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   <title>Williamsburg, Brooklyn in the Early 1990s</title>
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<center><img SRC="W_ThingZone_Kids.GIF" BORDER=1 height=117 width=175>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=-1>The Weird Thing Zone, 1991</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#178282">_______________</font>
<p><font color="#008099"><font size=+2>Brooklyn Unbound</font></font>
<br><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>_____________</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>by Mark Rose</font></font>
<br><font color="#178282"><font size=-1>New York Press, 1991</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+0>"Serene was a word you could put
to Brooklyn, New York...</font></font>
<br><font color="#178282"><font size=+0>But it did not apply to Williamsburg."</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+0>-Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Artists began moving into Williamsburg
in earnest six years ago and it is now estimated there are 2000 scattered
throughout the Southside and Northside, a veritable invading force.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Artists are attracted to Williamsburg
because of its close proximity to the city ...and a chance to escape the
overly-ambitious, commercialized hustle of the Manhattanized art world.
In this milieu, fellow escapees find solace, ideas flow freer, it's strictly
a Brooklyn state of mind. In Williamsburg you can create, you don't have
to sell. Big city cares and stresses are left behind. Or are they?...</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Williamsburg has a long and proud
tradition of fervent activism. Poles have faced down dozens of cops, marched
on City Hall, shut down the BQE for 18 miles, burned politicians in effigy
and occupied a firehouse. When the Latinos of the Southside Political Action
Committee tire of Congressman Stephen Solarz becoming "an apologist for
conservative, Republican policy," they lead a march on his residence. When
the unions want to protest unfair labor practices at the Domsey clothing
outlet, they call in Jesse Jackson. And you can't mess with their own police
force, their own medical teams; they can come at you in waves, with backup
support.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>So where do all these artists fit
in?</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Mostly, they live among the Polish,
Italian, and Latinos, but they are having a catalytic effect on the entire
community, and they are beginning to spread their influence to the other
North Brooklyn neighborhoods.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Over the last few years a tight
cadre of neighborhood activist-artist-media co-conspirators has emerged,
[including] "Nerve Circle" -"a multi-media organism," according to its
"nucleus," Ebon Fisher. Hatched in Boston in 1987, "Nerve Circle" is a
label for a series of experimental performance events.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>"All we can confidently do is lean
into the wild, cyclonic suction of integrity, sensing the yearning of all
things to relate. Your convergence <i>here</i> is precisely what we are
touching upon. Integrate," Ebon says.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>The neighborhood has also established
a network of "safe houses," for "Linkage, Integration, Interaction," such
as the two art galleries, Minor Injury and Brand Name Damages, bar/clubs
such as The Right Bank, Teddy's, The Ship's Mast, theaters such as The
Open Window, the "experimental hole in the ground, practically under the
Williamsburg Bridge" called Epoche, a smattering of Latino and Polish neighborhood
restaurants, and that huge stretch of eerie, magnificent, vacant waterfront,
with all those great rotting warehouses that are perfect to use as performance
spaces.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Artists have also created an impressive
semi-underground "Xeroxable" media network to lay unifying feelers out
to the mass of the Williamsburg art community and the long-time residents
of Southside and Northside.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1><i>Word of Mouth (WOM)</i> [later,
<i>WORM</i>],
a photocopied monthly with a circulation of 270, is intended to "politicize
the artists in the neighborhood without being bombastic... to creat an
interest," according to editor Kit Blake. Sam Binkley, "a quixotic swan
of the pen," according to Ebon, writes in <i>WOM</i> about the neighborhood
"with the sympathy of a socialist and the wink of an anarchist." Sam, the
self-named director of the North Brooklyn Center for Utopian Disorder,
writes: "You have nothing to lose but your brains!"</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1><i>The Nose</i>, compiled and published
by Ethan Petit, is a collaboration with local artists. It includes poetry,
philosophy, critical theory, visuals and "various exhortations such as
Kit Blake's images of computer chips, rallying the North Brooklyn Silicon
Subculture together," according to Ebon.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1><i>Waterfront Week</i> is a legal-size
Xeroxable gossip info-rap sheet dominated by Medea De Vyse, the "suburban
house-wife" side of Ethan Pettit.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>It also carries news of Ebon Fisher's
latest "Media Compression," where you gather to chew on, rip through, blend
and digest media -"no information, medium or sensation is too trivial.
The audience brings their own art and media to the event. We start with
a media blitz, then a media blackout, and then, in total darkness, we return
to the most primitive of all media, the spoken word. The purpose is to
integrate and make sense of the media overload. Like any mutation, a Media
Compression is an outgrowth of a disturbed environment," Ebon says.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1><i>El Pitirre</i>, a monthly educational,
political newsletter published by El Centro Cultural, is named after a
small bird native to Puerto Rico that is known for its ferocity.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Linkage. Integration. Interaction.
These are the three guiding principles of the art-activist cadre. That
means that Genia Gould, who edits and writes for the neighborhood paper
<i>Greenline</i>,
also writes for <i>Waterfront Week</i> and <i>Word of Mouth</i>. Ethan
Pettit, likewise. Ebon lends support to all the publications. Rube Fenwick,
Phyllis Yampolsky, Anna Hurwitz; the contributors to one publication are
likely to be the contributors to another.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>"Everybody chips in and does what
they can. Money as compensation is never part of the discussion," says
Kit Blake. Kit intends for <i>Word of Mouth</i> to serve as "a micro model
for a macro world."</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>In the October 1990, <i>Word of
Mouth</i>, Ebon writes:</font></font></center>

