DC's

The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Bette Gordon’s Day

 

‘A pioneer in the American Independent Film world, Gordon is best known for her bold explorations of themes related to sexuality. Her early short films, most notably Empty Suitcases, won numerous awards and Festival acclaim worldwide, including showings at the Berlin International Film Festival, New York’s Museum of Modern Art and The Whitney Biennial. Variety (1984) marked her debut as a feature film director, particularly in light of the film’s invitational showing at The Cannes Film Festival’s Director’s Fortnight.

‘It’s been four decades since filmmaker Bette Gordon moved to New York from the Midwest and took up residence in a loft on Greenwich Street, Tribeca. It was the early ’80s, and Gordon’s new stomping ground was a relative no man’s land—the perfect canvas for penniless artists with big ideas and the space to realize them. “It was a ghost town,” Gordon recalls. “There were no stores, maybe one restaurant and a couple of very cool bars where cool people hung out.” The Lower Manhattan Ocean Club was one such place. On any given night, you could find now award-winning director and painter Julian Schnabel in the kitchen cooking up whatever seafood delights were on offer for the likes of Patti Smith, David Byrne, Rene Ricard, Basquiat—basically anybody breaking new ground in the downtown art scene. “There was also Magoos, where artists would trade work for tab,” Gordon adds, “and the Mudd Club where we went rather than Studio 54, which was over by that time.” Gordon herself worked at a place called the Collective for Living Cinema, an outpost for avant-garde film, which at the time operated out of a high-ceilinged loft on White Street in Tribeca.

‘As Gordon recalls, it was a time of creative camaraderie where those wanting to make some noise, whether through art, music, film, or whatever it was that got them plugged in and inspired, found other like-minded artists rallied to the cause. “It was easy to meet people. It wasn’t driven by market, it was driven by people’s creative inspiration to make film and art for each other,” she explains.

‘While Gordon began her filmmaking career as a structuralist, she soon became involved with issues that joined film and feminism. In the midst of the scorched earth theories that all but prohibited images of women on the screen lest they provide voyeuristic satisfaction for “the male gaze,” she insisted on training her camera on women, often unclothed. An Algorithm, an optically printed film edited from several truncated shots of a woman diving off a board but never breaking the surface of the water, contains the germ of much of her later work. Gordon realized that the problem of the objectification of women in film has less to do with the display of the body than with who has control of the narrative—of the desire that motors it and of how that desire is resolved, or left as an opening into the unknown. She also understood, psychologically and pragmatically, that for a woman to become a filmmaker or to simply enjoy movies, she had to take pleasure in her own voyeurism.

‘Nevertheless, the pressures of the feminist discourse were such that Gordon would have to make several confused efforts at being a “good girl” filmmaker before she could cut loose in her barely disguised autobiography, Variety, the saga of how a nice young woman from the Midwest comes to New York, goes to work as a ticket taker in a porn theater (it’s the end of the 1970s recession), and discovers that she wants to take charge of and act on her fantasies however she pleases. Variety isn’t a perfect movie, but it is one of the most powerful descriptions of the female psyche committed to film by a director who knows how ravishing films can be.

‘“For better or worse, I tend to be drawn to things that are maybe not easy to make, but you can’t really forget them,” she says. “I think all of my films are kind of haunting in some way, and if you can’t get them out of your head it means that I couldn’t get them out of my head either.”‘ — collaged

 

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Stills































 

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Further

Bette Gordon Films
Bette Gordon @ IMDb
Bette Gordon @ The Film-makers Cooperative
UP LATE WITH FILMMAKER BETTE GORDON
Bette Gordon by Evangeline Morphos
THROWBACK MOVIE REVIEW: VARIETY (1983)
Bette Gordon Films from Anthology Film Archives
Bette Gordon on Vimeo
Bette Gordon on dealing with the realities of filmmaking
August 2010, Interview with Bette Gordon
Bette Gordon @ letterboxd
Bette Gordon’s ‘Variety’ 35 Years On
Antti Alanen: Film Diary: Variety (Bette Gordon 1983)
Bette Gordon @ instagram
Bette Gordon @ MUBI
Bette Gordon’s re-control of the cinematic narrative
Anybody’s Woman — Bette Gordon
Amy Taubin on Bette Gordon
Bette Gordon Talks Recognizing the Evil Within Ourselves

 

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Extras


A Message from Filmmaker Bette Gordon


AFS Presents: No Cover – Films By Bette Gordon


Entrevista – Bette Gordon

 

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Interview

 

If the diverse coterie of artists involved in your first feature, Variety, is anything to go by, the creative community was very interconnected at the time. To what do you attribute the collaborative spirit in New York back then?

Bette Gordon: There was nothing like the early ’80s… It was a very interesting time in the evolution of culture and the world of business and the support that you could get—people doing things for no money. There were these enclaves of do-it-yourself bands—you didn’t even have to play an instrument professionally. There was this kind of rediscovering what it meant to look at art—art as non-object, art as concept, minimal art. People were redefining the parameters, so it was a very exciting time. And in the film world, somebody would have a film that they shot on Super 8, so they’d lug a projector to Tier 3, which was [a no wave art nightclub] on West Broadway. You’d have little posters that you’d make by hand, and at 9 o’clock the poster would go up. I had a big loft and a projector and I’d invite people over to see whatever anyone wanted to show. It was very small, and only because of word of mouth and little posters that you’d Xerox and walk around town and put up—they’d get torn down and you’d put them up again—that you knew what was happening, the old-fashioned way.

