The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Category: Uncategorized (Page 778 of 1103)

Varioso #31: Compton-Burnett, Sandaldjian, Salvatore Harmon, Creeley, Barry, Melville, Nabokov, Pynchon , Murdoch, Fante, Mexican Food Porn, rings, oFF LOVE, Grass Roots, Beatles, Mallarme, Drew, Ectoplasm, Hans A, pipes, Bell, Stern, Picobots, Hoffine, Keckler, Borg, Berquet *

* (restored)

_____________________

 

I think that actual life supplies a writer with characters much less than is thought. Of course there must be a beginning to every conception, but so much change seems to take place in it at once, that almost anything comes to serve the purpose—a face of a stranger, a face in a portrait, almost a face in the fire. And people in life hardly seem to be definite enough to appear in print. They are not good or bad enough, or clever or stupid enough, or comic or pitiful enough. And I believe that we know much less of each other than we think, that it would be a great shock to find oneself suddenly behind another person’s eyes. — Ivy Compton Burnett

 

______________________

Hagop Sandaldjian

 

____________________

Raymond Salvatore Harmon

 

____________________

I dreamt last night
the fright was over, that
the dust came, and then water,
and women and men, together
again, and all was quiet
in the dim moon’s light.

A paean of such patience—
laughing, laughing at me,
and the days extend over
the earth’s great cover,
grass, trees, and flower-
ing season, for no clear reason.

— Robert Creeley

 

_____________________

Matthew Barry

 

____________________

The most simple manner in which this operation is performed, and I think, the best, consists in placing any number of the freshly plucked fruit, when in a particular state of greenness, among the embers of a fire, in the same way that you would roast a potato. After the lapse of ten or fifteen minutes, the green rind embrowns and cracks, showing through the fissures in its sides the milk-white interior. As soon as it cools the rind drops off, and you then have the soft round pulp in its purest and most delicious state. Thus eaten, it has a mild and pleasing flavor. — Herman Melville

Boil water in a saucepan (bubbles mean it is boiling!). Take two eggs (for one person) out of the refrigerator. Hold them under the hot tap water to make them ready for what awaits them. Place each in a pan, one after the other, and let them slip soundlessly into the (boiling) water. Consult your wristwatch. Stand over them with a spoon preventing them (they are apt to roll) from knocking against the damned side of the pan. If, however, an egg cracks in the water (now bubbling like mad) and starts to disgorge a cloud of white stuff like a medium in an oldfashioned seance, fish it out and throw it away. Take another and be more careful. After 200 seconds have passed, or, say, 240 (taking interruptions into account), start scooping the eggs out. Place them, round end up, in two egg cups. With a small spoon tap-tap in a circle and hen pry open the lid of the shell. Have some salt and buttered bread (white) ready. Eat. — Vladimir Nabokov

Routine: plug in American blending machine won from some Yank last summer, some poker game, table stakes, B.O.Q. somewhere in the north, never remember now….Chop several bananas into pieces. Make coffee in urn. Get can of milk from cooler. Puree ‘nanas in milk. Lovely. I would coat all the booze-corroded stomachs of England….Bit of marge, still smells all right, melt in the skillet. Peel more bananas, slice lengthwise. Marge sizzling, in go long slices. Light oven whoomp blow us all up someday oh, ha, ha, yes. Peeled whole bananas to go on broiler grill soon as it heats. Find marshmallows…. — Thomas Pynchon

He poured out drinks into tall glasses. Gin and freshly pressed lemon, and slice of lime which Harriet had given him, and soda water and a little parsley floating about, like his mother used to make in the old days. Sophie never drank long drinks, even in summer. — Iris Murdoch

Dorothy was at the sideboard, breaking eggs and spilling them into a bowl. Just watching the oval things crack in her white fingers and spill forth with a golden plop created a series of small explosions inside me. My calves shuddered as she scrambled them with a fork and they turned yellow like her hair. She poured a bit of cream into the mixture and the silken smoothness of the descending cream had me reeling. I wanted to say, ‘Dorothy Parrish, I love you’, to take her in my arms, to lift the bowl of scrambled eggs above our heads and pour it over our bodies, to roll on the red tiles with her, smeared with the conquest of eggs, squirming and slithering in the yellow of love. — John Fante

 

______________________

Mexican Food Porn

 

_____________________

 

_____________________

oFF LOVE

 

_____________________

There is that in love
which, by the syntax of,
men find women and join
their bodies to their minds

–which wants so to acquire
a continuity, a place,
a demonstration that it must
be one’s own sentence.

