Rabble: Nizan Shaked, Michael Ned Holte & Doug Harvey

Insert Blanc Press has been kicking out the Rabble! Well, actually we've been cultivating the Rabble very carefully, just for you, and we think we've come up with some real Rabble Rousers indeed. If you missed the Rabble at MPPSfP (Machine Project Project Space for Projects) event, you really did miss something great, but you can still pick up copies of our newest issues of Rabble by Nizan Shaked, Michael Ned Holte and Doug Harvey, and the Rabble will be Roused!
 

Rabble: Doug Harvey

What’s Happening in The Firesign Theatre’s I Think We’re All Bozos On This Bus as Best as I Can Make Out 

The Firesign Theatre’s I Think We’re All Bozos On This Bus is one of the greatest works of art of the 20th century: a performative, collectively authored, authentically prophetic, dystopian sci-fi stoner comedy LP from 1971 by the Los Angeles-based “Beatles of Comedy.” ... The cultural impact of FT’s ITWABOTB is widespread, profound and clandestine. If you don’t believe me, ask Siri “Why does the porridge-bird lay his egg in the air?” 

Rabble: Michael Ned Holte

The Urgency of History Painting

on the work of Michael Wilkinson

I have started this so many times I no longer know where to begin. Well, no, I should begin with an apology, for I’ve promised you a piece of writing for a very long time, and the number of deferrals and delays is (mostly) uncharacteristic but also (totally) unacceptable. Rarely have I stumbled through so many false starts in attempting to write about an artist’s work. I should say that this does not point to any deficiency in your work or lack of interest on my part. Rather, I suspect, it points to the difficulty of apprehending your work from this considerable distance of time and space.

 

Rabble: Nizan Shaked

91 92 93—Returns

The success of 91 92 93 was that it reorganized historical artistic debates against the grain of their contemporaneous reception, allowing its audience to rethink what worked, what didn't, and for what reason. In this way, it stands in stark contrast to the facile toting of the term "conceptualism" by artists who lack any form of political commitment, who regurgitate the past adding nothing by saturated amplification, and whose only claim to fame is appropriating mass media.

 

 

Rabble, an imprint of Insert Blanc Press, is co-edited by Holly Myers and Mathew Timmons. Rabble prints single author issues of critical essays of about 1500 words on a subject of the author’s choosing. The subject will be an artwork (or series of artworks), but broadly defined: could be visual art, literature, music, architecture, film, design; could be contemporary or historical. The essay will be printed in pamphlet form, with room for a couple full color images, and distributed at a reasonable price.

Rabble seeks to be a venue through which to interrogate the nature of criticism, a laboratory for prodding at the boundaries of criticism as a form. The idea is to begin with a framework that reduces criticism down to its two fundamental components—the thing that's been made and the person who responds to the thing that's been made (i.e., the art work and the critic)—and invite each writer to take it from there. We’re not looking for the average book or exhibition review, but something that tests out a new direction, whatever that means to the individual author.

We have great confidence in the potential of Rabble to make a lasting contribution to the cultural discourse on the West Coast and beyond. It is our hope that, in charting a path between the two prevailing poles of the genre—the ever-narrowing shutters of print journalism on the one hand and the ponderous obscurity of the academy on the other—Rabble will go some way in restoring the sheer excitement of criticism.

 

ISSN 2168-7439

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