The blog of author Dennis Cooper

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Paul Sharits Day *

* (restored)

 

‘The radical and highly stylized work of American filmmaker Paul Jeffrey Sharits (1943-1993) forever changed the landscape of filmmaking and art, and continues to reverberate within the history of cinema. Driven by what he described as “inescapable anxiety,” Sharits was extremely prolific throughout the 60s and 70s. His films exploded the conventions of both narrative and experimental cinema at the time and were a complete departure from what other “structural” filmmakers, such as Peter Kubelka and Tony Conrad, were making at that time. Perhaps some of the most powerful films ever made, Sharits’ mandala films of the 60s—such as the highly charged Piece Mandala/End War, T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G and Razor Blades—all used the flicker technique to violently alternate between pure color film frames with sexually explicit and sometimes crude still images. Trained as a painter and graphic designer, Sharits “drew” his films first with colored ink on graph paper, as blueprints for the completed films, and then proceeded to meticulously compose them frame-by-frame like musical notes. Stripping the elements of narrative cinema—illusion and imitation—from his work, Sharits instead highlights the materiality of film while focusing on a complete exploration of the film frame. A goal of Sharits’ films was to obliterate the viewer’s perceptions by using flickering light, stark imagery and repetitive sound to deeply penetrate the “retinal screens” and psyches of the audience members, creating a powerful, profoundly visceral and participatory experience.

‘Paul Sharits grew up in Denver and attended the same high school that filmmakers Larry Jordan and Stan Brakhage did ten years prior. He eventually enrolled at the University of Denver to study painting, drawing and sculpture. Becoming close friends with Brakhage, Sharits founded two student cinema clubs, screening work by filmmakers like Maya Deren and Kenneth Anger. Echoing the New American Cinema ethos, the films Sharits made during this time were narrative driven with actors and featured themes exploring sexuality, alienation and isolation.

‘Sharits’ mother committed suicide in 1965, forever altering his life and film work. This was also around the time his son Christopher was born, and both events marked a distinct turning point in his ideological way of working. From that moment forward, Sharits attempted to burn all of his early narrative-style works, mistakenly missing one film, Wintercourse, which fortunately survives as the sole example from that period. Also central to Sharits’ ideological shift in filmmaking was Kandinsky’s 1911 book, Concerning the Spiritual in Art, which helped guide and shape Sharits’ ideas of the “psychic effect” of using colors and the call for a “spiritual revolution” of artists to express their own inner lives abstractly.

‘In the early 1970s, Sharits was invited by Gerald O’Grady to teach film at the Media Study of Buffalo, a position he would hold for twenty years within a dynamic community of filmmakers that included Hollis Frampton and Tony Conrad. During this period, Sharits began working on gallery installations or, as he called them, “locations.” The extremely intricate and detailed locational works primarily featured multiple 16mm projectors of looped films, highlighting and showcasing the projector like a sculpture in the middle of the gallery. This allowed Sharits to explore and expand the durational aspects of his work in ways not possible theatrically, the loops extending the length of the films to durations Sharits could previously only imagine. Concurrently, Sharits worked on his Frozen Film Frames, a series of works in which strips of film are “frozen” in time and place, suspended between panes of Plexiglas and hung in the gallery to be studied like a painting.

‘For Sharits, the 1980s began with the death of his brother Greg; he was killed charging the police with a gun in his hand. Already battling the effects of severe bipolar disorder, Paul was devastated and never fully recovered from the tragedy. Throughout the decade, Sharits would complete several films and locational works, but spent the majority of his time painting, a preferred medium he had temporarily abandoned. Indicative of his tortured mental state at the time, his paintings concentrated on medical pathology, disease and decay. Sharits’ interest in the themes of his painting manifested themselves internally as well, as his body began to break down owing to a series of bizarre incidents that included being stabbed in the back and shot in the stomach.

‘In 1987, Sharits would make his first and only completed video and his final motion picture, entitled Rapture, a quasi music video employing early video technology, complete with scenes of Sharits writhing on the ground in a hospital gown. Six years later, on the weekend of his favorite holiday, the Fourth of July, Paul Sharits ended his life. His work lives on and in many ways is more popular than ever through the efforts of Christopher Sharits and the Paul Sharits Estate, as well as the ongoing work of Anthology Film Archives, whose staff is in the process of preserving his entire filmography, making it available to future generations.’ — Jeremy Rossen

 

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Stills















































 

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Further

 

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Extras


Trailer: PAUL SHARITS, a documentary film by François Miron


Paul Sharits – Mandala Films – trailer


Paul Sharits / Entretien avec Yann Beauvais


Paul Sharits (1981) by Gérard Courant

 

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Interview

 

John Du Cane: Could you talk about your beginnings in painting and how that led you to an interest in film?

Paul Sharits: Actually the work didn’t originate from painting, in fact before I was interested in art at all, I was making films strictly for the pleasure of making them. I destroyed all those early works. When I was in high school I was pretty anti-social and had not begun to think seriously or critically. I felt that society didn’t merit intellectual consideration and I was making films that were very much involved with my own adolescent sexual feelings. Like most of the early psychodramatic works of the 50s, they were about sexual neuroses. We made them in 8mm with my friend’s parent’s camera. When I began studying painting and sculpture I just kept making films, though I didn’t want to study film. It was at the end of abstract expressionism when it was a sin to do figurative work. I felt that this is the kind of work I’ll do in my films so I don’t have to be evaluated on it. This is strictly my own conception, my own development, and it really didn’t bother me that it was just a past time.

