RE: FLUXLIST: Performance!

2006-07-18 Thread Don Boyd

I'll try to be there John. (Quoting Babba Ram Dass but I mean it, too! )-Don



http://www.donaldboyd.blogspot.com/
http://fluxuswest.blogspot.com/
http://fluxusmuseum.blogspot.com/





Re: RE: FLUXLIST: Performance!

2006-07-18 Thread JOHN BENNETT
great - it should be pretty lively, as both Jack and Ben are high energy 
crazeeness and i'm no slouch in that dept. either -

john

Dr. John M. Bennett
Curator, Avant Writing Collection
Rare Books  Manuscripts Library
The Ohio State University Libraries
1858 Neil Av Mall
Columbus, OH 43210 USA

(614) 292-3029
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.johnmbennett.net
http://library.osu.edu/sites/rarebooks/avantwriting/

- Original Message -
From: Don Boyd [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tuesday, July 18, 2006 4:34 pm
Subject: RE: FLUXLIST: Performance!

 I'll try to be there John. (Quoting Babba Ram Dass but I mean it, 
 too! )-Don
 
 
 
 http://www.donaldboyd.blogspot.com/
 http://fluxuswest.blogspot.com/
 http://fluxusmuseum.blogspot.com/
 
 
 
 




FLUXLIST: Performance!

2006-07-17 Thread John M. Bennett


ROTTY WHAT

John M. Bennett – poetry/voice
Jack Wright – saxophone
Benjamin Bennett – percussion



AUGUST 16, 2006

9:00 PM






THE BASEMENT
369 E. 15th Ave.
Columbus, OH 43214 USA

Donation Accepted




Contact: Benjamin Bennett
(614) 291-7589


__
Dr. John M. Bennett
Curator, Avant Writing Collection
Rare Books  Manuscripts Library
The Ohio State University Libraries
1858 Neil Av Mall
Columbus, OH 43210 USA
(614) 292-3029
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

www.johnmbennett.net


http://www.library.osu.edu/sites/rarebooks/avantwriting/
___




FLUXLIST: PERFORMANCE FOR WEBCAM

2004-07-23 Thread Alan Bowman
dear all,

here's a li'l something we'd completely forgotten about!

http://xoomer.virgilio.it/n.waugh/aniani/index.html

judging by the haircut, bowman did it 3 years ago.

sort of a bit, nearly, kind of ties in with crispin's stuff.

jest fort ewe mite wont two sea eat!

bon manwala fffo shift and caps-lock phobic div






FLUXLIST: PERFORMANCE SCORES PERFORMED

2004-07-22 Thread Crispin Webb
http://www.crispinwebb.com/newpage/movies/phone.html
http://www.crispinwebb.com/newpage/movies/leftphone.html
http://www.crispinwebb.com/newpage/movies/phone.html

BJORN ERIKSSON of sweden recently responded to an email 
request for performance scores and video submissions and i have done 
these scores above.

here are a couple of performances for BJORN to do in front of his webcam

BATTERY PERFORMANCE1. HOLD A NINE VOLT BATTERY TO TUNGE
2. CHEW ON NAILS
3. DRINK A CUP OF WATER

MAP PERFORMANCE
1. DRAW A MAP SMALL
2. THROW YOUR PENCIL
3. SUCK YOUR THUMB


GOLF PERFORMANCE
1. ACT LIKE A GOLFER2. HOLD A GOLF BALL OR BALL SHAPED THING3. PUT THE BALL THING IN THE AIR


Thanks












www.crispinwebb.com
		Do you Yahoo!?
Vote for the stars of Yahoo!'s next ad campaign!

Re: FLUXLIST: PERFORMANCE SCORES PERFORMED

2004-07-22 Thread Björn Eriksson



Nice! 
The sleeping performance is to be found at http://www.crispinwebb.com/newpage/movies/sleeping.html
I'll try to make mine asap.

