diff options
author | grr <grr@lo2.org> | 2024-05-02 18:17:14 -0400 |
---|---|---|
committer | grr <grr@lo2.org> | 2024-05-02 18:17:14 -0400 |
commit | c14e19c8343f3f00944b9d50840501906c4ae2d7 (patch) | |
tree | f4674b41e3c507daa5bfb6d655317504e443eb00 /essays/letters.tex | |
parent | 0f35a25aeda5c8d0d740ccc0badc557cc9dcfc0a (diff) | |
download | blueprint-c14e19c8343f3f00944b9d50840501906c4ae2d7.tar.gz |
breaking more things into files
Diffstat (limited to 'essays/letters.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | essays/letters.tex | 313 |
1 files changed, 313 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/essays/letters.tex b/essays/letters.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..455a41b --- /dev/null +++ b/essays/letters.tex @@ -0,0 +1,313 @@ +\chapter{Letters} + +\section{Letter from Terry Riley, Paris, to Henry Flynt, Cambridge, +Mass., dated 11/8/62} + +One day a little boy got up and looked at his toys, appraised them and +decided they were of no value to him so he did them in. Seeing that others +were blindly and blissfully enjoying theirs he offered them a long and +"radical new theory" of "pure recreation" for their enjoyment but before he +let them in for this highly secret and "revolutionary theory" they should +follow his example and partake of a little 20th C. iconoclasm. From those +that balked he removed the label "avant-garde" and attached the label +"traditionalist" or if they were already labeled "traditionalist" he added one +more star. If they accepted they got a "hip" rating with gold cluster and if +they comprehended the worth of his theory well enough to destroy their +own art they would be awarded assignments to destroy those works whose +designers were no longer around to speak out in their behalf. + +Now about this hip radical new theory of pure recreation.---Well---alor! its +simply what people do anyway but don't realize it but it seems that what +people "do anyway and don't realize it" will not be fully appreciated until +"what people do in the name of art" is eliminated. If art can be relegated to +obscurity, if some one can get John Coltrane to stop blowing, if someone +can smash up all the old Art tatum records as well as all the existing pianos, +if someone can get all that stuff out of those museums, If someone can only +burn down all those concert halls, movie houses, small galleries as well as +rooms in private houses that contain signs of art, If someone can do in all the +cathedrals and monuments bridges etc, If someone can get rid of the sun, +moon, stars, ocean, desert trees birds, bushes mountains, rivers, joy, sadness +inspiration or any other natural phenomenon that reminds us of the ugly +scourge art that has preoccupied and plagued man since he can remember +then yes then at last Henry Flynt, sorry! + +\img{terry_flynt_name} + +will show us how to really enjoy ourselves. Whooopeeee + +\signoffnote{[Terry Riley's spelling etc. carefully preserved]} + +\clearpage + +\section{letter from Bob Morris to Henry Flynt, dated 8/13/62} + +Dear Henry, + +\gap + +perhaps the desirability of certain kinds of experience in art is not +important. The problem has been for some time one of ideas---those most +admired are the ones with the biggest, most incisive ideas (e.g. Cage \& +Duchamp). The mere exertion in the direction of finding "new" ideas has +not shown too much more than that it has become established as a +traditional method; not much fruit has appeared on this vine. Also it can't be +avoided that this is an academic approach which presupposes a history to +react against---what I mean here is the kind of continuity one is aware of +when involved in this activity: it just seems academic (if the term can +somehow be used without so much emotion attached to it). The difficulty +with new ideas is that they are too hard to manufacture. Even the best have +only had a few good ones. (I suppose none of this is very clear and I can't +seem to get in the mood to do any more than put it down in an off-hand +way---but what I mean by "new ideas" is not only what you might call +"Concept Art" but rather effecting changes in the structures of art forms +more than any specific content or forms) Once one is committed to attempt +these efforts---and tries it for a while---one becomes aware that if one wants +"experience" one must repeat himself until other new things occur: a +position difficult if not impossible to accept with large "idea" ambitions. So +one remains idle, repeats things, or finds some form of concentration and +duration outside the art---jazz, chess, whatever. I think that today art is a +form of art history. + +I don't think entertainment solves the problem presented by avant gard art +since entertainment has mostly to do with replacing that part of art which is +now hard to get---i.e. experience. It seems to me that to be concerned with +"just liked" things as you present it is to avoid such things as tradition in art +(some body of stuff to react against---to be thought of as opponent or +memory or however). As I said before, I for one am not so self-sufficient and +when avoiding "given" structures, e.g. art, or even the most tedious and +decorous forms of social intercourse, I am bored. If I need concentration, +which I do, I can't think of anything on my own as good as chess. + +One accepts language, one accepts logic. + +\signoff{Best regards,} +\signoff{Bob Morris} + +\section{} + +{ +\raggedleft +\textsc{From "Culture" to Veramusement} \\ +Boston--New York \\ +\textsc{Press Release:} for March--April, 1963 \par +} + + +Henry Flynt, Tony Conrad, and Jack Smith braved the cold to demonstrate +against Serious Culture (and art) on Wednesday, February 27. They began at +the Museum of Modern Art at 1:30 p.m., picketing with signs bearing the +slogans +\textsc{Demolish serious culture! / Destroy art!