— Robert Creeley

 

_____________________

 

__________________________

The Beatles Never Existed draws together what it calls evidence that the Beatles were not what they seemed. The main thesis: There were multiples of each character performing as John, Paul, George and Ringo. Each part of the world appears to have had its own Beatles group, And even then, there were sometimes multiple characters within. They all looked identical to each other except for a few features here and there. But what was most pronounced was their fluctuating height differences.

 

_________________________

Words rise up unaided and in ecstasy; many a facet reveals its infinite rarity and is precious to our minds. For our mind is the center of this hesitancy and oscillation; it sees words not in their usual order, but in projection (like the walls of a cave) so long as that mobility which is their principle lives on, that part of speech which is not spoken. Then quickly, before they die away, they all exchange their brilliancies from afar; or they may touch, and steal a furtive glance. — Stéphane Mallarmé

 

________________________

Benedict Drew

 

____________________

In spiritualism, ectoplasm is said to be formed by physical mediums when in a trance state. This material is excreted as a gauze-like substance from orifices on the medium’s body and spiritual entities are said to drape this substance over their nonphysical body, enabling them to interact in the physical and real universe. Some accounts claim that ectoplasm begins clear and almost invisible, but darkens and becomes visible, as the psychic energy becomes stronger. Still other accounts state that in extreme cases ectoplasm will develop a strong odor. According to some mediums, the ectoplasm cannot occur in light conditions as the ectoplasmic substance would disintegrate.

The psychical researcher Gustav Geley defined ectoplasm as being “very variable in appearance, being sometimes vaporous, sometimes a plastic paste, sometimes a bundle of fine threads, or a membrane with swellings or fringes, or a fine fabric-like tissue”. Arthur Conan Doyle described ectoplasm as “a viscous, gelatinous substance which appeared to differ from every known form of matter in that it could solidify and be used for material purposes”.

The physical existence of ectoplasm has not been scientifically demonstrated, and tested samples purported to be ectoplasm have been found to be various non-paranormal substances. Other researchers have duplicated, with non-supernatural materials, the photographic effects sometimes said to prove the existence of ectoplasm.

 

______________________

Hans A

 

_____________________

 

_____________________

Mike Meginnis: You were alone in the quiet room until they brought your brother to you. His mouth was stuffed with a wet rag but his eyes were calm and dry. They laid him down on the table and they tied his hands and feet in place. Your brother did not struggle. In your hand there is a certain implement of torment. The table is your family’s dinner table, the one with your dried snot on its underside and your name carved faintly in its side by the corner of your thumbnail. Against the wall there is a white dresser piled with various perfumes. Exits are north and south.

Matt Bell: EXAMINE PERFUMES

MM: The perfumes are variously colored; they are in bottles of many shapes, like hourglasses, crystal skulls, teardrops, corkscrews, orbs, and skinny cylinders. Not all of them can stand upright. Their collective smell is like the smell of a girl’s dormitory: fruit and flowers, nuts and alcohol.

MB: REMEMBER BROTHER

MM: You remember your brother. He is there on the table. He is waiting very patiently. He is your younger brother. He was named after you because you were the favorite son. You know everything he knows except all of his secrets. He smells of nerves.

MB: TAKE TEARDROP PERFUME

MM: You have the teardrop-shaped perfume.

