Mandela’s Eyes

Don’t play around the course he got the took the rook the crook the snook all were pasted upon him like a long vicious learning there is all of Africa all of night all the every trace of sweet hurt distilled like cobalt turned into night the distant moon a door to where no one … Read more

“Family Properties” (& Buying the Farm)

The NBA playoffs—from the high drama of the early series to divine low-downs of Charles Barkley—show what happens when African Americans get to compete on equal terms. But the sweetness of their play shouldn’t be an excuse for the treacle of that State Farm ad set in the 1920s(?) where Chris Paul’s proprietorial “twin” pitches … Read more

An Opening of the Field

Exploring the art and coteries of the artist Jess (1923–2004) and the poet Robert Duncan (1919–1988), An Opening of the Field celebrates the vibrant household of two extraordinary men who lived together as lovers and collaborators at the epicenter of the San Francisco Bay Area’s glory years of artistic ferment. For Jess and Duncan, the … Read more

Rank Culture

toxic. wtf. not a “oh I’m so surprised this toxic thing exists” wtf but a “we might have to barf forever” wtf I feel like everything is starting to collapse. And I can’t believe only 4 out of 40 people on this dumb list are women. OOOOOOHHHHMYGODDDDD YOU GUYS. THE WORLD. Culture is such a … Read more

The Question of Taste: Bill Berkson

« Institutional Memories | Main | Notes on Chilean Literature (Or Those Queer Birds Disturbing the Necrophilic Silence of the Barrio Alto) » The Question of Taste: Bill Berkson By Bill Berkson & Jarrett Earnest Bill Berkson is a poet (originally associated with the New York School) and critic who’s been writing about art since … Read more