The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Month: June 2023 (Page 13 of 13)

Dick

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Tala Madani The Gift, 2015
oil on linen

 

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Kembra Pfahler, Urs Fischer, Spencer Sweeney Disco Cock, 2018
mirror on styrofoam, Cock: 238 x 61 x 58.5 cm / Balls (each): ø 51.5 cm

 

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Voina Giant Galactic Space Dick, 2010
‘On the morning of famed revolutionary Che Guevara’s birthday in 2010, the group Voila created a 65m (213ft) tall drawing of a gigantic phallus on the Foundry Bridge in Moscow. The drawing did not take long to complete (23 seconds). However, it did deliver in terms of the message that Voina wanted to pass across. In short, the drawing of the phallus was created as a giant “fuck you” to all the Russian authorities that have operated through years with corruption, impunity, and oppression.’

 

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André Saraiva Untitled, 2012
‘Portuguese graffiti artist André Saraiva’s central showpieces include a huge pink dildo that gives kiddie rides for coins.’

 

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Raphaela Vogel Müssen und Können (Necessity and Ability), 2022
Polyurethane elastomer, steel, brass, anatomical model, cart

 

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Jelisaveta Grozdic Penis Canvas 02, 2018
Oil on Canvas

 

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Judith Bernstein Fun-Gun, 1967
Bullets and Acrylic on Distressed Canvas

 

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‘Maurizio Cattelan uses the gallery owner as a base for his project. As a matter of fact, gallerist Emmanuel Perrotin agreed to put on a costume, created for him, and to wear it for five weeks. This plushy costume was made by specialists of Italian cinema. A cartoon caricature, this animal would not go unnoticed at Disneyland.’

 

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Pablo Picasso Sans Titre, 1967
ink on paper

 

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Christopher Wool Penis Perils, 2008
Sérigraphie

 

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Hans Bellmer Penis ejakulatus, 1969
Pencil on paper

 

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Paul McCarthy Dick & Broom, 1997
C-print mounted on aluminum

 

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Hopi Pueblo Representation of Penis, 1904
Wood, cloth, pigment

 

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Pyromaniac Metal Crotch Guy Surprise, 2018
meme

 

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Salai Doodle, 1495
‘Casual reminder that in one of Leonardo da Vinci’s many notebooks containing innumerable artistic and scientific sketches and notes of incomprehensible important, there is a sketch of two penises with legs and tails walking towards a crudely drawn anus. The sketch was most likely done by Leonardo’s apprentice Salai, who was not only very likely one of Leonardo’s lovers, but who was also infamously mischievous. Better yet, the anus is literally labeled “Salai.” So either Salai drew these while Leonardo wasn’t looking just to annoy his boyfriend, or Leonardo himself put actual time and energy into drawing these.’

 

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Jana Euler Under this perspective 1, 2015
Oil on canvas

 

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Tricky Props Bloody Severed Penis, 2017
latex

 

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Peiqi Su The Penis Wall, 2014
The Penis Wall, a kinetic sculpture by artist Peiqi Su, is made up of eighty-one 3D printed penises that each have six segments driven by servo motors. Equipped with an ultrasonic distance sensor, each unit can respond to a viewer’s movements. Moreover, the Penis Wall can also be used as a display to represent data. For instance, the waving willies can be synched with fluctuations in the stock market.’

 

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Nicólas Guagnini Him, 2014
glazed ceramic and book

 

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Sarah Lucas Beer Can Penis, 1999
aluminium beer cans

 

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Lutz Bacher My Penis, 1992
Gelatin silver print

 

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Anonymous #ciapaipaebae, 2020
‘In Venice, in Piazza San Marco next to the Basilica, a white Carrara marble sculpture was briefly exhibited representing a phallus with a mask, with steel cables that simulated the elastic attached to the testicles of the figure. “The penis is a symbol of vitality. Venice is alive and it needs to live. It’s a thought-provoking call to be tough (in Italian, it was “hard”, clear double-entendre), to never give up and to get back on one’s feet” said the anonymous artist.’