} ; +\textsc{Demolish art museums! / No more art!} ; +\textsc{Demolish concert halls! / Demolish Lincoln Center!} ; +and handing out announcements of +Flynt's lecture the next evening. Benjamin Patterson came up to give +encouragement. There was much spontaneous interest among people around +and in the Museum. At about 1:50, a corpulent, richly dressed Museum +official came out and imperiously told the pickets that he was going to +straighten them out, that the Museum had never been picketed, that it could +not be picketed without its permission, that it owned the sidewalk, and that +the pickets would have to go elsewhere. The picket who had obtained police +permission for the demonstration was immediately dispatched to call the +police about the matter, while the other two stood aside. It was found that +the Museum official had not told the truth; and the picketing was resumed. +People who care about the rights of pickets generally should recognize the +viciousness of, and oppose, the notion that picketing can only be at the +permission of the establishment being picketed. (As for previous picketing of +the Museum, it is a matter of record.) Interest in the demonstration +increased; people stopped to ask questions and talk. There was a much +greater demand for announcements than could be supplied. Some people +indicated their sympathy with the demonstrators. The demonstrators then +went on to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Because of the unexpected +requirement of a permit to picket on a park street, they had to picket on +Lexington Avenue, crossing 82nd Street. As a result they were far from the +fools lined up to worship the Mona Lisa, but there was still interest. Finally, +they went to Philharmonic Hall. Because of the time, not many people were +there, but still there was interest; people stopped to talk and wanted more +announcements than were available. The demonstrations ended at 3:45 p.m. +Photos of the pickets were taken at all three places. + +On Thursday evening, February 28, at Walter DeMaria's loft, Henry Flynt +gave a long lecture expositing the doctrine the Wednesday demonstrations +were based on. On entering the lecture room, the visitor found himself +stepping in the face of a Mona Lisa print placed as the doormat. To one side +was an exhibition of demonstration photos and so forth. Behind the lecturer +was a large picture of Viadimir Mayakovsky, while on either side were the +signs used in the demonstrations, together with one saying +\textsc{Veramusement---Not culture}. About 20 people came to the lecture. +The lecturer showed first the suffering caused by Serious-Cultural snobbery, +by its attempts to force individuals in line with things supposed to have +objective validity, but actually representing only alien subjective tastes +sanctioned by tradition. He then showed that artistic categories have +disintegrated, and that their retention has become obscurantist. (He showed +that the purpose of didactic art is better served by documentaries.) Finally, +in the most intellectually sophisticated part of the lecture, he showed the +superiority of each individual's veramusement (partially defined on the +lecture announcement) to institutionalized amusement activities (which +impose foreign tastes on the individual) and indeed to all "culture" the +lecture was concerned with. After the lecture, Flynt told how his doctrine +was anticipated by little known ideas of Mayakovsky, Dziga Vertov, and +their group, as related in Ilya Ehrenburg's memoirs and elsewhere. He +touched on the Wednesday demonstrations. He spoke of George Maciunas' +\textsc{Fluxus}, with which all this is connected. Several people at the lecture +congratulated Flynt on the clarity of the presentation and logicality of the +arguments. Photos were taken. + +\section{Statement of November 1963} + + +Back in March 1963, I sent the first \textsc{FCTB Press Release}, about FCTB's +February picketing and lecture, to all the communications media, including +the New Yorker. It is so good that the New Yorker wanted to use it, but +they didn't want to give FCTB any free publicity; so they finally published +an inept parody of it, in the October 12, 1963 issue, pp. 49--51. They +changed my last name to Mackie, changed February 27 to September 25, the +Museum of Modern Art to a church, changed our slogans to particularly +idiotic ones (although they got in '\textsc{No More Art/Culture?