Eventually it become more engaging and I was very surprised that theories I had developed about a sort of ‘haiku’ narrative film structure were very similar, theoretically, to Eisenstein’s montage. At first I was quite depressed, because I thought I’d figured out this thing that I never saw in regular movies, and then I found it in Eisenstein.

In graduate school at Indiana University I was making films, but not studying them. I didn’t think there was any place where it would be valuable to study film. Henry Smith encouraged me in photography, and I quickly learned its technical aspects. He said why don’t you go ahead and make films and I’ll give you credits. He was always very helpful to me and allowed me to devote a lot of time to my work and even helped a little with financing. I found directing a bore as it was not the thing I wanted to do with film. I started fragmenting my narratives to such an extent that I felt that this was the subject matter. The way I was editing/thinking made the acting and drama increasingly extraneous. There was little sense of beginnings or ends, everything overlapped, and I suppose many of my ideas were informed by my studies in the visual arts. But all along I felt I wasn’t going to apply theories and ideas from painting to film. You can’t apply the principals of painting to a medium that’s not painting. I was very much against abstract film and I remain uninterested in the traditional abstract film.

John Du Cane: When you say abstract film, which filmmakers are you really talking about?

Paul Sharits: I’m thinking about the early avant-garde European movement, for instance, the films that were influenced by Constructivism. It’s not that I dislike them, I just don’t think they’re theoretically viable. Maya Deren also attempted to point this out. I think most people are somewhat aware of this. In any event my own work… I didn’t want the work I was doing in painting to directly inform my work in film. I was going to keep my film work off to the side so that it was completely free of any teaching. Well, I was getting ideas from all kinds of things, but they were my own synthesis, not pre-formulated conceptions of what film should be. I think it would be very bad for a serious filmmaker to go to a school and learn technique with the idea that after he learns the technique he will then have the tools to create intelligent, technically adequate forms. This seems silly to me; one doesn’t study sculpture by going through four years of woodworking. The attitudes those schools imbed subvert personal growth. Even if it’s not openly done, simply the training in what is right and wrong prevents one from seeing certain things through one’s own vision. Very few people survive this, even if their intentions are good. It’s like acquiring a lot of knowledge that you just have to suppress… I feel.

John Du Cane: How did you come to make Razor Blades?

Paul Sharits: No, first there was Ray Gun Virus, which I don’t believe has been shown here at all. That film, I think, is the most radical film, if not the most accomplished. It was a break for me because the only subject matter was the film grain and the structuring of colour in time. The soundtrack is the continuous sound of the actual sprockets of the film. This is where I became…

I suppose it is true that I made an abrupt cut, the look of the work radically changed. I was very apprehensive about this, but I felt like I was coming very close to having a breakdown, so I tried to see through my own preconceptions at that particular time and that led me to try to eliminate absolutely everything and start from the most basic elements. I think I overlooked many of the basic elements, and I did not have a very sophisticated conception of how to approach this, but I was very conscious that I was eliminating a great deal. At that time I wrote on the way Godard was using colour in some of his early work. This was the sort of thing I wanted to do using a very pure form. I was still thinking in dramatic terms, in the sense that I felt the basic system, the machinery, could be compelling drama. I feel that I ‘m going through another big transition at this point in that I realize more and more that that is a conception I must break through. I must allow myself to negate this desire to make anything with dramatic qualities. So that I will be able to perceive from a new base again. This is why I no longer did any mandala-structured works after T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G. T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G is the end of my involvement with worrying about, or thinking about, films that should have some appeal to the cruder emotions. I want a cinema that is more distant from the whole theatric tradition. Even though film has been stripped down to changes in colour, the impulse remains to make something dramatic, it’s still being influenced by theatre. I made Ray Gun Virus and then became interested in using things I’d discovered with colour and this brought about a synthesis with my interest in Tibetan mysticism and my own experiments with Yoga meditation and to some extent an interest in drug experiences to make a meditative kind of cinema. This is not the normative idea of something being dramatic, but I see it as drama now, I see it as a stage. T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G was a dramatic film. I could go on making more dramatic films, I’ve learned enough about how to structure it that way, but I simply don’t want to. I think that it’s a quality that has to be negated to get to other levels.

John Du Cane: You feel you were using dramatic imagery?

Paul Sharits: Besides the imagery, the rhythms are dramatic, though they might seem mathematical, even geometric. I know that I could evoke certain sorts of feelings without images, simply with the rhythm of the film. One could conceivably do a film that would leave people weeping via some variation on the black film form.

John Du Cane: It strikes me that something like T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G, besides being meditative, is also an exorcism.

Paul Sharits: Yes, yes. At that time I believed that film could be a lovely, magical object, a charmed experience. This is very personal, but I don’t particularly wish to do that any longer. I may change my mind some day but now there’s a big break.

With Ray Gun Virus I had imagined a form that had no end or beginning. I was thinking of a very long film with reels that could be played in any order. It wouldn’t show progression or development. There would be no overall shape to the film. None at all. Any part would be as appropriate as any other part.

Of course that’s not the same kind of drama that is involved in the mandala films. My intentions… you see there are so many things operating… we are talking about the idea of the mandala and the irony of structuring a film like that, that tries to put a centre in the film, which at once cancels the possibility of that film doing what a mandala does. Formally, to have a complete mandala in film, is to negate the possibility of an extended, meditative experience. Defining the overall shape negates the possibility of a true meditational experience; it’s a fragment of the meditative experience.

John Du Cane: I think there seems to be a conflict in your desire to remove meaning from your films, at the same time that there is, let’s not say an obsession, but a great concern with death, which is probably one of the reasons why your films remain dramatic.

