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<center><img SRC="millionaire%27burg.GIF" BORDER=0 height=178 width=650><font color="#1F92B2"><font size=-2></font></font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2"><font size=-2>Tony Millionaire's Medea's Weekend</font></font>

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<p><font color="#1F92B2">__________________________________</font>
<p><font color="#006399"><font size=+2>Quivering Amidst the Cultural Organisms
of Our Own Construction</font></font>
<br><font color="#1F92B2"><font size=+1>_____________________________</font></font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2"><font size=+1>Catalogue Essay by Ebon Fisher</font></font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Out of Town: the Williamsburg Paradigm</font>
<br><font color="#1F92B2"><font size=+0>Curated by Jonathan Fineberg</font></font>
<br><font color="#1F92B2"><font size=+0>The Krannert Art Museum, University
of Illinois</font></font>
<br><font color="#1F92B2"><font size=+0>Urbana-Champaign, 1993</font></font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">The world is a snarl of tissue, nerves, wires,
and notions. In such a dense tangle how am I supposed to sense the edges
of anything? And now that I've been asked to measure that slippery ganglion,
the Williamsburg creative scene, where can I possibly begin? Everywhere
I turn in this youthful neighborhood I find a different web of impressions,
each a cluster of neurons knotting into a world. What spin should I put
on our little bubble of houses and factories --our piggledy perambulator
humming on its base of toxins along the stinking shore of the East River?
Which of the countless telephone lines holds the true buzz of North Brooklyn,
the buzz of our gumption, the plop of our deep-fried Brooklyn humility?
Which of the subway lines is the critical link to Manhattan? Is Grand street
the true pregnant pause, or is Bedford Avenue the multi-ethnic mix-master?</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">And whose scene is the scene here anyway? Is it
Polish, Latino, Gringo, Korean, Hasidic, or Italian? What about all the
Germans on their travel grants? And what about Fort Green? Isn't there
an African American cultural storm just south of here? Ask Spike Lee. Ask
Betty Carter. Who are we to claim Williamsburg as the imagination's ground
zero?</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">A couple years ago a reporter from the New York
Press pulled me aside at an opening at Minor Injury, a cultural space in
the heart of Williamsburg. He seemed to be under some uncanny pressure
to encapsulate the creative activity here. I told him, look, I don't know.
Go ask that hive of artists over by the keg. No, I want it now. Ask Kevin
Pyle, he's the Zen director of this gallery --he always has something to
say. Give it up, jack. Alright, here's a hunch: Two or three thousand expressive
souls have attempted a landing in Manhattan, slipped off its greasy mountains
of expensive real estate, fell into the L train, slid under the East River,
and come up for air in Williamsburg. And what all us pseudo-Brooklynites
are discovering is that there's a peculiar kind of life out here after
all. We're impressed by how neat it is to bump into our friends on the
street and say hello. That's the Williamsburg Style? Yeah. Hello! Small
town stuff. We're peeling off all that art-school dead skin and finding
out what our neighbors knew all along. But aren't you worshipping at the
altar of middle-class American values?</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Abstractions put some people at ease, so I squinted
my eyes and gave the reporter a few fat words: Linkage, Interaction, Integration
--those are the mechanisms, stranger. It's a jig of cultural organisms
co-habitating in a hostile environment. It's crucial to be friendly, to
interact with your surroundings. It's a socio-ecological thing. We're all
immersed in a local tangle of transmissions, feed-back loops, community
meetings, parties, love affairs, more feedback loops. In the midst of this
industrial wasteland we're beginning to create our own communications infrastructure.
Besides, during a recession bartering and cooperating become necessary
again. At least for the majority. It's the nature of living fully somewhere.
You're inside the beast, not on top of it with a good view. You're surrounded
by a fantastic matrix of political, technological, and psychological tissue.
You can be oblivious to it, or you can sink right down into it.</font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><img SRC="StevieSuction.GIF" BORDER=1 height=134 width=200>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#1F92B2">What does any of this have to do with "art"? It
doesn't. Many artists are trying to get away from that sort of vocabulary.
We're just making things and doing things. We suck up materials from the
surrounding plasma of abandoned cars and factories, trigger numerous networks
of telephones, hook up some gas-powered generators, TVs, sirens, microphones
&Ntilde;and integrate it all with our tenderest of feelings. Boom! The
Flytrap is born: A burned-out, 20,000 square foot warehouse turns into
a seething cultural hydra. Thousands of people, interactive machines, border-free
performers, and live music all percolating on a hypnotic hot-plate of poverty-induced
good will in the summer of 1991. Like any interactive ritual the days of
preparation keyed up our emotions until there was nothing to do but uncoil
in a nightlong delirium.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">A few days later we watch the whole thing on Hi-8
video and party again. Rolf Carl, Mick Henry, and Anna Hurwitz haul out
their spinning projection systems and we're on the verge of a second climax.
For months afterwards Gallagher's Ship's Mast Pub is electrified by newly
bonded strangers. Rube Fenwick, a producer of performance events at the
Mast, moves through the throng with his superfluent grin, toasting in every
direction. Medea de Vyse has teamed up with Adil Kureshi, the de facto
neighborhood shrink, and is kissing anyone who's name she can remember.
A week later the local fanzine, Waterfront Week, appears with its unflappable
cartoon by Tony Millionaire depicting all the antics of the week before.
Adil makes an appearance as a huge, celestial potato.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">So many parties with monstrous, tilting, interactive
installations. So many incredible murals painted by the students at El
Puente. So many odd gatherings down by the waterfront to push the debris
around and make stuff. So many scarecrows built to scare off real estate
developers. Anna West campaigns with the Latino and Hasidic communities
to rebuild the walkway on the Williamsburg Bridge, and a few months later
she and Luisa Caldwell celebrate the opening with a festival: smoking kielbasa
and children's art clamoring along the fence; artists in every direction
open their studios to the public; Stavit Allweis revs up her nine pinkoid
dancers who ooze through the teeming strollers like slugs on a mission.
Yvette Helin's speechless, jet-black "Pedestrians" roll by on bicycles.
Children, cars, and the J train squeal in unison; a video tape of the event
is played back at Stevie's studio and she and her dancers discuss the fine
points of performance on dilapidated bridges.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">In Williamsburg we have so many overlapping fields
of involvement the density of curiousity and interaction is astounding.
Looking back over the last four years of cultural activity I can see that
the same spirit of participation infused the Sex Salon at Epoch*; open
mike nights at the Lizard's Tail and The Ship's Mast; The phenomenal Cat's
Head warehouse parties; the outdoor rap orgy, Human Fest; the group shows
at Minor Injury, Brand Name Damages, and Four Walls; There was Kit Blakes
and Roxy Paine's Tweeking the Human show, an incendiary hive of interactive
machines spread between Minor Injury and Brand Name Damages. The rock and
performance clubs which have emerged here in the last five years have also
invited a kind of unslick, multimedia involvement &Ntilde;The Bog, Keep
Refrigerated, Arcadia, Quiet Life, Room Temperature, El Sensorium, The
Green Room. The dancing has been strangely genuine, and intense.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">I have seen a lot of drunken people attempt to
graft the recent history of Manhattan's East Village onto Williamsburg.
They assume that any of the area's charm and progress is due solely to
that magic dragon, "gentrification." The word is wielded like some kind
of wand which you wave over complex neighborhoods, turning them into tidy
hierarchies. But get out the electron microscope and you find quite a lot
of neighborhood tissue growing out here -with webs of power extending in
every direction like capillaries. When the true gentrifiers turn up -the
real estate developers- they'll have quite an organized neighborhood to
contend with. The recession has provided plenty of lead time.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">It goes without saying that the Latino, Italian,
Polish, and Hasidic cultures in Williamsburg have not needed lifestyle
guidance from the recent influx of creative professionals. On every block
there are very active restaurants, clubs, churches, and synagogues punctuating
the sidewalks like sizzling circuit boxes. The Grand Street Waterfront
Festival, an annual Latino gathering, has encouraged artist's to dive into
the fiesta with our Weird Thing Zones, face painting, and Weenie Putt-Putt
courses. Medea de Vyse, the cross-dressing enigma, was even permitted to
dish out her shoeless ode to sexual liberation up on the Latino stage.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Bounded by an expressway, a bridge, and the East
River, North Brooklyn has an unusual sense of identity. Community networks
weave thickly here. Hanging out on the street with a couple of cold ones
and your neighbors is a regular tribal custom: children are always included.
