The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Category: Uncategorized (Page 747 of 1102)

The Tuesday Weld Shebang *

* (restored)
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“When I’m working I never need an entourage or anyone with me. Time has no meaning; I don’t notice how many weeks or days go by. I’m so totally absorbed that I really like to be alone. Actually, it’s not only when I’m working; I like to be alone in general. I have a hunger for it. I eat up silence.” — Tuesday Weld

 

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Emmanuel Levy: “Tuesday Weld began her showbiz career as a child model. ‘Mama tried to turn my brother and sisters into models too,’ Weld says. ‘but they preferred swimming. But me, I was the backward child, and I took to modeling immediately. Anything to escape.’ At the age of three, she became the sole supporter of her widowed mother and two siblings. She began drinking heavily at ten.”


TW as child model

Tuesday Weld: “When I was 9, I had a breakdown, which disappointed Mama a great deal. But I made a comeback when I was 10. I was in and out of several schools, but I never really went. There were no rules then in New York protecting working children. I was doing television shows as well as modeling, and instead of going to school, I used to do what they called correspondence, which meant that if I was working, I’d just write in and say I had jobs. Even when I didn’t have jobs, I’d get up in the morning and say, ‘Goodbye, Mama, I’m going to school,’ and then I’d head for the Village and get drunk. I started drinking heavily when I was about 10 years old. I made my first suicide attempt when I was 12. I had fallen in love with a homosexual and when it didn’t work out, I felt hurt.  A bottle of aspirin, a bottle of sleeping pills, and a bottle of gin. I was sure that would do the trick, but Mama came in and found me. I was in a coma for a long time and I lost my hearing, my vision and several other things. When I recovered, I decided that I should try to get some help, but Mama didn’t think I needed analysis.”

 

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The Wrong Man (1956)

Wikipedia: “Weld made her acting debut on television at age twelve and her feature film debut the same year in a bit role in the 1956 Alfred Hitchcock crime drama, The Wrong Man.”

Tuesday Weld: “Once I wanted to study acting, so I had an interview with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio. I was 14. That was against the rules. Mama told them I was 18, but they knew. It was horrendous. He asked me these stock questions. I hate stock questions. He said, ‘Who’s your favorite actor?’ I said, ‘Constance Ford.’ He said, ‘Who?’ Very sarcastically. I don’t have favorites, I don’t think about actors, she just seemed to me good. Obviously, that was not the right answer. I guess the Actors Studio is OK for people who want to act all the time, so when they’re not working they can put on their own plays, keep acting — well, I don’t want that. I want to act some part I like, and then stop.”

Guy Flatley: “Weld’s mother was so distressed by her rejection from the Actors Studio that she bundled up Tuesday and the rest of the Welds and went West. There Tuesday proved sufficiently ripe to play rambunctious teeny-boppers in Sex Kittens Go to College, The Private Lives of Adam and Eve and Rally Round the Flag, Boys, as well as Danny Kaye’s sweet, invalid daughter in Five Pennies. She was also ripe enough to participate in amorous off-camera activities with men double –- and triple -– her age.”


‘The Private Lives of Adam and Eve’ (1960)

 

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The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (1959)

Wikipedia: “In 1959, still only sixteen years old, Tuesday was given a role in the CBS television show, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. Although Weld was a cast member for only a single season, the show gave her considerable national publicity, and she was named a co-winner of a “Most Promising Newcomer” award at the Golden Globe Awards.”

 

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Sex Kittens Go to College (1960)

Ray Davis: “Career tragedy struck Tuesday Weld in 1960’s beautifully titled but incompetent Sex Kittens Go To College, in which Mamie Van Doren — “What does she do? Sag?”, Lou Reed — usurped Weld’s natural role. Weld retired, reflected, and returned, cardiac tissue toughened, determined to build a meaningful career of such demeaning roles.”