What was it that fueled your passion for filmmaking? Are you driven by the same motivations today?

BG: I was always drawn to stories with characters who pushed boundaries, limits, maybe even morality. I was interested in doing anything but being safe. Safe for me was the world I grew up in, and all I wanted was to break those boundaries because I knew that there was a more complex world than the one I was given as a model. [This becomes apparent] when you see John Luc Godard for the first time or when you see Cassavetes or when your world is opened up by work or writing or literature that doesn’t fit in this simplistic box of the assigned role that you are given.

We want to keep making the films we want to make and the stories that we want to tell, and make people think about things that they would not normally think about. Film is a language of the future and I think we need to be conscious of what we’re saying and how we’re saying it.

You continue to live and make films in New York. What is it about the city that appeals to you, creatively speaking?

BG: Around every corner, there is an amazing location. You can explore and find new ways of seeing this place we live in, you just never tire of it. We shot my last film, The Drowning, in City Island—it was fascinating. Staten Island I always find amazing. Yonkers is a whole new film community, and even outside of New York City in Jersey City…I feel inspired by New York, I also like a 24-hour environment where people don’t go to sleep. I have a very weird body clock—it’s probably from my club days because nothing ever started in the ’80s until 11pm and it went at least until 4, and then there was after-hours. So even today, I find that I do my best work around 11. For me, bedtime is never before 2am.

How is it making an independent film now, when independent film has become part of the establishment?

BG: The world has become so savvy. When I first began, there was a Wild West mentality. You just grabbed people from your circle, and if you were an artist, your circle was pretty interesting. Musicians and writers would participate in a freeform way without contracts. We didn’t even know what agents and managers were. Variety’s budget was about $100,000. Working together was organic to the way in which we lived. Now, making an independent film is about getting actors to sign on.

You seem connected to the art world, visually. And you have a sensitivity to what sound is.

BG: My background was as a visual artist, which gave me references that I wish more of my students had. Those who don’t have a visual arts background struggle to translate action and dialogue from the page to the screen. I was lucky not only to travel in circles of very talented people, but ones that were not legislated by a school.

What’s next, what ideas are brewing?

BG: I’ve always wanted to do an adaptation of Paper Moon, a father-daughter story, since I’ve done a mother-son. What I really hate is when reviewers say, “She hasn’t made a film in ten years!” I guess there are people who are able to make a film in a shorter amount of time, but by the time you have an idea and allow it to sit around in your mind and then write it and raise the money, it’s ten years later. But really, it’s the psychological realm that is fascinating to me. The digging deep. I think it comes from the idea of smashing the mirror we talked about earlier. I’m interested in stories where what is is not what is. I’ve thought about making a lighter story.

 

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12 of Bette Gordon’s 16 films

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w/ James Benning I-94 (1974)
I-94 explores the male and female sexual identities through two people that never appear onscreen together. It exemplifies Bette Gordon’s willingness to tackle topics like eroticism through the female gaze. While the short is only three minutes long, the intimacy captured of the two characters speaks volumes. As one of Gordon’s experimental collaborations with avant garde filmmaker James Benning. I-94 gives viewers a rare dual perspective of the male gaze and the incisive reversal of it, with an uncompromising study into masculinity.’ — fffest


the entirety

 

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w/ James Benning The United States of America (1975)
The United States of America was filmed with a fixed camera, but one that had a fixed lens. The camera was mounted in the backseat area of a car. Its position—and thus the framing of the images it records—never changes. We see a bit of the backseat area; the backs of the front seats and backs of the heads of the filmmakers who are seated in front (mostly Benning drives, but occasionally he and Gordon exchange places); the front windshield with the rearview mirror fixed in the middle at the top; and a bit of the side windows, left and right. The movement in the film is created almost entirely by the movement of the car as it is driven by the filmmakers from the East Coast to the West, with some north-south driving in the middle of the country. The United States of America has a runtime of twenty-seven minutes, but it’s not possible to determine how long the actual trip took or if the film was edited from footage taken during one trip or several. Our attention, like the attention of the filmmakers/“actors,” is on the passing landscape as it can be seen through the windshield. The film is shot from what in Hollywood is described, cheatingly, as an over-the-shoulder POV, but here, since the camera is midway between the left shoulder of one person and the right shoulder of the other, the shot is an amalgam of two supposed POVs, i.e., a double cheat. There is no dialogue. The sound track is largely derived from the car’s radio—a mix of music and local newscasts, one of which allows us to fix the period as that of the US’s chaotic withdrawal from Saigon in the closing days of the Vietnam war. The United States of America is pure road movie, absent of character goals or desire, but attentive to the movement of history and fixity of geography.’ — Amy Taubin


the entirety

 

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An Algorithm (1977)
‘A visually stunning kinetic rhythm produced by looped footage (mathematical curves) in and out of phase with each other.’ — letterboxd


the entirety

 