MB: SPRAY PERFUME ON RAG IN BROTHER’S MOUTH SO HE REMEMBERS TOO

MM: The perfume’s smell (the smell of a parking lot after it has rained and the oil of the cars and their other fluids have all been lifted from the pavement and moved to other spots on the pavement) reminds your brother of the day he followed you when you did not know he was following you—when you thought that he was staying home sick. And where he followed you, and what he saw you do that you did not know he saw, and how it rained most of the day. What did he see you do?

MB: THAT WAS THE DAY I STOLE THE FIRST PERFUME. THAT WAS THE DAY I FIRST LEARNED I DIDN’T HAVE TO SMELL THIS WAY, A SCENT SO RECOGNIZABLE. WHERE IN THE LOCKER ROOM I DISCOVERED THAT IF SOME SMELLS WERE THE GATEWAY TO MEMORY THEN OTHERS MIGHT HELP US FORGET. TAKE RAG FROM BROTHER’S MOUTH

MM: You have the rag, which still smells of the perfume. Your brother seems to miss the rag now that it’s gone. He is wearing a t-shirt with a picture of his girlfriend on its front; in the picture she is wearing a t-shirt with a picture of him. He breathes audibly. The breath smells of your perfume.

MB: ASK BROTHER HOW HIS GIRLFRIEND SMELLS NOW. ASK IF SHE STILL SMELLS THE SAME. TELL BROTHER HOW LONG IT’S BEEN SINCE YOU’VE SMELLED HIS GIRLFRIEND, EVEN THOUGH HE ALREADY KNOWS.

MM: Your brother says his girlfriend smells like a fish, overwhelmingly like a fish of a certain kind, but he has come to like the smell of the fish of that certain kind, on your wise advice. He asks you are you feeling well. (But he shouldn’t be asking you questions. This is rude, and here on your dinner table, the one with your dried snot on its underside, and your carved name in its finish, and its finish still embedded thickly under your thumbnail, which is practically inside you, and its smell on your fingers.) (This is like when he would use your Nintendo and save over your file.) (This is just the same.)

MB: TELL BROTHER IT’S MY TURN AGAIN, MY TURN TO PLAY MY TURNS. TELL HIM I DON’T KNOW WHAT’S CHANGED. TELL HIM TO TELL ME. TELL HIM EVERYWHERE I GO, EVERYTHING IS ALREADY DONE.

MM: Your younger brother with your same name closes his eyes from exhaustion at how you are always saying exactly these words anymore and the monotony of your voice. He says he’s always telling you that nothing is different. He has always been your younger brother with your same name and you are always wanting more. But you are the larger brother. So inside you there is someone like him and his size, and around that someone there is wrapped a larger someone who is your size, and you contain both, so that you should know. You should know, he says.

(cont.)

 

_____________________

Eddo Stern

 

___________________

Picobots

 

___________________

Yesterday I wanted to
speak of it, that sense above
the others to me
important because all

that I know derives
from what it teaches me.
Today, what is it that
is finally so helpless,

different, despairs of its own
statement, wants to
turn away, endlessly
to turn away.

If the moon did not …
no, if you did not
I wouldn’t either, but
what would I not

do, what prevention, what
thing so quickly stopped.
That is love yesterday
or tomorrow, not

now. Can I eat
what you give me. I
have not earned it. Must
I think of everything

as earned. Now love also
becomes a reward so
remote from me I have
only made it with my mind.

— Robert Creeley

 

___________________

Joshua Hoffine

 

_________________________

William Keckler

 

___________________

Maja Borg

 

______________________

Gilles Berquet

 

___________________

 

As regards plots I find real life no help at all. Real life seems to have no plots. And as I think a plot desirable and almost necessary, I have this extra grudge against life. But I think there are signs that strange things happen, though they do not emerge. I believe it would go ill with many of us, if we were faced by a strong temptation, and I suspect that with some of us it does go ill. — Ivy Compton Burnett
—-