Paul Sharits: I don’t think many of us in Western culture are trained properly in seeing or responding to our eventual death. I’ve been struggling with this – to see life as a series of deaths and births. I think the body of work I’ve made struggles to present myself with certain questions on a formal level about death. I think it’s interesting that I’m doing it with a dying medium, as I think cinema is, in the form that we’re working in, technically obsolete, and will eventually be looked upon as quaint gizmos. But I love them, they have many interesting aspects that I’m just beginning to recognize. At first one thinks that a machine cannot be simply the delivery system for a process. The idea is that these machines have to serve us, they need to be used for something. To use them simply to amplify their own nature is not often thought interesting. Dadaists like Picabia made jokes about machines and the idea of machines. But I’m more interested in the Russian Constructivist reaction to the Industrial Age than the negative Dadaist reaction.

John Du Cane: I think one thing that you are obviously developing is a completely different sense of humour which ties in with your feeling for paradox. This humour might have been lacking a little in your earlier work, perhaps this absence didn’t allow you to have such a balanced understanding of the oppositions you were working with in your films.

Paul Sharits: I have so many different moods. Sometimes I think about my things in a very serious manner. At other times I think it’s so absurd I just laugh. Sometimes I laugh when I see T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G because I think it’s very funny. But other times I feel a great horror. Sometimes I feel completely detached and just observe it.

John Du Cane: Could you talk about the oppositions you worked with in those films, in terms of the sound, colour and rhythms?

Paul Sharits: The whole aesthetic was an attempt to synthesize opposites. Or not so much a synthesis but a plausible co-existence of opposites. No, not even opposites, but whatever lies beyond the opposites of irony, paradox and conflict. I just try to do whatever I feel is necessary.

John Du Cane: So the theory develops in the making?

Paul Sharits: Sometimes everything seems theoretically very clear and other times it seems hopelessly complex and confused. I don’t mind contradicting myself; I think I probably contradict myself quite frequently. This is directly relevant to the kind of things I’ve been working with in my film. My life is very confused; so part of my struggle with these films was to find ways that made these things coherent to me. Intercutting positive and negative footage is an obvious way of dealing with dualities, for instance, or having opposing vectors in the temporal shape of the film.

Simon Field: Was that the reason for using two screens in Razor Blades?

Paul Sharits: Yes, I wanted a dialogue that would begin in Razor Blades with a harmonious relation until gradually more non-relational syntax (and symbology) were introduced. It gradually introduces various levels of meaning in the structure and in the referential qualities, then returns to a more related dialogue. But the dialogue is altered because of the previous changes. I’m not sure whether people experience the film this way or not. My idea is that these images slash at each other.

Simon Field: And the same holds true for the stereo sound?

Paul Sharits: Yes, one track is exactly inverse to the other track.

John Du Cane: Could you talk about the importance of seeing movies as a procession of discrete events appearing 24 frames per second, comprised of single frames with pauses between each frame?

Paul Sharits: If you see a movie there is an illusion – it’s not an illusion, it’s a physiological event in your nervous system – that you’re seeing a continuous light. But in fact the light is not on screen all the time. The soundtrack is different, because the sound is not interrupted by a shutter. The sound is continuous. So the sound can act in a way that the image cannot; the image cannot be on the screen continually. But the sound can be continual and mark out segments of time very exactingly, by emphasizing each frame, for instance.

 

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14 of Paul Sharits’s 32 films

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Wintercourse (1962)
‘Until the mid-1980s, Paul Sharits thought he had destroyed ‘Wintercourse’; one of his earliest works, rendered while at University studying where to put the brush on the canvas. Fortunately, he did not. If it’s nothing else, ‘Wintercourse’ is a beautifully disoriented work of fundamentally representational cinema; at best marginally of a piece with his later ‘flicker’ creations (which remain stunning works, regardless of how theory-driven they might have been). Think of it as a trip through the day, but with all the coherent, recognizable moments discarded. As much as any work of so-called ‘experimental’ film (a debased term, I grant you), ‘Wintercourse’ suggests — indeed, makes a credible case — that the only temporal world worthy of our awareness is that which the eye records just before the mind comprehends.’ — Tom Sutpen


the entire film

 

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Unrolling Event (1965)
‘Toilet paper event, single frame exposures.’


the entire film

 

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Word Movie (1966)
Word Movie depicts the ability of film editing to change and shape the meaning of individual images and sounds—which was the main idea of Sergei Eisenstein’s theory of montage. Much like Hollis Frampton’s Nostalgia, Word Movie examines asynchrony between sound and images (while Chris Marker’s La Jetee did the opposite). And just like Hollis Frampton did in Carrots and Peas, Paul Sharits’ further distorts the linearity of sound in order to examine how the relationship between the individual elements creates and shapes the meaning of a sequence. In Word Movie, a man and a woman’s voice alternate speaking one word each. They seem to not make any sense whatsoever, and neither do the fast-changing words on screen which are not directly related to what the voices are speaking. When listened to individually, both the man’s and the woman’s voice have a logical connection. However, the logical connection is lost because their voices are alternating and hard to follow.’ — filmsie


the entire film

 

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Ray Gun Virus (1966)
‘Although affirming projector, projection beam, screen, emulsion, film frame structure, etc., this is not an “abstract film”/projector as pistol/time-colored pills/yes=no/mental suicide and then, rebirth as self-projection. “… just colors and strobe … ‘light-color energy patterns (analogies of neural transmission systems) generate internal color-time shape and allow the viewer to become aware of the electrical-chemical functionings of his own nervous system’ … It’s true.”‘ — David Curtis


Excerpt

 

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Piece Mandala/End War (1966)
‘Blank color frequencies space out and optically feed into black and white images of one lovemaking act which is seen simultaneously from both sides of its space and both ends of its time.’ — canyoncinema.com


the entire film

 

