Open Letter

open-reading-group at o-r-g.com open-reading-group at o-r-g.com
Sun Mar 23 21:31:06 EDT 2008


Whitney

Doublin, 7 January 2008

Dear cooperator,

I have taken the typewriter down from the stack of boxes in the backroom
in order to guarantee a certain slowness and precision here. I'm after
the formality that is so easily obliterated by more recent and
ubiquitous technologies, and in this spirit I write to you -- one of a
small community of convalescents -- in the hope of convincing you to
participate in this not because you can or can't but because you care
and will.*


>From the 7th Regiment Armory building on Park Avenue in New York City

--
a parallel site to the 2008 Whitney Biennial exhibition -- I aim to
coordinate a series of PRESS RELEASES written by different people and
issued through different distribution channels. My hope is that this
will slow down, complicate, or at least draw out the reception of the
exhibition. Given both the location and status -- at a vortex of
critical mass -- the Whitney Biennial is immediately cannibalized by the
media who surround it: reviews are typically written on the first day
before the general public is invited, and each critic duty-bound to
weigh in with their direct interpretations of the show. The result is
that for most the exhibition is REviewed before it has even been viewed.
As such, my interest is in the possibility of arranging another reading
through these parallel press releases ... released neither under the
umbrella of the Whitney Museum nor that of any known publication. What
happens when information is released from within the show but not
sanctioned by The Show? (It functions as a shadow.) (It functions as a
mirror.)

Proof of the fact that a mechanical device can
Reproduce personality
And that Quality is merely
The distribution aspect of Quantity.
Journalists have conquered the book form;
Writing is now the tiny affair of the individual;
The customers have changed: televisions aren't viewers,
but advertisers; publishing's not potential readers,
but distributors.
The result is rapid turnover,
The regime of the bestseller
But there will always be
A parallel circuit, a black market.

And so this letter is addressed to no one in particular, but specific to
each of you for reasons I trust you understand. I suppose I am merely
asking you to write as a (Wo)Man of the Crowd, a community that can
still act, not because it is entitled to do so by the institutions of
power, but by virtue of an unconditional exuberant politics of
dedication (I quote.)

If you accept all this -- and the invitation -- you will contribute a
reflective text to double as a press release. This could be a new text,
an existing text, or not even a text at all. Furthermore, it might be
produced remotely, or on-site with me at the Armory in the Commander's
Room, a locked office accessed by a secret panel release from the
Colonel's Ballroom. Your press will then be released during the three
weeks following the opening of the exhibition, with the channel of
distribution -- fax, word-of-mouth, trumpet, parachute, etc. -- directly
determined by the contents of its message. Normal press releases are, of
course, typically compressed into a series of literal sound bites on a
single sheet of paper and designed to be easily re-purposed -- copied,
pasted, combined and inserted back into other media streams. This model
might as well be our point of departure too.

I hope that my formula of 'disinterestedness plus admiration' will
seduce (I I I I I I I I quote) and that the various non-textual
qualities of this missive fill in some of the gaps in explanation. If
so, we ought to continue this discussion by email or telephone (see
below). Please try to get in touch within the next week.

For now,

Dexter Sinister
38 Ludlow Street (basement south), New York, New York 10002, USA


* And what do you do? You just SIT there. (I quote)



More information about the Open-Reading-Group mailing list