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Yes indeed, they are. ** Bill, Yeah, right? The horror movie piñatas: among the best I’ve seen. Well, at least your nephew didn’t ask you to take him to a KAWS show, unless he did. I think Banksy’s blah, but being young and into Banksy’s is not necessarily a bad sign at all. ** Sypha, Awesome, inspiring nightmares is no small virtue. Oh, well, giving yourself a diary is beyond just giving yourself a gift somehow. A tool of the trade. You consider ‘Not that great’ a ‘pan’? I expected you were going to slaughter some albums. As always, your musical tastes put the ‘v’ in versatile. From Sting to Sunn0))) is quite a crazy gulf. ** Barkley, Hi, Barkley! I’m so happy you enjoy the array. I saw Hatsune Miku live — or ‘live’ — about a year ago when ‘her’ tour brought ‘her’ through Paris. It’s mindbogglingly great. Have you seen ‘her’ live act? Super highly recommended if ‘she’ ever comes your way. You good? Having happy holidays? ** _Black_Acrylic, RIP Alasdair Gray indeed. A great writer. And RIP Vaughn Oliver too. A great designer. That Holly Hendry sculpture looks exciting. I wish I could see. I have some small thing for kinetic art, as you no doubt know. ** Corey Heiferman, Hi. Chuffed that you took pleasure from the piñatas. Oh, I played the video game ‘Viva Piñata’ back when. It was nuts and fantastic. I think I had it in a post here at some point. No, I’m not acquainted with Milo Martin. The name rings a bell, but I’m not even sure I’ve read him. I’ll find his stuff and then try the interview if his stuff floats any part of my boat. Thanks! Being a Romantic will serve you well in life. Cause you heartache and disappointment too, but it’ll keep you ‘young’, and what with cynicism turning so many people as old the hills these days, blessings. ** Okay. Today I’ve restored another one of my old Varioso posts from the dead blog. Again, these posts basically consist of things that interested me at the time but seemed unworthy for some reason or other of taking up an entire post. I trust that, via the law of averages, something up there will intrigue you. See you tomorrow.

With piñatas

 

Chuck Ramirez
Pascale Marthine Tayou
Pulp Parlour
Art Pinjata Studio
Diana Benavidez
Iván Argote
Meg Cranston
Thedra Cullar-Ledford
Piñata Jumpolin
Dave McKenzie
Mariana Castillo Deball
Giovanni Valderas
Roberto Benavidez
Justin Favela
Aaron Krach
Franco Mondini-Ruiz
Franz West
Blanka Amezkua
Mathias Goeritz
Paolo Pivi
Gaby Lopez
HangMeOfficial
Sebastian Errazuriz
Charlotte Sagory
Jennifer Rubell

 

______________
Chuck Ramirez Piñata series (2002)
‘Chuck Ramirez came into this world with an eagle’s detail-devouring eye. In his Piñata series (2002), Ramirez puts his eye to complex narrative use: each image zeroes in on the material detritus of a past event and displays the swept-up and forsaken. Ramirez’ photographic technique in the Piñata series and elsewhere employs an almost molecular focus and a light both pitiless and exalting. With an initial blast of color, the comical intent of each party sculpture appears readily. But each torn paper limb and ruffle, each glimpse of spindly wooden skeleton and bulge of newspaper stuffing suggests a deep pathos behind the early impressions of humor. In lesser hands, a photo series of freshly-whacked piñatas could have taken on all the glibness and slick irreverence of a kitsch mexicanismo. It could have come off sentimental. For Ramirez, though, his worldview lies in the particulars; he doesn’t present piñatas with a pop, but with subversive gravitas. His awareness of his own mortality is too finely attuned, his queerness too gritty and his anger too potent to contain itself in mere punchlines. Ramirez also made evident his ambivalence towards Mexican and Mexican-American culture; an identity he claimed firmly and dismissed irreverently in turn, but never fully turned away from. The Piñata series exemplifies Ramirez’ respect for handiwork and, of course, rasquache.’ — Sarah Fisch

 

______________
Pascale Marthine Tayou Empty Gifts (2015)

 

______________
Pulp Parlour Bat Woman (2010)
‘This life size pinata stands at 5 feet 7 inches. Numerous pinata bats were created and attached to her.’ — PP

 

______________
Art Pinjata Studio Various (2018)


Hatsune Miku


Keith Prodigy


Ariana Grande

 

