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editor's note
Editor's Note
A great epoch has begun.
There exists a new spirit.
There exists a mass of work conceived in the new spirit; it is to be met with particularly in industrial production.
Architecture is stifled by custom.
The “styles” are a lie.
Style is a unity of principle animating all the work of an epoch, the result of a state of mind which has its own special character.
Our own epoch is determining, day by day, its own style.
Our eyes, unhappily are unable yet to discern it.—Le Corbusier, Towards a New Architecture
Written in 1923, this architectural manifest’s ideal seems prurient in the tidal wave that has castrated the US people, land, architecture, ideals, freedoms, and seeming sovereignty. The mass has come down. The style assaulted, the epoch destroyed, the purveyors of that epoch measured by their devastation, but their spirit remains and will be renewed. However horrifically—our eyes, unhappily are unable yet to discern it—but, it will come.
The cover—a close up of a butterfly wing, is delicate and brittle, beautiful beyond physical measure, short lived but magnificent in its fleeting life—a metaphor of the Twin Towers which began their growth in the ’60s. They appeared as babes in a cacoon on the cover of zingmagazine seven, only 30 years in existence, and seem unrecognizable, compared to their grown manifestation extinguished now, and forever devastated into a piedmont of rubble, encrypted into our consciousness—religious, economic, technological, political or otherwise. Those Towers. These wings.
Fly like a butterfly, sting like a bee.
—Mohammed AliDevon Dikeou
New York, New York
September 14, 2001The saccharine patriotism I felt in the above commentary now tastes as bad as the New Coke of 1984-5. Certainly our life has changed. What has been espoused and written, reflected and exhibited, conjured and published, felt and surmised, televised and broadcast, e-mailed and monitored, queried and justified, has more than adequately archived the range of emotions following 9/11. 9/11 itself is a new linguistic signifier for tragedy, as well as a monumental gravestone in the ephemeral landscape. And like the New Coke, I want it recalled; taken back; removed from the shelves.
So as I reassess my feelings and attempt to effuse thoughts on what is published here in the current issue of zingmagazine, I ask myself, “is any of the above salvageable, and what must or has to change?” I like the Le Corbusier quote. It engenders a rethinking appropriate of those moments this fall. And still, it seems less perfunctory in the abstract isolation of the present. And what does the present hold? In the most chronological sense, zingmagazine was at press when the events of 9/11 struck. Two curated sections were pulled for the appropriateness of their content. Two others have since been slated for later publication. So this issue of zingmagazine has certainly changed—even as the idea was the run the magazine as it was—without any differences or deferences. But that is the beauty in and of itself of zingmagazine—change in the same leading role, as contrast—both in the character of the curated projects. zingmagazine is as it was, only now a biannual. Fickle is change.
Homeland Security, Cipro, Enron Media Frenzy, American Taliban, Dirty Bombs, Hockey Dad, Skate Gate, Blame it on the French Judge
Irving Berlins “God Bless America” and “The Star Spangled Banner”. We now have two National Anthems.
“Then all the reindeer loved him, as they shouted out with glee, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, you’ll go down in history!”
—Johnny MarksAll innocents and innocence re-relegated. All revenge revealed not re-orientated.
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curators' notes
Curators' Notes
Kenny Schachter: After 13 years of swearing to never open a gallery, I will open two, both designed by Vito Acconci; the first in late Fall 2001 at 14 Charles Lane, NYC (the KS conTEMPorary), and the second in Chelsea, NYC in a location to be announced (depicted in zing). http://www.roveTV.net
Mark Sink on David Brady: “I believe the most beautiful things in life are the most simple. Brady is the type of artist that when he sits for a moment he will create art. If it’s plastic forks or paperclips, discarded magazine imagery, almost anything under your nose—he is constantly building, spontaneously searching the aesthetic potential of the ordinary and all-too-familiar. His work is innocently found objects, but they are successfully mounted for Conceptual study and insight to the qualities that constitute appeal.”
