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http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/29/nyregion/29plaque.html



April 29, 2007
Touring Warhol's Space, and 32 Other Art-History Sites
By RANDY KENNEDY

Among the things New York City does exceedingly well is erase its own past, even the more durable parts, like the old Pennsylvania Station or the Third Avenue El. So when it comes to a more fleeting kind of history, a lot of imagination is necessary to pay homage.

Standing in front of an expensive-looking apartment loft building in TriBeCa the other day, Ethan Andrews, who works for the public-art organization Creative Time, was trying to conjure up the late 1970s, when the building housed the Mudd Club, the art world dance hall that served as a second home for luminaries like Jean-Michel Basquiat and Julian Schnabel....

The reason for this rummaging through the city's artistic past was not exactly nostalgia. It was part of a plan by Creative Time to celebrate its own history: The group began in 1974 as a way to help the many artists who were then emerging from their studios and using the city's derelict streets and buildings as their raw material.

To commemorate its 33rd year of helping realize large and sometimes unwieldy projects, the nonprofit organization has chosen 32 sites around the city "” with a 33rd to be nominated later by the public "” where famous, infamous and sometimes almost secret yet significant art has been made. And the sites, chosen with the help of artists and art world denizens like the director John Waters, are being memorialized with a kind of art project unto itself. Called "One Day It Will Please Us To Remember Even This," it involves the installation of acrylic plaques at all 33 places.

Creative Time says the plaques, which will be in place by Tuesday, are intended to remain for "infinity (or until they fall off)," in keeping with the ephemeral nature of much of the artwork itself....

Since the idea was hatched only a few months ago, Mr. Andrews and other Creative Time people have been shuttling around the city asking for permission to affix the plaques, with bolts or glue or straps, at places where present-day residents are often surprised to hear that anything noteworthy, artistic or otherwise, had happened.

One day recently, for example, Mr. Andrews visited the spot that was once 231 East 47th Street, the address of Andy Warhol's first Factory, where he made his silk screen paintings. It is now a small, windswept brick courtyard in the shadow of the soaring office building One Dag Hammarskjold Plaza.....In the end, the management company that oversees the building and plaza declined to allow Creative Time to affix a plaque there. But most others approached agreed to cooperate, including the city; the owner of the East Village apartment building that was the first home of the Fun Gallery, an influential 1980s space; the operators of a small cafe on Park Avenue South that was once Max's Kansas City, the artsy nightclub; and the owners of a parking lot that was the site of Downtown Drive-In, a makeshift open-air movie theater set up by Creative Time in the summer of 1978 to show art films by Stan Brakhage, Rudy Burkhardt, Red Grooms and others.

"The city is becoming more privatized and more upscale, more upper-class, and artists are leaving here because they can't afford to be here," said Anne Pasternak, Creative Time's president. "I think it's important to share the kind of vitality and vibe the city once had and hope that it doesn't go away completely."
.....

Trying to determine what constitutes memorable art "” and which of Creative Time's own projects, more than 300 now "” to include on the memorial trail was also not easy. Among Mr. Waters's several suggestions were some things that were never created with art in mind and probably were not considered art by many people except him, like the Women's House of Detention in the Village, demolished in 1974, where he remembered women leaning out the windows and screaming unprintable things at passers-by.

"I think he saw it as kind of ongoing performance art," Mr. Andrews said. "To me that was one of the most interesting ones because I don't get that happening to me much in Manhattan now."
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But listen -you know these sorts of things are kind of off with me- why doesn't Creative Time do something to create blocks of spaces for artists to work in instead of this elegiac commemorative of things already gone. Why put resources in to this that could be put in to creating some type of sustainable, stable working environment. Who does this commemorative project really serve? Its another sign of how everyone has given up already.

I guess it does kind of quantify the level of loss for an environment that is incredibly artist-hostile at this point.

I have nothing against Creative Time. They've helped a lot of mainstream people get even more legitimated by the commercial sector. And I'm sure loads of people will enjoy what this is doing and it does encourage a collective appreciation as well as point up how the city was -is? -can be? an amazing creative environment (mostly for already wealthy people now though).

I guess every organization should celebrate itself for its own benefit and to impress the general public.

All right, I'll stop now.

Almost. This culture has too many misplaced priorities when it comes to art. There is not the right balance of emphasis placed on the now and the future promise for artists and their work here. The pervasive orientation of the vast majority of mainstream institutions that turn out artists now is to emphasize how doing art improves the individual's other capacities, especially in academia. Instead of promoting the fact that it is important for someone to do art because it will make them better at math, reading, social studies, science, etc.(even Creative Time's grant programs stipulate the winners have to do some public outreach as part of their project) - or for that matter emphasizing the importance of someone doing art is that it gives the city some historical significance - this society needs to start emphasizing it is important for someone to do art just for the reason that artists are leading contributors, they bring a wider sense of possibility to society in general, they are the foremost practitioners of liberty, outspokenness and individuality within a profession.

S'tan, I think we should get together with Waters, find a way to buy up a building, and staff it with a large cast of people who will just hang out the windows voicing vulgarities all day long!
Last edited by seven
I thought it indeed melancholy and as you say
an "elegiac commemorative of things already gone," simply futile, what are the rich going to do, turn over their expensive condo for the benefit of an obscure nightclub and its nightclubbers... alot of out culture never made it mainstream and never sought to, and much of mainstream was once underground, FIRST, so where is the seeding, the underground now?

Could or would John Waters possibly support underground artists or rather it seems this is your irony.
Last edited by S'tan
I'm with that question big time S'tan.

Ever since Rudiani, and now Puff Puff Bloomberg, wanted to spend all the culture budget on the big tourist attractions, the Met, Lincoln Center, etc. and no one from the top down in the establishment ever bothered to ask, "But where do the people in those galleries and on those stages come from?" -From the NYC underground of course, from the modest neighborhood cultural centers, from the one-off shows in lofts and squats. And that fertile zone is so dried up now.

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