______________
Diana Benavidez Piñatas (2016 – 2019)
‘In this body of work, Diana Benavidez introduces the piñata as a method for storytelling, expression, and reflection. Benavidez shares her personal narratives by manipulating physically and conceptually the piñata through the incorporation materials not commonly found in traditional piñatas. Through the use of color, scale, and text, this popular Mexican art form is transformed into a contemporary art practice that explores mental states and emotions.’ — contemporaryartdaily

 

______________
Iván Argote White Cube Piñata (2014)
‘White Cube Piñata it’s a comment on minimal sculptural and also exhibition standards of installation. Something important is that the object, as happens with piñatas, is made to be broken during a celebration, so here, the White Cube is presented broke, inside of it there is plenty of small sculptures, performances instructions and many other references and winks to art history, popular culture and even sentimental things.’ — Perrotin

 

______________
Meg Cranston Magical Death (2002)
‘For some artists, stuffing their piñata is not as important as the beating it will take, especially when it’s a self-portrait. From 2002-2007, Los Angeles-based artist Meg Cranston created a series of empty piñatas in her own image. Each piece in the series is titled after the anthropological documentary Magical Death (1973) about the Yanomami people of Brazil who use ritual warfare, or “shamanic drama” to avoid real blood shed. According to Artforum, early in the series Cranston invited visitors to “enact a similar ritual murder on her own pendant form—if they would be willing to pay for the pleasure by buying the work.” Cranston later suggested that no one had taken her up on this masochistic challenge and for this reason she filled her last piñata with candy. “The violence has to occur,” she said, “so the figure (my doppelgänger) can symbolically triumph.”’ — Art21

 

________________
Thedra Cullar-Ledford F**K CANCER (2016)
‘The performance is a response to let everyone know how she feels about her breast cancer diagnosis, and her choice to have a double mastectomy and live the mantra “flat and fabulous.”’ — Contemporary Arts Museum Houston

 

________________
A PIÑATA STORE IN AUSTIN GETS BULLDOZED BY LANDLORDS FOR A SXSW PARTY
‘Unreal. A party supply store, Piñata Jumpolin, in the eastside of Austin, was reduced to rubble, unbeknownst to store owners, Monica and Sergio Lejarazu, by building landlords for a party to take place during SXSW. The store was in the location for 8 years. This upsetting news also points to the fact that Austin is the most economically segregated city in the country, according to Austin Culture Map. It was the morning of February 12, as he was driving his daughter to school, that Sergio Lejarazu discovered that the store that he co-owned with his wife for eight years, selling custom, hand-made moonwalks, piñatas imported from Mexico, and more, was demolished, allegedly without warning, with their inventory still inside. Sergio describes to Austin Culture Map: “That’s when I saw it: my life’s work under the bulldozer.”’ — Pennsylvania Herald

 

________________
Robert Benavidez Illuminated Piñatas (2018)
‘Robert Benavidez looks to famous paintings and literature for source material for his metallic piñatas, such as Hieronymus Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights (previously). The Los Angeles-based artist’s most recent series Illuminated Piñata pulls characters from the Luttrell Psalter (c. 1325-1335), a famous medieval manuscripts. The book contains illustrations of fantastical hybrid creatures, which Benavidez further explores by creating three-dimensional sculptures using traditional piñata motifs.’ — thisiscolossal



 

________________
Dave McKenzie Self-Portrait Piñata (2002)
‘When Jamaica-born artist Dave McKenzie commissioned an effigy of himself as piñata, his “hanging” and “beating” had entirely different connotations. At an event at the Queens Museum of Art, museum-goers joyously bashed McKenzie’s likeness. Candy and fun seemed trivial, if not inappropriate, as his dangling lifeless figure began to conjure America’s history of lynching and other racially charged violence.’ — Artsy

 

