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How To Read Music In One Evening, 1974 |
Adapted from Sandra Phillips
introduction to Evidence, 2004 edition
In 1974, Mike Mandel and Larry Sultan,
produced their first collaborative book,
How to Read Music in One Evening, A
Clatworthy Catalog. This comprised a
series of drawings and rather lowbrow
photographic illustrations lifted from
cheap ads or instructional manuals: the
sort you would find on the back of comic
books or inside matchbooks or in the
pages of the (now defunct) Sunset House
catalog. The advertised electric neck
warmers, machines to strip corn off the
cob, tape to repair the water hose for
your car were arranged and cropped, and
these wonderfully ordinary, naive
pictures were reordered and became a
mysterious and funny metaphorical book
essentially about sex. Those strange
gray pictures which demonstrated how a
mechanical nose hair trimmer worked, or
how to place potatoes on a metal spike
to cook them more efficiently, resembled
the collaged work of Jess, or Bruce
Conner. In How to Read Music, however,
the pictures were arranged with a
respect for the authority of the
original image, which, while cropped
(and excising the text) retains its
identity while at the same time is
altered by the anomalous relationship it
has with the other pictures. Even though
the mechanics they illustrate is
decidedly low tech, mop handles,
shoulder strap details, the consistent
theme is of people using mechanical
devices in a kind of banal but utopian
association, women smiling giddily as
they try on sunshades or telephone
receivers. Only toward the end is there
even a sense of foreboding: a closeup of
a hand gun near a man's shirtless chest,
a man's face covered with a ski mask
except for the eyes and nose, a box of
jewels and documents with ghostly flames
licking its surface. Not surprisingly,
this little book gives clues to the
photographic project that immediately
followed it...
12 photos | 168 views
items are from between 21 Oct 2008 & 27 Oct 2008.