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Empty Suitcases (1980)
‘… is a narrative derived from film’s own material and my concern for exploring issues of representation and identification in cinema. The film presents fragments of a woman’s life–her work (as a photographer), her friendship and relationships–in short, her economic, sexual,and artistic struggles. By deconstructing the fragments of text, speech, music and picture, the film forces focus on the workings of narrative, as well as on the narrative itself. Central to EMPTY SUITCASES is women’s inability to place and define themselfs in laguage and politics, the location of radical struggle. This displacement leads to a definition of woman as other, and reveals problems of unresolved sexual relations, difference, and violence,–B. G. Her most successful sequences–a militant ‘new wave’ fashion show in which models photograph themselves, an expressionless white woman lipsynching alog to Billie Holliday, a scene where the filmmaker relates a dream only to be drowned out by Talking Heads singing ‘PSycho Killer’–all criticize conventional modes of representation, with particular attention to what current academic jargon calls ‘the imaging of woman.” — J. Hoberman


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Anybody’s Woman (1981)
‘One day in the early 1980s I was wandering around the East Village and I came across the neon lights of the old Variety theater on 3rd Avenue at 13th Street. It was the most delicious theater I had ever encountered. I was drawn in by the glowing sign. As I walked inside I discovered that it was a porn theater and I came up with the idea for this film. I invited my friends Spalding Gray and Nancy Reilly, both members of the Wooster Group, to talk about pornography on-camera. I shot it on Super 8 and spliced it together myself. On the soundtrack, I used the music of Bush Tetras and Marianne Faithfull. ANYBODY’S WOMAN was made for a show at Artist’s Space in 1981 called Emergency. Thirteen filmmakers were given $75 and told to make a film that would be shown a month later; all the films were to address what we saw as an emergency in the arts’ community after right-wing Senator Jesse Helms had slashed funding for the National Endowment for the Arts. This short film was ultimately the precursor to my first feature film VARIETY.’ — Bette Gordon


the entirety

 

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Variety (1983)
‘The sexually charged tale of a woman’s journey of self-discovery, Bette Gordon’s Variety is a fascinating independent film that challenges common notions about feminism and pornography. Emerging out of the underground NYC arts scene that produced the late ’80s boom in American independent cinema, Variety contains the contributions of an impresive array of talent, including cinematographer Tom DiCillo (Living in Oblivion), actor Luis Guzman (Boogie Nights), a script by the late cult novelist Kathy Acker, and a score by actor and musician John Lurie (Stranger Than Paradise, Down By Law). Renowned photographer Nan Goldin appears in a supporting role, as does Mark Boone Junior (Sons of Anarchy, Memento)

‘Christine (Sandy McLeod), a bright and unassuming young woman, takes a job selling tickets at a porno theater near Times Square. Instead of distancing herself from the dark and erotic nature of this milieu, Christine soon develops an obsession that begins to consume her life. The character’s reaction unexpectedly flips normal gender roles; director Gordon daringly twists feminist ideology by showing a woman who finds self-expression through an interest in pornography. Variety becomes even more provocative when it dramatizes the changes that occur in Christine’s relationships with both Mark (Will Patton), her boyfriend, and Louie, a dangerous-looking patron of the theater.

‘Few films deal honestly with a female’s sexual point-of-view, and particularly with the way in which she develops her own fantasy world. Controversial and highly personal, Variety does just that, and in so doing announces itself as the major film of a director who embodies the essence of independent cinema.’ — Kino Lorber


Trailer


Bette Gordon visits the BFI Southbank to talk about Variety

Watch the film here

 

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w/ Chantal Akerman, Ulrike Ottinger, Valie Export, Maxi Cohen, Laurence Gavron and Helke Sander SEVEN WOMEN SEVEN SINS (1987)
‘As wide-ranging an omnibus film as there has ever been, a group of some of the most important international filmmakers of the last few decades – all of them female – take on each of the biblical vices. Bette Gordon, Chantal Akerman, VALIE EXPORT, Maxi Cohen, Laurence Gavron and more contribute a contemporary celluloid sin. The result is a thoroughly unpredictable introduction to each filmmaker’s work; encapsulating devious narratives and experimental collages, film and video.’ — Metrograph


Trailer

 

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Monsters (Desirable Alien) (1991)
‘Bette Gordon directed episode of the TV series Monsters. Luis Guzman plays a supporting role in a semi-comedic episode about a satyr trying to apply for U.S. citizenship – and ultimately coming at the problem from a different angle. There’s a walk-on part for Videodrome’s Debbie Harry, too, as well as a little nudity, in the form of paintings and frescoes.’ — Through the Shattered Lens


the entirety

 

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Luminous Motion (1998)
‘LUMINOUS MOTION is a dreamlike and erotically charged thriller from critically acclaimed director Bette Gordon (Variety). Deborah Kara Unger (The Game) stars as an unnamed hustler who seduces and robs gullible men while criss-crossing the country with her ten-year-old son Phillip (Eric Lloyd, The Santa Clause). Phillip grows accustomed to this outlaw life on the road, but his world is turned upside-down when his mother settles in the suburbs with a carpenter named Pedro (Terry Kinney). Desperate to reclaim his mom’s attentions, Phillip plots Pedro’s violent end, hoping for a return to the road. But this Oedipal dream turns into a nightmare as they are pursued by ghosts from their past, including Phillip’s menacing father (Jamey Sheridan, Spotlight), who seems to be intent on reclaiming his place at the head of this deteriorating family.’ — Kino Lorber