/Björn Eriksson


  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Crispin 
  Webb 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2004 8:14 
  AM
  Subject: FLUXLIST: PERFORMANCE SCORES 
  PERFORMED
  
  http://www.crispinwebb.com/newpage/movies/phone.html
  http://www.crispinwebb.com/newpage/movies/leftphone.html
  http://www.crispinwebb.com/newpage/movies/phone.html
  
  BJORN ERIKSSON of sweden recently responded to an email 
  request for performance scores and video submissions and i have done 
  these scores above.
  
  here are a couple of performances for BJORN to do in front of his 
webcam
  
  BATTERY PERFORMANCE1. HOLD A NINE VOLT BATTERY TO TUNGE
  2. CHEW ON NAILS
  3. DRINK A CUP OF WATER
  
  MAP PERFORMANCE
  1. DRAW A MAP SMALL
  2. THROW YOUR PENCIL
  3. SUCK YOUR THUMB
  
  
  GOLF PERFORMANCE
  1. ACT LIKE A GOLFER2. HOLD A GOLF BALL OR BALL SHAPED THING3. PUT 
  THE BALL THING IN THE AIR
  
  
  Thanks
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  www.crispinwebb.com
  
  
  Do you Yahoo!?Vote for the 
  stars of Yahoo!'s next ad campaign!


Re: FLUXLIST: performance with stones

2003-10-13 Thread Kathy Forer
On Thursday, October 9, 2003, at 10:02  AM, Josh Ronsen wrote:

In December, the Austin New Music Co-Op will present an evening of 
performances using stones and rocks. Pieces by John Gibson, Christian 
Wolff, Pauline Oliveros and NMC members will be performed. Outside the 
performance space, there will be a number of installations using 
rocks. I am thinking about doing an installation/performance (I will 
also be performing in the ensemble). My idea is to kneel down by a 
pile of stones and a sign that reads let he who is without sin cast 
the first stone.

This is a simple idea (although rich in implications), and I am sure 
it has been done before. But who? When? Where?
For their project, a group of conceptual art students at Cornell in 
Ithaca, NY, 1974, rented a school bus and took students and faculty up 
to a quarry where we had a performance play. It started with stoning 
an outcast. The outcast went into a pit and everyone threw what they 
could find. Only problem was people got really into it, not like in the 
rehearsal. I was the outcast getting stoned and remember getting 
really scared and adrenaline rushing. That stopped and we scrambled up 
a cliff. It was a little like the Magical Mystery Tour and there 
everyone was at the top of the cliff. Something drew me to the edge and 
I recall thinking how easy it would be to just jump -- as part of the 
performance! Luckily something drew me back more and I didn't. So we 
all scrambled down again, sat in an oval and smoked a real peace pipe.

There was much more to this, but as the outcast (self-appointed?) I 
not entirely cognizant of the script though there was also audio and I 
still have a recording somewhere.

Not as simple as a rock pile and glass wall, but related.




Re: FLUXLIST: performance with stones

2003-10-12 Thread Don Boyd
Josh, By Christ, 28 B.C. -Don

_
Help protect your PC.  Get a FREE computer virus scan online from McAfee. 
http://clinic.mcafee.com/clinic/ibuy/campaign.asp?cid=3963




FLUXLIST: performance with stones

2003-10-09 Thread Josh Ronsen
In December, the Austin New Music Co-Op will present an evening of performances using 
stones and rocks. Pieces by John Gibson, Christian Wolff, Pauline Oliveros and NMC 
members will be performed. Outside the performance space, there will be a number of 
installations using rocks. I am thinking about doing an installation/performance (I 
will also be performing in the ensemble). My idea is to kneel down by a pile of stones 
and a sign that reads let he who is without sin cast the first stone.

This is a simple idea (although rich in implications), and I am sure it has been done 
before. But who? When? Where?

Any help will be greatly appreciated.

-Josh Ronsen
in Austin, Texas





Need a new email address that people can remember
Check out the new EudoraMail at
http://www.eudoramail.com



FLUXLIST: Performance Cinema Symposium - SF CA - USA

2003-09-17 Thread ART ELECTRONICS
The San Francisco Performance Cinema Symposium
September 27  2003, starting at noon, running into late evening.

Requested admission is $5 (all day) or $10 (evening only) and free after
11pm, at Dimension 7, 150 Folsom street, San Francisco.

Scott Arford, Tommy Becker, Bello Benischauer,
Greg Bowman, Joshua Kit Clayton, Fred Collopy,
Sue Costible, criticalartware, Caterina Davinio,
Stefan G, Michael Heap, Lynn Kirby,
Phoebe Legere, Christina McPhee, Sunit Parekh,
Shirley Shor, Henry Warwick, Gregor White

Recent innovations in computer software and performance gains in hardware
are now permitting the development of a truly performative cinema.  Today,
we can see this distinctive  new art form growing quickly and this symposium
will  aid in the formative theory of this new cinematic art - complete with
mind-bending performances by leading artists in the field.


