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Art News from Elsewhere

Revaluing Salinger
Via interviewmagazine.com
Jun 2012
Richard Prince tells Kim Gordon that a work in which he reprinted Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye with Prince’s own byline isn’t a comment on his recent copyright troubles. It’s an excellent book and “I just wanted to double the price.”
EC

Art News from Elsewhere


Protest with Purple
Via nytimes.com
Jun 2012
“I grew up under American apartheid and this was far worse,” said author Alice Walker of Israel’s treatment of Palestinians in a June 9 letter to Yediot Books. In protest, she says she won’t permit a Hebrew translation of her Pulitzer winner The Color Purple.
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Cat Break
Via animalnewyork.com
Jun 2012
Ideas are like cats, said Ray Bradbury: “They come silently in the hour of trying to wake up and remember my name … and if I don’t rouse, give more than cats give: a good knock in the head, which gets me out and down to my typewriter before the ideas flee or die.”
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Passings: Ray Bradbury
Via io9.com
Jun 2012
Ray Bradbury, known for writing in genres from sci fi and horror to the dystopian novel, has passed away at age 91. His classics include Fahrenheit 451, Dandelion Wine, The Martian Chronicles, and Something Wicked This Way Comes, among others.
EC


Art News from Elsewhere

Book Hacks
Via craigmod.com
Jun 2012
“The covers are dead!” writes Craig Mod in his essay about the history of the book cover. Based on the shift in where we buy and browse for our books (online and on e-readers), Mod suggests there is much possibility in reinterpreting covers for digital formats.
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Guerrilla Libraries
Via designobserver.com
May 2012
From OWS’ People’s Library to Little Free Libraries, we’re seeing a guerrilla library boom. Shannon Mattern asks “where they’re coming from, how they relate to existing institutions that perform similar roles, and what impact they’re having on their communities.”
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Censor Speaks
Via kuwaittimes.net
May 2012
It’s a job you’re unlikely to hear about at Career Day, so read along as Dalal Al-Mutairi, Kuwait’s senior censor, discusses her work. “Many people consider the censor to be a fanatic and uneducated person, but this isn’t true. We are the most literate people.”
PA
Art News from Elsewhere

The Warhol Crater
Via nasa.gov
May 2012
Via Gallerist NY we learn that NASA has named 23 of Mercury’s “impact craters” after art figures. In addition to Nureyev, Nabakov and Alvin Ailey, visual artists like Magritte and Warhol are also honored with namesake divots on the planet closest the sun.
EC
Art News from Elsewhere

Pynchon in Public
Via pynchoninpublic.com
May 2012
The dense prose of Thomas Pynchon, born today in 1937, would hardly seem the stuff of a mass movement, but that’s what Pynchon in Public Day aims for: A global surge of “unashamed” public readings of Pynchon and works by “heirs” like Eggers and Foster Wallace.