Jack C. Stalnaker, TW fanatic: “It only took me (almost) four decades, but I FINALLY got the semi-legendary Tuesday Weld single “Are You the Boy?” There is nothing else in life to look forward to now, unless, maybe, if Tuesday could be convinced to tour with a musical review. Amazingly, the A side, “Are You the Boy?” is really not bad at all. It’s got a nice Lesley Gore feel to it. Tuesday sings off key, but it really sounds like her persona of 40 years ago. Even more amazing is that the B-side (“All Through Spring and Summer” is actually rather good. She even sings well on it. It’s a Connie Francis-type ballad, and very nice. Both sides are very well produced; nothing cheap for our girl. Both sides are definitely in the Paul Petersen/Shelley Fabares mode — very bubble gum. But I’m still very impressed with the record.”

 

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The Drunk Scene From Wild In the Country (1961)

Wild in the Country (1961)

Tuesday Weld: “Elvis walked into a room and everything stopped. Elvis was just so physically beautiful that even if he didn’t have any talent… just his face, just his presence. And he was funny, charming, and complicated, but he didn’t wear it on his sleeve. You didn’t see that he was complicated. You saw great needs.”

Theresa Duncan: “In 1961, after starring opposite Elvis Presley in Wild in the Country, he and Tuesday Weld began an off-screen romance. In Hollywood, her reputation for a reckless lifestyle was fodder for the gossip columnists and Louella Parsons reportedly said, as politely as possible, that “Miss Weld is not a very good representative for the motion picture industry.” The romance with Elvis did not last long after Colonel Tom Parker cautioned Presley against the relationship, fearful it would harm his image.”

 

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Bachelor Flat (1962)

Roddy McDowell: “No actress was ever so good in so many bad films.”

Emmanuel Levy: “In the 1960s, Tuesday went through a period of depression and seclusion, during which she married, had a child, divorced and saw her house burn down. But with her film career all but finished, suddenly fans began to notice that she had been a first-rate actress all along, a major talent that had the misfortune of appearing in one horrible film after another. Indeed, in the late 1960s, Tuesday became the center of a growing cult of aficionados. Special Tuesday Weld film festivals began to spring up in New York and in other cities.”

Dudley Moore, at the time TW’s husband: “We’ve very few friends. We live in sort of isolation. She’s almost paranoid about public life. She just prefers to stay home.”

 

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Lord Love a Duck (1966)

Ray Davis: “1966’s Lord Love A Duck was the first of might be termed the Dobie-deconstructions. Here Roddy McDowell plays a young upstart whose intellect (clearly signalled by a mid-Atlantic accent) is only surpassed by the passion inspired by Weld, who easily reduces the owlish McDowell to hawk-like screeching and mowing down of suburbanites, ironically paralleling both the bloody technocrats who conducted the Vietnam war and the impending revolutionary fervor which would reap Richard Nixon as its reward.”

Douglas Hawes: “Over the years I have met a number of people who were aware of the remarkable behind the scene aspects of Tuesday Weld’s life and influence. A friend of mine in Santa Cruz talked at length with Kenneth Anger at the Silver Screen years ago about Tuesday Weld’s hidden influence in the realm of underground occult activities. Another figure I know, a New Age teacher (now deceased) with widespread Sufi/ Masonic/ Rosicrucian contacts told me that Tuesday was involved in the promotion of a certain grand master to the leadership of the AMORC Rosicrucian order in San Jose back in the eighties… A Vietnam veteran I knew said he had attended a ritual in the Santa Cruz mountains in which Weld officiated (it didn’t involve anything scandalous). He once got up in a political meeting I attended in Santa Cruz and said that Weld was doing all she could to help the cause….

“I could tell other stories as well… The hidden life of Tuesday Weld has largely been undisclosed in the media, and remains one of the great undisclosed stories of the sixties and seventies. The only major reference to her that discloses her occult connections, but only in a discreet way, is a long forgotten book, “Popular Witchcraft,” which was published by Bowling Green University Press in 1972. In it Anton LaVey in an interview says that his book “The Satanic Bible” was partially dedicated to Tuesday because “she was the embodiment of the goddess,” and was “part of the ritual.” LaVey’s remarks reflect a close personal acquaintanceship with Weld, and hints heavily on her involvement in his ritual activities. So why the coverup?”

 

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Pretty Poison (1968)

Tuesday Weld: “Don’t talk to me about Pretty Poison. I couldn’t bear Noel Black (the director) even speaking to me. When he said ‘good morning,’ it destroyed my day. I learned more from the old Dobie Gillis TV shows than from Pretty Poison.”

