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Boxed up: time capsules, archives, and magazines.


A recent story from Tulsa, Oklahoma Tulsa is the second-largest city in the state of Oklahoma and 45th-largest in the United States. With an estimated population of 382,872 in 2006,[1] it is the principal municipality of the Tulsa Metropolitan Statistical Area, a region of 897,752 residents projected to , reported on a "ruined" time capsule built in 1957. The capsule was opened this year during Oklahoma's Centennial celebrations, but it had leaked and the 1957 Plymouth Belvedere The Plymouth Belvedere was an American automobile produced by Plymouth from 1951 through 1970. 1950s
Introduced on March 31, 1951, the 1951 Plymouth Belvedere arrived as a two-door pillarless hardtop.
 inside had been pickled pick·led  
adj.
1. Preserved in or treated with pickle.

2. Slang Intoxicated; drunk.


pickled
Adjective

1. (of food) preserved in a pickling liquid

2.
 for fifty years in four feet of standing water. While the Tulsa capsule was undone by the ravages rav·age  
v. rav·aged, rav·ag·ing, rav·ages

v.tr.
1. To bring heavy destruction on; devastate: A tornado ravaged the town.

2.
 of time--precisely what it was constructed to keep out--there is one interesting footnote to this spectacular failure. Interred in the capsule were the results of a competition to see who could get the closest to guessing the town's new population when the capsule was to be opened in 2007. No winner has yet been announced but they ("or their descendents") win the car and a savings account Savings Account

A deposit account intended for funds that are expected to stay in for the short term. A savings account offers lower returns than the market rates.

Notes:
 worth $1,000, which all goes to show that the past is always present and it can come back anytime to bite you.

From time capsules to archives is an easy transition--both contain a body of records/documents "pertaining per·tain  
intr.v. per·tained, per·tain·ing, per·tains
1. To have reference; relate: evidence that pertains to the accident.

2.
 to an organization or institution." (1) One important difference between the time capsule and the archive is that the time capsule attempts to, "store for posterity POSTERITY, descents. All the descendants of a person in a direct line.  a selection of objects thought to be representative of life at a particular time." (2) Archives are less picky pick·y  
adj. pick·i·er, pick·i·est Informal
Excessively meticulous; fussy.


picky
Adjective

[pickier, pickiest] Brit, Austral & NZ
, and it is well understood that their real significance might not be fully appreciated until some time in the future.

Archive appears to be a flexible term, one that can be used to describe the physical place or locale of the collected material, as well as a conceptual frame that sifts artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 and intellectual information. Indeed, the archive, time capsule, and magazine are not that different. All sift and sort information, arrange it into a predetermined pre·de·ter·mine  
v. pre·de·ter·mined, pre·de·ter·min·ing, pre·de·ter·mines

v.tr.
1. To determine, decide, or establish in advance:
 format, and all have a complicated relationship to the present. The magazine records the now for immediate consumption, the time capsule preserves the now of then for the then of now, and the archive preserves everything for later. All are united in their capacity to store things, to bring stuff together from different pasts and for different futures, and all converge at the collection point of the archive.

Patricia Kelly, a contemporary art historian at DePaul University Coordinates:  DePaul University[1] is a private institution of higher education and research in Chicago, Illinois, USA.  in Chicago, in an abstract for a chapter in a book about artists' periodicals, writes about Phyllis Johnson's Aspen magazine (which published ten issues between 1965 and 1971) and how each issue of the periodical with its mixed media contributions gathered inside a box served as "as a veritable time capsule, providing insight into a fraught historical period...." (3) Indeed, there are two issues of Aspen that do have unique combinations of objects that have come to be viewed as representative of specific cultural and historical moments: the "Pop Art Issue," designed by Andy Warhol Noun 1. Andy Warhol - United States artist who was a leader of the Pop Art movement (1930-1987)
Warhol
 and David Dalton (#3, 1966), and "The Minimal Issue," edited by Brian O'Doherty (#5/6, 1967). Here we have a magazine that illustrates one aspect of its etymological et·y·mo·log·i·cal   also et·y·mo·log·ic
adj.
Of or relating to etymology or based on the principles of etymology.



et
 definition as a "storehouse" (4) while simultaneously functioning as a unique time capsule. Additionally, from the historian's point of view, the opening of the time capsule offers a tantalizingly tan·ta·lize  
tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es
To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach.
 ephemeral whiff of the past.

Warhol, as it would later turn out, had a much deeper and long-lasting association with archives. In the middle 1970s, ten years after Aspen's "Pop Art Issue," he began to keep a cardboard box cardboard box ncaja de cartón

cardboard box n(boîte f en) carton m

cardboard box card n
 next to his desk into which he would regularly sweep a Wunderkammer of printed matter. At the time of his death in 1987, six hundred and twelve of these dated and sealed boxes were discovered in storage. Warhol was evidently ambivalent about these "time capsules," as he called them, saying, "I want to throw things right out the window as they're handed to me, but instead I say thank you and drop them into the box-of-the-month. But my other outlook is that I really do want to save things so that they can be used again." (5)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In a 1978 diary entry, Warhol considered another strategy: "I really ought to auction off my time capsule boxes ... but I would try to make every box a little interesting. I'd throw in one of my dresses, an old shirt, a pair of underwear--something great in each one." (6) Here, Warhol sets in opposition two different ideas about the archive: that somehow they are neutral and that their accumulation of material happens organically versus an archive whose significance and value has been artificially enhanced. Either way, the traditionally coy image of the archive is sexed up by a contemporary gesture.