Trailer

Watch the film here

 

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Jill Sobule Flight (jet plane charm) (1999)


the entirety

 

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Handsome Harry (2009)
‘As in the films that precede it, the mysteries—and terrors—of desire also propel Handsome Harry, which reunites Gordon with Luminous Motion‘s Jamey Sheridan, here in the title role. A road movie ensemble piece interrupted by flashbacks, HH finds its hero reconciling with the unpalatable notion that, to paraphrase Oscar Wilde, each man maims the thing he loves. Harry, a well-liked, long-divorced middle-ager, capable of only the most awkward interactions with the waitress who clearly wants him and the son who’s driven hundreds of miles to visit him in upstate New York, takes off suddenly for Philadelphia to visit Tom (Steve Buscemi), a dying Navy buddy. “We became men together,” Tom reminisces in his hospital bed—rites of passage that torment Harry, who continues to seek out friends from the service to assuage his guilt over a heinous act of betrayal and cruelty. Each visit serves as a set piece for the pathologies of white midlife manhood: entitlement, repression, rage, self-pity. Gordon films every encounter—some of which droop under too much hectoring (the script is by first-timer Nicholas T. Proferes)—with a hesitant empathy, maintaining just the right tone before Harry’s lushly romantic final reunion. In Gordon’s films, Eros’s capacity to disturb and disrupt is celebrated as its greatest quality.’ — Melissa Anderson

Watch the trailer here

 

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The Drowning (2016)
‘The movie is a prime specimen of “the paranoid style.” You feel it in the fractured visual palette, in the piecemeal depiction of Tom’s house and the quietly unnerving wind through the curtains. Tom’s home life was already destabilized. He wants Lauren to remain in New London, but her center of gravity is shifting to New York City, where her reputation as a painter is growing. Danny, with his sixth sense, puts his fingers in that fissure. The end of the movie is absurd — but sometimes a good capper is. There’s something awesome about a cathartic action that leads not to relief but more horror. In Bette Gordon’s universe, that’s the fundamental tragedy of being a man.’ — Vulture


Trailer


Excerpt


Josh Charles And Bette Gordon Discuss “The Drowning”

