cover photo



blog archive

main site

artwork

bio






Schwarz



View current page
...more recent posts

In an arrangement known to few of the club's patrons, CBGB [OMFUG] subleases its spaces at 313 and 315 Bowery from the organization, which shelters 175 homeless people in the floors above the club. In 2001, the organization began efforts to collect more than $300,000 in back rent from the club. Although much of that has now been paid, the club faces eviction over remaining debts of about $75,000, both parties say.

[link] [5 comments]

carpocalypse


[link] [add a comment]

The show also has a single large painting, a black-and-white photorealistic portrait of the proprietor, Paula Cooper, copied by Mr. Stingel from a photograph made by Robert Mapplethorpe in 1984.

[link] [add a comment]

own in the sink


[link] [5 comments]

transmaterial


[link] [add a comment]

In those early years, he [Julius Shulman] used only a rudimentary Kodak vest pocket camera on a tripod with natural light — no flash. Architects loved his work because it celebrated theirs: the purely horizontal floor, perfectly vertical walls, the play of light and shadow.

[link] [add a comment]

In a controversial ruling Wednesday, a court in Düsseldorf barred a company from selling the 'B9' chair originally designed by Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer and ordered it destroy all existing stocks.




 
[link] [add a comment]

danto on sontag


[link] [1 comment]

houses of vinalhaven


[link] [add a comment]

announcing a new feature here on schwarz: rat rod watch and auction results. today's pick


[link] [4 comments]

A new two-mile esplanade and bicycle path - no less than 40 feet wide in most places - would run along the river, linking Battery Park at the tip of Manhattan Island to the East River Park, between the Manhattan and Williamsburg Bridges. Benches, tables, planters and trellises would line the planked walkway.

More than a dozen small, boxy pavilions for shopping, recreation, cultural programs and community gatherings would be built under the F.D.R. Drive, each with about 10,000 square feet of space. Some might have facades that could be opened in summer. The elevated highway viaduct would remain, but its underside would get new lighting and cladding to improve its appearance and acoustics.

[link] [add a comment]

shake hands with shorty


[link] [add a comment]

architecture slam : create a futuristic luxury hotel and government office complex for the year 2050 when, presumably in the name of spreading democracy there, the United States takes over the moon.


[link] [add a comment]

richard prince check paintings


[link] [1 comment]

really real


[link] [1 comment]

surf photographer leroy "granny" grannis american b.1917


[link] [add a comment]

"A new audit of spending on port security - often called the nation's "soft underbelly" - reveals a disturbing trifecta: far too little money appropriated; much of the appropriated money not spent; and much of the money that was spent going for the wrong things. This is all part of a larger problem of misplaced priorities in the homeland security budget."


[link] [add a comment]

The product below is an unauthorized parody that is being offered for auction by its creator, Francis Hwang. It has not been licensed or authorized by Apple, Downhill Battle, Island Records, Casey Kasem, Negativland, or U2.
story via
[link] [add a comment]

Who owns the words you're reading right now? if you're holding a copy of Bookforum in your hands, the law permits you to lend or sell it to whomever you like. If you're reading this article on the Internet, you are allowed to link to it, but are prohibited from duplicating it on your web site or chat room without permission. You are free to make copies of it for teaching purposes, but aren't allowed to sell those copies to your students without permission. A critic who misrepresents my ideas or uses some of my words to attack me in an article of his own is well within his rights to do so. But were I to fashion these pages into a work of collage art and sell it, my customer would be breaking the law if he altered it. Furthermore, were I to set these words to music, I'd receive royalties when it was played on the radio; the band performing it, however, would get nothing. In the end, the copyright to these words belongs to me, and I've given Bookforum the right to publish them. But even my ownership is limited. Unlike a house, which I may pass on to my heirs (and they to theirs), my copyright will expire seventy years after my death, and these words will enter the public domain, where anyone is free to use them. But those doodles you're drawing in the margins of this page? Have no fear: They belong entirely to you.

[link] [add a comment]

Mac Low is probably the most controversial of the many great poets of the legendary "New American Poetry" generation, those literary artists born in the '20s and weighted with names like Beat and Projective, New York School and San Francisco Renaissance. He has certainly been the hardest to assimilate into the predominantly humanist, self-expressive orientation of postwar poetry. Seen from the point of view of the visual and performing arts, Mac Low's work may appear less abrasive; and yet there is no visual or performing or conceptual artist whose word works approach the complexity, ingenuity, and density of Mac Low's, not even his many Fluxus associates, or his longtime comrade and instructor in the art of chance, John Cage. It is not that Mac Low's work is better than his contemporaries'–he himself rejected such forms of evaluation–but his work's significance for the development of poetry and for our understanding of verbal language is without parallel.

[link] [add a comment]

"BUILT during the Great Depression by dint of an irresistible force named Frank Hague - the prevailing political boss here for a period of 40 years - the eight colossal buildings of the Jersey City Medical Center now stand empty and sorry-looking on a rise near Journal Square that overlooks Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty."


[link] [add a comment]

frankenpine


[link] [add a comment]

mt airy lodge at auction


[link] [add a comment]

Sturtevant


MUSEUM FüR MODERNE KUNST
FRANKFURT
Through March 05


One of the art world's greatest éminences terribles, Sturtevant has for over forty years been charting the unruly interiors and exteriors of the visible. Curator Mario Kramer takes over the entirety of the Museum für Moderne Kunst with about 140 multi-media works for what's being billed as the artist's first retrospective—but let me assure you, Sturtevant don't want no retrospective, since her endeavor has always been exposing contrafactual immanence, eternally returning. Sadly, this landmark exhibit won't travel, so let's hope some staunch American museum takes heed and brings this artist and her work home. With an essay by Bernard Blistène and an interview by John Waters, the catalogue will expose brutal truths, and, licking the shiny boot of beauty, we like it that way.


—Bruce Hainley for art forum

[link] [1 comment]