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editor's note
Editor's Note
Recently I’ve been mired by reading “editor’s notes.” Writing one . . . why would that be any different? Don’t get me wrong, this 5th issue rages and has loads of inspiring curated sections, and god knows, tons of reviews. It’s the “editor’s note” in magazines that has been my tedium, and as I can’t seem to find anything of interest in any that I’ve read—including mine—to further benefit the publication in question, I wonder—does anybody read these things? And does it matter? El Nino, the role of the paparazzi, and a host of other different things, because of their timeliness, might come into play, regarding what might don the cover, here or anywhere else. But, why?
“. . . she let me see that sympathy, in a sense of moved understanding, had always been lacking. “But then,” she added ingenuously, “I’ve never really been sure, because I’ve never told anyone my story. Only I take it for granted that, if I haven’t, it’s their fault rather than mine . . .”
—Mrs. Lizzie Hazeldean, Edith Wharton’s “New Year’s Day,” Old New YorkFault? Mrs. Hazeldean would rather play with disinformation as an art, and reckon ignorance comes from acceptable non disclosure—or discreet disclosure: The modernity of life. The Donald does it (marry, unmarry, marry, unmarry), Rudy does it (walk, don’t walk), can zingmagazine do it? Perhaps, perhaps not. But who can resist. Lawrence Welk did it on his honeymoon night—a little of this, and none of that—and of course, Welk reported this dutifully in Wunnerful! Wunnerful! Which in fact, measures up as double cover—twice exposed: innkeeper and American autobiography—all know your secrets, Fern! Back to Mrs. Hazeldean.
“What is it there in the atmosphere of such houses that makes them so enchanting to a fastidious and imaginative youth? Why is it that those women (as the others call them) alone know how to put the awkward at ease, check the familiar, smile a little at the over-knowing, and yet encourage naturalness in all? The difference of atmosphere is felt on the very threshold. The flowers grow differently in their vases, the lamps and easy chairs have found a cleverer way of coming together, the books on the table are the very ones that one is longing to get a hold of. The most perilous coquetry may not be in a woman’s way of arranging her dress but in her way of arranging her drawing-room; and in this art Mrs. Hazeldean excelled.”
—Mr. Parrett, Edith Wharton’s “New Year’s Day,” Old New YorkMrs. Hazeldean and this issue excel.
Devon Dikeou
New York, New York
1998 -
curators' notes
Curators' Notes
Chris Miles is an artist and writer and an instructor at Los Angeles Mission College. He is a contributing editor at Detour, where he writes a monthly column chronicling the events, trends, and personalities of the American art scene, and he regularly contributes interviews, essays, reviews, and projects to Artweek, art/text, and zingmagazine. His writings have also appeared in Artnewsletter, Lingo, and Soma.
Steven Severance is a Sub-Sub-Librarian at Penn State University—”painstaking burrower and grubworm.” He has a couple of degrees from Stanford and likes the way de Kooning writes and Proust draws. If you want more of his Aeschylus drawings, just write him at:
348 Sunnyside Rd
West Grove, PA 19390If you want fewer if his Aeschylus drawings, just rip them out and throw them away.
Liz Deschenes is a photographer living in NYC. She will be exhibited a photo project entitled “Beppu” in October/November 1997 at Bronwyn Keenan Gallery, NYC.
Tom Rayfiel lives in Brooklyn.
Paul Graham is an artist-photographer who lives and works in London. His work of the past twenty years has been widely influential in many of the recent changes within the medium, such as the switch from black and white to color documentary practice. The work presented here, +33:18, is from a flight around the world that he made last year.
Ricardo Dominguez is the recombinant editor of the Thing (http://www.thing.net), a former member of Critical Art Ensemble, and a bioglyph in the Zapatista Network. http://www.thing.net/~rdom
Diane Ludin is an associate editor for Thing Reviews, former managing editor for Blast:3 and 4 (http://www.thing.net/~xaf), and collaborated with Floating Point Unit on the CUseeMe TV broadcast. http://www.thing.net/~diane
Tricia Collins lives and works.
Jane Hart lives in Los Angeles where she is currently the director of Muse X Editions, as well as a partner in Lemon Sky: a project space, an independent curator, artist, and writer.
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masthead
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Chris Miles
New Faces in Portraiture
Chris Miles
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Steven Severance
The Persians
Steven Severance
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Liz Deschenes
Bath Houses
Liz Deschenes
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Tom Rayfiel
Lutwidge Finch
Tom Rayfiel
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Paul Graham
33:19
Paul Graham
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Diane Ludin & Ricardo Dominguez
Sensory Interface: A Closet Drama In 4 Scenes
Diane Ludin & Ricardo Dominguez
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Tricia Collins
Tablet
Tricia Collins
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Jane Hart
Oh! sweet youth
Jane Hart
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The Reflections, The Reviews, The Reactions
The Reflections, The Reviews, The Reactions