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Dots 1 & 2 (1966)
’35 sec, b&w, silent’


the entire film

 

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N:O:T:H:I:N:G (1968)
‘The screen, illuminated by Paul Sharits’ N:O:T:H:I:N:G, seems to assume a spherical shape, at times – due, I think, to a pearl-like quality of light his flash-frames create … a baroque pearl, one might say – wondrous! … One of the most beautiful films I’ve seen.’ — Stan Brakhage


Excerpt

 

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Razor Blades (1965-68)
Razor Blades follows the tradition of the stroboscopic films which affect our eyes on a physical level, causing an almost hypnotic transference of light from the screen of our minds. However, Sharits explores psychological as well as physical sensations. He seems intent upon going against the grain of our perception and feelings, and we are forced to either stop the flow of images or to dive into them fully with total abandon. If we can do this we find the film deeply satisfying, because it is conceived to break down our defences and then to work on a subconscious level to initiate us into a new level of awareness. By opposing the eyes and ears against the mind, Razor Blades cuts deeply, both in our psychic and visceral bodies, and is a forerunner of what films some day may become – totally programmed visual, auditory and psychological environments.’ — David Beinstock, Whitney Museum


Excerpt

 

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T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G (1968)
‘There are moments in cinematic art when the narrative of the film is subjectively implied and subsequently written by the viewer. while this is common to most structural and lyrical films in the experimental genre, none hits louder than T,O,U,C,H,I,N,G,. an angry and demonic piece that simultaneously lulls you into awareness and hypnotizes you into an emotive overload.’ — Pierre Aubert


the entire film

 

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Shutter Interface (1975)
‘The four film projections of Shutter Interface combine to produce a mural-like installation of seven overlapping monochromatic rectangles. The rotating shutter system, which traditionally generates the illusion of cinematic motion, here turns the solid-color frames into an oscillating panoramic kaleidoscope. The films vary in length, creating new color combinations as they continually loop. Single black frames interspersed within each reel create a pulsing optical effect, which is amplified by synchronized high-frequency tones. Sharits’s use of the basic components of film—speed, color, light and darkness, and sound—effectively creates an assault on the nervous system, which reverberates through the body. His mentor, influential filmmaker Stan Brakhage, described the work as a “delicious healing fever cycle.”’ — Art Institute of Chicago

the entire film

 

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Epileptic Seizure Comparison (1976)
‘”Epileptic Seizure Comparison is an attempt to orchestrate sound and light rhythms in an intimate and proportional space, an ongoing location wherein non-epileptic persons may begin to experience, under ‘controlled conditions’ the majestic potentials of convulsive seizure.” The films are of two patients, extracted from a medical film study of brain wave activity during seizures. Of course, the patients volunteered for these tests. The black and white footage of each patient entering convulsive stages was temporally and tonally articulated on an optical printer and rhythmic pure color frames were added to these images. Everything was done to allow the viewer to move beyond mere voyeurism and actually enter into the convulsive state, to allow a deeper empathy for the condition and to also, hopefully, experience the ecstatic aspect of such paroxysm.’ — light cone


the entire film

 

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Tails (1976)
‘A series of tail ends of varied strips of film, with sometimes recognizable images dissolving into light flares, appear to run through and off of a projector. A romantic “narrative,” suggesting an “ending,” is inferred.’ — mubi


the entire film

 

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Dream Displacement (1976)
Dream Displacement is an example of a ‘locational film’ – a term coined by Sharits to refer to installations in which the mechanisms of film are foregrounded both physically and conceptually. Dream Displacement was originally exhibited at the legendary Albright-Knox Art Gallery in 1976, and was restored and re-presented there in 2012 for their group exhibition Wish You Were Here: The Buffalo Avant-Garde in the 1970s. The work – whose title derives from terminology used by Freud in his analysis of the unconsciousness – prompts an engagement with film as a complex material entity, rather than as a narrative vehicle. With Dream Displacement, the immobile spectator of the theater is replaced with an active participant in the gallery space, and cinematic narrative arcs are supplanted in favor of an ongoing soundtrack and a continuous reel. Sharits achieves a physical and temporal simultaneity with the viewer, a maneuver that has had lasting implications both in developing the ontological emphasis of structural film, and in contemporary film and video practice.’ — Art Basel


Excerpt

 

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Bad Burns (1982)
‘Two reels of mis-takes in shooting Part II of 3RD DEGREE. Film was loaded in camera improperly and the image slides about off-center and becomes blurred — creating some rather amusing and mysterious imagery. A made “found” object.’ — Filmmakers Co-operative


Excerpt (music added)

