DETROIT’S HIPPIE-PUNK PRINT PALACE 19.12.2007

urb bokbeat.jpgClocking in at #83, Book Beat was name checked in the 150th issue of URB Magazine, a glossy bible of hip-hop culture and “a manifesto of (our) music and life.” URB magazine is a lively jumble of articles and ads that focus on urban music and the fashion world without the snob appeal.

URB’s founder Raymond Leon Roker writes a very cogent editorial on his 150th anniversary in which he shares some thoughts on publishing a magazine in this age of digital mass media; “I can’t be bothered with all of this conventional wisdom and unimaginative doom and gloom… I’m more excited about print –and this magazine — then I have been in a long while.” We couldn’t agree more. Passion and bullheaded focus will keep the most imaginative and radical works alive for years to come, be they magazines, books, music or hippie-punk print palaces.

The Nov/Dec URB holiday issue runs down the 150 things they love most which includes; #42 Amoeba records, #50 The Hollywood Bowl, #58 Supper Rad Toys, #104 Red Bull, #120 Street Walkers, #130 DC rapper Wale, #125 Chicago’s rainbow colored party scene. We’re blushing red. Check back soon for Book Beat’s 25 things we love for 25 years.

VALENTINE FOR RAY JOHNSON 14.02.2007

The most well-known unknown American artist” died in a suicide drowning 13 January 1995, after a lifetime as unique and perplexing as his art. His suicide, the film proposes, was perhaps his greatest and most mysterious artwork. Can suicide become an artwork? A performance? The idea was troubling. When I’d first heard about it (a call from a friend on the 14 January), I was stunned and saddened. I didn’t understand how someone I knew and adored, who had intrigued me with his words and keen intelligence, and seduced me with his friendship, would or could take his life….

How to Draw a Bunny, like most of Johnson’s collages, is a cryptogram wrapped inside a conundrum. The title is taken from one of Ray’s diagrammatic drawings of his iconic rabbit/duck, a stand-in alter ego. In the film, we learn the “how,” of Johnson’s suicide but not exactly “why,” although we are offered dozens of clues. Source: Matthew Rose, letter from Paris in ART THE MAGAZINE”

The origins of this mysterious Ray Johnson film began many years ago when John Walters a young 16-year-old, soon-to-be PBS fimmaker  began combing the stacks at Book Beat collecting surrealist tomes and rarities, especially on the artist Marcel Duchamp who occupied the central position of  Walter’s interest in artists (and anti-artists).  At some point I mentioned that Ray was giving a midnight performance in the bookstore (one of several, over the 1980s). I don’t know if  Walter’s was able to see Ray’s performance, but his interest  soon morphed into the idea of making a movie several years after the artist swam into oblivion in 1995.

Ray’s performances at the Book Beat were very simple and poetic “non-performances”. For one event Ray simply altered a sign in the front window announcing the performance with large capital  that spelled my name in capital letters bought at a hardware store.  We were having a midnight madness sale at the bookstore and at midnight he placed the adhesive letters on the back of the announcement in the front window:  “Come see Artist Ray johnson tonight at midnight! one performance onlY!” Another time Ray sat in the children’s book section with a bag over his head and recited “I’m not Iggy Pop!” over and over. Once for several days he’d come by with his arm always wrapped up completely with rope, he said something about how his arm was a Christo wrapping. At an informal book signing we had, Ray often signed his name with his right or left hand upside down and backwards. He also had a small clipboard attached to his steering wheel so he could make drawings while he drove. He amassed hundreds of these he kept in the glove box and a small shoebox on the floor of the car.

How to Draw a Bunny is one of the best artist biographies ever put to film. It is one of the few approaches to a difficult subject put into an honest and objective framework. It was awarded a special jury prize at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival and the Grand Prix du Public 2002 at the Rencontres Internationales de Cinema in Paris. The film was also nominated for a 2003 Independent Spirit Award. The film soundtrack also reflects the offbeat world of Ray with tracks by Max Roach, Thurston Moore and Destoy All Monsters.

“As both investigated and represented by filmmakers John Walter and Andrew Moore, How to Draw a Bunny is itself a collage of photographs, art works, interviews and letters, home movies and video, that flow at the viewer like a jazz ensemble. With exceptionally toned care and constructions, the filmmakers penetrate into a “rabbit hole of an art world wonderland” and reveals not only an artist’s fragmented life, but also the universe of his peers, friends, critics, and colleagues. With interviews from Roy Lichtenstein and Christo, Chuck Close and James Rosenquist, and the artist himself, the film offers a real understanding of the origins of present-day art and the confusions of the postmodern world, as well as the experience of an artist who wore many different faces and treated the art scene as a game without a prize.” — from the Estate of Ray Johnson website