Emmanuel Levy: “By l968, Tuesday was becoming a little tired of playing the eternal nymphet. At 25, she was still playing the precocious adolescent but, this time, with a difference. Under the baby-doll exterior lurked a heart of pure evil. Pretty Poison, with a script by Lorenzo Semple Jr., was based on the novel “She Let Him Continue”, and co-starred Anthony Perkins in his usual Psycho-like psychopathic role. At its release, Pretty Poison was not commercially successful; it was not until some critics praised Tuesday’s performance that the film acquired a cult status. Over the years the movie has become an underground classic. “

Tuesday Weld: “I should do movies worthier of my talent? You’re crazy! Do you think I want success? I refused to do Bonnie & Clyde because I was nursing at the time, but also because down deep I knew that it was going to be a huge success. The same was true of Bob & Carol & Fred & Sue, or whatever it was called. It reeked of success. I turned down Rosemary’s Baby because they asked me to test for it, and will not test…. To test is the ultimate humiliation. No, not quite: my daughter was very young then. Do you know what it is like, stuck in a house all day with an infant? Monstrous! Did you ever have to talk to a five-year-old, day in, day out? I did! I was suddenly playing this wife role, cooking, cleaning, mothering, it was worse than testing! I may be self-destructive, but I like taking chances with movies. I like challenges, and I also like the particular position I’ve been in all these years, with people wanting to save me from the awful films I’ve been in. I’m happy being a legend. I think the Tuesday Weld cult is a very nice thing.”

 

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I Walk the Line (1970)

Tuesday Weld: “Gregory Peck and I had to do a love scene in bed and it showed my bare back. I wasn’t nude or anything, maybe a half-slip, I don’t remember exactly, but I was as nude as possible. And he got into the bed with his pants and his shoes on. Now they weren’t moccasins. They were big clunky businessman’s shoes, laced up, you know. With socks, and… what more can I say.”

 

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A Safe Place (1971)

Tuesday Weld: “It’s been quite a year. Everything has really fallen apart for me. A Safe Place is a dud. I got a divorce, my car disintegrated, and my house burned down. There was absolutely nothing left of my house. Nothing. Not even a picture of my daughter Natasha. All the paintings I’d done are lost, as well as five years of journals I had been keeping. I enjoy writing so much. In fact, I’ve begun on my novel again. It’s going to be a good book, but I may have to wait until my ex-husband and my mother die before I publish it. From here, I go to Paris, but I feel so misplaced everywhere. Sometimes I just walk the streets at night, for hours and hours. I’m incredibly restless; I guess maybe it’s time for my renaissance.”

PlatinumCelebs.com: “A few years after turning down the role in Rosemary’s Baby, Roman Polanski wanted her to star in his film version of Macbeth (1971). She lost the part when she refused to do a nude sleepwalking scene.”

 

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Play It as it Lays (1972)

Emmanuel Levy: “Weld was always Frank Perry’s first choice to play Maria Wyeth in Play It as it Lays. She was widely quoted at the time as saying ‘I could phone it in.’ However, this was not her feeling about the role. Although she knew the ground covered in the picture, she insisted the part ‘has nothing to do with my life and my past. And I’m not that personality at all. I’m not typecast for it.’ Asked if she liked her role, she said, ‘Who could like it? It’s not a part I relished playing. It went against my personal feelings of life. And I had to think about the state I would be in. It was unsettling.’ Although Tuesday won the Best Actress Award at the Venice Film Festival, Play It As It Lays was not well-received by American critics.”

Tuesday Weld: “All these lost people I do, Maria Wyeth, saying ‘Nothing applies.’ That’s bullshit! No, forget the bull, one syllable’s better. Everything applies! I am not Maria Wyeth, or any of these schleps!”

