141 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
141 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
Preface to _ASSEMBLING 13.1_
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by Karl Young
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For this issue of _Assembling_, contributors were asked to supply 200
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copies each of one, two, or three 8 1/2" x 14" sheets. Anyone could
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contribute, and contributors alone decided what work would be included,
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without advice or direction from an editor. Except for the sheet size
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and the number of copies, that's how _Assembling_ has come together
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through its first twelve issues. In this issue, contributors were also
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asked to use color in some way.
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The initial impulse behind _Assembling_ was the need to create a
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medium in which contributors would have absolute artistic freedom.
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Early issues bore the subtitle "A Collection of Otherwise
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Unpublishable Manuscripts." Although these issues included work that
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could be, and often was, published elsewhere, the subtitle conveys
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some of the sense of urgency behind the magazine. It was founder
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Richard Kostelanetz's contention that the best work produced in this
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country was unpublishable not because it was bad, but because it was
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too good -- it presented too much of a challenge and a threat to
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established publishing houses. In many respects, he was right.
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However, during _Assembling's_ first decade, small presses were active
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and healthy. Many had the courage to publish daring work; others had a
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commitment to work that may not have been all that radically new but
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still, for market reasons, would not be published by established
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houses. At the beginning of 1987, the small press movement of the 60's
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and 70's seems to be dying or becoming complacent. Many presses have
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ceased to operate for lack of funds. Many of those that are still
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going have become dismally predictable. Most magazines represent one
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clique or another and the tables of contents for magazines in any one
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clique are little more than rearrangements of the same lists of names.
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This is not to say that there is necessarily something wrong with the
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artists whose names appear in those lists; it is to say that there is
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other work, at least as good, that simply doesn't appear. I think this
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sort of stagnation finds its base in a curious kind of market
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censorship -- editors feel that by publishing recognized artists they
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may better be able to attract an audience and to hold on to their
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precarious grants.
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The need for recognized artists leads us to a much deeper and more
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dangerous problem, the problem of the need for reassuring authority.
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Editors of stagnant magazines feel assured that what they do has value
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if they publish recognized work; readers can feel assured if they feel
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the works they see have been consecrated by a consensus of opinion
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established more than a decade ago, and given a stamp of approval by
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an editor, even if that editor may be as insecure as they are. It
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might be argued that such works aren't really read, they simply confer
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a type of status on editors, and assure readers that their taste is
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good.
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_Assembling_ constantly challenges the complacency of editors and
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readers, returning responsibility to artists and authority to their
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audiences. The artists themselves chose what to print and how to go
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about doing it. No production restrictions, other than page size,
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hamper them. Any defect -- from conception to execution -- is the
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artist's fault. Readers themselves have to determine what has value
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for them, without any reassuring authority figure validating anything.
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No mediator stands between artists and audience judgment. Publication
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in _Assembling_ simply makes work available; it doesn't validate or
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consecrate anything, nor does it offer anyone any kind of assurance.
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These are basic tenants of any sort of freedom. They may be
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frightening, but the alternative is even more frightening. Look at
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the world around you and you'll see the results of people abdicating
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their responsibilities and placing their trust in authority figures.
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The fact that _Assembling_ doesn't validate or consecrate anything
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tends to focus attention on the work itself and away from the artist.
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It sometimes takes a bit of effort even to find the name of the author
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of a given page. I don't advocate anonymity (I label my own
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contributions), but I do think the way _Assembling_ shifts attention
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from the artist to the work is a healthy corrective to the current
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overemphasis on personality.
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I mentioned market censorship above. _Assembling_ can help alleviate
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this problem to some extent, but not as much as we'd like. The problem
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that remains is the cost of printing contributions. "Freedom of the
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press is guaranteed only to those who own printing presses," runs an
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old axiom in small press circles. Most contributors don't own presses,
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and are faced with ever escalating printing costs. The smaller press
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run of this issue may help, but still a solution to this problem
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remains unfound. Perhaps contributions by some of the Soviet Samizdat
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artists, who are used to a more severe sort of censorship than we find
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in North America, may suggest solutions to the rest of us.
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There have been several aspects of _Assembling_ that weren't clearly
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thought out when the magazine was first conceived, but which have
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helped make it one of the best magazines around. Collage and chance
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processes have dominated the arts throughout this century, and
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_Assembling_, with its varied contributors sequenced in alphabetical
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order, seems to be the chance generated collage par excellence.
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Performance art has become increasingly important as we've moved
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closer to the end of the millennium, and _Assembling_ is a sort of
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Happening done in print, an Event created by a number of people going
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in different directions, following a simple program, unable to see the
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final result until the Event has been completed.
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We hope that the page size and the request for color will be creative
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and challenging factors in this issue. In the invitations I sent out,
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I suggested that contributors might think of three sheet contributions
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as mini-books or to work in terms of two page openings or spreads.
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Aside from any retinal, emotional, or symbolic qualities color may
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have, it allows greater complexity of information to be conveyed. For
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instance, by using two colors you can superimpose one text over
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another and still let each be legible; using color, a contributor can
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create an illusion of depth, so that one visual field or text can seem
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to appear over another, or to block out another;in a performance
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score, you can color code the text so that several participants can
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distinguish their parts by color. There are many other possibilities
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for constructive use of color that we may hope to see extended in this
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issue.
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The assemblers are trying to bring in contributions from countries
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outside the United States and we hope to see _Assembling_ become more
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of an international magazine. _Assembling_ has always tended to cut
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across barriers of one sort or another, primarily those set up by
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cliques and users of different methods. The magazine should be a
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place where different points of view and opposing methods can come
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together, encouraging interaction, constructive debate, and, ideally,
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mutual tolerance. I hope that constructive diversity will continue to
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grow in each successive issue. This should be increased and enhanced
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by international participation.
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One of the most interesting things to me about past issues of
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_Assembling_ has been the need felt by some contributors to test the
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few limits placed on them by the magazine's format. I was one of the
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few contributors to No. 12 to follow the request that works address
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the notion "our place in nature, and nature's place in us." I imagine
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quite a few contributors will ignore the request for color, and I hope
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that others will find ingenious ways to work against the magazine's
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format. Such impulses get us started; how intelligently we use them is
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our own responsibility.
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_Assembling 13_ was compiled by Charles Doria, Andrea Schwartz,
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Andrea Von Milbacher, and Karl Young in 1987 and published by
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Assemblig Press/P.O. Box 1967/Brooklyn, N.Y. 11202/U.S.A.
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