5.12.10

Disjecta: This week's links

Your guide to this week's best cultural links
Atelier Carvalho Bernau's typeface, celebrating the 80th birthday of Jean-Luc Godard

Literature:

Samuel Beckett: This week's Ends and Odds over at the Samuel Beckett Debts and Legacies website.

Gabriel Josipovici: Who reads Proust? Ramona Koval interviews Josipovici about modernism on The Book Show, ABC Radio National

Marcel Proust: 20th century novelist on the sensationalism of the daily news

Thomas Bernhard: Recent photographs of Bernhard's house and surrounding landscape, by Hennetmair

TLS Books of the Year 2010

Patti Smith: Video of artist and musician Patti Smith, author of Just Kids, in conversation with Jonathan Lethem, author of Chronic City, earlier this year

The Future of the Literary Journal: An interview with Electric Literature's Andy Hunter

Philosophy & Critical Theory:

Will Self at the Freud Museum in London: A fundraising event, organized as part of the Intimate Evenings series

Roland Barthes: Audio recordings of Barthes' lectures at the Collège de France, 1977

Film:

Jean-Luc Godard: To celebrate the 80th birthday of the new wave French filmmaker, Atelier Carvalho Bernau has designed a typeface that is free for readers to download

Music

Joy Division Plus: Rough Trade celebrate the launch of Joy Division +- with Peter Saville, Stephen Morris and Jon Savage

Iggy Pop: A television interview where Iggy Pop discusses working with David Bowie, and the recording of his 1977 album The Idiot

Thank you to all link contributions, which can be found on the A Piece of Monologue Twitter page.
14.11.09

David Bowie's Lodger: 30th Anniversary

Third album in the renowned 'Berlin Trilogy'
David Bowie, 'Lodger'

The Quietus celebrates the thirtieth anniversary of David Bowie's Lodger, the third album of the so-called Berlin trilogy (Low, "Heroes", Lodger). Ben Graham elaborates on the significance of Lodger to Bowie's career, and recaps some of the key details of the musician's creative relationship with Brian Eno.

There's also an interesting exploration of Bowie's influences at the time the album was recorded, from the high-strung intellectualism of Talking Heads and the motorik beat of Neu!, to the European paranoia of Polanski's The Tenant.

But in essence, Graham aims to establish once and for all the role that Lodger plays within Bowie's Berlin trilogy. On the one hand, he argues, there are characteristics that hold it in place alongside Low and "Heroes", but the release of Lodger inevitably marks a kind of irreconcilable departure (thank you to 'Z' for drawing my attention to this article):
[...] And responsibility, in the end, is the real theme of Lodger: taking us back to the opening track’s worries over the fate of the entire planet resting in the hands of one flawed, capricious human being, through to ‘Repetition’s’ description of how we pass on our pain to those closest to us, full of self-pitying victimhood yet unaware we’ve become the aggressor. From the crippling banality of ‘DJ’- a man with the ears of millions of believers, yet nothing to say- to the cocooned self-absorption of ‘Boys Keep Swinging,’ and the damp squib of a judgement day portrayed in ‘Look Back in Anger.’ The last words on the album are “Such responsibility- it’s up to you and me.”

It’s this sense of responsibility - both individual and collective - that finally separates Lodger from the so-called Berlin albums. Low was, in Bowie’s own words, “Isn’t it great to be on your own, let’s just pull down the blinds and fuck em all”, a celebration of self-pity. “Heroes” saw the individual begin to fight back, but still from a passive-aggressive, me-against-the-world standpoint. It’s only with Lodger that Bowie realises that to survive in any meaningful sense, he has to engage with society, and with the rest of the human race. [Read More]

More at A Piece of Monologue:
7.9.09

William S. Burroughs: A Man Within

A new documentary

It seems that I'm still catching up with some wonderful developments that have occurred since I've been away. 3:AM Magazine, on the other hand, has remained very much on-the-ball. Listed in their recent Missing Links column was a teaser-trailer for the upcoming documentary on American writer William S. Burroughs.

William S. Burroughs: A Man Within will be the first and only posthumous documentary about the infamous counter-cultural figure, and includes interviews with Iggy Pop, David Cronenberg, James Grauerholz, Victor Bockris, Gus Van Sant, Sonic Youth and many others. The trailer is hosted on the official documentary website, which includes a PDF download of the synopsis and information regarding upcoming film-fundraising events.

Links
3.8.08

Die Brücke

One of the great artistic movements of the 20th Century
Die Brücke

A few years back a friend and I decided to spend a week in Berlin. We followed the tourist handbooks and navigated our way through the city. After a few days, with growing confidence, we even began to explore with the guidebooks tucked away in our pockets, and gradually started to establish our bearings. I loved the experience, and to this day I feel that Berlin is one of the greatest places I've ever visited.

I found it amazing to see the way Berlin accepts and adapts to its own history: a history that shaped much of twentieth-century Europe, and which manifests itself in every street and every square of the city. There are so many signifiers of a dark and troubling past, amid so much optimism and urban development. The collision of the present with the past, light with dark, was often more than a little on the uncanny side.

We saw bars and restaurants located around Checkpoint Charlie, where tourists can sip a cold beer and contemplate the divide; fragments of the Berlin wall outside shopping malls and train stations; and memorials and high-rise buildings constructed over underground caverns of Nazi administration. Walking through the city was, at times, awe-inspiring, and at others it was frightening.

It was in Berlin that I first came across the work of Ernst Ludvig Kircher, Ernst Heckel and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, painters of the Die Brücke expressionist movement. Their name, literally meaning 'the bridge', derives from a desire to merge traditional artistic techniques with the evolving avant garde movement. I was initially drawn to investigate the group while reading about David Bowie, who emulates the pose of Heckel's Roquairol on the cover of his Berlin album "Heroes". Iggy Pop strikes a similar pose on the cover of his album, The Idiot, released the same year.



Despite their expressionist techniques, I always saw a certain realism in their work that always appealed to me. I was drawn to the lone figures, that seemed to be trying to comprehend their surroundings. At times I was reminded of some of Kafka's short stories, at others I thought of Edward Hopper's anonymous city dwellers, but sometimes I didn't think of anything specific. I just daydreamed. That was what I loved about them.

I was reminded of Die Brücke again just recently, while reading James Knowlson's fantastic biography of Samuel Beckett, Damned to Fame. In the mid-1930s, as national socialism began to gain momentum, Beckett embarked on a kind of cultural pilgrimage, touring the museums and art galleries of Germany.

Ironically, many of the modern pieces that interested Beckett most, including those of Kirchner, Heckel and Schmidt-Rottluff had recently been declared decadent by the Third Reich and were taken out of the public eye - either to be stored, bought by private collectors or destroyed. Beckett witnessed the censorship first-hand, and was appalled to meet painters and artists who were suffering from the new policies. But despite this, Beckett did find numerous opportunities to see the works he had been looking for, and retained an interest in the Die Brücke movement, and painting in general, all of his life.

Lying in bed this morning, I spent some time in a dreamless haze, watching the sun move gradually up the wall. I was contemplating the morning coffee, but couldn't quite find the motivation to get up and do something about it. It was at this point that I noticed some of the postcards that have been tacked about the place, here and there, to give my room a bit of colour. Two such postcards were bought from an art gallery gift shop in Berlin: two paintings by Kirchner. I decided to make myself a fresh pot of coffee and go in search of some more paintings online.

And I found them. The Museum of Modern Art in New York is currently holding an exhibition of Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's work. There is a website filled with great examples of his painting, and plenty of information about his life and that of the Bridge movement. You can see it for yourself by clicking here.