It seems unfair that this deserving
Indiegogo campaign didn't meet it's target; I can't be alone in hoping they revisit the possibility of getting
this important Jazz-age cache of photographs out into the world (which is not to diminish its value as the hugely under-noted moment in San Francisco history that it also is). Smart publishers take note.
The National Heritage Memorial Fund has been instrumental in keeping such uniquely British artifacts as the Flying Scotsman steam locomotive, William Wordsworth's cottage, and the poet Siegfried Sassoon's archive not only preserved but in the UK. Last week, they saved
Charles Dickens' desk for the nation.
In stark contrast, France loses out to New Jersey for
this.
Derrida's library in Paris | photo © Andrew Bush, 2001Postcards from Picasso.
The filmmaker Jem Cohen, best known to many for
Instrument, a documentary about the band Fugazi, has a new film and is the subject of a nice
profile in the
Guardian by
Sukhdev Sandhu.
There's a lot of talk these days about interdisciplinarity and cross-pollination in the arts, but on the approach of the 100-year anniversary of the
Cabaret Voltaire, this
essay is a good reminder that Dada got there first.
Speaking of cross-pollination: music composition and income inequality: a sociological,
moving musical diagram that you can
compose yourself (especially if you know the NYC subway system). How long till we have London, San Francisco, Beijing, Mumbai, and Washington D.C. versions of this?
—Eugenia BellHomepage image: Celebrating a record release in the Fillmore Diner, San Francsico, 1950s | photo by Steve Jackson Jr. Part of the "Harlem of the West" project.