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Thanks a lot, pal. I’m noting the things I need to discover, the Meg McCarville maybe being the most curiosity-creating for me. ** Chris Kelso, Hi, Chris. Nice to see you! I’m doing alright. Expanded edition, wow. That was quick. Great, thank you! Ha ha, yeah, I think you want to preserve you girl’s innocence at least a little bit longer. Thanks again! Big build up to Xmas week, sir! ** Dominik, Hi!!! My pleasure, of course. I don’t know a couple of those books you listed. I will (try) soon! You love’s reputation for having an impeccable eye for crunchy sentences is in tact. Love holding Paris’s temperature forecasters to their promise that the temperature will ruse to 14 degrees today, G. ** politekid, Hey, O! Your lists always turn my immediate present into a shopping spree. There are bunches there I don’t know of whatsoever, especially books-wise, wow. ‘Pinocchio’ is good? I’m so wary of it for some reason. I haven’t heard about the Ernaux-adaption film. Huh. I would say that list you made does put your life this year firmly in the productive realm. You got the Co! Three people I know who, like me, never got it, just got it. And my nose is a little runny this morning, eek. Do what needs to be done to escape it, yes? Super awesome to see you and learn stuff! ** scunnard, Ouch! So sorry. I slipped on ice in Moscow years ago and broke both of my wrists simultaneously, and, man, was that inconvenient. Here’s to an instantaneous discharge. ** Zak Ferguson, Hi, sir! Very good to see you in here. New film is inching forwards, a bit stressfully, but we’ll get there. I was and remain so happy that you published Siratori. That book’s super great, naturally. I don’t know, I had a total blast with the ‘Jurassic Park’ movie, what can I say? I came really close to also including ‘Moonfall’, which everyone thought was garbage but which I exited bedazzled. You have the best Xmas that Xmas is capable of outputting. ** CAUTIVOS, Hi. Thanks. I’m still in Paris until the next LA jaunt early next year. I don’t read directly in French or Spanish, no. I wish I could, obviously. I don’t pay attention to best seller lists, so I don’t know what’s on them. My favorite American writer is Joy Williams, and I think her books are best sellers? I’ve never read ‘It’, no. I read two S. King books a long, long time ago. I thought he was clever with narrative and plot, but his writing didn’t interest me at all, so I stopped reading him. Happy lead up to the big X. ** Tosh Berman, Hi, Tosh. I’ve already seen and admired your lists, but in case others here haven’t … Everyone, Tosh’s ‘best albums I have heard in 2022’ are here, and his ‘best Fiction and Poetry in 2022’ are here, and his ‘best Non-Fiction Books in 2022’ are here. ** Letterboxd, Wait, the entirety of Letterboxd commented on my blog? Holy shit, it’s an honor. ** Steve Erickson, Thanks, Steve. I haven’t seen the vast majority of your favorite films. I’ll shoot for them. My eyes always scrunch confusedly when you put Taylor Swift on your best list. But I do enjoy confusion, as I’m sure you know. ** Misanthrope, Sure, bud. I’m way behind on Justin Isis’s and Colby Smith’s books, which is absurd, but there you go, and I intend to correct that mistake. I hope your weekend did the fun thing. ** Sypha, Still crunching the year’s content, are you? I guess I got impatient. I was really surprised that I kind of enjoyed the first two-thirds of ‘The Batman’. Probably because I saw it on a plane where I tend to become more populist. **  Bill, Ha, thanks. Exciting lists, pal. All kinds of things I have yet to discover. I just wrote them down, or, rather, copied and pasted then into a TextEdit doc to be completely accurate. I saw almost no live music this year. How miserable of me. Thank you, B. ** “e.”/jade, Hi! Really nice to meet you! Randomness is always a joy as far as I (and this blog) are concerned. There’s no etiquette here, in other words. Wow, thank you so much for what you did on your tumblr. I’m very honored. I’ve only just glanced at it for the moment because I need to keep barreling forward with the p.s. or else I’ll be here all day, but I’ll read it carefully as soon as I launch the post. It looks amazing! Thank you so much! Do come back and hang out here any time for any reason, if you like. It would be cool to get to know you. p.p.s. Someone named arby liked what you wrote if you didn’t see their comment. ** arby, Hi, arby. Thanks for coming in here and doing that. And for your lists! I’m into your tastes. Benning is a god. And, bonus, I can watch your film! Which I will do as soon as this very day. Great, thank you! Everyone, arby, who kindly contrbuted to the favorite lists shebang, made a film this year her/his/theirself, and I’m excited to watch it, and maybe you are too. It’s called ‘THE FALSE SCENT’, and you can watch it here. Great, please come back anytime for any reason. ** fervorxo, This holiday has its issues, but there are at least side benefits. Like seeing you! Wow, what great lists! I actually know a lot of your music picks and love them too. And you saw some amazing live shows, unlike me. I think the only live shows I saw this year, unless I’m blanking, were Puce Mary, Destroyer, Yeah You, Shit + Shine, and Stephen O’Malley solo. Thanks so much! You had a super rich cultural year. Kudos! ** ANGUSRAZE, Hey, pal! Time is relative here, no worries. Excited for for Oto show on the 11th — the day after my birthday. That’s fantastic about you working with Mark Leckey. He’s great. I really like his work a bunch. That’s super exciting, and I’ll be jonesing until I get to see the results. The film project is ever if slowly falling into place. I’m doing alright. Have a sweet Xmas if I don’t see you before. xoxo ** Meg Gluth, Hi, Meg! Yes, Steven told me about the change, and that’s fantastic. I’m so happy that you’ve found yourself, maestro and old friend! I will hunt down the music you liked that I don’t know post-haste. I’m thrilled to hear you’re finishing your novel. That’s huge news. Oscar mentioned the screenplay project, so awesome, a lovely fit. Where or when can I hear your sound project with Steven? Oh, wait, you said glacial. Right, I’ll find my patient side. Yeah, I’m really so happy for you on all fronts. Maybe I’ll get to see you somewhere somehow this year. I’ll be in SoCal a lot making the new film if you head down that way for any reason. Love, me. ** John Newton, Hi, John. Thank you, and a big Xmas to you as well. Thank you very much about ‘I Wished’. I’m just about to finally start Jason’s Acker bio at long last. Mm, I think you’re probably thinking of my novel ‘The Marbled Swarm’ re: that Sade thing. My former boyfriend that you asking about is Marcus Ewert. Mm, the p.s. is too tight a form to give you decent report open what David W. was like as he was a complicated guy. I liked him a lot. Enormous integrity, lovely person. You keep love stocked up inside you too. ** Mildred, Hi, Mildred. Lovely to meet you (assuming I’m meeting you and not just spacing out). Well, you have phenomenal tastes in music too, it seems, so high five. Envy on those shows you saw. Like I was saying above, live shows got the short schrift re: my activities this year for no good reason. I send you love right back. Come back, hang out, whatever feels right. ** Charles Bernstein, Wow, thank you, Charles! That really means a lot. And it’s a total thrill to have you in the inner sanctum of my blog. Very best to you! I hope I’ll get to see your again IRL before too long. ** James, Howdy, J! Well of course, re: your book vis-à-vis my list. Oh, man, very sorry to hear about your rough year. Hope Xmas clears the slate. Very cool about your YA novel. My eyes will be very peeled, of course. Zac and I were in LA last month to do pre-production on the film, and we’ll go back for more of that in January and then shoot the film starting in mid-March. Love, me. ** Andrew Wilt, Hi, Andrew! Wonderful to see you! You guys totally killed it this year, as I hope my list makes clear. New baby mode, yikes. Well, yikes plus congratulations. I’ve only seen friends go through that from afar, but, yeah, intense. Huge respect to you! ** Montse, Hey, Montse!!! The plan is to finish shooting around mid-April, and, after that, Zac and I will be in Paris for quite a while because we’ll be editing the film here, so that should work for your visit, yay! Maybe we can celebrate finishing the film with a Sant Andreu tour! Thank you for the lists. Such good and good seeming stuff. I liked the Boy Harsher. I liked their film too, did you see it? Yes, naturally I’d hoped France would win, but Argentina/Messi winning does seem like a awfully good outcome. Love, moi! ** Derek McCormack, The honor was entirely and completely mine, Mr. McCormack! Btw, not that you would care maybe, but the only reason Jason’s book wasn’t on my list is because I only started reading it yesterday! And it’s already top of the list retroactively. ** Jeff J, Thanks, pal. The Debré book … well, it definitely falls into the French autofiction category. The writing is very gorgeously flat and cold and magically does a lot. I liked it very much. I’ll check out the Yokoyama. Mm, ‘EO’ lives deliberately in the wake of ‘Au Hazard’, but it’s not really an homage. Maybe it was my mood, but I quite liked it. Hard stuff about your dad’s closet. I did the same thing with my mom’s. That still haunts. Cool about the talks with Meghan Lamb. I’ll watch closely for that. Email me and let’s sort out the Zoom. Should be fine. ** © 2022, Hi. Welcome. Everyone, A visitor named © 2022 made what seems to be a best of 2022 Spotify playlist that you can listen to here. ** Paul Curran, Hey, hey, Paul! Your novel ruled the roost, dude! I typed that while bowing. Yes, finish that new fictional baby in ’23! Rausch!!!!!! Love, me. ** Okay. I discovered that my old Paul Sharits post had been turned into a ghost town by dead links and embeds and other time-related wear and tear, so I restored it back to life. See you tomorrow.