}', later on), +and added incidents; but the general outlines, and the phrases lifted verbatim +from the FCTB RELEASE, make the relationship clear.---Henry Fiynt + +\section{} + +{ \raggedleft 3/6/63 \par } + +Henry, + + +Received your note this morning. I had written down a few things about the +lecture the very night I got home but decided they were not very clear so I +didn't send them. Don't know if I can make it any clearer\ldots actually I keep +thinking that I must have overlooked something because the objection I have +to make seems too obvious. You spend much time and effort locating +Veramusement, stating clearly wnat it is not, and stating that it is, if I get it, +of the essence of an awareness, rather memory, of an experience which +cannot be predicted and therefore cannot be located or focused by external +activities. And, in fact, as you said, may cut across, or "intersect" one or +another or several activities. You have discredited activities---like art, +competitive games---as pseudo work or unsatisfactory recreation by employing +arguments which are external to "experiencing" these activities (e.g. chess is +bad because why agree to some arbitrary standard of performance which +doesn't fit you)\ldots well it seems to me that Veramusement could never replace +any cultural form because it has no external "edges" but rather by definition +can occur anywhere anytime anyplace (By the way I want to say here that +its existence as a past tense or memory I find objectionable---but I can't at the +moment really say why.) It seems that you have these two things going: +Veramusement, that has to do with experience, and art, work, +entertainment, that have to do with society and I don't think that the +exposition of how the two things are related has been very clear. George +Herbert Mead, an early Pragmatist (don't shudder at that word, but I can see +you throwing up your hands in despair) talked about this relation as a kind +of double aspect of the personality (which he called the "me" and the "I" +\ldots can't remember his book, something like \booktitle{Mind, Self, and Society}). + +I thought you presented the lecture very weil, but towards the end I was +getting too tired to listen very carefully and I am sorry because this was the +newest writing. I would like very much to read this part, i.e. that which dealt +with the evolution of work, automation and the liberation from +drudgery---send me a copy if you can. + +\signoff{Best regards,} +\signoff{Bob Morris} + +\section{} + +{ \raggedleft 3/12/1963 \par } +Henry + +\begin{tabular}{ c c c c c } + \redact{Jazz} & + \redact{Cage} & + \redact{"Folk Music"} & + \redact{Communism} & + \begin{tabular}{ c } + (anti-art?) \\ + ------ \\ + (communism) \\ + \end{tabular} \\ +\end{tabular} + +I've been along this road too. +Yes I certainly do see the harmfullness of serious culture. My favorite movies are plain documentaries. + +\gap + + +"Veramusement" +questions: the way you set it up it sound like veramusement is \textsc{It}. Some +kind of Absolute good state or activity. ---ie) \textsc{Athletics} are out. \\ +---now my brother is a healthy athelete---he enjoys nothing so much as +swimming or playing tennis all day (he likes to use his body---and he likes the +form---competition) + +{ \centering +Is this "wrong" \\ +Should he stop.--- \par +} + +or wouldn't your "creep theory" which lets each person be himself and +relish in himself---by extention from this---shouldn't the atheletic person be +alowed to be himself? ---too. \\ +I think you were opening up the world to the people at the lecture--- + + +{ +making them move free-- +" " ready to be themselves \par +} + + +I think you were right in not giving examples! + + +however \\ +your absolute---statements and "come on"---and blend with the communist +ideas---(My mind was pretty tired by then and I didn't follow how the +veramusement---was tied to communism)---this \textsc{It} kind of talk.---can only shoo +people off-and let them wait for the next revision or explication. \\ +people off---and let them wait for the next revision or explication. + +\signoff{Walter DeMaria} + +\section{} + +Dear Henry, March 18, 1963 + + +As I said before, my main reactions to yr lecture \& ideas is that I'm for +Henry Flynt but not for his ideas. I think the spirit you show in carrying on +yr crusade is admirable and exciting. However, I am not against art and think +that any artist who would say that he is or think that he is would be +masochistic enough to need psychiatric care. Since you make no claims to +being an artist this does not refer to you. However, I do call myself a poet +and do think of myself as one. I like art, culture, etc. and do not yet feel +that I am being screwed by it. Until I do, I will not need to turn to anti-art +movements. + +All best wishes. + +Yours, + +Diane Wakoski + +\section{} + +"Dear Mr. Flynt...Since I may be depending on o-ganized culture for my +loot \& livelihood I can wish you only a limited success in your movement... +Cornelius Cardew" [froma postcard of June 7, 1963] + + +\clearpage + +{ +2/22/1963 + + +Jack Smith and Henry Flynt demonstrate against the +February 22, 1963 + + +(photo by Tony Conrad) + +Museum of Modern Art, +} +\clearpage |