Excerpts from Theodor Adorno’s “Functionalism Today,” 1965
Architecture worthy of human beings thinks better of men than they actually are.
Rip Currents @ Montez Press Radio
Caesura was invited by Montez Press Radio to contribute a segment of radio programming in July 2020.
A New Channel: David Lynch’s Weather Reports
David Lynch has an impeccable ability to generate an attuned viewer. His Weather Reports show that he can do so in less than a minute. Even more than that, they illustrate the extent to which Lynch is a devout practitioner of art.
A Conversation with Errol Sawyer
I died for Beauty — but was scarce / Adjusted in the Tomb / When One who died for Truth, was lain / In an adjoining Room
Walter Benjamin’s “On The Topic of Individual Disciplines and Philosophy,” 1923
“Timelessness” must be unmasked as an exponent of the bourgeois concept of truth.
Gallery Poems
Our countertops shall be as spotless as spotlights are dramatic / on skim finished gallery walls.
Disjecta Membra: Clement Greenberg’s “Counter-Avant-Garde,” 1971
Conceptualist art is making a last desperate attempt to escape from the jurisdiction of taste by plumbing remoter and remoter depths of subart — as though taste might not be able to follow that far down. And also as though boredom did not constitute an aesthetic judgment.
Reflections on Kanye West’s “Wash Us in The Blood”
If West’s works are ever “soothing,” it’s precisely because they do often succeed in revealing something true about the world, something we can relate to as listeners. If critics feel that “Wash Us in the Blood” fails to hit the mark, then, it must be for a different reason.
Disjecta Membra: Ezra Pound’s “Date Line,” 1934
Criticism tries to serve as a theoretical gunsight: what to aim at. And the gun is more like a catapult. It will have to clear the trees here on earth before it leaves the atmosphere.
What does it mean to be critical?
When people today criticize the leaders of the American Revolution they only project their own narrowness and narcissism onto the conditions of the past. Had the American Revolution been defeated, in 1776 or in 1865, there would be no critique of present freedom possible today and no hope for any greater freedom in the future.
Aphorisms II
As Marx writes, “It is a matter of confession, no more. To have its sins forgiven mankind has only to declare them to be what they really are.”
Disjecta Membra: Excerpts from Thomas Wolfe’s Look Homeward, Angel, 1929
Every work of art “is a window on all time.” Thomas Wolfe was an American Proust — his novels are the crystalline precipitate of a hypersensitive memory submerged within the substrate of the universal.
Staring at the Sun: Arthur Jafa’s “Love is the Message”
Jafa’s omnipotent sun of tradition is there to remind us that what is considered freedom now is merely the allowance we are given to be a controlled emanation of society as it exists.
Disjecta Membra: Rosmarie Waldrop's "Thinking of Follows," 1996
I do not “use” the language. I interact with it. I do not communicate via language, but with it. Language is not a tool for me, but a medium infinitely larger than any intention.
Critical Art or Kum Ba Ya?
Is Glenn Ligon a critic of identity politics, or a mouthpiece? Or is it that he is both, and ultimately neither?
Disjecta Membra: Clement Greenberg’s "The Renaissance of the Little Mag," 1941
All important questions become political questions in a much more immediate sense than in the past. But to be publicly portentous one must have opinions. And to have serious opinions one must have ideas — political ideas. But one is afraid of political opinions; they involve you in partisanship and in arguments that have nothing to do with poetry.
The Magnitude of a Young Courbet: Reflections on A Burial at Ornans
According to a young Courbet, whatever we encounter en masse today might just as well need to be considered a (neo-) Romanticism, waiting for its own Burial in order to explode the heteronomy of the given and the same in which we constantly entrench ourselves.