The Order of Things for 27SEP03, SFPCS:

SPEAKERS:

Noon
Michael Heap UK  (Sadly had to bag out last minute but has lecture on DVD)

12.30
Scott Arford SF  Total Static Takeover

1.00
Stefan G  SFThe History and Practise of the VJ


1.30
Henry Warwick SF   Towards a Theory of Performative Cinema

2.00
Criticalartware Chicago Collaborative Discussion

(short break)

3.00 Panel (RT):

Kit claytonSF
Christina mcpheeLA
Greg bowmanSeattle
Kit claytonSF
Lynn kirbySF
Henry WarwickSF

Dinner break between 5pm and 7pm

It's San Francisco: there's a million places to eat, and 90% of them are
pretty damn good.

We all show up back at D7 at 7pm for the performances.


Performers:

7.00
Sunit ParekhSF

7.30
Christina mcpheeLA

8.00
Gregor whiteScotland

8.30
Lynn Marie Kirby w/ Alex Killough   SF

9.00
Fred Collopy w/ Henry WarwickCleveland Ohio

9.30
Tommy BeckerSF

10.00
Greg bowmanSeattle


10.30 (?)
Phoebe LegereNYC (may perform later, to break up reception)

Installations:

Shirley ShorSF
Bello BenischauerOz
Caterina DavinioITL
Sue CostibleSF


Others Involved:
Grant Davis (Technology Manager)
Ben Sheppee (Technology Assistant)
Ryan Lubbers, Michelle Stanul (Food service)
Jathan Gurr (video documentation and other assistance)
Ann Wang (video documentation)
Mark Dellima and Jef Cunningham (video documentation and other assistance)
Charles Kremenak (DJ between speakers and performers. D7 has a DJ for
reception)




Re: FLUXLIST: performance with scrap metal

2001-06-12 Thread Sol Nte

Tom,

This sounds like a fine performance. I would certainly be interested in
documentation. Do you still have my snail mail address or do I need to send
it again.

cheers,

Sol.




Re: FLUXLIST: performance with scrap metal

2001-06-11 Thread Tom Grothus

I performed the following on a public sidewalk in Seattle on June 9, 2001.

Arrangement for Scrap Metal : A Composition in Two Parts
Part 1 - Place pieces of scrap metal in a line on the ground.
Part 2 - Pick up the pieces in the order in which they were placed.

Other than one advance post on Fluxlist (on June 8)
there was no prior publicity. The scrap metal consisted of approximately 450
pocket-sized pieces of metal, mostly picked up on the streets of Seattle
over the past year - screws, washers, bolts, bits of wire, jewelry, keys,
etc.

I will soon have a more detailed document prepared about the event.
If you would like a copy, let me know.

If you want a text-only e-mail, send me your e-mail address.

If you want a printed version (a xerographic booklet), send me your postal
address.

Tom G.
Seattle

(I tried to send this earlier with an attachment but it seems to have not
made it through. I'm sending it again without the attachment. Sorry if
you've received this twice.)

--
From: Tom Grothus [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: FLUXLIST: performance with scrap metal
Date: Fri, Jun 8, 2001, 10:01 PM


 I am planning a public performance of Composition with Scrap Metal in the
 Ballard neighborhood of Seattle on the evening of Saturday, June 9, 2001



Re: FLUXLIST: performance with scrap metal

2001-06-11 Thread { brad brace }

On Mon, 11 Jun 2001, Tom Grothus wrote:

 Arrangement for Scrap Metal : A Composition in Two Parts
 Part 1 - Place pieces of scrap metal in a line on the ground.
 Part 2 - Pick up the pieces in the order in which they
 were placed:

 ... one-at-a-time, place the first after the last,
followed by the second, ad infinitum.

Part 3 - Incorporate any additional haphazard scrap that
falls-in-line.

/:b








FLUXLIST: performance with scrap metal

2001-06-08 Thread Tom Grothus

I am planning a public performance of Composition with Scrap Metal in the
Ballard neighborhood of Seattle on the evening of Saturday, June 9, 2001
(the 2300 block of NW Market St, sidewalk on the south side, 7:00 p.m. local
time). It will last approximately 30 - 40 minutes. I may postpone the
performance in the event of rain. I will post more details on Fluxlist after
the performance.

This is the only public announcement of this planned low-key event.

Tom G.
Seattle



FLUXLIST: Performance?