 

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Tim Noble & Sue Webster Bloody Haemorrhaging Narcissus, 2009
Bloody Haemorrhaging Narcissus comprises a sculpture on a tall plinth whose cast shadow creates a silhouette of the artists’ facial profiles. This shocking work is made from a plethora of bright red silicone rubber casts of Webster’s fingers and Noble’s penis in various states of arousal.’

 

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Liu Xinhua Penis On Duty, 1995 – 1997
Penis On Duty continues from 3 May 1995 to 14 February 1997. Each day, Liu Xinhua used ink to paint his penis on a page of Concise Encyclopedia Britanica, wrote a brief remark, and signed the date.’

 

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Juan Davila Holy Family, 2019
‘A painting of the Virgin Mary cradling an enormous penis in place of Jesus Christ has sparked outrage in Australia. Griffith University in Brisbane has said it will not remove the image of Mary manhandling the massive member despite an outcry from church groups.’

 

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Daniel Edwards Tom Cruise Penis: Study for The Shroud of Scientology, 2015
Digital

 

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Peter Lenk Friede sei mit Dir, 2009
Mural

 

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James Lee Byars Penis Letter to Jon Thompson, 1985
Gold pencil and watercolour on Japanese paper

 

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Grayson Perry Object in foreground, 2016
’68-centimeter-tall glazed ceramic phallus is adorned with bank notes, images of city workers, and the face of the politician George Osborne, UK’s chancellor of the exchequer.’

 

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Richard Newton Touch a Penis, 1976
Performance

 

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Soraya Doolbaz Benito Mussoweenie, 2016
Photograph

 

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Robert Morris Teeth and Penis, 1964
Bronze

 

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David Hammons Body Print, 1974
symbolic painting

 

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Andy Warhol n.t. (Dick Dressed in a Vest), 1956
Graphite on tracing paper

 

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Wolfgang Tillmans Cock and Clothes, 1994
c-print

 

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Gregor Schneider Corpse with Erection, 2004
Cast rubber, expanding foam, garbage bag and clothing

 

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Simon Zoric Cock & Balls, 2013
Silicone, Crepe Hair

 

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Taro Masushio Rumor Has It, 2021
‘Masushio has created an exhibition centred on the work of Jun’ichi En’ya, one of the first Japanese homoerotic photographers known colloquially as the ‘Uncle from Osaka’. Not much is known about En’ya save for his years of birth (1916) and death (1971), his marital status and occupation, and that he photographed over 2,000 men. Upon accessing En’ya’s archive contained in a humble apartment on the outskirts of Tokyo, Masushio found that the few hundred photographs and negatives he saw there are the tip of the iceberg; many more were dispersed, or worse confiscated and destroyed, due to the strict Japanese law on the possession and dissemination of pornographic images.’

 

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Lee Lozano Untitled, 1963
conté crayon on paper

 

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Jayne County Three Wise Penises, 2020
acrylic and ink on canvas

 

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Robert Gober Male & Female Genital Wallpaper, 1989
2 offset lithographs on affiche paper

 

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Alexei Biryukoff Penis Research Facility – Block A, 2017
oil on wood panel

