Alix Lambert: Alix Lambert, a multimedia artist based in New York and Los Angeles, was recently seen performing at New York's P.S. 122 with the theater company the Civilians in Nobody's Lunch.1 THE ETERNALS This Chicago-based trio blends a cornucopia of samples, synthesizers, bass, drums, and vocals into a futuristic sound that comes tumbling at you. Their new album, Rawar Style, gives nods to the Clash, African Head Charge, Capleton, and Sun Ra, among others. Despite the hybrid, the final product is sheer originality. Past, present, and future coexist as something Eternal. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 2 PERSONS OF INTEREST Of the more than five thousand people questioned after September 11, an untold number were Muslims arrested on American soil for minor immigration violations (or more often for no legal reason at all) and then detained in secret while the government tried to link them to terrorist activity. Filmed in 2002, Alison Maclean and Tobias Perse's documentary presents twelve interviews with former "special interest" detainees. The subject is heartrending, and Persons has a unique formal strategy to match: Shot from a fixed vantage point in a cell-like room built for the production, the film doesn't hide the sometimes awkward interactions between filmmaker and subject that usually get edited out. The bumbling questions, even the condescension in the directors' voices (most evident when they try to cajole an interviewee into removing his baseball cap to suit their lighting), strangely amplify the urgency of these testimonies. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 3 ELAD LASSRY Lassry is fascinated with the canyons of LA, where he takes provocative and affecting portraits of rarely dressed and often dirty young men, who happen to be artists. The canyons themselves are neatly manicured in some areas and wildly overgrown in others--a terrain that seems to speak of both availability and limits. Replaying the '70s genres of Earth and body art. Lassry's subjects appear distinctly self-conscious and uncomfortable. Bohemianism ain't what it used to be. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 4 DESTINO After a 1937 trip to Hollywood, Salvador Dali Dali (dälē`), city, W central Yunnan, on the shore of Erhai lake. It has long been famous for its Dali marble, which is still being produced. wrote to Andre Breton that he had met the "three great American surrealists"--the Marx Brothers Marx Brothers, team of American movie comedians. The members were Julius (1890?–1977), known as Groucho; Arthur (1888?–1964), originally Adolph and known as Harpo; Leonard (1887?–1961), known as Chico; and two other brothers, Milton (Gummo) and Herbert (Zeppo), who had both left the act by 1935; all were born in New York City., Cecil B. DeMille, and Walt Disney. This seven-minute cartoon, a collaboration between Dali and Disney, is amazing because it's just that: a collaboration between Dali and Disney. Started in 1946, the project was deemed a money, loser and abandoned after eight months, only to be rescued and completed last year by Disney animators in Paris. Watching a Disneyesque ballerina traipse through a melting Dali landscape, I was struck by the thought that little kids--with their unblinking acceptance of talking crickets and fairy-tale endings--make the best surrealists. 5 JORGE LUIS ALVAREZ PUPO, TRANCE Sweat, darkness, fire, men at night, visions, the spirit world: Cuban photographer Jorge Luis Alvarez Pupo's black-and-white photographs, published in 2003 by Perceval Press, have an elusive, shadowy feeling befitting their subject matter--the religious rites of voodoo and Santeria. Pupo bears passionate witness to the intensity of spiritual life in his native country with the simple release of the camera's shutter. 6 ALEX DONUTS What cracks me up about Alex Donuts is that it's not called Alex's Donuts. Also a sign over the cash register says, "We don't accept twenties unless they're for Mary's tip jar." Sandwiched between an alley and a dry cleaner in a strip mall near the corner of Franklin and Argyle, this is the place for the best chocolate glazeds in LA. 7 UNDER THE BANNER OF HEAVEN: A STORY OF VIOLENT FAITH In a time when people are increasingly turning to religion for answers (witness the Republican National Convention, where I spent four days taking pictures--yikes!), Jon Krakauer's book about the Mormon Church offers a riveting perspective on our nation. Krakauer weaves a history of the fastest-growing American-born religion with the horrific account of two fundamentalist Mormon brothers who murdered their sister-in-law and her baby in 1984--ostensibly on God's orders. What The Executioner's Song was for the '80s. Under the Banner of Heaven is for our time. The two books form a dark portrait of America and the relative nature of piety. 8 "BEFORE THE END (THE LAST PAINTING SHOW)" Curated by painter Olivier Mosset, this show at the Swiss Institute in New York last month revolved around the idea that many conceptual artists were once abstract painters producing minimal, often monochromatic work. It wasn't the blank surfaces of these "last paintings" that attracted me, though, but the feeling of nostalgia they inspired. Standing in the gallery I thought of all the "last times" in my life that I'd registered too late. I kiss a friend goodbye on the street corner after spending the afternoon together watching bad movies, and it's not until much later that I think, "Wow, that was the last time I ever saw him." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 9 END OF THE CENTURY: THE STORY OF THE RAMONES First Joey, then Dee Dee, now Johnny. Within a few short years we've suffered the untimely deaths of all but one of the original Ramones. Jim Fields and Michael Gramaglia's documentary chronicles the story of one of the most influential bands never to make the Top 40. Johnny had this to say: "It's a very dark movie. It's accurate. It left me disturbed." Coming from the man (a Republican!) who once pleaded, "Gimme gimme shock treatment," that's really saying something. End of the Century also features the final interview with another recently deceased punk luminary, the Clash's Joe Strummer. The Ramones said it themselves: "The bubble's going to explode. Probably never live to get old." 10 BACON A shout-out not to the artist, nor the actor, but to something from the abattoir abattoir (ăb'ətwär`) [Fr.], building for butchering. The abattoir houses facilities to slaughter animals; dress, cut and inspect meats; and refrigerate, cure, and manufacture byproducts. The largest abattoirs are those of the meatpacking industry.. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion