In today's mail - three of the twenty-eight booklets published by Semiotext(e) on the occasion of the Whitney Museum of American Art Biennial currently showing in New York City. Semiotext(e) has also organised some readings for the event. Here's what Peter Schjeldahl thinks of the exhibition in general - click.
31.3.14
26.3.14
Société Jamais-Jamais presents Alibis
poems in English and French by Pam Brown
translated by Jane Zemiro
Click on the cover to enlarge.
Now available. Order a copy here.
Here's an extract:
Scenes what’s graspable on the starless night of the blackout as the gleaming cars snake cautiously up around that hillside curve is the way the absence of street light suggests the past - not a past I ever knew, but one I make up, tonight a boy slides through it on a silver scooter, coming back from synagogue, curly tails dangling beneath an embroidered yarmulke perched like a lid to imagination’s reckless feats or dimmer prospects - sets of fraying notebooks filled with scripture * over the road two very stoned spectres can’t figure out how to turn off the one working headlight on their old silver BMW so they leave it on & hurry off on foot, jerkily, on pills probably, fags attached to lower lips, flat battery a portent * an intense white light shines down through folding greys on the isolated city - it transforms to a plastic model, to a distant maquette, like toys on my horizon that white plastic bag has been drifting from the gutter to the road for three days, when the rainwater carries it off to the Tasman Sea I think I’ll miss it * * * * * * * Scènes ce qu'on peut saisir par cette nuit sans étoiles alors que des voitures reluisantes serpentent prudemment le long d'un virage de la colline c'est la façon dont l'absence d'éclairage des rues évoque le passé - pas un passé que j'aie jamais connu mais celui que j'invente, ce soir un garçon glisse dans la rue sur un scooter en argent, il revient de la synagogue, des frisettes qui pendent sous son yarmulke brodé perché comme un couvercle sur des exploits téméraires de l'imagination ou peut-être même - une série de cahiers effilochés remplis de textes sacrés * de l'autre côté de la route deux spectres complètement défoncés n'arrivent pas à comprendre comment éteindre le seul phare qui fonctionne encore de leur vieille BMW argentée alors ils y renoncent et se sauvent à pied, par à-coups, bourrés de médicaments sans doute une clope attachée à la lèvre inférieure, la batterie plate un présage * une lumière blanche, intense perce les plis de gris couvrant et isolant la cité - elle se transforme devient un modèle en plastique, une maquette lointaine, comme des jouets sur mon horizon ce sac blanc en plastique vole à la dérive du caniveau jusqu'à la route depuis trois jours, la pluie finira par l'emporter dans la mer de Tasman je crois qu'il va me manquer
23.3.14
I began to read the political aesthetic work of Esther Leslie with Synthetic Worlds : Nature, Art and the Chemical Industry which considers the alliance between chemistry and art, going from the late eighteenth century to the period immediately following the Second World War. It's an absorbing book that opens new insights into the place of the material object and the significance of the natural, the organic, the inorganic and the synthesized in a poetics of science. I'm currently reading Derelicts : Thought Worms from the Wreckage.
Philosophy and art with the imagination to actually change the world: this is the unfinished dream of history and the heart of the revolutionary modernism of the early 20th century, which globalised war and exploitation managed indefinitely to defer. Esther Leslie reopens the cold case on filmmakers, artists, thinkers and other animals, exiled or otherwise Disneyfied, and finds still-warm fertile ground for a wild future as yet unfulfilled. From ideal homes with traces erased to utopian rivers drawn back to their source, the alienated subject of history discerns its rightful place in the present tense, with no room for buts or half-measures. The derelicts of history find new life beyond commodified thought: would that the same could be said for all their readers.
Further information and publication details - click here
Esther Leslie at AMM#8: Derelicts - Thought Worms from the Wreckage from Jimbo on Vimeo.
Esther Leslie on Walter Benjamin - click here