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Jim Pedersen, Hi, Jim! Me too, and hypnotised me at the same time. ** Misanthrope, Yeah, they don’t tend to rerun those shows much anymore, but I think they could develop a passionate following among the stoner set. Any doc news? Thanks for the RG report. Maybe I’ll get to sneak in a view this weekend during our editing break-ette. ** _Black_Acrylic, Occasionally some anime maker still tries to use that technique but it’s all self-conscious and ironic now, and the sincerity of the old, low tech version is what makes it wild. I haven’t read a Jarman bio. I think I remember people telling me there is a good one, but … check goodreads? Did you know that the boy who played Caravaggio in Jarman’s film directed that Elton John biopic ‘Rocketman’? Weird. ** Jack Skelley, Dear Dave, It pains me to say this but ‘Suzanna’s Still Alive’ is a fine enough composition to compete with some of my own, generally much finer Kinks tunes. That flyer, yes! I don’t remember the gig very well, but I do remember making the flyer. Sexy! Your scribblings were very revealing, sir. Editing is proceeding at a solid clip and very well, thank you. Love from me and Wicked Annabella, Ray. ** Mark, Ha ha, glory hole, that’s inspired! I don’t know Trulee Hall, but I’ll check her out thanks to you. I was anti-Beats as a teen. They were too, I don’t know, into America or something for me at that point. I knew Allen a little, and he was nice in a way, but, boy, was he a sleaze. I always wanted to go to Naropa, though. Oh, well. It would be so great if zines made a come back. I think people are trying. There really should be a website that’s the equivalent of Factsheet Five. Maybe there is? I’d love to know. But, yeah, I agree, and it’s not nostalgic. Zines are great form. The Queer Zine era was one of my happiest life periods. Big up. ** Tosh Berman, Someone should adapt Proust in a Syncro-Vox-style film or mini-series. But I’ve never read him, so what do I know? Mm, I can’t remember what time of day those shows were broadcast, but, yeah, I don’t remember them being Saturday morning fodder. Didn’t there used to be blocks of animation scheduled for just after kids got back from school? Maybe not. ** Jamie, I think it says in that interview with the woman who was partly behind those Synchro Vox shows that they cost about a couple of hundred dollars to make, so I’m guessing there was a glorious rush and sloppiness as a result? I’m good. The editing is going very well. We’re making very good pace, at least so far. I think we have about 40 minutes edited in initial, rough form. We’ll be editing all summer and ideally having something ready enough to submit to festivals in the early/mid fall. Essays are really hard. I’ve written them but I have a rough time writing them and I finally swore off writing them. But it’s a great form, and lot more flexible that one might think, I think. ** Steve Erickson, Wow, that’s shocking. What in the world?! What a terrible person. Commiserations supreme, that’s rough. Like I said to Mark, it’s hard to see zines making a big comeback without some venue, almost certainly online, to catalogue their existence and pointing interested parties at their purchase points. But they’re definitely still being made and dispersed in more localised ways, which is great. Who knows, though? It would make a definite positive difference if they could make a comeback in at least a smallish broad way. ** Bill, Well, they were cheap. Like, really cheap. Which I think is one of the reasons they so tripped me out. They were like the ‘Teletubbies of their era or something. Yeah, I remember thinking the Burroughs cameo broke the spell too. ** Nasir, Hi, Nasir! I’m good, how are you? Welcome. Cheers from Paris. It’d be cool to know more about you, etc. if you want to hang out here anytime. Take care, and thank you a lot in any case. ** Right. I suppose if there was ever a post that needed no introduction, it’s probably this one. See you tomorrow.

Syncro-Vox Day

 

Cambria Productions: On the Lips of Syncro-Vox
by Josh Measimer

Cambria Productions, founded in West Hollywood in 1958, was largely a collaboration between cartoonist Clark Haas, who had been an assistant for a few series at King Features Syndicate as well as the creator of his own series Sunnyside, and cameraman Edwin Gillette, who created the Syncro-Vox animation technique.

Syncro-Vox was developed in 1952, intended to cut down the costs of animating mouth movements, specifically on animals in TV commercials. What Syncro-Vox basically did was that the lips of a voice actor would be filmed as they read their lines, and then take the footage of their lips would be edited onto an image to visually simulate speech.

The average cost of animating mouth movements onto the commercial animals prior to this had been approximately $11,000 per minute. Using his Syncro-Vox technique, Edwin Gillette dramatically decreased the cost to just $500 per minute. In 1956, Gillette would gain a patent for his invention, and in 1958, he was contacted by Clark Haas about joining a new animation studio he was starting up called Cambria Productions.

The use of Syncro-Vox was Cambria’s biggest claim to fame (or infamy), though they also used other techniques to lower costs, including shaking the camera on a static frame and splicing in live-action footage (such as of a waving flag) to simulate more movement than there was in reality.