2001-05-29 Thread Owen Smith

This was sent to me this morning and I thought that it had 
Fluxus potential and that some of you on the list might want 
to participate.

Owen




Subject: summer solstice 
Celebrate the solstice in a meaningful way!!  This
could be fun! 

Regardless of your politics, please consider
participating in a demonstration of conservation... it
could make a difference. Mark your calendar to
remember! 

VOLUNTARY ROLLING BLACKOUT 
THE SUMMER SOLSTICE, JUNE 21, 2001 THURSDAY, 7-10pm
worldwide, all time zones 


As an alternative to George W. Bush's energy
policies and lack of emphasis on efficiency,
conservation and alternative fuels, there will be a
voluntary rolling blackout on the first day of summer
(summer solstice), June 21 at 7pm - 10pm in any time
zone (this will roll it across the planet). 

Its a simple protest and a symbolic act. Turn out your
lights from 7pm-10pm on June 21. Unplug whatever you
can unplug in your house. Light a candle, kiss and
tell or not, take a stroll in the dark, invent
stories, anything that's not electric - have fun in
the dark. 

Forward this email as widely as possible, to your
government representatives and environmental contacts.
Let them know we want global education, participation
and funding in conservation, efficiency and
alternative fuel efforts -- and an end to
overexploitation and misuse of the earth's resources.
Say no to more nuclear reactors, oil drilling in the
Arctic, and excessive oil drilling and fossil fuel
consumption in general. 




FLUXLIST: performance scores?

2000-11-17 Thread Josh Ronsen

Is someone still collecting scores for a new Fluxus Workbook?

I have a new piece I dream about performing with my brekekekexkoaxkoax ensemble once I 
actually get an actual ensemble together. I am sure there is a piece similar to this 
somewhere

ENSEMBLE SCORE

1. Announce start of piece.
2. Ensemble enters, sets up equipment, tunes up or otherwise get ready to perform.
3. Pause.
4. Ensemble breaks down equipment and removes fromstage.
5. Ensemble returns for applause.


-Josh Ronsen
http://www.nd.org/jronsen










--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
Before you buy.





Re: FLUXLIST: performance score/making transfers (very useful)

2000-09-28 Thread ann klefstad

Can use acetone to do the transfers from xeroxes--so xerox images from
newspaper etc and then transfer w/ acetone, a relatively benign solvent (much
less deadly than some others). Also, since the advent of soy inks, the old
solvent-transfer from newspaper thing doesn't work as well. This circumvents
that.

AK

David Baptiste Chirot wrote:

 sit for some time (hours) at nearest street corner to where you
 live

 make a "traffic report"

 sit and watch sky (or lie down to do so--or stand--whatever best,
 or change positions)--again, for some time--

 make "weather report

 note such reports not only may entail concrete particulars--but
 also memories, dreams, reflections engendered by the events observed

 dave baptiste chirot

 PS--thank you again Patricia and Allen for the beautiful job of
 presentation of the timepiece i had made--

 it's funny--i think the colors look brighter on the web--

 they also often come out very interestingly in color xerox
 (ones i have tired, not these ones)

 you can make interesting works by collecting color xerox from trash
 cans in the xerox copy places--and then you soak them, or parts you want
 to use, with some finger nail polish remover--then rub off the colors and
 things presented there--onto another sheet of paper

 this is another method of what is called making "transfers"--i
 first earned how to make the ones from newspaper b and w from an
 interview years and years and years ago with rbt rauschenberg--for these
 you use lighter fluid to soak the paper--

 just be areful if you smoke! i do this and use spray paint a lot
 so am always on verge of blowing myself up as seem to lose track and light
 up--!




Re: FLUXLIST: performance score/making transfers (very useful)

2000-09-28 Thread David Baptiste Chirot




dear ak:

my gawd! many THANKS for your info!
does indeed turn out BY CHANCE (?--"meant to be")--
do have huge lovely metal can of acetone here 
still "bran-nu" as never opened
can't recall why have it
may be like abt 85% or so of my work materials "found"
"while in the line of duty"--i.e. walking abt
or at a sale of art supplies figured some day of use
--and NOW IS!

have found though for my purposes--ie. love of the corroded,
cracked, fragmented, "if it's broke don't fix it"--
(much like myself any more)
that much like effects though "poor" (arte povera/art brut?)
of the old method--makes interesting forms/traces  of words/worlds


so--shall "sally forth" (always wondered who she is)
and try acetone!
funny you look  at it and is: ace tone

sounds like a Fifties rock and roll singer

but say it  is "ass-ah-tone"

"adventures with language" 

as old school books wd call it!

again many many thanks!

yet another thing of use in the world!