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Yeah, it wasn’t bad. The sweetness without the theatrics. Still no elevator. Grr. Might need to be a tenant rebellion. Except a lot of our tenants have escaped the heat and are who knows where. Whine. Love enlarging and framing a photo of himself and telling everyone it’s a mirror, G. ** Adem Berbic, Lucidity is editing’s metier surely. I guess I ultimately prefer harsh nouse wall to power electronics, so good report. Closet Doctrine, gotcha. I am curious to hear. Uh, I’m seeing my visiting nephew today. He’s in town briefly because he’s one of some people who run this super high end catering service that serves meals to the ultra-rich and often very famous. So I’m curious to know who flew him and his cohorts all the way from LA for one day. Vegan Thai food tonight with Bruce Hainley. Start hunting possible new film producers since the script is finally finished. Art, I guess. Today is supposedly the last mega-hot day, but we’ll see. Beach, nice. Happy Bastille Day if you celebrate. ** Carsten, Haven’t heard the new Stones, but that ‘return to form’ label is almost always giddy and preemptive. I guess the hope is sweet. There’s plenty of interesting work going on in popular music. It’s just somewhat obscure and unknown to the proclaimers like interesting work usually is. The big World Cup match is tonight on Bastille Day? That’s strange. It’s going to be nuts here. ** ⋆˚꩜。darbbzz⋆˚꩜。, Hi! I don’t think I know that Polish ARG project? Sounds pretty. Luca Guadagnino’s films are like perfume commercials, as a friend of mine said. I feel 100% positive that his Burroughs film is shit. That seems like a thoughtless money and attention grab move on the part of whoever runs the Burroughs estate. I can’t imagine ever seeing it. I have to drink two cups of coffee and do the p.s. and usually take a shower and drink more coffee to clear my mind before I can start writing. I know a few people who are passionate Christians that are cool and smart people anyway. Not too many, for sure, but a few. The only news in my writing world is that we finally finished the film script. So now I have to try to get my head back into writing fiction again, and I’m so not in that mindset. ** _Black_Acrylic, He’s only anonymous because I couldn’t find an attribution. My fault entirely maybe. Okay, Friday. This time it has to happen. Upside down horseshoe if you need it. ** Bill, Hi. Yeah, ‘In the Mouth of Madness’ was the first thing I thought of when I saw Sam O’Neill died. He had a nice quality. And ‘Possession’ too, of course. Maybe you should (re)watch ‘Home Alone 2’. This heatwave at least hasn’t been as murderous as the one two weeks ago. Yet. ** julian, Lucky you. Paris had very mild summers for the most part until this year. Yeah, I think that for whatever reason there was less deliberate musical influence on ‘Frisk’. Maybe I even did that on purpose, I can’t remember exactly. ‘Whispering Moon’ … no, I don’t think I know it. Unless I know it by its German name? Sound very intriguing. I’ll go look for it. Thanks a lot. Stay temperate. ** charalampos, Glad to have helped occasion your discovery, although horatio is the true fount. Mm, no books purchased (some gifts of books), and no parks. Just events and looking around. Had a great pizza. Hey from the wrongly hot place. Although I guess you’re probably quite hot there too, but that’s natural in your case. ** horatio, Oh, sure, that album is an overlooked biggie. That’s intense, what you’re experiencing with the guy. I can feel it. I can get really obsessive too, and it took me a long time to get that organised and as privatised as possible. Because, in my experience at least, people who are the subject of that much interest and feeling don’t know what to do with it, and it’s best if you can keep that internal roiling secreted away behind your face as much as you can. Although there are people who respond to that and even need that. I don’t know. Hang in there and try to let him be as autonomous as you can, at least in your behavior or whatever. And for sure make art about this, both because what you’re feeling is the best inspiration there is, or can be, and because making the art can help you position him in your life in a ‘healthy’ way. Sorry, I’m just thinking out loud. I’m really happy this is happening for you. Sure, send me his Instagram. Great day to you. xoxo. ** politekid, Hey, O! Your book still hasn’t arrived. I’m so impatient. The French mail service is a disaster, and I’m just ‘praying’ your book’s delivery transcends that. Seeing ‘Einstein on the Beach’ in the early 80s totally changed my life or at least my art. Totally. So sorry about the tricky mental period. If you can drink coffee surely you’re in recovery. Nice about the reading/event. You and Hesse K, superstars. I was in one of Kevin’s plays, or maybe two plays, playing Paul McCartney if my memory serves. Writing such things is probably a step too far for my talent, true, but ‘acting’ so randomly and in such an under-rehearsed way was … exciting? Well, fun. I’m okay. Like I said above, we finished the new film script, so that’s big. So now it’s the shit part of figuring out how we’re going to make it. That’s probably my immediate future until Zac and I go to Stavanger, Norway in August to show ‘RT’ and hopefully hit some theme parks. What’s your impending narrative? ** Steeqhen, I love folk music which is why I don’t like James Taylor, haha. Here today is supposed to be the last heat blast at a high level for a while. It hasn’t been as horrible as it was two weeks ago, but it’s still surreal in a bad way. ** HaRpEr //, I sometimes think everything I like in film, music, art, literature, etc. is ultimately about physical space. I certainly think heavily about that when I write. I don’t know of ‘The Tracey Fragments’. Huh, interesting. I’ll find it. Thanks, pal. ** laura w, At the ice cream parlor I had one scoop of olive oil ice cream and one scoop of vanilla. My friend had fig which he highly recommended. There’s no soft serve ice cream in Paris! Or not actual, real soft serve a la Tastee Freeze, etc. It’s a big problem. The French can be too snooty about things being classy. Like Paris has one Chipotle, but they would never allow a Taco Bell here. I guess the powers that be think that soft serve ice cream is too low end. They’re so wrong. Anyway, I’m greatly missing Tastee Freeze right now. ‘Watch Me Jumpstart’! Do you know ‘Johnny Appleseed’? Talk abut lo-fi. Paris is less smoker friendly than it used to be, but it’s more user friendly than almost anywhere else, I suspect. How is/was today? ** Uday, 45 degrees?! And that’s not the worst? I am so happy I’m not you at this very moment. Do you like Walt Whitman? His poetry makes my skin crawl. He’s such a blowhard. But I guess he was good at blowhard-ery, and I guess blowhard-ery is legit. The public has spoken. ** Right. Today my suggestion is that you investigate the work of the filmmaker Bette Gordon. You game? See you tomorrow either way.

Light

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Claude Lévêque
‘The title of the exhibition refers to a song by the American rock group The Cramps. The fly’s field of vision approaches 360° and the insect can break down the movement of an immediate threat through an ability to perceive almost ten times more images per second than a human being. Its augmented vision is directly linked to the sensory paroxysms that are one aspect of the installation.’


Human Fly (2019)

 

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Michel François


Walk Through a Line of Neon Lights (2019)
Watch here

 

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Keith Sonnier
‘Employing unusual materials that had never before been used, Sonnier, along with his contemporaries, Bruce Nauman, Richard Tuttle, Eva Hesse, Richard Serra, and Barry Le Va, called all previous conceptions of sculpture into question. Sonnier has experimented with materials as varied as latex, satin, bamboo, found objects, satellite transmitters, and video. In 1968, the artist began working with neon, which quickly became a defining element of his work. The linear quality of neon allows Sonnier to draw in space with light and color, while the diffuseness of the light enables his work to interact on various architectural planes.’


Mat Key and Radio Track (1972)


Lightbulb and Fire (1970)

 

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Meghan Young
‘The Symphony in D Minor installation manages to capture the raw beauty of a thunderstorm in four cylindrical sculptures suspended 40 feet from the ceiling. Displaying rain drops and dark clouds, the imagery and sound is intensified when the installation detects movement. As soon as a person touches the sculptures, all hell breaks loose. Projections of rain and electrical charges are sent through the space.’


Symphony in D Minor (2012)

 

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Leo Villareal
‘Leo Villareal works with pixels and binary code to create complex, rhythmic compositions in light. Firmly rooted in abstraction, his approach uses layered sequencing that results in open-ended and subjective visual experiences. Villareal’s works often reference organic systems and evoke—but do not illustrate—atmospheric elements in that emergent and unexpected behavior occurs without a predetermined outcome. Interested in identifying the rules and governing structures of systems, Villareal uses custom, artist-created code to constantly change the frequency, intensity, and patterning of LED lights. For Villareal, the essence and medium of his work is code; light and its phenomenological effect is its visible manifestation.’