Clutch Cargo: The Low-Budget Cartoon Phenomenon

 

 

Clutch Cargo (1959–60)

The first series produced by Cambria starred Clutch Cargo (voiced by TV and radio announcer Richard Cotting), a tough adventurer with handsome looks who’s regularly sent off on dangerous missions across the globe. Clutch typically flew around in an airplane, inspired by creator Clark Haas’s time as an early jet pilot. With him are his loyal red-headed sidekick Spinner (voiced by Margaret Kerry, the real-life model for Tinker Bell in Disney’s Peter Pan) and their dog Paddlefoot (voiced by actor Hal Smith in one of his earliest roles). Sometimes the team was also helped by their ally Swampy (also voiced by Hal Smith).



Clutch Cargo, for all intents and purposes, was the first of what modern cartoon viewers would call an “action” cartoon—excepting perhaps the NBC Tele Comics series years earlier. While serialized cartoons on TV weren’t a new thing (going as far back as the first TV cartoon, Crusader Rabbit), unlike those series which were comedic at heart, Clutch Cargo drew more directly from the film serials of old by actually taking itself seriously. The heroes often found themselves in real danger against villains who meant them harm. Clutch and Spinner were forced to overcome these nemeses through ingenuity and teamwork. Future action cartoons would follow in its footsteps, bringing more serious storytelling to animation.



Clutch Cargo made its debut on March 9, 1959, running in weekday syndication on local children’s shows. Each of its 52 adventures consisted of five 5-minute shorts (260 total) which ran Monday through Friday, and in some markets would be rerun all together over the weekend as a half-hour show. While even back when it premiered it was ridiculed for its animation, Clutch Cargo gained a solid following for its storytelling for those who could see past the lips.


Clutch Cargo: The Haunted Castle


CLUTCH CARGO: Mystery in the Northwoods


CLUTCH CARGO: Big X

 

 

Space Angel (1962–64)

Space Angel was Cambria’s second series, created by Dick Darley (who directed the early ’50s sci-fi TV show Space Patrol) and animated by former DC Comics artist Alex Toth. Centered around the eyepatch-wearing astronaut Scott McCloud (voiced by Ned Lefebver), he would don his helmet take on the identity of the hero Space Angel when the day needed saving.


Employed by the Earth Bureau of Investigation, he, along with the mechanic Taurus and navigator Crystal (voiced by Hal Smith and Margaret Kerry respectively), made up the Bureau’s Interplanetary Space Force operating aboard the spaceship Starduster. The most frequent alien force they faced were the Anthenians, a race of space-faring aliens with a society nearly identical to that of ancient Rome, frequently launching attacks to conquer other planets and enslave the inhabitants. There was also Queen Zora; physically resembling Nefertiti, she’d constantly try to create new weapons to terrorize the galaxy, as well as directly target the Interplanetary Space Force.


Space Angel, in certain ways, may have inspired elements of later, more well-known science fiction series. For example, in the “Space Hijackers” story of Space Angel, there is a docking scene that mirrors the famous docking sequence from 2001: A Space Odyssey, despite Space Angel premiering a full seven years before 2001 was released.


Space Angel: INCIDENT OF THE LOUD PLANET


Space Angel: VISITORS FROM OUTER SPACE


Space Angel: COSMIC COMBAT

 

 

Captain Fathom (1965)

The last in the trilogy of Syncro-Vox series was Captain Fathom, beginning in 1965 and lasting a mere 17 stories (or 85 five-minute episodes). The series focused on Bill Fathom (voiced by artist Warren Tufts), the captain of the submarine Argonaut who’d go on various adventures with his crew. Like the previous series, the designs and animation were done by Alex Toth.


This series is not too fondly remembered (or remembered at all for that matter), and for good reason. By this time, the standards of animation on television were a bit higher than they were six years earlier when Clutch Cargo premiered.