Melissa Anderson, Film Society of Lincoln Center: “If you were to imagine a celluloid ancestor to Mulholland Drive’s Diane Selwyn, she’d probably look a lot like Maria Wyeth, the heroine of Frank Perry’s acerbic Play It As It Lays, a 1972 film based on Joan Didion’s merciless second novel, published two years earlier. Brilliantly played by Tuesday Weld, Maria is rapidly unraveling, as is her marriage to her director husband, Carter Lang (Adam Roarke). Carter has previously directed her in both a vérité short, barking bullying off-camera questions (“Did you ever want to ball your father?”), and an acid-rock biker movie called Angel Beach. As Carter prepares to shoot his next movie in the desert, Maria — which rhymes with “pariah” — drifts through a succession of ghoulish Hollywood parties and hotel-room assignations with producers from the East Coast, always returning to the driver’s seat of her banana-yellow Corvette.” Rating: ***

 

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Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977)

Psuedopodium.org: “Now in her thirties, Weld gave a memorable performance in Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977), for which she was nominated for an Academy Award as best supporting actress. Playing Diane Keaton’s sexually promiscuous air hostess sister whose influence turns Keaton’s character from a frigid romantic into a slut, a rape and murder victim waiting to happen, it was a beautifully played but utterly thankless role, as thinly conceived as an imbecilic scrawl on a toilet stall, each cliché transmuted by Weld into glimpses of gold behind the foregrounded rubble of inferior stars-du-jour.”

Tuesday Weld: “I think that from here on, I should be paid to do interviews. And do them myself. I should be sent the questions, and write the answers. I mean, an interview isn’t going to get me a job, or make me act well, it’s of no use. I mean, can you make me a star?”

Arthur Bell, talk show host, after interviewing TW: “Tuesday Weld depressed me so much, I went from her hotel to Bloomingdale’s and shoplifted, and I’ve never done that before or since.”

 

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Once Upon a Time in America (1984)

Wikipedia: “In 1984, Weld appeared in Sergio Leone’s gangster epic Once Upon a Time in America as a masochistic prostitute featuring a brutal rape scene with her and Robert De Niro that may be among the most shocking ever filmed. The scene was the source of some controversy as Weld’s character is depicted as eventually enjoying the rape.”

Melanie Clark: “The film would have been much much better without Tuesday Weld. I fast forwarded through all scenes with her in it. She was atrocious.”

Emmanuel Levy: “About this time, the long-standing tension between Tuesday and her mother erupted in the press. Tuesday began telling people that her mother had died.”

Tuesday Weld: “I hated Mama. She took my childhood away from me. I was expected to make up for everything that had gone wrong with in Mama’s life. She became obsessed with me, pouring out all her pent-up love — alleged love — on me. It’s been heavy on my shoulders ever since. I didn’t feel really free until she died. Otherwise her death didn’t really affect me much…. ”

Tuesday Weld’s mother: “I wasn’t really mad at Tuesday until she started telling everyone I was dead. I didn’t like being called dead. Why, if it hadn’t been for Patty Duke, I might have starved to death — that’s how much help Tuesday has been.”

 

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Falling Down (1993)

Rob’sReviews.net: “Like most movies designed to be debated on the op-ed page, Falling Down doesn’t live up to its negative hype. It’s been called dangerous and borderline racist, a charge it narrowly deflects by showing one good Hispanic cop for every Hispanic punk, and so on. It has also been called a powerful black comedy, but considering the true classics of black comedy we’ve produced (Dr. Strangelove being the pinnacle), it’s an embarrassing assessment — an indication of how far movies have sunk. Tuesday Weld plays a cop’s shrewish, neurotic wife who spends the movie shrieking at him over the phone. The script provides a plausible reason for her sad craziness (their daughter died at age two), but director Joel Schumacher treats her cruelly.”

Filmreference.com: “Forty years into her career, Tuesday Weld still percolates through American pop culture. A 1995 biography is devoted to her, and a worldwide web site; she will soon appear in the off-mainstream Feeling Minnesota, her first movie since 1993’s Falling Down (reportedly the first commercially successful film of her entire career). Weld’s uncredited picture adorns the cover of rock musician Matthew Sweet’s 1991 Girlfriend album, epitomizing her continued if obscure relevance — but also suggesting that her signature star qualities of self-determining sexuality, insolence, and nearly self-destructive wastefulness (philosophically grounded in antimaterialism as it may be) fit the rock ‘n’ roll era’s patterns more than classical Hollywood’s.”

Tuesday Weld: “I like everything open. Everything. I don’t like shut doors. I like to see. In the kitchen, I like to see all the spices, all the food. I wasn’t really aware of it until people complained. It was completely unconscious. I would hear, ‘Could you please shut that door! We’re gonna lose all the ice.'”