Cylinder 2 (2012)


Cosmos 4 (2013)

 

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Paul Chan
‘Chan described the series The 7 Lights (2005-07) as “hallucinating the seven days of creation from dawn to dusk”. His projections included visions of floating objects and falling bodies that drew on themes of the Apocalypse and Revelation, as well as referencing images and events from our contemporary world. The exhibition title referred to light, and in particular to light that had been ‘struck out’. The tension between the two is central to the artist’s practice.’


1st Light (2007)

 

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Bruce Nauman
‘Nauman enforces the contrast between the perceptual and physical experience of space in his sculptures and installations. Looking at the brilliant color emanating from Green Light Corridor (1970) prompts quite a different phenomenological experience than does maneuvering through its narrow confines.’


Green Light Corridor (1970)

 

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Kyle McDonald & Jonas Jongejan
‘Kyle McDonald and Jonas Jongejan filled a darkened room with fifty disco balls and created colored and timed lighting sequences to cast mesmerizing reflections that surround visitors. However, rather than simply relying on scattershot reflections, McDonald and Jongejan used hundreds of structured light scans to capture the volumetric position of every pixel being projected by each of the three projectors. The pair then used SketchUp to predict the reflected pixel positions.’


Light Leaks (2014)

 

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Unknown


Town Without Pity/Audrey Horne (2013)

 

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Mona Hatoum
Home consists of a long table covered with gleaming metal kitchen appliances. The table has a polished wooden top and heavy metal legs on wheels. The industrial connotations of the table are offset by the domestic kitchen utensils on its surface, including graters, scissors, a colander, a whisk, a ladle, salad servers, a sieve, a pasta maker, presses and a heart-shaped pastry cutter. Wires snake through the installation, connected to each utensil with crocodile clips. The wires conduct electrical currents to the objects periodically illuminating small light bulbs positioned beneath the sieve and colander and inside an upright grater. The current is controlled by a software programme that alters the frequency and intensity of the lights. Speakers amplify the crackling sound of electricity coursing through the wires and the metal objects. The sculpture is set back behind a barrier of thin horizontal steel wires that separates the viewer from the potentially lethal current.’


Home (1999)

 

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Erwin Redl
‘Erwin Redl, an Austrian-born artist based in Bowling Green, Ohio and New York City, is best known for large-scale light installations for art museums, public buildings and corporations. His work transforms the medium of light into immersive, tangible experiences for viewers. His architectural environments translate complex mathematical algorithms and other methods inspired by computer code into contemplative, minimalist spaces further activated by his use of motion and rhythmic sequencing.’


Ascension (line 24), 2014

 

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Atsuko Tanaka
‘Atsuko Tanaka, (born Feb. 10, 1932, Osaka, Japan—died Dec. 3, 2005, near Nara, Japan), Japanese artist who , was a leading avante-garde artist, best known for her experimental works of the 1950s and ’60s. Tanaka was an early member of Gutai, a radical group of Osaka-based artists founded in 1954. Many of Tanaka’s works involved electric light, the most famous of which, Electric Dress (1956), was made entirely of coloured light bulbs, cords, and fluorescent tubes that she wore as a dress during performances.’


Electric Dress (1956)

 

___________
A.F.Vandevorst
‘A.F.Vandevorst have sculpted a life-size sculpture of a sleeping woman. This wax woman embedded with 250 kg of candle wicks was made by Lenn Cox.’

 

___________
Jason Ferguson
Domestic Carnival is an ongoing project that takes the specific rooms of a home and re-presents them as flashing amusement park rides, transforming intimate interior spaces into objects of mass spectacle. Within the room dark and foreboding music, two hundred pulsing lights, steel joists, and a trailer combine with a dining room table, chairs, and oak hardwood flooring to create a carnival that is both familiar and uncanny. The apparatus is engineered like a carnival ride; the entire sculpture is mounted on a custom trailer that collapses for transportation to its next destination.’


Domestic Carnival: Dining Room (2019)

 

________
Dan Flavin
‘In 1963, Dan Flavin began working with the medium of light: functional fluorescent tubes exhibited in their original state, without alteration or decoration.’


Demo for Installation of LED tubes

 

_______
Sherrie Levine
‘Cast stainless steel. “I want to put a picture on top of a picture,” Levine says. “This makes for times when both disappear and other times when they’re both visible.”’


Light Bulb (2000)

 

_______
Ed Atkins
‘Atkins is best known for works like Ribbons (2014), featuring iterations of drunken, soliloquy-spouting male protagonists who ruminate on perennial (and currently unfashionable) topics like love, loss, and loneliness. His work Even Pricks (2013) takes a slightly different tack. Atkins evokes his signature mood of quiet desperation with comparably spare methods, stringing together a series of vignettes that seem as indebted to the trippy avant-garde films of the 1960s as they do video-game cutscenes and contemporary cinematic tropes.’


