- Irwin Corey, the soi-disant “World’s Foremost Authority” who spent much of the twentieth century declaiming on this and that with an inexhaustible reserve of faux pomp, has died at 102, thus bringing an end to one of the greatest fusions of comedy and performance art. T. Rees Shapiro’s obituary recalls Corey’s brightest literary moment—when he served as a stand-in for Thomas Pynchon. “His career reached its peak of absurdity in 1974 when he was called upon to accept the National Book Award on behalf of the reclusive author Thomas Pynchon for the novel Gravity’s Rainbow. Corey gave a wandering acceptance speech on behalf of Pynchon, offering thanks to Communist Party leader Leonid Brezhnev, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger—whom Corey called the ‘acting president of the United States’—and author Truman Capote. Since Pynchon had never made a public appearance, many in the audience assumed the prattling Corey to be the mysterious author. (Corey did not, in fact, know Pynchon, but they had mutual friends who arranged the comedian’s book award talk.)”
- Some traditions are born great; some achieve greatness; and some have greatness thrust upon them. I think the American people should thrust greatness upon Vinegar Valentines, a once-prospering Victorian tradition in which people sent anonymous, hateful little poems to their enemies on Valentine’s Day. With the country more divided than ever, it falls to us to resurrect this pungent convention—and to bombard those we hate, especially in seats of power, with more Vinegar Valentines than our fragile postal service can handle. AbeBooks has a primer on them: “Gluttons, drinkers, hen-pecked husbands, braggarts, windbags, spinsters, sharp-tongued wives, unfaithful lovers, cowards, lazy colleagues, uncaring bosses, ugly people, fat and thin people, vain people, and stupid people—they were all fair game to folks who posted vinegar valentines. They could be delivered to enemies, or people who had treated you badly, or someone you thought needed to be brought down a notch or two. The tone of verse ranged from gentle to downright vicious and abusive.”
- Our Summer 2014 issue featured a cover and portfolio from Raymond Pettibon, the artist who got his start drawing flyers for Black Flag in the seventies. (He used to work right down the hall from us; his dog, Boo, was something of an office fixture.) Now Pettibon has a retrospective at the New Museum. Peter Schjeldahl writes, “The images that Pettibon draws are also either borrowed or look like they are. Comic-book characters have been a frequent source: Batman, Gumby, and the little guy from the old Felix the Cat television cartoon series … Another recurring persona is Jesus, who, in a 1990 drawing, appears on the Cross, musing, ‘I am after eight years’ hammering against impenetrable adamant, become suddenly somewhat of a success.’ Pettibon’s graphic style is no style, a clunky mélange of cartooning and illustrational modes that lack honed skill and nuanced feeling. It works extremely well, appearing gauche only until you accept its service to blunt statement: manner at one with matter. Though never employing caricature, the work’s effect updates a tradition of pointed grotesquerie that has roots in Hogarth, Goya, and Daumier and branches in the modern editorial cartoon: aesthetic pleasure checked by the absurdity or the horror—the scandal—of the subject at hand.”
- In Virginia, dumb teen vandals dumbly vandalized an historic African-American schoolhouse. Now a judge has ordered them to make the ultimate sacrifice: they must read thirty-five whole books, from start to finish. (The judge, whose sentencing included a solecism apparently valorizing bigotry, may want to read a few more, too.) Danuta Kean reports, “A judge sentenced the teenagers to read the books, as well as watching fourteen films, visiting two museums and writing a research paper to encourage ‘a greater appreciation for gender, race, religion, and bigotry’ (sic) after they were caught vandalising the Ashburn Colored School in Virginia … County prosecutor Alex Rueda said she had taken the step because the five were ‘dumb teenagers.’ ‘None of the boys had any prior record. They had never been in trouble. And it was obvious that this was not racially motivated. It was more of them being stupid and not understanding the seriousness of what they had done.’ ”
- A public service announcement from Shannon Mattern: no matter how often Silicon Valley tells you otherwise, and no matter how beautifully the designed the devices are on which they’re telling you otherwise, the city is not a computer. So don’t treat it like one. Mattern writes, “We’ve long conceived of our cities as knowledge repositories and data processors, and they’ve always functioned as such. Lewis Mumford observed that when the wandering rulers of the European Middle Ages settled in capital cities, they installed a ‘regiment of clerks and permanent officials’ and established all manner of paperwork and policies (deeds, tax records, passports, fines, regulations), which necessitated a new urban apparatus, the office building, to house its bureaus and bureaucracy … It is an information processor, to be sure, but it is also more than that … The city is not a computer. This seems an obvious truth, but it is being challenged now (again) by technologists (and political actors) who speak as if they could reduce urban planning to algorithms.”
from The Paris Review http://ift.tt/2lqFmsP
Comments
Post a Comment