From November 3–5, Brooklyn's ISSUE Project
Room will host “Theoretical Music: No Wave, New
Music, and the New York Art Scene, 1978-1983,” a
three-day event organized by art historian Branden
W. Joseph and musician David Grubbs. Its purpose
is to examine the intersections as well as the failed
encounters of art, music, and cinema in downtown
Manhattan from 1978-1983.
The last several years have been witness to an
increasing number of exhibitions, books, and
archival audio releases representing New York art,
music, and underground cinema from the years
that hinge the late 1970s and the early 1980s. The
Metropolitan Museum’s exhibition The
Pictures Generation, 1974-1984, the traveling
retrospective Dan Graham: Beyond,
Thurston Moore and Byron Coley’s No Wave:
Post-Punk, Underground, New York, 1976-
1980, Marc Masters’ No Wave, Tim
Lawrence’s Hold on to Your Dreams: Arthur
Russell and the Downtown Music Scene, 1973-
1992, and the DVD release of Ericka
Beckman’s 135 Grand Street New York
1979 all speak to a growing interest in
historicizing this period of multidisciplinary
ferment.
"Theoretical Music: No Wave, New Music, and the
New York Art Scene, 1978-1983" will take place in
three parts: a rare screening of James Nares’s no
wave epic, Rome ’78; an evening of panel
discussions with some of the most notable figures
to emerge from the art, music, and film scenes of
the time; and conclude with a concert performance
headlined by the first New York appearance in
years by the fearless, crucial downtown band, Ut.
Panel discussions include film director Beth B,
Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore,
contemporary artist Dan Graham, artist/critic John
Miller, painter/singer/musician Taro Suzuki, Fashion
designer/guitarist Nina Canal, writer/archivist
Byron Coley, founder of Love of Life Orchestra
(LOLO) Peter Gordon, author Neb Sublette. They
will be moderated by Branden
W. Joseph and David Grubbs.
About the curators:
David Grubbs has released eleven solo albums, the
most recent of which is Hybrid Song Box.4
(Blue
Chopsticks). He is known for his cross-disciplinary
collaborations with writers such as Susan Howe and
Rick Moody, and with visual artists such as Anthony
McCall, Angela Bulloch, Cosima von Bonin, and
Stephen Prina. He is an assistant professor in the
Conservatory of Music at Brooklyn College and
director of the graduate programs in Performance
and Interactive Media Arts (PIMA).
Branden W. Joseph is Frank Gallipoli Professor of
Modern and Contemporary art in the Department of
Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University
and a founding editor of the journal Grey
Room.
He has written frequently on the intersection of art,
music, and film, most recently in Beyond the
Dream Syndicate: Tony Conrad and the Arts after
Cage (Zone Books, 2008).
Photo: Ut
Theoretical Music: No Wave, New Music, and the New York Art Scene, 1978-1983

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- José Esparza
- 03 November 2010