Audiences just couldn’t see past the unsettling lips and bare minimum animation (as Haas once said, he didn’t consider his shows “cartoons” but rather “motorized movement”), especially when there were better options from studios like Hanna-Barbera (who had no less than six shows in production in 1965) and Total Television Productions (the studio behind shows like Tennessee Tuxedo). Cambria Productions was quickly falling into irrelevancy.


Captain Fathom: Voyage to the Stone Age

Captain Fathom:Pisastros Private War


Captain Fathom: Eye of the Mountain!

 

 


Moon Mullins: failed TV pilot excerpt

In the end, despite their efforts to stay alive, Cambria Productions quietly closed up shop by the end of the ’60s, remembered primarily as a relic of an odd time in television animation. Clutch Cargo continued to play off-and-on in syndication into the ’90s, seeing airplay on networks like Comedy Central’s predecessor, The Comedy Channel.


In fact, Clutch Cargo was forever immortalized in Pulp Fiction, just before Christopher Walken’s infamous watch speech. A young Butch (Bruce Willis’ character) is sitting in front of the TV when a weird looking cartoon character says, “Him think totem pole alive!” Space Angel and Captain Fathom, however, have disappeared from the collective public consciousness, only seeing the light of day as dollar bin DVDs.


The Making of Clutch Cargo

 

 

In Her Own Words: Margaret Kerry and Cambria Productions
from Cartoon Research

Jim Korkis: So why was the studio called Cambria?

Margaret Kerry: That was the name of Richard’s (her husband producer Dick Brown) A.P.A. ship when he was in the Coast Guard during World War II. He was stationed on the Pacific Coast. At one time he was patrolling the beach at Bodega Bay with a watchdog. We all tried to convince him to name the studio after himself but he was just so stubborn. I still think it was a big mistake.

JK: I found an article in a trade paper that stated that in 1965 Cambria was going to take Hanna-Barbera to court for $1,050,000, claiming the Jonny Quest series “uses, copies and appropriates substantial parts and portions of Cambria’s ‘Clutch Cargo’ and its pilot film, ‘Captain Fathom,’ including their principal cartoon characters.”

MK: No, we never sued. We never had the money. We wanted to sue. We were developing this action series with this young boy with red hair. Kay Wright was working with us at the time and he was working at Hanna-Barbera and he told them about the project and the next thing we knew they had hired some of our artists and took some of our concept art. You know that they were sometimes referred to as “Heist and Borrow” in the business.

We didn’t have the money to do the project so I doubt we sued. We were syndicated so we were always operating in deficit. People forget we were the first studio to do animation on television with human characters rather than squashed cats and mice.

JK: I know you announced many different animated projects that never got made like one with actor Cliff Arquette playing his “Charley Weaver” character in 1965.

MK: That was called “Get Cracken!” Cracken was the name of the mayor of this small rural town like Weaver’s Mount Idy but he was never where he was supposed to be so when something went wrong people would shout “Get Cracken!” Joe Cutter and Dave Detiege scripted the pilot and Clark Haas did the art direction. Charlie Weaver was going to narrate the thing. I still have a piece of artwork for the Weaver character design.

JK: And then Golden Eagle in 1967.

MK: How do you know all these things? That was about this young blonde World War I pilot. Again, it would be five minute segments but this time we were not going to use Synchro-Vox. We had a deal in place with Trans-Lux. My kids were playing with a Ouija board at the time and it said we would never start production on it and we didn’t.

Ed Gillette had these eight foot glass platens that moved by motors so the clouds could go one way and the planes the other. We were over on Melrose when we were working on that. He didn’t feel it was steady enough so he drilled down to anchor the device and hit the aquifer and gallons of water gushed up and it took two and half days to cap it.

JK: Any other oddball projects?

MK: I wrote a script called “The Company We Keep” about life in an animation studio and then another company produced “The Duck Factory” that was so similar. We did some animation of a wiseacre football called Freddy the Football voiced by Hal Smith for some Superbowl and we still own the rights to that character. We had a contract with The Human Fly, the Canadian stuntman who was briefly popular at the time. We were also pitching a Laurel and Hardy show and some other comedy team I can’t remember now.

