• Miscellany


    • Playboy’s original letterhead is a modernist classic, a bracing reminder of how important refined aesthetics were to Hefner’s enterprise and his notion of the good life. Via Letters of Note, here… a fascinating site that gathers up letters, postcards, telegrams, faxes, and memos of significance and interest. Hat tip @ettagirl, who’s feed on art & culture is well worth following.



    • Via Invisible Oranges, a classically-trained singer and voice teacher critiques five classic metal singers.

      Regarding Iron Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson: …Nothing but admiration for this singer…His diction is easily intelligible, regardless of range… an intensely rhythmic delivery… without losing legato and musical momentum, something a lot of classical singers struggle with, especially when interpreting the many staccato and accent markings that crowd scores by Bellini, Donizetti, etc.

      Ronnie James Dio? …another very fine singer… so naturally resonant. He performs with perfect legato, clear diction, and a consistent, organic vibrancy. He arranges his resonance space to create a shallow snarl without setting up any resistance for his breath. You can tell how healthy his delivery is from the way he moves in and out of brief moments of harmony with the other tracks with impeccable intonation. The whole piece is a must read… here.



    • Besides the classic, sharp, unfussy design of the cover, the photograph bears an uncanny resemblance to Robert McGinniscelebrated rendering of Audrey Hepburn for the poster of Breakfast at Tiffany’s, below.



    • I really dig the new New York State license plate. I spent the last week driving abound the better part of western NY and these tastefully classic looking beauts kept popping up. I love, in particular, the re-embrace of the state’s official colors. Uncluttered, universal, distinctive yet free of kitsch they’re everything good government design should be. Not perfect (the arc on Empire State is a bit janky) but still, aces.

      (Unfortunately, they need all the support they can get. Quite a kerfuffle has broken out in thier wake. Originally, adoption of the new design was mandatory, accompanied by a fee - folks went bananas. Once the design was introduced, they went double bananas, castigating the design as plain and ugly. Cue kerfuffle. Sigh.)



    • Black Sheep Antiques, Duanesburg, NY



    • Spotted this uncharacteristically swinging cover art for Anthony Powell’s The Military Philosophers - the ninth in the A Dance to the Music of Time series, a twelve novel cavalcade of mid-20th century English life, manners, culture, etc…



    • Short of the actual detection of extraterrestrial life few things would make me happier than the following news. 2010 is the year of “re-contact” with the mighty Man or Astroman! According to a transmission from MOAM-HQ, after 10 years of cryogenic storage they have have knocked the frost particles off and are properly thawed for live music experimentation. Read the rest of the transmission, here. And remember, fear not - they come as friends.



    • “Check out the eye popping, fantastic type and strikingly modern composition of this old Bob Seger record” is not something I could have imagined proclaiming in a million years, but seriously - check out the eye popping, fantastic type and strikingly modern composition of this old Bob Seger record (larger version, here). And, while you’re at it, take a few minutes to soak in this record’s centerpiece - the epic, wistful, road-weary melancholy of “Turn the Page.”



    • Absolutely astonishing ultra-high resolution photographs of birds by Andrew Zuckerman. A decent overview can be found here, while Zuckerman’s site, here, showcases even more. Also check out his earlier project, Creature, featuring a wider spectrum of wildlife. The detail is breathtaking, and the depth of personality projecting from the animals is downright eerie.



    • For your pleasure, an oddly charming, earnest, hippy-dippy photo recreation of Manet’s The Luncheon on the Grass from an old 1970 photography annual.



    • Gorgeous, elegant cover for Richard Avedon’s 1959 portrait book Observations. Rather than taking it in whole, it rewards a close scan so you can follow the way the letters slice, carve and cordon off patches of creamy white. Easy to appreciate, so hard to pull off.



    • A moment’s rest at the Rochester Institute of Technology, between two immense murals by Joseph Albers meant to evoke the equally brilliant Kodak logo. Aces.



    • Things the Ramones did want to do, things the Ramones did not want to do, things the Ramones did do, things the Ramones told you to do, things the Ramones warned you about doing, things the Ramones did not like, things the Ramones wondered about, and things the Ramones would do next time… over at Electra Luxx’s place, here.



    • Goodbye, and a hearty salute to Grafik Magazine, which folded a few days ago. This cover gallery, here, is a fitting testament to its accomplishment - a cavalcade of top notch design, and an ad-hoc primer to just about every style & mode in vogue since 2003.


    • The first trickle
      of water down
      a dry ditch stretches
      like the paw
      of a cat, slightly
      tucked at the front,
      unambiguous
      about auguring
      wet. It may sink
      later but it hasn’t
      yet.
      – Kay Ryan, The Paw of a Cat

  • Further miscellany, odds & sods, etc., at the Tumblr annex, here.
Categories: Art, Books, Culture, Design

Visual art was part and parcel of William S. Burroughsentire creative project. While the writing and the biography dominated people’s perception, his creative efforts encompassed art, graphics, calligraphy, type, photography, film, assemblage, poetry, spoken word, and music.

Culture itself was his medium. For most artists this claim would be, on its face, pretentious or megalomaniacal (it feels pretentious just writing that sentence.) Burroughs was deeply sincere about it, and he pursued it with a single minded, deadpan sincerity. The cut-up was, broadly speaking, the method that he employed wherever he turned his attention. In the visual arts, that resulted in work that anticipated or was sympathetic with many fundamental currents in post-war modern art and design.

His art evolved in a fluid series of phases. The earliest work is essentially calligraphic and typographic. Words degrade into gestures and gestures gather up into words – the notion being that there is less distance between these two states that we think.  Legibility and meaning are powerful, yet fragile forces – easily dissipated, scattered, and reconstituted. This notion runs through everything Burroughs does.

Grid systems feature prominently in his work. Most striking is his adoption of newspaper layout blue-lines as a background on which he composes gonzo gazettes. Late in his life, after his retirement to Lawrence, Kansas to live among his thoughts and his cat army, he wanders into Robert Rauschenberg territory, shotgun in hand.

The results, his shotgun paintings, are my personal favorites – fine pop art stuff, paint splatters, comics, etc…  The shotgun as a brush is both completely adolescent and yet congruent with his serious desire to blow up meaning and structure and read the resulting tea leaves. Also during this period he does a “spooky stencil” thing that I get, but falls a bit flat aesthetically (but does anticipate the original opening credits for the X-files.)

The work was collected in a great monograph called Ports of Entry: William S. Burroughs and the Arts, out of print but available, here. Also, highly recommended is the biography Literary Outlaw by Ted Morgan.  It includes the following exchange: Person to Burroughs “You look like a walking corpse…” Burroughs: “Yes… but not all corpses can walk” Heh.

Mink Mutiny (recto) 1987
with Brion Gysin, Untitled (Rub Out the Word) 1965
Dust jacket illustrations for Naked Lunch, 1959 and Soft Machine, 1966
with Brion Gysin, Untitled (Addiction Plan) 1965
Envy,  Gluttony, from the Seven Deadly Sins, 1992
Rub Out the Word, 1989