_____________
Mariana Castillo Deball Klein Bottle Piñata (2009)
Klein Bottle Piñata is inspired by the typical Mexican piñata, giving it the form of a bottle painted International Klein Blue. Triggering a logical but original relationship, Castillo Deball’s vision thus unites the concept of the container-pot, which in popular tradition is broken open to offer its contents, with a topological form whose interior flows into its exterior.’ — Castello di Rivoli

 

_____________
Giovanni Valderas Piñata Houses (2018)
‘Local artist Giovanni Valderas grew up in Oak Cliff. He misses the neighborhood he once knew. He’s seen all these changes firsthand — and he’s had enough. And, for the past few weeks, he’s been doing something about it. On Christmas Eve, Valderas started placing sad little piñata houses he’d made throughout Oak Cliff — namely around the Bishop Arts District and other areas currently undergoing top-to-bottom gentrification. His goal is to raise awareness about the disappearing affordable housing market in Oak Cliff through an approachable starting point.’ — Central Track

 

________________
Several women destroy a piñata with a figure that represents a sculpture by the Costa Rican artist Jorge Jimenez Deredia while singing in chorus ‘All his sculptures are the same’.

 

_____________
Justin Favela Various (2015 – 2019)
‘Though he lives in Las Vegas, Favela has a considerable following in Denver, where his large-scale piñata installations, including a tissue-paper tribute to Frida Kahlo and a life-sized lowrider piñata, have been exhibited at the Denver Art Museum and Museo de las Americas.’ — ACD

 

_____________
Aaron Krach Indestructible Object (2009)
”When you’re a kid and you go to a birthday party, bust the piñata, and all you get are hard candies, maybe peppermints or butterscotch balls, you’re angry!” And so, Krach fills his piñatas (there has been more than one) with expensive imported chocolate truffles in a few different flavors. From the shell of the piñata down to the candy, participants continually pull back layers. “Also very important,” he says, “is that they are wrapped in the most beautiful colorful foil. These chocolates are so pretty you don’t want to eat them, but of course that’s just like the piñata. You’ve got to open them in order to really enjoy them.”

 

_____________
Franco Mondini-Ruiz Contemporary Art Pinatas (2001 – 2014)

 

_____________
Franz West Epiphanie an Stühlen (2011)

 

_____________
A man from western Mexico tried to jump out of a church window and ended up hanging like a piñata while a policeman beat him with a broomstick. A mobile phone video posted on social media on Tuesday shows the moment a Tonalá police officer, Jalisco, clings to the left leg of the carjack. A crowd quickly gathers outside and urges another law enforcement officer to hit him with a stick.

 

_____________


 

_____________
Ronny Quevedo & Blanka Amezkua Rompe Puesto (2010)
‘New York-based artist Ronny Quevedo and artist Blanka Amezkua invited twenty-three emerging artists to create piñatas for the one-night exhibition and party, Rompe Puesto, at the Bronx River Art Center. (The event’s title loosely translates to “breaking ground.”)’ — Art21

 

________________
Mathias Goeritz Sculpture Piñata (1981)

 

________________
Unknown Unknown (Unknown)
‘I have tried to find out what this is and knowing how many world travelers ATS has, I thought someone could tell me. What is this weird ceremony? Is that Mao with Lenin in there?! Weird! Thanks!’ — Clearskies

 

________________
Paola Pivi They All Look the Same (2019)
‘These life-sized bear piñata sculptures are inspired by Pivi’s traumatic encounter with a polar bear years ago in Alaska.’ — artmacao

 

________________
Melissa The Unfortunate Truth (2015)
‘Hi. I am 11 yrs old. Whaling should be against the law, but for now some countries still do it under the legislation of science, but they eat them instead. This sculpture is a reflection of the whale’s emotions during the tragic events of getting harpooned. This sculpture is to make you think. So, what do you think?’ — Melissa

 

______________
Gaby Lopez Hunted Deer (2019)

 

________________
HangMeOfficial Horror Movie Piñatas (2019)
‘Also we have more pinatas that we can not post on etsy.’ — HMO

 