Even Pricks (2013)

 

________
TUNDRA
‘TUNDRA is a St.Petersburg based collaborative artist collective focused on creating spaces and experiences by exploring facets of interaction between audio/visual and human emotions. We specialise in multi-media performances and immersive audiovisual installations. Our multidisciplinary team involves musicians, sound engineers, programmers and visual artists. The team is known for works presented at festivals and museums of multi-media art in America, Europe, Russia, and Asia.’


Row (2020)


THE DAY WE LEFT FIELD (2019)


Nomad (2018)


TUNDRA x JAGUAR (2018)

 

________
Otto Piene
‘In 1957, Piene developed the Grid Picture, a type of stencilled painting made from half-tone screens with regularly arranged points in single colors (yellow, silver, white, or gold), for example Pure Energy (1958, New York, MOMA). Piene’s work then developed in a variety of forms. The Lichtballette (“light ballet”, 1959) was a development of the Grid Pictures; light from moving lamps was projected through grids, thus extending and stimulating the viewer’s perception of space.’


Light Ballet (1969)

 

_________
David Batchelor
‘Batchelor is interested in the colours that you find rather than the ones that you make. So he’s been picking up discarded light boxes that typically advertise shops and restaurants (and that, he says, are one of the main sources of colour in a city), cleaned them up and mounted them to form a tall sculpture he called Magic Hour. The colours emanating from the light boxes are glowing against the wall and the public only see their reflection shining back at them.’


Magic Hour (2004-2007)

 

________
Leo Pyrata

 

_____________
Diana Thater
‘Featuring honeybees and a hive made of multicolored hexagons, knots + surfaces addresses a recent mathematical hypothesis that correlates a six-dimensional spatial model to the map of a honeybee’s dance. I’m working with animals that exist as individuals and as part of a complex social network that functions as a unit. Here, I feature the erasure of the video rectangle in order to create a multipart, puzzle-like image. Initially, the many components seem to form a single picture. However, when viewers walk into the projections, they penetrate the “bee space”; the one picture breaks into five and the surrounding bees become a vision of chaos.’


Knots + Surfaces (2001)

 

________
Larry Bell
‘One of the most significant artists of his generation, Larry Bell (b. 1939, Chicago) is an important representative of a West Coast minimalism that uses commercial and industrial materials and forms to create intense sensorial experiences. Best known for minimalist sculptures—transparent cubes and sprawling glass installations that thrive on the interplay of shape, light, and environment—Bell is considered a champion of the ideas of the Light and Space Movement of the 1960s. For decades, Bell has explored the new materials and modes of production developed by the military. His work during and after this period also reflects an interest in the scientific and technological experimentation taking place in Southern California. Hydrolux (1986) is complex fountain with live video projects, the work skews perception and critically invokes the viewer. As Bell’s only water-based sculpture that was executed beyond the model stage, Hydrolux demonstrates Bell’s constant inquiry into innovation, audience engagement, the surreal, and the sublime.’


Hydro lux (1986)

 

_______
James Clar
‘James Clar is a media artist whose work is a fusion of technology, popular culture, and visual information. Actually, his work is an analysis and observation on the affects of media and technology on our perception of culture, nationality, and identity. His interest is in new technology and production processes, using them as a medium, while analyzing and critiquing their modifying affects on human behavior.’


Dynomite (2006)

 

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Kitty Kraus
‘The inherent fragility of Kraus’s mediums betrays established ideas about the stability and longevity of sculptural form. Such flaws are seen in Untitled (2006), in which illuminated lightbulbs are frozen inside ink-dyed ice cubes. Installed in the gallery at room temperature, the ice slowly melts, producing a meandering puddle of watered-down ink on the gallery floor, eventually leaving behind a stained and patterned path of dried ink.’


Untitled (2006)

 

_______
Ryota Kuwakubo
‘On the front of a model train running around a darkened room is a small, lit-up LED light. As the train moves slowly along its route, small and large objects are projected onto the walls and ceiling. Due to the movement of the light source, the shadows of the stationary objects appear to move, leaving viewers with the impression that they are passengers riding on the train.’


The Tenth Sentiment (2010)

 

____________
Nasan Tur
‘A room with a wall in flames. Although the fire burns incessantly, contrary to expectations it does not spread.’


Fire (2017)

 

_______
Gavin Turk
‘I first came to notice the Gerhard Richter painting (Kerze, 1983) in 1988 when it was used on the album cover of Daydream Nation by Sonic Youth. It seemed to extend the mood of the music and got lodged in my subconscious; now more than 30 years later, this feeling of pathos has started to reappear in my work.’ — Gavin Turk’


Kerze (2022)