Mine for yours: My favorite fiction, poetry, non-fiction, film, art, and internet of 2022

Fiction
(in no order)

Constance Debré LOVE ME TENDER (Semiotext(e))

Blake Butler AANNEX (Apocalypse Party)

Kevin Lambert QUERELLE OF ROBERVAL (Biblioasis)

Ian Townsend PURGATORY (tragickal)

Paul Curran GENERATION BLOODBATH (Apocalypse Party)

Peter Christopher CAMPFIRES OF THE DEAD AND THE LIVING (11:11 Press)

Mike Kleine THIRD WORLD MAGICKS (Inside the Castle)

Lidia Yuknavitch THRUST  (Riverhead Books)

Kelly Krumrie MATH CLASS (Calamari Press)

James Greer BAD EMINENCE  (And Other Stories)

Caren Beilin REVENGE OF THE SCAPEGOAT  (Dorothy, a publishing project)

Thomas Kendall THE AUTODIDACTS  (Whiskey Tit)

Adrian Bridget CHILD’S REPLAY (self-published)

Cookie Mueller WALKING THROUGH CLEAR WATER IN A POOL PAINTED BLACK  (Semiotext(e))

Audrey Szasz ZEALOUS IMMACULATE  (Amphetamine Sulphate)

Russell Walker PICTURE THE SCENE: A RUSSELL WALKER READER  (Very Bon Books)

David Nutt SUMMERTIME IN THE EMERGENCY ROOM (Calamari Press)

John Waters LIARMOUTH  (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

Jace Brittain SORCERERER  (Schism Press)

RE Katz AND THEN THE GRAY HEAVEN  (Dzanc Books)

Eileen Myles, editor PATHETIC LITERATURE (Grove Atlantic)

Kenji Siratori PARACELSUS (Sweat Drenched Press)

Richard Makin WORK  (Equus Press)

Tim Jones Yelvington DON’T MAKE ME DO SOMETHING WE’LL REGRET (Texas Review Press)

James Nulick LAZY EYES  (Expat Press)

Ashley Marie Farmer BESIDE MYSELF  (Apocalypse Party)

Elle Nash GAG REFLEX  (CLASH Books)

Clay AD HOLY BODIES (Pilot Press)

Bruce Benderson URBAN GOTHIC (ITNA)

Josiah Morgan THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE  (Amphetamine Sulphate)

Alexandrine Ogundimu AGITATION  (Amphetamine Sulphate)

Joey Truman DONKEY (Whisky Tit)

Shane Kowalski SMALL MOODS  (Future Tense)

Cristina Rivera Garza NEW AND SELECTED STORIES  (Dorothy, a publishing project)