(or my corner of it--)

--dave baptiste


On Thu, 28 Sep 2000, ann klefstad wrote:

 Can use acetone to do the transfers from xeroxes--so xerox images from
 newspaper etc and then transfer w/ acetone, a relatively benign solvent (much
 less deadly than some others). Also, since the advent of soy inks, the old
 solvent-transfer from newspaper thing doesn't work as well. This circumvents
 that.
 
 AK
 
 David Baptiste Chirot wrote:
 
  sit for some time (hours) at nearest street corner to where you
  live
 
  make a "traffic report"
 
  sit and watch sky (or lie down to do so--or stand--whatever best,
  or change positions)--again, for some time--
 
  make "weather report
 
  note such reports not only may entail concrete particulars--but
  also memories, dreams, reflections engendered by the events observed
 
  dave baptiste chirot
 
  PS--thank you again Patricia and Allen for the beautiful job of
  presentation of the timepiece i had made--
 
  it's funny--i think the colors look brighter on the web--
 
  they also often come out very interestingly in color xerox
  (ones i have tired, not these ones)
 
  you can make interesting works by collecting color xerox from trash
  cans in the xerox copy places--and then you soak them, or parts you want
  to use, with some finger nail polish remover--then rub off the colors and
  things presented there--onto another sheet of paper
 
  this is another method of what is called making "transfers"--i
  first earned how to make the ones from newspaper b and w from an
  interview years and years and years ago with rbt rauschenberg--for these
  you use lighter fluid to soak the paper--
 
  just be areful if you smoke! i do this and use spray paint a lot
  so am always on verge of blowing myself up as seem to lose track and light
  up--!
 
 







Re: FLUXLIST: performance score/making transfers (very useful)

2000-09-28 Thread Patricia

Interesting, I viewed a televised special on the recent Rauchenberg exhibit and
commmitted to memory the fact that they taped him making monoprints on wet
watercolor paper from an inkjet print.  It's in the P.K. memory but I have yet
to try it.

I've done the acetone method, but I have developed an aversion to chemicals,
so, if I use chemicals for any type of process, I use them outdoors.

Re the timepiece work - Dave, I was disappointed that the texture of your
pieces was lost in the scan process, but I like the different dimension it
brings through the loss of dimension, if that makes any sense.  This
digital/internet business has no end of visual fascination.  Btw, I will send
them back to you, honest.

Best,
PK

David Baptiste Chirot wrote:

 sit for some time (hours) at nearest street corner to where you
 live

 make a "traffic report"

 sit and watch sky (or lie down to do so--or stand--whatever best,
 or change positions)--again, for some time--

 make "weather report

 note such reports not only may entail concrete particulars--but
 also memories, dreams, reflections engendered by the events observed

 dave baptiste chirot

 PS--thank you again Patricia and Allen for the beautiful job of
 presentation of the timepiece i had made--

 it's funny--i think the colors look brighter on the web--

 they also often come out very interestingly in color xerox
 (ones i have tired, not these ones)

 you can make interesting works by collecting color xerox from trash
 cans in the xerox copy places--and then you soak them, or parts you want
 to use, with some finger nail polish remover--then rub off the colors and
 things presented there--onto another sheet of paper

 this is another method of what is called making "transfers"--i
 first earned how to make the ones from newspaper b and w from an
 interview years and years and years ago with rbt rauschenberg--for these
 you use lighter fluid to soak the paper--

 just be areful if you smoke! i do this and use spray paint a lot
 so am always on verge of blowing myself up as seem to lose track and light
 up--!




Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-27 Thread Patricia

Henry Miller did 2/3 of this.  See "Hieronymous Bosch and the
Oranges of Big Sur."  That would be, at least, items 2 and 3.
Yet, still sounds eventful to me.

One could always:

1.  paint vodka
2.  drink 50 coloured waters.
3.  sell them for a minus sum

dance round

Carol Starr wrote:

 hi eryk,

 square dance

 1. drink vodka
 2. paint 50 watercolours 6x6"
 3. give them all away

 happy sunday everning, c   :)
 --
 carol starr
 taos, new mexico, usa
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-26 Thread meryl



- pass pages that would bring tears to your eyes.  
 
