Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

Return of the Fugitive

Sunday, June 13th, 2010
When I first moved to New York in 1984, I fancied myself street-smart. Wrong. The city was a darker, scarier, and more raw place. Or perhaps I was just very young. In either case (and friends back me up on this) New York was a lot more perilous then, with fewer cops around, and trash and litter pretty much every where you looked—some of it fascinating. I didn’t know why I felt compelled to pick up ripped passports, trampled photographs, blurred notes scrawled in Bic pen on the back of Marlboro packages—but I did.
I made my collection of junk into a set of 100 2-sided collages, each about the size of a baseball card. I called the project 100 Fugitive Felons, after I saw a poster in the subway stating the NYPD was searching for just that many criminals on the lam. I felt like I was gathering evidence, might have crossed paths with some of these people; as if I was preserving some record of small scale despair. I was preserving the history of the city’s unknown, unwanted human flotsam by noticing and cataloging the ephemera left in their wake. I keep the set of collages in a black evidence binder; they remind me of mug shots, police blotters, other official record books.
I knew that the logical conclusion to the project would be to re-lose the felons: to take the collection to a grimy park somewhere or Madison Square Garden or Times Square, and just leave it behind, return it to time’s slipstream. Only I couldn’t bring myself to do it. So it sat around my studio; was photographed and exhibited a couple of times, was seen by some people. Last time I looked at the collection, I noticed that I only had 99 felons left. They are stored 4 to a binder page, and somewhere in the middle of the book was a page with one unoccupied slot.
One had escaped, been pilfered, gone missing in its travels. I couldn’t remember which felon was missing, and it disturbed me more than I’d care to admit that I had lost just that one. I tried to be zen about it. Did someone swipe it during a photo shoot? Did it fall out somewhere in my disorganized house? In any event, that day I also noticed the plastic binder pages were so old they had begun to destabilize and become sticky: I thought they were archival quality when I bought them but clearly they needed to be replaced. I stored the collages in 2 gallon-sized ziplock bags until I got around to ordering replacement pages.
Today, instead of undertaking a hideous project I never should have agreed to, I decided to procrastinate by refiling the felons back into the new pages. I had thrown them into the ziplock bags in a jumble, and it dawned on me that I’d never be able to put them back in their original order. Well, so what I thought? Embrace the randomness of life. Love chaos. Wabi-sabi. I just began grabbing the cards and storing them away. Lo and behold: when I finished, I had 25 pages with 4 collages each. I had never lost one; it must have been slipped into a case with another, and since they’re 2-sided I never noticed. There is a lesson in there of some sort, I think it’s about the larger meaning of fugitive, but beyond that I have no clue.

When I first moved to New York in 1984, I fancied myself street-smart. Wrong. The city was a darker, scarier, and more raw place than it is today, and it turned out I knew nothing about how things worked. Or perhaps I was just very young. In either case (and friends back me up on this) New York was a lot more perilous then, with fewer cops around, and trash pretty much every where you looked—some of it fascinating, and some of it on fire. I didn’t know why I felt compelled to pick up ripped passports, trampled photographs, blurred notes scrawled in Bic pen on the back of Marlboro and Parliament packages—but I did.

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Page Turners

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009


On view at the NY Art Books Fair. Left: J and L Books. Right: DAP.

It was heartening to see that as the publishing landscape makes room for Kindles and vooks and online magazines complete with flippable “pages,” there is still interest in beautiful, impractical artist’s books. Printed Matter, the world’s largest nonprofit organization dedicated to publications made by artists, presented the fourth annual NY Art Book Fair, October 2-4 at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in Long Island City. (more…)

Rethinking Reading, Part 2

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Sony Daily Edition

Brightness on the horizon: there are encouraging early reports on the Sony Daily Edition Reader, due on the market this December. Continuing to delve into my approach/avoidance conflict with electronic readers, I had a chance to test drive a friend’s Kindle this past weekend, and the verdict is in: I wouldn’t buy one. Like many other reviewers, I found the e-ink screen not contrasty enough. Trying to read dark gray type on a light gray background just makes me sad. And the clunky keyboard on a Kindle takes up waaaay too much real estate.

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Rethinking Reading

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Kindle iPod
Photo: Angela Riechers

My idea of a perfect vacation involves gluttonous amounts of reading. But bringing enough printed matter for ten days away causes problems at the airport, as a friend recently learned when he packed so many books that the overweight luggage fees exceeded the cost of his ticket from New York to Portugal. The obvious answer is to get a Kindle2 from Amazon and load it with up to 1500 weightless digital titles, but I was reluctant to spring for the $299 device. Sneaking peeks at other people’s Kindles on the subway is creepy, but even the little I managed to see wasn’t encouraging; for one thing the screen seemed very murky-looking. Nicholson Baker’s excellent article A New Page in the August 3rd issue of the New Yorker gave me a great idea. There’s a free Kindle app for the iPhone, and it works exactly the same as the regular Kindle: buy a book and download it instantly from Amazon’s 3G network, and start reading within minutes.

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