Candice Wuehle MONARCH  (Soft Skull Press)

Samuel Robertson ILLUSTRATED OLD TESTAMENT  (11:11 Press)

Christopher Norris HUNCHBACK ’88  (Inside the Castle)

Grant Maierhofer THE COMPLEAT LUNGFISH  (Apocalypse Party)

Philip Best, Editor HUMAN RIGHTS  (Amphetamine Sulphate)

Rebecca Greenes Gearhart ELKHART  (Tabloid)

Jinnwoo POLO  (Expat Press)

Zac Smith EVERYTHING IS TOTALLY FINE  (Muumuu House)

Evan Isoline DƐVDMVTH (11:11 Press)

 

 

Poetry
(in no order)

Jerome Sala HOW MUCH? NEW AND SELECTED POEMS (NYQ Books)

Ron Koertge I DREAMED I WAS EMILY DICKINSON’S BOYFRIEND (Red Hen Press)

Johannes Goransson SUMMER (Tarpaulin Sky Press)

Bruce Hainley REALLY, NO BIGGIE (CHRRCH BZRR)

Golnoosh Nour IMPURE THOUGHTS (Verve Poetry Press)

Jack Shelley INTERSTELLAR THEME PARK (BlazeVOX)

Lewis Warsh ELIXIR (Ugly Duckling Presse)

Matt Longabucco HEROIC DOSE (Golias Books)

Renee Gladman PLANS FOR SENTENCES (Wave Books)

Antonin Artaud A SINISTER ASSASSIN: ANTONIN ARTAUD’S LAST WRITINGS (Infinity Land)

Ted Rees DOG DAY ECONOMY (Roof Books)

David Trinidad DIGGING TO WONDERLAND: MEMORY PIECES (Turtle Point Press)

Paul Cunningham FALL GARMENT (Schism Press)

Ron Padgett DOT (Coffee House Press)

Piero Heliczer POEMS AND DOCUMENTS (After8 Books)

Friederike Mayröcker ETUDES (Seagull Books)

Kit Robinson QUARANTINA (Lavender Ink)

Ursula Andkjær Olsen MY JEWEL BOX (Action Books)

Wayne Koestenbaum ULTRAMARINE (Night Boat)

Sandra Simonds TRIPTYCHS (Wave Books)

Doug Lang IN THE WORKS (Edge Books)

John Ashbery SOMETHING CLOSE TO MUSIC (David Zwirner Books)

 

 

Nonfiction
(in no order)

Serge Daney THE CINEMA HOUSE & THE WORLD (Semiotext(e))

Derek McCormack JUDY BLAME’S OBITUARY (Pilot Press)

Lynne Tillman MOTHERCARE (Soft Skull Press)

Pierre Clementi A FEW PERSONAL MESSAGES (Small Press)

Will Alexander THE CONTORTIONIST WHISPERS (Action Books)

Ada Calhoun ALSO A POET: FRANK O’HARA, MY FATHER, AND ME (Grove Atlantic)

Pauline Oliveros QUANTUM LISTENING (Ignota)

Amy Sillman FAUX PAS: SELECTED WRITINGS AND DRAWINGS (After8)

Dan Taulapapa McMullin THE HEALER’S WOUND: A QUEER THEIRSTORY OF POLYNESIA (Tropic Editions/Puʻuhonua Society)

Chip Livington, Editor LOVE, LOOSHA: THE LETTERS OF LUCIA BERLIN AND KENWARD ELMSLIE (High Road Books)

Chris Kelso & David Leo Rice CHILDREN OF THE NEW FLESH (11:11 Press)

Jennifer Lucy Allan THE FOGHORN’S LAMENT (White Rabbit Books)

Michael Zryd, editor HOLLIS FRAMPTON (October Files)

Martin Bladh DES: THE THEATRE OF DEATH (Infinity Land Press)

Nige Tassell WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE C86 KIDS? (Nine Eight Books)

 

 

Music
(in no order)

Destroyer LABYRINTHITIS (Merge)

Bill Orcutt MUSIC FOR FOUR GUITARS (Palilalia Records)

Guided by Voices CRYSTAL NUNS CATHEDRAL (GBV, Inc)

Kali Malone LIVING TORCH (Portraits GRM)

Richie Culver I WAS BORN BY THE SEA (REIF)

Bill Nace THROUGH A ROOM (Drag City)

Snake Chain SNAKE CHAIN (Upset the Rhythm)

Chris Olsen HUMAN! SOUND! -> & OR THE RECORD I COULD NEVER FINISH (EVEN IF I WANTED TO) (Van Dank)

Shit and Shine PHASE CORRECTED (Riot Season Records)

Peter Rehberg AT GRM (Portraits GRM)

Helms Alee KEEP THIS BE THE WAY & 2 (Sargent House)

Machinefabriek TEXTURALIS (Cassauna)

700 Bliss NOTHING TO DECLARE (Hyperdub)

Carl Stone WAT DONG MOON LEK (Unseen Worlds)

Natasha Barrett HETEROTOPIA (Persistence of Sound)

Buñuel KILLERS LIKE US (Profound Lore Records)

Kendrick Lamar MR. MORALE & THE BIG STEPPERS (PgLang)

Moor Mother JAZZ CODES (Anti-)

The Soft Pink Truth IS IT GOING TO GET ANY DEEPER THAN THIS? (Thrill Jockey)

Flower-Corsano Duo THE HALCYON (VHF Records)

Kee Avil CREASE (Constellation)

Locrian CNEW CATASTROPHISM (Profound Lore)

SpermChurch MERDEKA ATAU MATI (Riverworm Records)