We also did a pilot based on the comic strip “Moon Mullins”.

JK: Didn’t you work on a public service spot?

MK: That’s right. It was a fifteen minute animated film for the state of California on earthquake preparedness. I saw they were offering a grant and I figured I had been in an earthquake so I submitted and we got the job. My son came up with the name “A Quake…Don’t Let It Shake You”.

I haven’t seen it since. I wrote the script. Kay Wright did some work on it. Later the local CBS television station wanted us to do something similar for them.

JK: Of course, everyone wants to know about Clutch Cargo.

MK: We had a budget of only $3,600 for each five minute episode. Here’s something interesting. Dick Cotting who did the voice of Clutch could not say “Whew!” He would struggle with it and I can’t even imitate how it would come out so Hal Smith stepped in and would do it.

For one episode, Hal and I did eight different characters. Things were so tight money-wise that Hal and I stood at the same microphone.

I never got paid for any of my work on Clutch Cargo. My husband just assumed it was the family business and I should do it. I did get paid for Space Angel and Captain Fathom.

My husband had a falling out with Clark Haas and there was bad blood but I never knew what it was all about because he never said. I think Haas’ son took some Clutch Cargo artwork to Mike Van Eaton at his gallery and told him the story but I never heard it.

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Misanthrope, I’ll try to get a glimpse. I think we might take weekends off, I’m not sure yet. Excellent outcome with your doc today, I guess it goes without saying. ** David Ehrenstein, She’s definitely among the great French actors ever, and such a resume. ** Tosh Berman, Hi. Wow, I don’t remember you telling me that Seyrig was your neighbor for a bit. That’s crazy! Even if your memory can’t illustrate it. Wow. ** _Black_Acrylic, Cool, happy she caught your eye, etc. ** bruno msmsmsm, Hi, welcome! Good to meet you, and thanks a lot. Yeah, ‘Dielman’ is unimpeachable. How and who are you? ** Jeff J, Hi, Jeff. Sight for sore eyes. Literally sore eyes, what with the editing. We’ve jumped into the editing, but Zooming would be good. Let’s find a mutual window. Weekends should be somewhat free if not totally. Amazing about the Bookworm book. I didn’t know about that. I wonder if that’s the same book that McSweeneys was supposed to publish years ago. I saw your email, and, yes, of course, it would totally amazing to have that post. Yes, please. Obviously happy the surgery seems to have righted your elbow. Nice festival there. Radigue was actually there in person? I’m going to see Sparks in a couple of weeks, but I think that’s all there is gig-wise for me at the moment. Although Nuit Blanche is on Saturday and a Ukrainian experimental electronic label is doing some big free sound/projection shebang at Gaite Lyrique, so I’ll probably wander into that. You’re into revising the trilogy now? That’s great! So you made a lot of progress during the residency? I’m good, very headlong into the film/editing, which is looking so incredible so far. In my little spare time I’m still fiddling with that possible small book of short, weird fiction things from the past ten years. It’s looking a little more probable at the moment, Great to see you, pal! ** Nick., Hi. I’m trying to imagine what a cute graveyard would look like. I keep ‘seeing’ something Japanese. Uh, for the most part I always did journalism to make extra money, but that was back when magazines and so on actually paid decent money, which doesn’t seem to be the case now. Otherwise, hm, I don’t know, something that requires physical input or your presence but leaves your mind free to stay on the art/writing/etc. thinking track, whatever that would be? For me, writing is my only real talent, so my extra gigs have pretty much always leeched off of my writing in some way. Fun story … uh, I just found an escort for an upcoming post whose offered service is to blow his nose in men’s handkerchiefs or mouths or cupped hands. That seemed kind of fun? ** Okay. Some of the credit and/or blame for today’s post goes to d.l. Jamie who inspired it. Thanks, Jamie, and see you all tomorrow.

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