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Carsten, Now it’s Spain against France. Because I like how wild everyone here goes when France wins the big futbol prize, I’m voting for us. Dealbreakers re: Marseilles. It’s way too hot there for me. I also don’t like the hilly build. That’s one of the reasons I don’t like San Francisco. And I’ve been fortunate to live all my life in big cities where there is lots of fast changing international culture (music, art film, theater, etc.) within quick reach, and I would be bored and unhappy if that weren’t the case. ** jay, Hi! Yes, Philip Best has gone on to arguably even better things. If I don’t get 8 hours of sleep at night, I’m a dead duck above the neck. I have a distressingly fascist body clock. But you sound okay. The Tati was sold out, so we didn’t get to go. Boo. ** Adem Berbic, Vital, what more could one wish to institute. Thank you. For me the problem with ‘bludgeon’ is it eliminates nuance and detail in its recipient. I like being bludgeoned by music, but there’s not much aftermath. Maybe ‘excoriate’? That’s more interactive while still way harsh. Yours is an interesting goal for writing assuming there’s sufficient thought and calculation in any case. Yes, how was your friend’s power electronics debut? Those with new boobs obviously know best. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Amsterdam living in the winter when there are no tourists is a grim thing, at least if you’re not Dutch. Yes, Ange’s wedding was four metro stops away, but then the party was at some house in the middle of nowhere. (I skipped it because I hate parties and it was a zillion degrees that day). I’ve sometimes wondered if people use sunscreen as a sexual lubricant, and, if not, why not? Maybe love wonders that too. Love boringly but desperately pleading with the manager of my building to fix the fucking broken elevator because climbing four flights of stairs in this heat is not suitable for someone who smokes cigarettes, G. ** Steve, Not that I know of. Or not to me at least. Maybe to Sypha himself? Hm on ‘Black Chariot’. Ah, a great new reason to stay in my shitty air-conditioning. Everyone, Steve’s new episode is yours to borrow! Here he is to characterise: ‘Swim with the orcas to art pop, psych, hip-hop and more on the latest episode of “Radio Not Radio”. This one features Ibeyi, Hanbee, Bia Soull & d. silvestre, Faye Wong, Vi, Cold Riot, Pomelo, Madonna, Penelope Trappes, Feeble Little Horse, F/i, Hash Jar Tempo, Slift, Sleep, Trad Gras och Stenar, Odyssey Cult, Baba Zula, Selda, Vince Staples, Kneecap, Matt Proxy, mary sue, Maiya The Don, Earthsignchels, Parallel Though, Paris, Edén Carrasco & Sara Zlanabitnig, and Patricia Brennan & Sylvie Courvoisier.’ ** julian, Hey there! This summer has been a plan killer, at least over here, so no problem. I’m happy the Whitehouse shebang intersected with you. I’m good, overly heated, but good. I’d have to guess at what I was listening to particularly when writing Frisk, which would have been 1987-1990 roughly. Uh, memory says Sonic Youth, Glenn Branca, Fugazi, Boredoms, … gosh, I wish I had my notes here. Thank you a lot for reading the novel! ** horatio, Howdy, horatio! Really good to see you! That’s heady and seemingly very exciting about the crushed on/crush bearing guy. Good madness, right? I do of course really like that Neutral Milk Hotel album, yes. I think I’m going to listen to it again right about now actually, so thank you. Describe your madness and, well, anything else if you feel like it. xo. ** _Black_Acrylic, Right, that interview. Everyone. Mr. William Bennett of Whitehouse and subsequently Cut Hands was interviewed by our very own _Black_Acrylic some years ago for his and others’ legendary, much missed zine Yuck ‘n Yum, and I obviously highly encourage you to go partake in their conversation. Do so here. Ridiculous that taxi services aren’t readily prepared for wheel chair using customers at this point in time. I did hear about England. An England vs. France final? That could be ugly, haha. ** Bill, I see Sypha popping up on Facebook every once in a while. He seems like him. The Tati screening was sold out, so we didn’t go. Surprising, but I think a big air-conditioned theater and Tati must’ve proved too luxurious to the heat sufferers, understandably. Back East again, ah. I don’t even want to think about that heat. You’re a toughy, dude. ** CHARLIEZACKS, Hi. Oh, okay, give me a few days to get through this heatwave because I’m a bit sluggish at the moment. ** Uday, That makes sense. The term delineation. I seriously don’t think you could be a plebeian even if you dressed as one for Halloween. I don’t think you need to be an artist to know really interesting people. Being interested in art helps. Some of the most inspiring people aren’t artists. No sweat, pal. ** HaRpEr //, Sypha was the master of inhumanly big posts. There’s a live Sparks album coming out? Wow, great, that makes so much sense. Oh, yeah, Spicer is great. For some reason my very favorite mini-collection of his ‘Billy the Kid’. It tests its own sentimentality in a really interesting way. ** laura w, My imagination says that being on an island at a wedding could be relaxing because everyone would ostensibly be happy and being around happy people is usually relaxing, I think. Although you being the sister could throw a wrench into that, I guess. Sorry about Norway. Yeah, Paris will go nuts if France wins, and I like when Paris goes nuts, so I’m on board. My weekend was okay considering the heat. Just saw friends, went to an ice cream parlor, a lot of walking on the shady side of the street. Thanks about ‘The Anal-Retentive Line Editor’. If I do end up doing the Selected book, that one’s on the list. I don’t know Rhythm Heaven, but you’ve easily convinced me to go find out what it is. Thank you! ** kenley, Hi, kenley! I’ve been wondering how you are there in still relatively new Montreal. High five or low five on our mutual sweltering. I am so over it. Belgium was nice, and more recently Holland/Amsterdam was nice. I was gifted homemade stroop waffles, which was happy making. My Parisian exploits are pretty hampered by the heat, but they say it’ll get back to just normal summer warm in a few days, so there’s still time. How are you countering the aggressive sun? ** Right. It could be argued that there’s already too much light around at the moment, but here’s some more. See you tomorrow.

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