William Basinski/Janek Schaefer … ON REFLECTION (Temporary Residence)

Maria Moles FOR LEOLANDA (Room40)

Richard Skelton A GUIDONIAN HAND (Corbel Stone Press)

Oren Ambarchi SHEBANG (Drag City)

Éliane Radigue & Frédéric Blondy OCCAM XV (Organ Reframed)

John Ashbery LIVE AT SANDERS THEATRE, 1976 (Fonograf Editions)

 

 

Film
(in no order)

James Benning THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Paul Sietsema AT THE HOUR OF TEA

Pierre Clementi IN THE SHADOW OF THE BLUE RASCAL (1986/2022)

Jerzy Skolimowski EO

Jane Schoenbrun WE’RE ALL GOING TO THE WORLD’S FAIR

a. laurel lawrence KNIFE PLAY (FOR TWO ANGELS)

Marie le Hir IN THE VALLEY

William Hong-xiao Wei EMBERS FROM YESTERDAY, AFLAME

Colin Trevorrow JURASSIC WORLD: DOMINION

Terence Davies BENEDICTION

Phil Tippett MAD GOD

Joel Potrykus THING FROM THE FACTORY BY THE FIELD

Celeste Bell & Paul Sng POLY STYRENE: I AM A CLICHÉ

 

 

Art
(in no order)

Charles Ray RETROSPECTIVE (Pinault Collection/Centre Pompidou)

Paul Sietsema (Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris)

Cyprien Gaillard HUMPTY \ DUMPTY (Palais de Tokyo)

Nancy Holt LOCATING PERCEPTION (Sprüth Magers, Los Angeles)

James Fotopolos THE MIRROR MASK (The Film Gallery, Paris)

Christian Marclay RETROSPECTIVE (Centre Pompidou)

Xinyi Cheng (Lafayette Anticipations)

Louise Lawler NOT ENOUGH TO SEE (Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris)

Joan Mitchell RETROSPECTIVE (Fondation Louis Vuitton)

GERMANY / 1920s / NEW OBJECTIVITY / AUGUST SANDER (Centre Pompidou)

David Levine DISSOLUTION (Jeu de Paume)

Laura Henno GE OURYAO! POURQUOI T’AS PEUR! (Palais de Tokyo)

Morgan Fisher PAINTINGS AND PHOTOGRAPHS (Galerie Mitterrand, Paris)

Martin Kersels HOME SWEET HOME (Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois, Paris)

Luc Tuymans ETERNITY (David Zwirner, Paris)

Charles Gaines (Galerie Max Hetzler, Paris)

 

 

Internet
(in no order)

SCAB
The Wire
Bookforum
GAMESCENES
SHABBY DOLL HOUSE
Small Press Distribution
X-R-A-Y
{ feuilleton }
Legsville
Rhizome
Theme Park Review
TOWARDS CYCLOBE
Musique Machine
Original Cinemaniac
Beaucoup
Fanzine
Volume 1 Brooklyn
Experimental Cinema
The Los Angeles Review of Books
3:AM Magazine
largehearted boy
pantaloons
Harriet
Open Culture
Locus Solus: The New York School of Poets
giphy
The Wonderful World of Tam Tam Books
Hobart
Ubuweb

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. I’m sure I’ve spaced out and forgotten things that would be listed had I been slightly sharper whilst compiling. As always, I (and I’m sure others here) would love to know what your faves of the year were if you feel so inclined. ** _Black_Acrylic, Me too. Hopes galore. ** Bill, Oh, nice. We were hoping to get some of the nitty gritty crushing stuff on our tour, but alas. I think the wanting and the fact that they’re likely not what they say they are and the not being able to actually have them interferes in the appreciation possibility. I’ll look for the Strickland short, thanks! ** Dominik, Hi!!! Julian, cool. No more ‘it’. All hail ‘he’ or ‘they’. The Japanese district is right next to the supermarket I need to walk to today, so I think my mouth might just have a terrific weekend. We went to the concrete factory for fun and out of curiosity. But it could end up showing up in some future thing we do, yes. Heartless8oy is a superb choice, need I even say. If your love is an unhygienic drug hole then my love is so hornet!, G. ** Jamie, Hi, Jamie! Good to see you, pal! I’m … goodish too, I guess. I saw BEE’s answer(s), yes. Kind of fun. Thank you, I’ll … Everyone, Bret Easton Ellis recently answered questions posed by a number of artists and celebs of different stripes for Interview Magazine, and I was one of the questioners, and the whole thing is rather amusing, and, thanks to Jamie, you can go read BEE’s interrogation right here. You have a lovely weekend too, okay, promise? Love sans roaring fireplace, Dennis. ** Steve Erickson, Right, I know what you mean. I just hadn’t associated that tag with the genre. Gotcha. No, I haven’t done a post specifically about that, no. Count me among those who are kind of dying to see ‘SKINAMARINK’. I need to go hunt on the nefarious sites for it. Luck getting through your laptop-less weekend if comes to that. Scary. There did seem to be a preponderance of the far right in the escort world this month, or else they just caught my eye for some reason because it’s not like they’re not always around. Especially when the escorts are in Germany or Greece for some reason. ** Adam, Hi, Adam! Very nice to meet you. Thank you for coming in. How nice of Ian to hook up you and my stuff. Yes, the escort posts are kind an informal sequel to ‘The Sluts’ in a way, but not written by me and, thus, much better written. How are you? What’s going on? Please come back if you feel like it. ** Misanthrope, I hope so too. Time will tell. The goodness of yours seems pretty taken care of in advance, so enjoy the lot. ** Right. My lists for your list(s) if you feel like it. See you on Monday.

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