<blockquote>
<center><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>"Our western myth of the passive,
consuming being who sits in a brain surrounded by concrete objects of prey
and repulsion is beginning to dissolve... we are beginning to place the
locus of attention beyond the mythical 'self' and into a psycho-physical
swirl as we might call common space."</font></font></center>
</blockquote>

<center><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Common space is what the Williamsburg
art-activist movement is all about; a heady experiment to integrate into,
defend, help build and somehow connect the community at large, while remaining
true to that ever-slippery ideal called "artistic integrity." In fact,
the Williamsburg Way is to create art through activism and interconnection.
This involves subtle, non-confrontational shifts in how normally conflicting
cultures understand each other. Take, for instance, Ebon's "Weird Thing
Zone," at last year's Grand Street Waterfront Festival.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>The Waterfront Festival existed
happily for many years as a traditional three-day Labor Day Weekend Latino
bash at "a chunk of grassy turf," says <i>WOM</i>, where Grand Street meets
the East River, "Where the Northside meets the Southside and the land meets
the water," says Ebon.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>There are rides and food and beer
and music, a regular hot summer festival...and then come these Weird Things,
these "publicly relevant phenomena...wherein the public was invited to
wander freely."</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>For the "Weird Thing Zone," six
artists were invited to contribute "physical catalysts for participatory
culture," in a clearly marked area set off by orange cones and yellow tape.</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>These Weird Things, from which "various
tactile, auditory, and visual signals emanated," beckoned to be sat on,
touched, stroked. Whatever these Weird Things were, at least two of the
artists agreed it was not "art."</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Anna Hurwitz created "This Is Your
Office" for the "Weird Thing Zone." Anna says of her Weird Thing, and her
art in general: "I hate precious art..I measure the success of my installation
by the degree to which people participate. Nobody seems to be aware that
my furniture installations are 'art.' They just seem to see it as furniture,
which is actually pretty great considering that it's sitting on a dance
floor in a nightclub or in the middle of Grand Street."</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>Ebon, whose Weird Thing was "The
Pulse Box," also states flatly, "I don't do art. My work is a media organism
which protrudes into public space and exchanges unmentionable nutrients."</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>How do the Latinos feel about these
unmentionable nutrients protruding into their public space?</font></font>
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>"Oh, the kids loved it. They crawled
all over everything," says Chris Lanier of El Centro Cultural de Williamsburg,
sponsors of the Grand Street Waterfront Festival. "That was a unique festival.
Usually we exist in parallel worlds, the Anglos and the Latinos. Something
happened at that festival. A coalition was formed."</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#178282"><font size=+1>-- Mark Rose, 1991</font></font></center>
</blockquote>

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