_______________
Sebastian Errazuriz Golden Calf (2014)
‘Sebastian Errazuriz caused quite a scene of the streets of Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborhood last week with a giant, cash-stuffed piñata shaped like a golden cow. The glittering statue is meant to recall another iconic bovine: Arturo Di Modica‘s famed Wall Street Bull, which has become an internationally recognized symbol of the stock market’s resilience and capitalism’s bullishness. “The piece hints at the Capital system as an idol that we have worshiped for decades and is unfortunately proving to be false,” said Errazuriz. “There’s an urgent need for corrections to the Capital system that can offer a more fair redistribution of wealth.” There was an enticing extra incentive to take part in the collective calf-smashing, in case anti-Wall Street sentiment alone didn’t cut it: 1,000 $1 dollar bills stuffed inside the piñata, in a grown-up spin on the candy-stuffed versions so popular at children’s birthday parties. Predictably, participants quickly reverted to a capitalistic “every man for himself” mentality the minute the money began to rain, pushing and shoving one another while grabbing fistfuls of $1 bills—not that the artist expected anything else. “The people will be really excited to destroy the (symbol of) capital [and] will then end up running for the capital.”’ — artnet

 

_______________
Charlotte Sagory Various (2017 – 2019)

 

________________
Unknown Superman (2006)
‘It’s a flaming piñata. Supposedly its Superman? Feels weird.’ — Umberto Brayj

 

________________
Jennifer Rubell Andy Warhol Piñata (2018)
‘This year’s Brooklyn Ball will feature several art history-inspired works of food to make the evening fun and interesting for all who attend. The most visible of these takes the form of a twenty foot tall piñata in the shape of Andy Warhol’s head, which is currently installed in our Rubin Pavilion. The idea for the piñata came from Jennifer Rubell, who is creating these food installations inside the Brooklyn Museum that evening as a project she is calling “Icons.” What, you ask, will the piñata be filled with? That will be kept a secret—one staff co-worker hopefully quipped, “It’s going to be filled with $100 bills for staff, right?”—until the start of “High Style: The After Party,” which begins at 9 p.m. I have been told, however, that its contents will be edible.’ — Brooklyn Museum

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Yes, you’ve said that about how the camerawork in ‘AHL’ is a problem for you. As I’m pretty sure I’ve said before, I had a completely polar reaction. I sat straight up in my chair the whole three hours utterly exhilarated and astonished by the shots and camerawork. Zac and I still have long, impassioned talks about Malick’s camerawork in the film weeks later. Apples and oranges. Everyone, Mr. Ehrenstein alerts us to this aka ‘The 2019 Round-Up inks Galore to political blogs (including mine) dealing with the muck of Trump.’ ** Ian Berry, Hi, Ian. Thanks. I got in touch with you via email, and I woke up to find your responding email in my box, and I’ll write back to you today. HNY to you! ** Misanthrope, You get yourself things for Xmas? Is that Wines tradition or something? Never heard of such a thing. Early happy b’day to the mighty LPS. I’m hoping he’s doing okay these days. Was a time I guess quite a while ago now that there wasn’t used bookstore or thrift shop in the world that didn’t have at least one copy of ‘Look Homeward, Angel’ on the shelves. That was my dad’s favorite book. Never cracked it myself. Bad son. I can’t imagine watching ‘Little Women’ but who knows. More positive is the way to go, and in this climate it would be positively revolutionary. Cool, I’ll go over to The Weaklings Graveyard and hunt down that post about your friend then. ** Ferdinand, Happy it hit the mark although Marilyn and Dan get all the credit. I was just the construction site manager. ** _Black_Acrylic, I’m happy the post caught you. His films are very good, very interesting, and, yes, he’s a real champion and hero re: daring film in general. I’ve avoided the film adaption of Patrick’s novel like the plague for fear. Maybe I’ll dip in though and see if the waters are temperate. Thanks, Ben. ** Okay. You folks who’ve seen ‘Permanent Green Light’ know that my imagination holds a small place of honor for piñatas. I thought I’d extenuate that and share my interest with you this weekend. Done deal? See you on Monday.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 DC's

Theme by Anders NorénUp ↑