Friday, January 25, 2008

in the meantime






tried unsuccessfully to upload a page, so for now here are a few low-res shots of the show that Colby, Allison, and I did at the diego.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Reflection(s)



opening at Diego at 5pm at 800 Chestnut, San Francisco, a collaborative installation by Colby Claycomb, John K Melvin, Allison C Taylor. don't know why the image above is so orange...whatev, will be uploading images to the site soon.

cheers,

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

public intellectuals

a read worth reading...

"Earlier 20th-century thinkers like Lewis Mumford and Edmund Wilson kept the university and its apparatus at arm's length. Indeed, they often disdained it. They oriented themselves toward an educated public, and, as a result, they developed a straightforward prose and gained a nonprofessional audience. As his reputation grew, Wilson printed up a postcard that he sent to those who requested his services. On it he checked the appropriate box: Edmund Wilson does not write articles or books on order; he does not write forewords or introductions, does not give interviews or appear on television, and does not participate in symposia.

Later intellectual generations, including, paradoxically, the rebellious 60s cohort, do give interviews; do write articles on demand; and most evidently do participate in symposia. They grew up in a much-expanded campus universe and never left its safety. Younger intellectuals became professors who geared their work toward their colleagues and specialized journals. If this generation — my generation! — advanced into postmodernism, post-Marxism, and postcolonialism, where the Daniel Bells and Lewis Mumfords never trod, it did so by surrendering a public profile. It neither wanted to nor, after a while, could write accessible prose. The new thinkers became academic — not public — intellectuals, with little purchase outside professional circles. While a book by Edmund Wilson could be read with pleasure by an educated citizen, a volume by an academic luminary such as Homi K. Bhabha or Fredric Jameson would give him or her a headache."

read more here

http://chronicle.com/free/v54/i18/18b00501.htm