 

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Feeling Minnesota (1996)

Tuesday Weld: “I got bored after a while with analysis, with me-me-me. Could that be one of the purposes of it, you get so bored with self-absorption? Enough, already, getting yourself together is preferable. It is so uncomfortable, all those personal things you’re supposed to say, except I never did, I never opened up totally.”

Peter Travers, Rolling Stone: “Keanu Reeves and Cameron Diaz fuck on the bathroom floor right at the beginning of Feeling Minnesota, and it’s still not any good. Poor Keanu. First he flops with a big-budget action flick (Chain Reaction), and now he scrapes bottom with this indie stinker. … His mom, Nora, played by Tuesday Weld. Yes, the Tuesday Weld, of Pretty Poison and Lord Love a Duck, grown plump but still flirty fun and undeserving of such a nothing role.”

Sam Shephard: “Tuesday Weld is the female Marlon Brando.”

 

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Chelsea Walls (2001)

The New Yorker: “Ethan Hawke, as director, presents a group of friends and fellow-actors in a series of mushy dramatic moments inside the venerable Chelsea Hotel, the onetime haunt of William Burroughs, Sid Vicious, and other artists. Hawke captures the woozy, dissolute atmosphere of the place (the rough, grungy surroundings are well suited to the shadowy digital filmmaking used here), and there’s a single superbly rich scene featuring the great Tuesday Weld and Kris Kristofferson, and some beautiful use of Jeff Tweedy’s music, but the movie sinks with its script. The writer Nicole Burdette based it on her stage play, and all the woe-is-me bohemian angst grates on the viewer eventually.”

MGSinNYC: “The most noteworthy scene is with the luminous TUESDAY WELD! I had almost fogotten what a terrifically talented and gorgeous actress she is. Acting students take note and watch her in action for she is the real thing. Why doesn’t she work more? I didn’t even realize she was in the movie and when I saw her scene, I was riveted. A true pro in every sense of the word. Only complaint was her role was too small. MORE TUESDAY!!”

MovieCrazed.com: “Now 64 years old, Tuesday Weld keeps a lower profile than ever. The most recent of her marriages to Israeli concert violinist and conductor Pinchas Zukerman ended in 1998. He divorced her for the official reason of ‘lack of interest in his career.’ He quotes her as saying: ‘Why do I need to go to another concert when I’ve heard the piece before?’ Tuesday Weld’s last film performance was a small role in 2001’s Chelsea Walls. Since then, as far as the public is concerned, that silence she has been quoted and saying she ‘hungers for’ and ‘eats up’ seems to have eaten her instead.”

Tuesday Weld: “I love the cult thing. Love it! Why? It’s fun. And it has endurance. When you’re a “cult goddess”, you don’t have to do anything to keep being it! You don’t have to work, it’s better you don’t, great, know what I mean?”

 

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Additionally


MR. BROADWAY – guest stars Steve Cochran, Tuesday Weld (1964)


Tuesday Weld presents the Oscar® for Sound Effects at the 36th Academy Awards in 1964


Tuesday Weld at Roddy McDowall’s Malibu Beach house 1965


Jane Fonda Tuesday Weld Anthony Perkins Rock Hudson Lauren Bacall Natalie Wood Judy Garland 1965


Tuesday Weld and Steve McQueen scene in Cincinnati Kid (1965)


Tuesday Weld on The Dick Cavett Show (Oct. 8th, 1971)


Tosh’s Journal: August 27 (Tuesday Weld)