Yeon-doo Jung: I am interested in people’s lifestyle. I believe that the way my neighbors and I live explains who I am and why I live. My work is a mirror of my life. Sometimes it is romantic, but most of the time it is isolated. I visualize these things through the images in my work.
Vik Muniz born in Brazil, works and live in New York. Vik Muniz created “Pictures of Air” for the 49th Venice Biennial, Palazzo Fortuny.
Sico Carlier ambitious and prone to long periods of idleness, is a stylist, curator, and publisher, dividing time between Rotterdam/Holland and Marble Hill/the Bronx. He loves riding his bike up Wave Hill. Ben Laloua is a graphic designer, and works and lives in Rotterdam/Holland. Loves riding a tandem around the Dutch polders with Felix.
Lisa Kereszi lives and works in Brooklyn, and is planning a show of her work in this issue for Winter 2002 at Pierogi 2000. She is still in recovery from her 2000 Yale MFA.
Dear Friends & Colleagues,
It was a great pleasure working with Aaron Rose to make “Alleged Galleries 1992-2001” happen. Alleged was truly special force in New York and will be sorely missed by many. I wish Aaron and the crew all the best in Los Angeles.Sincerely,
James E FuentesPatricia Cronin is a New York based artist. She moved a lot as a child and ever since has been searching for that perfect home. In keeping with this theme, she is currently overwhelmed with a three ton marble mortuary sculpture funded by Grand Arts, Kansas City, Missouri. It will be exhibited there, at The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, Connecticut, and ultimately, at her final resting place. Unless, of course, someone buys it, which might help pay for some real estate that would come in handy while she’s still alive. She teaches at Columbia University and School of Visual Arts.
Paul Ramirez Jonas will be back in fifteen minutes.
William Pope L lives and works in Lewiston, Maine. “Friendliest Black Artist in America Productions” is his project company and the Martin Luther King Distribution Project is its most current enterprise. The next two steps are rumor and bio infiltration.
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masthead
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Kenny Schachter & Vito Acconci
Preliminary Proposal for Kenny Schachter's Gallery
Kenny Schachter & Vito Acconci
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David Brady & Mark Sink
Victoria's Secret
David Brady & Mark Sink
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Yeon-doo Jung
Evergreen Tower
Yeon-doo Jung
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Vik Muniz
Pictures of Air
Vik Muniz
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Sico Carlier & Ben Laloua
Persistence of Memory
Sico Carlier & Ben Laloua
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Lisa Kereszi
Night Light
Lisa Kereszi
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James Fuentes
Alleged Galleries 1992-2001
James Fuentes
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Patricia Cronin
Classified
Patricia Cronin
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Paul Ramirez Jonas
Magellan's Itinerary—A Reproduction
Paul Ramirez Jonas
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William Pope L
The Martin Luther King Distribution Project
William Pope L
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zingmagazine CD #2: Aesthetics
Compiled
zingmagazine CD #2: Aesthetics
1. Pulseprogramming - "Oh' Halo (1984 Penny For Your Loafer Mix)"
2. Team Forest - "Your Wings"
3. Fleck + Fumie - "From The Morning"
4. L'Altra - "Tragically Older"
5. E*Vax - "Go Before"
6. Icebreaker - "Melody For Nato"
7. Hood + Dose One + Why? - "Branches Bare"
8. Windsor For The Derby + I-Sound - "Ice Age Blues"
9. High Priest + CX/Kidtronik - "Sickly"
10. The Eternals - "Phase 3 (Of A Never Ending Transformation)"
11. Daniel Givens - "Propel"
12. 33.3 - "Playing Safe, Ducking Kisses and Getting Position"
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The Reflections, The Reviews, The Reactions
The Reflections, The Reviews, The Reactions
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zingmagazine book #3: Serge Onnen
Volume 0
zingmagazine book #3: Serge Onnen