Allen Ginsberg. A selection of live performances, films, texts, photographs, discussion, reports as well as reproductions of art works and handwritten drafts and numerous, hitherto unpublished documents are shown on several screens.
curated by Jean-Jacques Lebel
With this virtual exhibition curated by Jean-Jacques Lebel, four
European institutions – the Centre Pompidou Metz, the Fresnoy in
the northern French Tourcoing, the Champs Libres in Rennes,
Breton and the ZKM in Karlsruhe – provide detailed insight into the
legendary history of the Beat Generation, which, with its early
beginnings in 1940s New York and San Francisco, was to later catch
like a wildfire appearing in very different forms throughout the
world.
The leading figures among the Beat Generation were Allen Ginsberg,
Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs. A selection of live performances,
films (among others, classics such as “Pull My Daisy” with Kerouac and
Ginsberg), texts, photographs, discussion, reports as well as
reproductions of art works and handwritten drafts and numerous, hitherto
unpublished documents are shown on several screens.
In this arrangement of what are, at times, moving recordings, visitors may
experience the dynamic journey of this young generation, whose legacy
was to invent a new language and new forms of life at the same time,
and to create a poetic view of the world all of which continues to have an
effect until today.
The hitherto unpublished discussions between Ginsberg and Jean-
Jacques Lebel, and filmed in Paris by Alain Jaubert and Alain Fleischer,
also form part of the exhibition.
Welcoming Speech by the Exhibition Creator:
“Hallo Beatniks!
This is not, in a classic sense, an exhibition, where works are hung on
walls, but far more a visual and acoustic anthology; a sensuous
experience, a fantastic world full of projected images and a virtual stroll
through a major multicultural movement that emerged during the Second
World War in New York, and which spread throughout the world from
1955 onwards. The poet Allen Ginsberg, founding father and influential
figure of the Beat Generation, will serve us as cartographer and guide.
He will introduce us to our friends – who he photographed at different
times – and, above all, their works; in so doing, he throws light on the
unique personalities of each of them.
Known and unknown films, public readings, recordings, reportage never
seen before, texts, fine art, discussions, photographs and documents of
all kinds... This compilation, until now, unpublished and shown here for
the first time, offers an international, labyrinthine and multimedia
perspective transcending the constraints of linear and didactic museum
presentation.
Here, visitors are invited – without further delay – to step into the
hallucinatory universe of the poets of the Beat Generation and to relive
this collective and subjective adventure. Also entirely new is the
simultaneous opening of four versions of the same exhibition in four
European institutions of differing backgrounds: at the Centre Pompidou
Metz, at the Studio National des Arts Contemporains, Le Fresnoy
(Tourcoing), in the Champs Libres (Rennes) and at the ZKM | Center for
Art and Media Karlsruhe. A perfect example of synergy and partnership.
Thanks to Allen Ginsberg, we can follow step for step, the literary,
cultural, political, existential and intellectual controversies in which the
Beat Generation were involved. It is through him that we become
acquainted with and are able to newly interpret a series of masterpieces
of modern literature: works by Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, Gregory
Corso, Michael McClure, Gary Snyder, Peter Orlovsky and, naturally,
Allen Ginsberg. One sees or hears them; one discovers their
manuscripts, their drawings, their way of life, but also their commitment to
the freedom of expression, and liberation from bourgeois morality; their
struggle against ethnocentricity; homophobia and racial paranoia; for
ecology. One may consider the pioneering role they played as writers
and cosmopolitans at the center of a major international movement,
which, in the 1960s, rebelled against the Vietnam War, Wall Street, the
Pentagon, the atom bomb, the nuclear industry, and generally against all
forms of cultural and political imperialism.
Incidentally, in his famous manifesto/poem, Howl, Ginsberg once again
took up the biblical monster Moloch, which continued to cost more and
more human victims. Karl Marx had already denounced Moloch as a
symbol of the prevailing and aggressive capitalism. It is no mere chance
that Ginsberg, Burroughs and their mutual friend Jean Genet took part in
the demonstrations in Chicago, in 1968, and that a number of their young
close friends used the opportunity to present a real, pink-colored and
screeching pig as candidate for the American presidential elections. The
spirit of Dada was, indeed, present, though all distinctions between
political and artistic action had dissolved.
Furthermore, the films presented here, the discussions, the coverage, the
photographs and texts especially highlight the way in which poets make
reference to their predecessors and contemporaries, in particular, to the
Asiatic and European: they have a close affinity with William Blake,
Arthur Rimbaud, Guillaume Apollinaire, and Antonin Artaud. Throughout
the course of their numerous long and productive stays in Paris,
Ginsberg, Burroughs, Gysin and Corso became acquainted with Henri
Michaux, Gherasim Luca, Jean Genet, Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray,
Tristan Tzara, Bernard Hiedsieck, Félix Guattari and many others. In
Café Sélect, on Montparnasse, Ginsberg began his major cathartic poem
Kaddish and wrote Sur la Tombe d’Apollinaire and Europe! Europe! In
Paris Burroughs completed and published Le Festin Nu, Nova Express,
and Corso, his poem Bomb.
It was with the Beat Generation, that the enormous worldwide movement
of the counter culture emerged, for which the ‘indignant’ stands today,
and from which future visionaries and utopians may draw their
inspiration.” (Jean-Jacques Lebel, April 2013)
Supporting Program for the Exhibition
Fri., June 14, 2013, 4 p.m., ZKM_Lecture Hall
Film screening with Peter Sempel
• Short film “Save the Children”
• Documentary film “Jonas in the Desert”
Thurs., July 4, 2013, 8 p.m., ZKM_Cube
• Supporting film “Pull my Daisy” by Robert Frank
(USA 1959, 30 min.)
• European premiere “David Amram − The first 80 years”
documentary by Lawrence Kraman (USA 2012, 80 min.)
David Amram will be present in person. Admission free.
Fri., July 5, 2013, 9 p.m., ZKM_Cube
Concert with David Amram & Emil Mangelsdorff feat. Erwin Ditzner (dr),
Judith Goldbach (b), Thomas Siffling (tr), Matthias Ockert (g)
Admission advance booking, 20 € plus charges / box office, 25 €
Sat., July 6, 2013, 11 a.m., ZKM_Music Balcony
BEAT BRUNCH
Music and stories about Allen Ginsberg by David Amram, open mike:
recite your favorite poem, music of the Beat years.
Admission free.
Image: 'Danger' - Portrait of William S. Burroughs in front of the Théâtre Odéon, Paris 1959. Courtesy „The Barry Miles Archive“ © Photo: Brion Gysin, Naked Lunch series, Paris, Oktober 1959
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Opening: Fri., June 14, 2013, 7 p.m.
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