 And possibly other body
 parts as well.

 Such-as?
 And-so?

Such as your small intestine.
And so who the fuck cares?


 We publish a series of mystery novels in which the protagonist is a cat.

 Fluxism on Broadway.
 Ken is a Cat.

Is Ken a cat?  If so, what do we really mean by cat?  What do we really mean
by Ken?  What are we really talking about when we're talking about is?  What
time is it REALLY.  What do you care?  What do I care?

I don't.




Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-25 Thread { brad brace }

On Sat, 23 Sep 2000, meryl wrote:

 I work for a large publishing house (as a production editor).  We publish 
 crap.  My, oh my, could I send you passages and pages from raw manuscript or
 1st pass pages that would bring tears to your eyes.  

 And possibly other body
 parts as well.

Such-as?
And-so?

 We publish a series of mystery novels in which the protagonist is a cat.

Fluxism on Broadway.
Ken is a Cat.


/:b






Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-25 Thread { brad brace }


kinda like responding to emails six months later... what's better?   /:b







Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-23 Thread meryl

I work for a large publishing house (as a production editor).  We publish 
crap.  My, oh my, could I send you passages and pages from raw manuscript or
1st pass pages that would bring tears to your eyes.  And possibly other body
parts as well.

We publish a series of mystery novels in which the protagonist is a cat.
Mangled cliches are our stock in trade.

--

  i dream of books made of nothing but misquotes, maplapropsism,
 mangled cliches, errata,the most seemingly b alnd juxtaposd with the
 horrific--in short, a kind of National Enquirer piece of "illiterature"!



















 



Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-23 Thread Narcissus In Paradys

Meryl, I am a young man trying to make a living as a writer. Please send me the 
mailing address of your publishing house. If all you publish is really crap, I might 
stand a chance.
~David Streever
--- "meryl" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
I work for a large publishing house (as a production editor).  We publish 
crap.  My, oh my, could I send you passages and pages from raw manuscript or
1st pass pages that would bring tears to your eyes.  And possibly other body
parts as well.

We publish a series of mystery novels in which the protagonist is a cat.
Mangled cliches are our stock in trade.

--

  i dream of books made of nothing but misquotes, maplapropsism,
 mangled cliches, errata,the most seemingly b alnd juxtaposd with the
 horrific--in short, a kind of National Enquirer piece of "illiterature"!





















==
"When the last human has died, trees shall cover the earth."
"Man is the dream of the dolphin."

_
Get premier, free, fast, 6Mb web-based email at --- http://www.nabou.com



Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-23 Thread Eryk Salvaggio

Yes, me too. We all need a publishing house that publishes only 
crap! How else would I make a living?

-e.



Narcissus In Paradys wrote:
 
 Meryl, I am a young man trying to make a living as a writer. Please send me the 
mailing address of your publishing house. If all you publish is really crap, I might 
stand a chance.
 ~David Streever
 --- "meryl" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  wrote:
 I work for a large publishing house (as a production editor).  We publish
 crap.  My, oh my, could I send you passages and pages from raw manuscript or
 1st pass pages that would bring tears to your eyes.  And possibly other body
 parts as well.
 
 We publish a series of mystery novels in which the protagonist is a cat.
 Mangled cliches are our stock in trade.
 
 --
 
   i dream of books made of nothing but misquotes, maplapropsism,
  mangled cliches, errata,the most seemingly b alnd juxtaposd with the
  horrific--in short, a kind of National Enquirer piece of "illiterature"!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 ==
 "When the last human has died, trees shall cover the earth."
 "Man is the dream of the dolphin."
 
 _
 Get premier, free, fast, 6Mb web-based email at --- http://www.nabou.com



Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-21 Thread David Baptiste Chirot



Josh:  an exellent idea!
as you know, often books with "errata" made become collectors'
items (same with records--the pl vereity--as worked in record store svene
years and learned all kinds of obscyre lore along these lines--)

i once placed pacards in large boodstor by the fiction saying: ALL
WORKS HERE ALL FALSE AND WILL SHORTLY BE WITHDRAWN

this caused no end of confusion in the bookstore!

rmber when Grantigans's TROUT FISHING IN AMERICA  used to be
placed in nature/ports sections?