“Ray Johnson is a natural collagist, one of whose principal activities is bringing disparate entities into conjunction. His collages, especially those made after his period as an American Abstract Artist, have been intermittently exhibited and reproduced in books, catalogs, and magazines. The mid-fifties collages, which incorporate printed images of Elvis Presley and James Dean, are slowly entering the history books, usually as components of the early history of pop art. But Ray Johnson is not to be confined so easily within a single ism. Other of his collages are closer to the raw art of Jean Dubuffet, while displaying a funky inevitability all their own. Others, still, are very lyrical.” — from Clive Philpot’s, THE MAILED ART OF RAY JOHNSON


In 1981, Detroit artist Jim Pallas began his “hitchiker series.” They involved wooden stand-ups of artists and were supposed to be abandoned anywhere (on the road) one year after of they were given to the artist. One of artists in the project was Ray Johnson, who refused to give up the image after the year was up. “I just became attached to it,” Ray said. The story of this strange collaboration can be read at: HITCHICKER RAY JOHNSON

He colored images of Elvis before Warhol did, and his Correspondence School predates the Internet with its concept of open and free distribution of artwork. His dropping of 60 foot-long wieners at an avant-garde art happenings predates the Turkey Drop episode of WKRP In Cincinnat by a good 25 years. — Metro Times

Ray used to phone the bookstore at all hours of the day and night. “Check out The Warhol Diaries, now, page 425, I’ll hold on..” ( his name appeared on that page) or “Nico is dead!” and then he’d hang up…  “did I tell you about that guy I mailed a ham sandwich to… he still has it in his fridge!” …”call Joy Colby and ask her to review my nothing…” Ray worked the phone lines in similar style to the mail art network.

One of Ray’s best friends was the archivist William S. Wilson, who lives now in a small apartment in Chelsea, New York,  totally crammed in with works by his artist mother and a huge Ray Johnson archive dating back to the mid-fifties. Bill has some of the best insights to Ray. Some of Bill’s old home movies of Ray row-boating down a river were included in How to Draw a Bunny. Bill took 13 wonderful black and white photos of Ray Johnson sometime in the late 1960s and wrote an article on Ray’s obsession with the number 13. You can read his article online at Blastitude 13: Ray Johnson and the Number 13.

New Pynchon Arrives 12/05/2006 27.07.2006

Thomas Pynchon’s last known photograph taken in 1957.

The long wait could be over for Thomas Pynchon fans. His first novel in nearly a decade is titled Against the Day, it runs over 900 pages and is due out (or maybe not) in bookstores on December 5th. Reserve your copy today!

In Pynchon’s own words: “Spanning the period between the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893 and the years just after World War I, this novel moves from the labor troubles in Colorado to turn-of-the-century New York, to London and Gottingen, Venice and Vienna, the Balkans, Central Asia, Siberia at the time of the mysterious Tunguska Event, Mexico during the Revolution, postwar Paris, silent-era Hollywood, and one or two places not strictly speaking on the map at all.

With a worldwide disaster looming just a few years ahead, it is a time of unrestrained corporate greed, false religiosity, moronic fecklessness, and evil intent in high places. No reference to the present day is intended or should be inferred.

The sizable cast of characters includes anarchists, balloonists, gamblers, corporate tycoons, drug enthusiasts, innocents and decadents, mathematicians, mad scientists, shamans, psychics, and stage magicians, spies, detectives, adventuresses, and hired guns. There are cameo appearances by Nikola Tesla, Bela Lugosi, and Groucho Marx.

As an era of certainty comes crashing down around their ears and an unpredictable future commences, these folks are mostly just trying to pursue their lives. Sometimes they manage to catch up; sometimes it’s their lives that pursue them.

Meanwhile, the author is up to his usual business. Characters stop what they’re doing to sing what are for the most part stupid songs. Strange sexual practices take place. Obscure languages are spoken, not always idiomatically. Contrary-to-the-fact occurrences occur. If it is not the world, it is what the world might be with a minor adjustment or two. According to some, this is one of the main purposes of fiction.

Let the reader decide, let the reader beware. Good luck.”
–Thomas Pynchon

Source: The Guardian UK

Detroit Gossip 20.06.2006

Famous media photographer Bruce Weber was in Detroit for a week of shooting the Motor City for a special 40 page insert in “W” magazine to be out in September. Weber stopped by the Book Beat on Saturday to capture Detroit’s poet laureate Naomi Long Madgett, who was doing a reading with fellow poets Bill Harris and Vievee Francis. After the shoot, Madgett autographed multiple copies of her books for the famed photog. You can purchase or read for yourself about Madgett’s newly published autobiography at: Pilgrim’s Journey. Weber also invited Detroit’s own photo-documentarian Bill Rauhauser (author of Detroit Revisited and Bob Lo Revisited) for a private portrait session at Ameen Hawrani’s classy photo studio on Grand Boulevard where we were treated to a nice buffet lunch & caught super model Kate Moss shooting hoops out back with local homeboys. Kate & Bruce were observed earlier at a fashion shoot at Tyree Guyton’s famed Heidelburg Project. The art director from “W” magazine and Bruce picked up some vintage photographs and art books from Book Beat before heading back home. ~ report from Detroit, nouveau fashion & style capital of the world.