Take Filmore Place, the total hang-out-and-play street. It hasn't changed
a bit since the 1950's when Henry Miller called it the perfect American
street. Neighborhood associations have planted trees, rebuilt sidewalks,
and paved lumpy roads. Coalitions of unlikey ethnic mixes have formed and
a lot of low-income housing has been built. Activists have temporarily
shut down the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway and personally blocked a fire
truck from abandoning the area. This year as the New York Marathon came
panting down Bedford Avenue, a hundred Williamsburgers were there, dressed
up in white sanitation suits to challenge the city's incinerator proposal.
Protest here is a very dramatic enterprise.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">This place has character, and by bullet-ridden
necessity that character is progressive. This is the Wild West in the age
of the computer, the video camera, and the fax machine. Ask the People's
Firehouse, El Puente, or the Southside Political Action Committee. In the
last couple of years Williamsburg residents have elected a progressive
judge and one of the country's first latino Representives, Nydia Velazquez
-a woman with a clear mandate to change the status quo. Holding a recent
fundraiser at a Williamsburg art gallery, Velazquez is no stranger to the
creative impulse.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Many artists I've met here have acknowledged the
inter-relations between art, technology, the environment, and politics.
Many have entered into the stream of community meetings, skills exchange
networks, recycling systems, and park creation. They've built strange alliances
with firemen, bakeries, and pubs. Rather than taking an oppositional, elitist
stance towards their neighbors, a far more convivial sensibility has emerged
-at least with some of the artists. On the heels of the cynical, disingenuous
art culture of the 1980's, this inversion of orientation comes as a relief.
Out of the stultifying, sanctimonious mausoleum of a Soho-centered cultural
order we are thrown into the turmoil of local adventure and multivalent
connection. New neural pathways are forming here and their catalyst, thank
the universe, is emphatically not the solipsistic "art world." The catalyst
is the entire world as we find it churning here on these Williamsburg streets.</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">I wrote this article with great doubt in my authority
to describe the profusion of cultural fiber here. Despite my intentions
to be democratic, my biases keep bleeding to the surface. To get some perspective,
I strolled down to the end of Grand Street where the Waterfront Festival
was in full salsa swing. I asked everyone I bumped into what they thought
of our community:</font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Daniel Maisonet:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"It's cool. The southside buildings are being
renovated. City housing, affordable housing. Williamsburg is probably one
of the smallest neighborhoods so there's a lot of unity."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Tawana McNeil:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"There's too much shooting, too much drugs. But
I like the jams, the block parties."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Mike Rodriguez:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"I like the girls, man. They're too fine."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Anita Montanez:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"There's too much drugs, shooting. The music
?having something like this festival is great."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Kevin Pyle:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"I like the anonymity of it. I like the inherent
post-industrial romanticism oozing and clanking from the street refuse."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Emily Ortiz:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"I love Williamsburg. I love it because I know
all the people. It's easy to get along with them. I grew up here. The gun
shots don't bother me. In a way it does, but I go to Puerto Rico in the
summer, and I don't like it. You need a car to get everywhere. Here the
store is right down the street. There's a better chance to get an education,
a job."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Robert Elmes:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"I like the proximity to Manhattan. Manhattan
is like a living, breathing reference library of all forms of human culture.
Williamsburg gives me a perspective on all that. It's less intense here."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Ruth Kahn:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"There's no fashion pressure."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Roi Babiak:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"It's the interactive art community. People are
so readily interested in working with each other. I like the cultural diversity.
It's the interactive thing. I get the feeling like I'm in a neighborhood."</font>
<p><font color="#1F92B2">Al Arthur:</font>
<br><font color="#6876E7">"It's a gift."</font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#1F92B2">--Ebon Fisher, 1993</font>

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<center><a href="media.html" target="_parent"><img SRC="=coilgentlyW=.gif" BORDER=0 height=59 width=109></a>
<p><font size=-1><a href="mailto:[email protected]">L I N K&nbsp;&nbsp;
M E</a></font>
<p><font size=-1>&copy;2011 Ebon Fisher</font>

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