The archive and the time capsule come together in a unique convergence in an artists' periodical dedicated to documenting the history of performance art. Appropriately titled High Performance, it was launched by Linda Frye Burnham in 1978 and continued publishing quarterly until 1997. High Performance's mission was to document and publicize pub·li·cize  
tr.v. pub·li·cized, pub·li·ciz·ing, pub·li·ciz·es
To give publicity to.


publicize or -cise
Verb

[-cizing, -cized]
 the emerging history of this ephemeral and time-based art, with Burnham insisting that the magazine would be "nothing more than a chronicle of events," and it would function like a "white box" for the publication of performance documentation: "... a kind of frame for each piece ... [as if it were] ... hanging in a gallery." (7)

High Performance's documentary publishing model found its fullest expression during its first couple of years in a section called "Artist's Chronicle" that featured photographic documentation and texts submitted by artists of their performances. Each issue also sought submissions of performance documentation of works performed within a specific time period for consideration for the next issue. The magazine was filled out by this key documentary function and each new "Artist's Chronicle" now reads like a performance art time capsule.

In 1980, two years after High Performance started publishing, Burnham wrote an editorial that proposed discontinuing the "Artist's Chronicle" section. She claimed that this feature had outlived its usefulness, that taking up 50% of each of the first eleven issues, the format was getting repetitious rep·e·ti·tious  
adj.
Filled with repetition, especially needless or tedious repetition.



repe·ti
 and that people were even creating performances just to get in the magazine. (8) In the next issue, she acknowledged the uproar this proposal provoked from both readers and performance artists and the "Artist's Chronicle" was re-instated as an annual feature, freeing up the remaining three issues to experiment with new formats and coverage. As performance art matured, as it crossed disciplinary boundaries, and as a critical and theoretical dialogue was established, High Performance developed a more nuanced approach to what it documented and reported of this newly emerging multidisciplinary art form.

Despite these changes, there is one feature that did not change throughout High Performance's life, and that was the importance and power of photography to document the beginnings of a new medium. Unlike the Tulsa time capsule, High Performance's past has not come back to bite it, indeed the magazine's role has only expanded over time, and the results of its documentary mission have been transformed during the intervening years into a primary historical record of a late-twentieth century ephemeral art form.

High Performance succinctly illustrates the other side of photography's documentary function--the archival role that photographs perform. In recognition of this, in 2005 the Getty Museum accepted the donation of the High Performance archives into its institution. (9) Thus, this archive-turned-time capsule for the years 1978-97 now sits boxed up in a climate controlled environment deep in the heart of an institution devoted to the acquisition and preservation of works of historical value. The larger and symbolic trajectory contained within this twenty-seven-year period is the movement of this avant-garde art form from the periphery of the art world to its embrace by one of the country's key cultural and research institutions.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

STEPHEN PERKINS is an art historian and artist and director and curator of the Lawton Gallery, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay UW–Green Bay was founded in 1965 and originally had an environmental emphasis, but now offers a wide array of degrees. It is unusual among Wisconsin's public universities in that it does not have a football team, due to advice from Vince Lombardi citing high costs and the fact that .

NOTES 1. The American Heritage American Heritage can refer to:
  • American Heritage (magazine)
  • American Heritage (band)
  • The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
  • American Heritage Rivers
  • American Heritage School, a small private school in Broward County, Florida
 Dictionary (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Houghton Mifflin Company is a leading educational publisher in the United States. The company's headquarters is located in Boston's Back Bay. It publishes textbooks, instructional technology materials, assessments, reference works, and fiction and non-fiction for both young readers  Co., 2nd ed., 1985). 2. From "What is a Time Capsule?," The International Time Capsule Society The International Time Capsule Society is an organization dedicated to tracking the world's time capsules to ensure that those that are created are not lost. Along with their database of time capsules, they have published a list of "most desired" time capsules that have been lost : www.oglethorpe.edu/about_us. 3. Patricia Kelly, "Aspen Magazine, Outside of the Box" (dissertation abstract), 2007. 4. The American Heritage Dictionary. 5. The Andy Warhol Museum, Andy Warhol's Time Capsule 21 (Cologne, Germany: DuMont, 2003), 14. I would argue that despite Warhol's description of these boxes as "time capsules" these heterogeneous and indiscriminate collections of printed matter fall more properly within a definition of "archive" than "time capsule." A time capsule indicates a much more rigorous procedure for selecting objects to be contained within the capsule. My understanding of Warhol's criteria for inclusion in a box was that there wasn't one. 6. Ibid., 8. 7. High Performance, No. 3 (1978), Editorial, 1. 8. High Performance, Nos. 11/12 (1980), Editorial, 166. 9. Phone conversation with Lynda Frye Burnham, July 26, 2007.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Visual Studies Workshop
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Author:Perkins, Stephen
Publication:Afterimage
Date:Nov 1, 2007
Words:1441
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