and so many of the works of the great Paul Metalf, beng
unclassifiable
for many--wound up in the oddest places also--

when i fisrt got bitten by te bug for the obscue ad ut of the
way--boks i knew must exist yet knew not where to find except by chance or
word of moth of wonderful guidebooks like Henry Miller's THE BOOKS IN MY
LIFE--used to imagine a section for the "unwonted/unwanted" boks i
sought--srt of mass grouping of errata that had some how made it past
unwitting publishers, sleeping cnsors and the so called critics--

the good part is that pehrpas this spurs one on to create such
wrks of one's own

"errata" or the "erratic" (put by mistake in with the "eoricat"
section!)

i dream of books made of nothing but misquotes, maplapropsism,
mangled cliches, errata,the most seemingly b alnd juxtaposd with the
horrific--in short, a kind of National Enquirer piece of "illiterature"!

i think we shd begin eah in ur ways a mapaing for the dessimantion
of errata--

by the introduction of such subtle shifts, on a mass and
surreptious scale--many an odd chamnge may begin to occur in the reception
of many a "serious" work . . . . 

--dave baptsite 

On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, Josh Ronsen wrote:

 ERRATA SCORE
 
 Print spurious Errata notices and place them in books in a bookstore or library.
 
 
 -Josh Ronsen
 http://www.nd.org/jronsen
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
 Before you buy.
 






FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-21 Thread Don Boyd

LAST DAY OF SUMMER PERFORMANCE SCORE by Don Boyd, FLUXUS WEST, 2000

1. Step outside at noon today, September 21, 2000, if you can.

2. Look North, up to the sky, take a deep breath and say, "It was a   
wonderful summer!"

3. Then turn and look East at the horizon, take a deep breath and say,
"Welcome Fall!"

4. Turn and look South at the ground, take a deep breath and say, "This is a 
great day!"

5. Turn and face West, take a deep breath, look anywhere you want and say 
what you want. Tkae your time, performance is over.


(In memory of Dick Higgins who wrote a score for the first snow fall in New 
York City. Also, I'm not sure if today is the last day of summer or if it is 
tomorrow. At any rate, do this on the last day of summer where you live. 
Have a good day. -Don
_
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Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-21 Thread Eryk Salvaggio

Reminds me a bit of the REM video for "Stand."

1. Stand in the place where you live.
2. Now face North: Think about direction.
3. Wonder why you haven't before.
4. Stand in the place where you work.
5. Now face West.
6. Think about the place where you live.
7. Wonder why you haven't before.


Not too direct a connection to the song but kinda. :)


Don Boyd wrote:
 
 LAST DAY OF SUMMER PERFORMANCE SCORE by Don Boyd, FLUXUS WEST, 2000
 
 1. Step outside at noon today, September 21, 2000, if you can.
 
 2. Look North, up to the sky, take a deep breath and say, "It was a
 wonderful summer!"
 
 3. Then turn and look East at the horizon, take a deep breath and say,
 "Welcome Fall!"
 
 4. Turn and look South at the ground, take a deep breath and say, "This is a
 great day!"
 
 5. Turn and face West, take a deep breath, look anywhere you want and say
 what you want. Tkae your time, performance is over.



Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-21 Thread Narcissus In Paradys

Actually, sounds like the invocation to the Four Quarters, or the Calling of the 
Elements.
1. Face the North. Call the Spirits of the North.
2. Face the West. Call the Spirits of the West.
3. Face the South. Call the Spirits of the South.
4. Face the East. Call the Spirits of the East.
This form of ritual is ingrained in the subconcious of anyone from any culture- part 
of the cultural/genetic memory. It has many parallels in many cultures, and the above 
is only a simplified version.

--- Eryk Salvaggio [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
Reminds me a bit of the REM video for "Stand."

1. Stand in the place where you live.
2. Now face North: Think about direction.
3. Wonder why you haven't before.
4. Stand in the place where you work.
5. Now face West.
6. Think about the place where you live.
7. Wonder why you haven't before.


Not too direct a connection to the song but kinda. :)


Don Boyd wrote:
 
 LAST DAY OF SUMMER PERFORMANCE SCORE by Don Boyd, FLUXUS WEST, 2000
 
 1. Step outside at noon today, September 21, 2000, if you can.
 
 2. Look North, up to the sky, take a deep breath and say, "It was a
 wonderful summer!"
 
 3. Then turn and look East at the horizon, take a deep breath and say,
 "Welcome Fall!"
 
 4. Turn and look South at the ground, take a deep breath and say, "This is a
 great day!"
 
 5. Turn and face West, take a deep breath, look anywhere you want and say
 what you want. Tkae your time, performance is over.