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** Armando, Hi. Of course I’m serious about really liking your novel. I’m a nice guy, but I never bullshit about stuff like that. It’s too important. Well, big hugs and thanks to George then. A good a guy as there is, that’s for sure. ** David Ehrenstein, The French can be very reasonable. ** Steve Erickson, Hi. Oh boy, when it rains … etc. I don’t know, but it sounds like the tiff with your friend is pretty repairable assuming he’s a good friend. Everybody’s on edge for so many reasons these days. Best to cut people emotional slack (to a point). Yeah, try to take your hampered eyesight as an entry into new ways of absorbing. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. His ‘Imponderable’ book is fun, yes, if you’re at all susceptible to the paranormal’s charms. ** Bill, I did remember or assume that you might like Oursler. Half of the people I know in the US who teach have been switched to online instructing. Unhappily in almost every case. Like I said, over here we’re all just waiting for the axe to fall. Maybe it won’t, but … ** Misanthrope, Thanks in person for being such a bud to Armando. The doc sounds reasonable, or maybe just amiable, which has an interesting way of sounding like reasonableness. Yeah, I mean take yourself out of the pitching rotation and don’t do windmills when you’re running and all that stuff, I guess. ** Okay then. Today I’ve restored an old post focusing on the actorly stylings of the singular Tuesday Weld, so it’s a good day around here, in other words, I would say. See you tomorrow.

Galerie Dennis Cooper presents … Tony Oursler

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‘Blob is a funny word, an ugly thing. It’s alive and nobody knows why. Maybe it came from outer space or it came from a science experiment gone bad or from pollution or from the sea or out of a really sick body. It never stops moving, moving all around with no place to go. When will it die. It can’t die by any means known to man at this moment.

‘What’s your gut reaction? “Gut reaction” is an American term for your first response to things before you examine the facts intellectually. When you see the blob your gut reaction is: you want it to be gone, you want it to die.

‘The blob’s movements are alien yet oddly familiar. Pulling and stretching. Like peristaltic movement. Like the way things move through your body by contractions which result in locomotion. You understand this is linked to your bowels and intestines because even though this motion is involuntary, it is conscious on some level. It is essentially a wave, the universal form of energy transmission divided into peeks and troughs like a bad ocean. Unending waves, wave after wave, wash away your shape. Now formless. You are the blob.

‘Now, you want to help the blob.

‘With its transparent skin, the blob exposes its muscles, organs, blood flow. The banal workings of the organism are revealed in fragile detail. How embarrassing. To encounter the blob is to see the simple, low ambitions that sustain life with no greater purpose. The blob can only and merely exist, it is useless. Whatever happens inside the blob should be hidden, should remain private.

‘The blob can be funny like any mutation, a dead end creature in the chain of evolution. And in the food chain, it has no niche, no other life form feeds on the blob. It’s a disturbing creature because it is unique A Monster that could kill you like a cancer, a devolution of cells. Here is the nightmare scenario: a terratoma analogous to you, an evil negative offspring replaces you the host. A formless double, the blob kills you when it takes up residence within.

‘When you gaze at the blob, your eye no longer has a focal point because the blob has no focal point. You see right into it. You may keep loosing your sight in a myopic blur. In this way the blob can escape even though it moves very slowly and with no apparent direction.

‘In the movie, “The Blob,” the ruby colored nemeses could be a sign of the counter culture, the erotic, psychedelic, loud, political, chaos impending into the serene, the anxious cold war America of the 1950’s.

‘The blob is scary because we do not understand it nor do we easily recognize it. Always changing shape, it’s more like a spill than a sphere. It’s like part of a fat person that escaped and came to life. It’s like Jell-O or slime or mold.’ — Tony Oursler

 

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Further

Tony Oursler Official Website
Tony Oursler @ Metro Pictures
Tony Oursler @ Lehmann Maupin
Tony Oursler @ Electronic Arts Intermix
‘The Uncanny World of Tony Oursler’
Carlo McCormick ‘The Pathology of Projections & Cynical Spiritualism’
Tony Oursler ‘Sixth Wall’
Philip K. Dick & Tony Oursler ‘Psychomimetiscape’
TO interview by Alan Licht @ Bomb
Tony Oursler’s ‘The Presence Project’
Re: Tony Oursler’s ‘Mud Opera’
Re: Tony Oursler’s ‘The Influence Machine’
Tony Oursler books @ Amazon

 

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Bowie/Oursler


David Bowie/Tony Oursler Where Are We Now? (Official Music Video)

‘My first actual contact with David was like a shock of energy, fully charged with the magic of media, music, and glamour. It was as if he had somehow bilocated between our world and one of myth and didn’t fully exist in the same space as ordinary earthlings. Of course, this was all in my mind, and my reaction said much about the delusions of popular culture. Somehow this giant I’d been listening to and watching with such admiration since forever was in my studio in person. It was hard to reconcile fantasy with flesh. Later, I would notice that this was a common effect of David’s presence, sometimes with hilarious results. I remember seeing a Jasper Johns exhibition at MoMA with David, his wife Iman, and the artist Linda Post. David sauntered through the show, busily discussing the art and holding forth like we were in a bubble, while the focus of everyone around us shifted from the art to him. Finally, as we were leaving the museum, a group of women surrounded David and began touching him, as if in a spontaneous frenzy of admiration.

