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Straight Up | Jan Herman

Arts, Media & Culture News with 'tude

Boris Lurie’s ‘NO!art’ Mounted in Berlin

June 10, 2016 by Jan Herman

NO COMPROMISES! | The Art of Boris Lurie at the Jewish Museum Berlin looks like a major, absolutely must-see show. But the title reminds me of a huge compromise at the heart of it. Lurie, a Holocaust survivor, lived in New York like a pauper. But when he died he left about $80 million. He’d […]

MoMA’s Hidden ‘Electro-Library’ Show

June 8, 2016 by Jan Herman

THE ELECTRO-LIBRARY: European Avant-Garde Magazines from the 1920s (at MoMA)

It’s only a couple of vitrines, and they seem like overflow storage — as though they’ve been placed out of the way in the downstairs mezzanine of the Museum of Modern Art’s education building on 54th Street. But the slide show for THE ELECTRO-LIBRARY: European Avant-Garde Magazines from the 1920s is magnificent. In visual richness, […]

Legally, Is Trump a ‘Poxy-Arsed Whore’?

June 6, 2016 by Jan Herman

Donald Trump, Master of Trump U.

And is it libellous to say so? I ask because a friend recalls this medieval definition of libel from his days as a law student at Oxford: Ye may say that a woman be a whore and that be not libellous. Ye may say that a woman be poxy-arsed and that be not libellous. But […]

Diderot Had the Right Idea

May 31, 2016 by Jan Herman

'Les Mots Diderot' sculpture by Gerard Bellaart [Cold Turkey Press, 2016]

“…neither the white silences / of Beckett, nor the black … / Grace & good nature / like a transparent forest / rooted in facts, / thoughts like crickets / in dry August grass. / Not to climb the ladder, / not to cling or sneer, but / to be invisible. / Though poor and […]

Speaking of Politics: ‘A Study in Depravity’

May 26, 2016 by Jan Herman

Ken Livingstone, the former socialist mayor of London who was usurped by the egregious Boris Johnson, reads 'The Blonde Beast of Brexit: A Study in Depravity.' Livingstone was on a train to Cambridge, where he was to speak about the state of U.K. politics.

Pamphleteering in England goes back nearly 300 years, represented most famously by such 18th-century polemicists as Henry Fielding and Daniel Defoe, and in America by the British-born Thomas Paine. Even the poet John Milton was a pamphleteer. The tradition continues. Ken Livingstone, the former socialist mayor of London, was on his way to the University […]

‘Donald Trump Is a Work of Fiction’

May 24, 2016 by Jan Herman

Election Ballot (from 'General Municipal Election') [Nova Broadcast Press,1969]

The trouble is, “fiction has to make sense,” as Tom Clancy and others have said. Observe the celebrity known as Donald Trump saunter onto the stage at Boca Raton, twenty minutes after his helicopter swoops in. The slow and ponderous walk, the extended chin, the pursed mouth, the slowly swiveling head, the exaggerated look of […]

Who Are the World’s Most Famous People?

May 17, 2016 by Jan Herman

#3 -- Marilyn Monroe

You’d be surprised. Martin Luther King, Jr. is the world’s best-known American, followed by — are you ready? — Elvis Presley, Marilyn Monroe, Walt Disney, and Ben Franklin. Those are the top five. How do I know this? And on what basis? I checked Pantheon 1.0 at the MIT Media Lab, which did the elaborate […]

Mc Neill & Burroughs: Art Meets Occult

May 2, 2016 by Jan Herman

Detail from 'End of Days'

Hieronymous Bosch has nothing on Malcolm Mc Neill. And that’s not even counting the underlying theories Mc Neill has about time travel, biological mutation, and evolutionary transition that he and William Burroughs worked on together in Ah Pook Is Here, a failed word-and-image collaboration that led nearly 40 years later to Mc Neill’s memoir Observed […]

MoMA to Mount Tzara’s Magnum Opus

May 1, 2016 by Jan Herman

Dadaglobe Reconstructed (June 12–September 18, 2016)