==
"When the last human has died, trees shall cover the earth."
"Man is the dream of the dolphin."

_
Get premier, free, fast, 6Mb web-based email at --- http://www.nabou.com



Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-21 Thread Eryk Salvaggio



Ah, well- the REM version was catchier- 
and you could dance to it!

:)

-e.

Narcissus In Paradys wrote:
 
 Actually, sounds like the invocation to the Four Quarters, or the Calling of the 
Elements.
 1. Face the North. Call the Spirits of the North.
 2. Face the West. Call the Spirits of the West.
 3. Face the South. Call the Spirits of the South.
 4. Face the East. Call the Spirits of the East.
 This form of ritual is ingrained in the subconcious of anyone from any culture- part 
of the cultural/genetic memory. It has many parallels in many cultures, and the above 
is only a simplified version.
 
 --- Eryk Salvaggio [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  wrote:
 Reminds me a bit of the REM video for "Stand."
 
 1. Stand in the place where you live.
 2. Now face North: Think about direction.
 3. Wonder why you haven't before.
 4. Stand in the place where you work.
 5. Now face West.
 6. Think about the place where you live.
 7. Wonder why you haven't before.
 
 
 Not too direct a connection to the song but kinda. :)
 
 
 Don Boyd wrote:
 
  LAST DAY OF SUMMER PERFORMANCE SCORE by Don Boyd, FLUXUS WEST, 2000
 
  1. Step outside at noon today, September 21, 2000, if you can.
 
  2. Look North, up to the sky, take a deep breath and say, "It was a
  wonderful summer!"
 
  3. Then turn and look East at the horizon, take a deep breath and say,
  "Welcome Fall!"
 
  4. Turn and look South at the ground, take a deep breath and say, "This is a
  great day!"
 
  5. Turn and face West, take a deep breath, look anywhere you want and say
  what you want. Tkae your time, performance is over.



Re: FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-21 Thread Narcissus In Paradys

LOL, very true! I always did like the REM version :-)

--- Eryk Salvaggio [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:


Ah, well- the REM version was catchier- 
and you could dance to it!

:)

-e.

Narcissus In Paradys wrote:
 
 Actually, sounds like the invocation to the Four Quarters, or the Calling of the 
Elements.
 1. Face the North. Call the Spirits of the North.
 2. Face the West. Call the Spirits of the West.
 3. Face the South. Call the Spirits of the South.
 4. Face the East. Call the Spirits of the East.
 This form of ritual is ingrained in the subconcious of anyone from any culture- 
part of the cultural/genetic memory. It has many parallels in many cultures, and the 
above is only a simplified version.
 
 --- Eryk Salvaggio [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  wrote:
 Reminds me a bit of the REM video for "Stand."
 
 1. Stand in the place where you live.
 2. Now face North: Think about direction.
 3. Wonder why you haven't before.
 4. Stand in the place where you work.
 5. Now face West.
 6. Think about the place where you live.
 7. Wonder why you haven't before.
 
 
 Not too direct a connection to the song but kinda. :)
 
 
 Don Boyd wrote:
 
  LAST DAY OF SUMMER PERFORMANCE SCORE by Don Boyd, FLUXUS WEST, 2000
 
  1. Step outside at noon today, September 21, 2000, if you can.
 
  2. Look North, up to the sky, take a deep breath and say, "It was a
  wonderful summer!"
 
  3. Then turn and look East at the horizon, take a deep breath and say,
  "Welcome Fall!"
 
  4. Turn and look South at the ground, take a deep breath and say, "This is a
  great day!"
 
  5. Turn and face West, take a deep breath, look anywhere you want and say
  what you want. Tkae your time, performance is over.

==
"When the last human has died, trees shall cover the earth."
"Man is the dream of the dolphin."

_
Get premier, free, fast, 6Mb web-based email at --- http://www.nabou.com



FLUXLIST: performance score

2000-09-19 Thread Josh Ronsen

ERRATA SCORE

Print spurious Errata notices and place them in books in a bookstore or library.


-Josh Ronsen
http://www.nd.org/jronsen














--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
Before you buy.



FLUXLIST: Performance/Mail Art Show

2000-09-07 Thread Patricia

"Time of Change" Minden, Germany 9 September 2000 - 11 September
2000

http://www.netmailart.de/english/invitations/

Best,
PK