‘That was in the late ’90s, in the early stages of a friendship that lasted more than twenty years. At that time I was living in a hovel of a studio at 175 Ludlow Street, on the Lower East Side. During David’s first visit, it took me at least an hour to calm down. As it turns out, behind the star power, he was almost a regular guy. Except that he was David Bowie, after all, who appeared to have different-colored eyes and who had that voice. I still remember fragments of our first conversations: We both agreed from experience that drugs are bad. While he was chain-smoking and sipping coffee, his thoughts ricocheted, much like his career, from music and film to books, art history, and comics, and back again. He was humble about his accomplishments (saying of his work, “One can pluck a few peppercorns from the shit”), and his humor was unforgettable, as was his deep laugh, often accompanied by a conspiratorial sideways grin. Friends asked me why he came to my studio, and at first I honestly didn’t know. It took me a while to understand that he loved art, from discussing how it was made to seeing how artists lived and worked. And it turned out that David wanted to interject some of my work into his lexicon. Much of what we did together became very public—videos can be found on the Internet—but some has never been seen.’ — Tony Oursler, Artforum

 

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Etc.


Excerpt from ‘Perfect Partner’ by T.O., Kim Gordon, & Phil Morrison (2006)


Excerpt from an early T.O. film ‘The Loner’ (1980)


Tony Oursler on the art of video projection

 

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Interview

from designboom

 

In video art, what is ‘projection’ for you?

Tony Oursler: Physics tell us we see light, not objects. For me projection is ‘inner thoughts projected outward onto the world’ and the viewer is a collaborator of the artist. The exposes the gender of reaction to the artwork, finishing it.

Please describe an evolution in your work, from your first projects to the present day.

TO: My projects are more focused now than they were in the past. I’m comfortable with a lot of different mediums that I wasn’t so comfortable with early on. I’m sort of claiming back certain things. I started twenty years ago with photography, drawing and painting and now I’m trying to round them back into my work. It’s been an interesting elliptical process. I think an artist’s life is kind of like a snowball, picking up stuff as you go. everything’s on the outside of the snowball and sometimes you have to burrow in to get the old stuff.

Reality’s something we’re not getting from reality; it’s something people are looking for to entertain them. There’s been this reversal where the powers that be have funneled reality into the entertainment sphere and entertainment has been funneled into the sphere of policymaking.

TO: I’d always looked toward pop culture to decipher things as a mirror of the world, and now I don’t at all, because I know who the creators are, and I can see through what they’re trying to do, so it doesn’t work on me at all. I wish it did. In a weird way, I miss it. There was a time when I used to look at pop culture and take it apart piece by piece to figure out how the magic American engine worked. I was very paranoid and full of conspiracy theories. But now I just look at it as a bunch of morons who are barely getting by, just pushing the buttons on this machine that’s rolling forward. The people have the power of production in their hands, yet the good stuff is yet to be made. The most boring things I just don’t get: people who are fascinated by Paris Hilton, phenomena like that, someone who does nothing and becomes a celebrity, or even worse the city destroyer Trump.

What books do you have on your bedside table?

TO: That’s a good question. I’m a bibliomaniac, so I collect books. At any given moment I might have one book about spiritualism, another like a thriller and one about the military. There is one about the alternative new-age military culture that happened after vietnam when they introduced psychic activities to warfare, trying to kill people through thought.

Describe your style, like a good friend of yours would describe it.

TO: My friend once said I was like the Picasso of video and that was a very flattering, stylistic comment. My other friends probably call me sloppy… and insane.