Samy Rosenstock’s idea for a great big book is getting a great big show nearly 100 years later. Dadaglobe Reconstructed reunites over 100 works created for Dadaglobe, Tristan Tzara’s planned but unrealized magnum opus, originally slated for publication in 1921. An ambitious anthology that aimed to document Dada’s international activities, Dadaglobe was not merely a […]

Nope! Trump and Clinton Ain’t Neck ‘n’ Neck

April 20, 2016 by Jan Herman

New York Times Graphic Illustration

Today’s lead story on the front page of the New York Times, Trump Wins Big and Clinton Ends Sanders’s Streak, which jumps inside to an entire page in the print edition, never mentions the actual number of votes the two winners received — only the percentages. So we read that Donald Trump received 60.5% of […]

Meeting the Hangman

April 10, 2016 by Jan Herman

Illustration by Elena Caldera

By Heathcote Williams I used to speak out against capital punishment From a soapbox at Speakers’ Corner. This was when it was thought that hanging people Was helpful in maintaining order. One day someone called Barry Trenoweth came over. His father, Gordon, had been hanged for murder. He’d killed a shopkeeper in Falmouth during the […]

The Strange Case of Orwell’s Typewriter

March 28, 2016 by Jan Herman

George Orwell at his portable manual Remington typewriter.

My curiosity was aroused by this sentence: His manual typewriter — rather suitably, in the light of his faint anarchist leanings — was later bestowed by Sonia on the 1960s hippy-radical news-sheet, the International Times. — D.J. Taylor, Orwell: The Life Why did George Orwell’s widow give the typewriter to the paper? And where was […]

Trump Detour: Via Bernie’s Home State

March 25, 2016 by Jan Herman

IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE First edition, 1935 [Doubleday, Doran and Company]

Once upon a time — in Vermont, of all places — Sinclair Lewis sat down to write a counterfactual satire about American politics. Never having cracked the book myself, I’m grateful to Chris Braithwaite for relating its details. “If you’ve been as gob smacked as I have by The Donald phenomenon,” he writes in the […]

Trump Detour: Orwell Recalls a Fascist’s Rally

March 15, 2016 by Jan Herman

At the Trump Rally in St. Louis

Eighty years ago today George Orwell witnessed the British Fascist demagogue Oswald Mosley* speaking to a full house at a public meeting in the Yorkshire coal-mining town of Bransley. Orwell was shocked by what happened. It’s worth remembering his notes about the experience, given Donald Trump’s rallies these days. Writing in his diary that “M […]

The Black and Blue of Butterworth’s Diaries

March 3, 2016 by Jan Herman

Meng & Ecker No. 5 [Savoy Books, 1992]

Michael Butterworth’s new book, The Blue Monday Diaries: In the Studio with New Order — recently published in the U.K., and just out in the U.S. — tells how he began hanging out with New Order at the London recording studio Britannia Row while the band was making its album Power, Corruption & Lies and […]

Coming Soon: The Wild Tale of the Paneros

February 28, 2016 by Jan Herman

Leopoldo María Panero

When a young Spanish director began making a film about a mad family of poets “during the waning days of the Franco dictatorship,” Aaron Shulman writes in the current issue of The Believer, it was intended to be a short documentary. Titled “El Desencanto” (“The Disenchanted”), the film “ended up spilling into a ninety-one minute […]

Not a Peep about the Oscars, Thank God

February 26, 2016 by Jan Herman

David Elliott

I’ve said his writing “had the density of Hart Crane poems” and that I was exaggerating “only a little.” That’s because I was recalling his column in the Chicago Sun-Times, when he roved the art galleries reviewing photography shows. (He had been the film critic of the Chicago Daily News before it folded, but that […]

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Jan Herman

When not listening to Bach or Cuban jazz pianist Chucho Valdes, or dancing to salsa, I like to play jazz piano -- but only in the privacy of my own mind.
Another strange fact... Read More…

About

My Books

Several books of poems have been published in recent years by Moloko Print, Statdlichter Presse, Phantom Outlaw Editions, and Cold Turkey … [Read More...]

Straight Up

The agenda is just what it says: news of arts, media & culture delivered with attitude. Or as Rock Hudson once said in a movie: "Man is the only … [Read More...]

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