remember why. You dug it, I’m guessing? Should I re-try it? ** Carsten, I’ll count my chickens once the visa is actually hatched, but it looks good. Oh, the doctor wasn’t obnoxious about my smoking. She’s a doctor, she’s not going to say, ‘You smoke? Whoopie’. Yeah, the head bobbing guys sketch. Agreed re: Reed, but yet another reason why he’s not a Gen Z influencer. ** ⋆˚꩜。darbbzz⋆˚꩜。, Hi, pal. Free time! Victoire! How was the Transgender Underground Cinema Cultural Event? It sure sounds exciting. I’d be very happy to see anything you make, maestro. Great if you can get to the Davidson screening. The film’s not confrontational and stuff like my fiction, so I don’t think your sister would be freaked out. I’ll give you the coordinates when I get them. Don’t delete, it’s all good! ** Ghostofcock, Hi. I was wrong, George was born on January 31. Strange. I do lots and lots of planning and structuring and things before I start a novel, and then when I’m writing I follow those rules but I let myself be very intuitive about what I’m writing about. Hm, I think the last time I did drugs would have been in the very early 00s, and I think it was probably Ephedrine ‘the truckers’ speed’. Or Ecstasy. One or the other or both. Do you write, and if so, how? And when’s the last time you did drugs? ** Steve, This soap2day link works: https://ww25.soap2day.day, or it does for me. Like I said, I think a lot of films at Rotterdam are never or very rarely ever seen again. Or the really interesting ones anyway. And it’s a very friendly festival. ** Gustavo, Hi. Your usual stuff sounds pretty nice. Bill Jones is an old friend of mine. I like his films a lot too. I’m happy you liked Sparks, 7038634357 and Guided By Voices, especially GbV since they’re my all-time favorite band. Yeah, the texts are all found. I just edit them a little sometimes to help them be better writers, although a lot of them actually write pretty well. It’s strange. I’m doing fine. All my little physical maladies seem to have faded away. Otherwise, I’m always busy getting Zac’s and my film shown. And today I’m talking/Zooming with a class of students in Madrid who read my novel ‘The Sluts’ to answer their questions I guess. That should be interesting. Have a swell day! ** Hugo, If/when you have enough cash on hand, it’s a cool book. ‘The Ghost Writer’ still sucks. The comments were all different sizes in the old days just like now, I think. Depended on the post/day. When they were extant, the audience for Oingo Boingo was almost nothing but beer swigging jocks, at least in my world. God, they’re horrible. You take care! ** HaRpEr //, Hi. No, the doctor was pleasant in her ‘don’t smoke’ stuff. Caring or whatever. It’s weird, I guess, but I think my understanding of the class and North/South stuff in the UK is mostly informed by The Fall and Mark E. Smith’s lyrics. I feel like he got into that a lot on his oblique-is way? Yeah, I wouldn’t know how to verbalise how I deal with sex’s complications in my writing, and when I try it sounds simplistic to me. You actually said great things about that. I love what you’re aiming for. I feel like I’m going to learn a lot from your novel. ** Bill, The biggest escort site I use for the posts is based in Germany, so I actually have to try not to include to many Germans, although their profiles are often the best for some reason. I’ll get ‘Blame!’ first then. Cool. Thanks! ** Nicholas., When I met you, I felt like you have a bubbling serenity. Mm, no, I don’t think I write down my goals. Except for an agenda to remind myself what’s going to happen and when. And except for when I’m about to travel: ‘RER ticket, toothpaste, magazine for plane, …’ etc. My brain seems pretty good at retaining future tasks. I hope. Favorite tense? Hm, present, I guess? Yours? Future, maybe? I will wait up for you. It will be my honor. ** Okay. Today you get the very belated second entry in the blog’s BDSM franchise. See you tomorrow.

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