The Christian Right is afraid that religion is going to be replaced by technology—that a computer can deal in absolutes better than a spiritual leader can. If you think about it, the Moral Majority got firmly embedded in the Republican Party around 1980, which is when computers started becoming more popular. I don’t think it’s a coincidence. Organized religion in this country has been very worried since then that religion’s really going to go out the window.

TO: I like the feeling of reaching progress through technology; I wish it could be true. I hope so for my son. When I wrote my timeline on virtual media around 2000, I realized that as a video artist there was no art history written for me. All this stuff that plugged in or moved or had anything to do with light was very finicky; curators, if a bulb broke or something, just put the piece in a box in the basement. It was much easier for them to put paintings and photographs on the walls, so those of us in video were left with no history of virtual image production. It goes all the way back to the first mention of the camera obscura in a Chinese poem around the year 1000. The image was upside down and associated with the dark side of human nature from the start. Anytime there’s a new kind of technology there’s this association with evil or death, so I think your theory is correct. It’s true of every human invention: rock ’n’ roll, it’s the devil’s music; photography, there was spirit photography; the radio, it was Constantine Raudive who did that tuning into the dead radio; and television, there are lots of examples, but the people who believed they could communicate with the spirit world through technology were really rebels. They took the tools and put them to personal radical use rather than be sublimated by them.

What are you afraid of regarding the future?

TO: I guess death, taxes and fascism. Actually I don’t know.

 

____
Show

___________________
Part. 1: works at a (relative) standstill

 

________________
Part 2: works in motion


Guilty (1995)


Slip (2003)


Cigarettes (2009)


Star (2003)


Pain (2008)


Switch (2010)


Vampiric Battle (2009)


Judy (1994)


various works (2008)


Cave-in (2010)


Untitled Work with Money (2008)


Frog (2005)


E*Nel (2016)


Caricature (2002)
—-

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Armando, Hi! Oh, it was my honor and pleasure entirely, sir. I’m happy that you finally managed to see the comments, and I apologise on behalf of this blog’s seemingly unsolvable glitches. And I’m loving your novel as I tear through it, surely needless to say. And RIP Max von Sydow, yes. ‘Hour of the Wolf!’ My fave. ** Shane Christmass, Hi, Shane. Good to see you, man. I’m doing all right. I still haven’t read Gary’s memoir for no good reason whatsoever, weird. I’m going to finally score that. I hope the formulating goes excitingly. How does that work for you — a novel’s conceptual beginnings? Do you haver a process or way to starting novels that seems to work especially well for you, or do you change that part up, or … ? ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, sir. ** Bill, It’s a very chewy sentence though. Excellent, thank you! About the post! Sure am curious and looking forward. I so hope the health blipping de-escalates to zip any second. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Thanks for congratulating Armando. ** Dom Lyne, Hi, Dom! Super sweet to see you! Thanks for your generous and thoughtful words and attention to the post and Armando’s novel. I hadn’t realised you’d stopped doing readings. Was there a reason? In any case, I’m glad you’re enjoying them, and, consequently, doing them. I’m sorry about the split with Seb, although you sound very revved up and okay with that, so I’m glad the break was an outbreak. All of what you wrote makes sense to me. I think I’ve sworn off romantic relationships for good, or it feels that way while knowing that one never knows. Really appreciating friendships and not feeling like anything more makes any sense or something. Curious. You do sound really good, and I’m really glad that you feel that way too. Cool, man. I’m good, working on my stuff and enjoying things pretty much in general. Love and big hugs back! ** Misanthrope, That mania for toilet paper and bottled water is not happening here at all. Things are getting cancelled more and more. After ‘banning’ events with 5000+ attendees the govt just reduced that to 1000+ attendees, although I think it’s optional. I keep waiting for the lockdown announcement now that all of Italy is on lockdown, but it still feels relatively chill here, as of this morning, I should say. Best of the best of luck at the doctor’s. Do give a post-visit heads-up please. ** Steve Erickson, Is there a way that you, a person so drawn to the visual, can find some kind of interesting oddness and even peace of sorts at being temporarily deprived? ** Tim Sandel, Hi, Tim. Welcome! Thank you very much for coming in and showing Armando’s book support. ** Okay. Today I turn my galerie over to that charmer Tony Oursler. Have the particular fun that his work is geared to provide. See you tomorrow.

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