Kulchur is unreadable yet it begs to be read. To be read is to be assaulted. Just look at how Kulchur is dressed; it is
asking for it. I am talking about its
binding. Perfect, like the manhattans or
martinis one drinks at Laure’s with Barbara and Frank while discussing Kulchur’s
pages. Or Audrey Hepburn’s Givenchy dress
(such as Issues 2 and 3, before Kulchur went black on white), which in
Kulchur’s case is rather ill-fitting and thus rips at the seams.
Yet sometimes it is more important to look good rather than
be comfortable. The perfect binding
implies class. I should know. Kyle and I wanted Mimeo Mimeo 4 perfect bound
in order to announce our move into the next tax bracket. In terms of intellectual capital that is. The first issue of Kulchur is blue
collar. Modeled I would guess on the
Totem, Cornith and Yugen chapbook formats.
Makes sense as Leroi Jones was involved with the start-up of Kulchur. Lita Hornick, art patron, collector of
artists, financed the magazine from the beginning but remained distant until
Marc Schleifer left after Issue 3. Those
issues are working class. The little
black dresses of Issue 2 and 3 are more accurately black leather jackets. They are truly Wild Ones. I wonder if Hornick suggested the perfect
binding in Issue 2. Maybe, maybe not,
but Kulchur obtained its classic look with Issue 4 and Hornick’s taking of the
editorial reins.In my opinion, perfect binding is a disaster. Many printers have not perfected that binding process at all. The sense of space on the page is cramped; long lines get lost within the spine and lose their backbone. They suffer from scoliosis. The magazine remains shut; it refuses to speak openly. The perfect binding is stand offish, reserved. A stiff upper lip of a binding rather than a barbaric yelp, or a hearty laugh. Kulchur’s first issue opens its arms; it reaches outward. Not a hug, but a firm handshake among comrades. As reflected in the perfect binding, the later issues report on closed in worlds of velvet ropes and VIP parties. Poetry of the open field becomes an exclusive club. The handshake is now secret and coded. You have to shift the magazine from hand to hand, manipulating pages with your fingers to gently open the pages for reading. Despite Hornick’s efforts to make Kulchur a high class production, the perfect binding always reminds readers of the presence of the gutter. Kulchur would always be shadowed by its origins as a magazine concerned with the proletariat, not the art market. It is to some extent Schleifer’s politics lurking in that gutter. The ghost in the machine.
What is so frustrating with Kulchur for a collector who also likes to read and use his collection for research, is that Kulchur is so damn readable. The collector in me, who prizes the condition of my set of Kulchur, hesitates (and I largely have restrained myself unfortunately) to read the magazines and inevitably destroy the binding. But the contents (that I have read) are absolutely terrific. Kulchur was envisioned as a critical journal on the various New American scenes: poetry, film, theatre, music, dance. It was a guide to New American Kulchur. I can think of few publications of its era that so completely provides senses (sights, sounds, flavors, smells, materiality) of the scene. The critical writing is in the moment and immediate. The impressions are written quickly and with passion. With 20 issues that is a ton of impressions.
I just pulled Issue 12 of the shelf. Published in Winter 1963, the magazine went to press during the Kennedy Assassination. The table of content has a tipped in notice from the editors: “The editors wish to express their grief and indignation which all thinking men must feel at the spectacle of barbarous brutality and inconceivable madness.” At this point the editors included Hornick, Leroi Jones (music), Frank O’Hara (art) and Joseph LeSueur (theater) with Charles Olson, Gilbert Sorrentino, A.B Spellman, and Bill Berkson as contributing editors. I would suspect O’Hara’s Art Chronicles and Jones’ music criticism are collected somewhere or other, but it is really exciting to see O’Hara review John Rechy’s City of Night followed by Jones’ reviewing Allen Ginsberg’s Reality Sandwiches. In the middle of the Reality Sandwiches review, Jones’ Exaugural Address (for Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, who has had to eat too much shit) written on November 26, 1963, has been pasted in. There is also a review of City Lights Journal #1, several music reviews by Jones and Spellman, and a review of Clayton Eshelman’s translation of Pablo Neruda’s Residences on Earth. This is just the review section of Kulchur, comprising the last 20 pages or so. Each and every issue has their own treasures to excavate. I was just flipping through Issue 18 and there is Ted Berrigan’s review of William Burroughs’ Nova Express. Scanning is impossible, but binding be damned, I will type out the entire review for RealityStudio.
What we really need is a reprint of Kulchur, maybe not even the entire run, but just the review sections. It would be a fascinating documentation of New York City from 1960 to 1965. Until then you will have to buy the issues yourself. In my opinion Kulchur is one of the bargains of the Mimeo Revolution market. You can pick one up for $15-20. This makes sense given that up to 1000 copies per issue were printed, but that said, the perfect binding makes fine copies rather scarce. Another option is to get a complete run. These are also scarce. Certain issues are quite simply tough to come by. Mast Books just posted on Abebooks a complete run for $1500. That is just about right. In my opinion it is worth it, as Kulchur is truly the epitome of the little magazine as archive. Archives are expensive to build but the money put in will pay dividends in intellectual capital for years to come. And that is more than you can say for the stock market.
JB





MIMEO MIMEO #8: CURATORS' CHOICE features 16 bibliophiles on 6 highlights from their personal or institutional collections. Contributors include Steve Clay, Wendy Burk, Tony White, Brian Cassidy, Thurston Moore, J.A. Lee, Michelle Strizever, Adam Davis, Michael Basinski, Joseph Newland, Alastair Johnston, Tate Shaw, Michael Kasper, Steve Woodall, Molly Schwartzberg, Nancy Kuhl, James Maynard, and the Utah posse (Becky Thomas, Marnie Powers-Torrey, Craig Dworkin, Emily Tipps, Luise Poulton, & David Wolske)
MIMEO MIMEO #7: THE LEWIS WARSH ISSUE is the first magazine ever devoted in its entirety to poet, novelist, publisher, teacher, and collage artist Lewis Warsh. Warsh was born in 1944 in the Bronx, co-founded Angel Hair Magazine and Books with Anne Waldman in 1966, and went on to co-found United Artists Magazine and Books with Bernadette Mayer in 1977. He is the author of over thirty books of poetry, fiction and autobiography, the Director of the MFA program in Creative Writing at Long Island University in Brooklyn, and as you’ll soon discover, so much more. Includes an introduction by Daniel Kane, an interview conducted by Steve Clay, 10 new stories, 5 new poems, dozens of photographs and collages, and an anecdotal bibliography.
OUT OF PRINT
MIMEO MIMEO #6: THE POETRY ISSUE is devoted to new work by eight poets who have consistently composed quality writing that has influenced and inspired generations since the golden era of the mimeo revolution. Contributors include Bill Berkson, John Godfrey, Ted Greenwald, Joanne Kyger, Kit Robinson, Rosmarie Waldrop, Lewis Warsh, and Geoffrey Young. Cover art by George Schneeman.
OUT OF PRINT
MIMEO MIMEO #3: THE DANNY SNELSON ISSUE examines the relationship between structuralism and the poetries of the mimeo era by presenting a detailed analysis of Form (a Cambridge-UK magazine published in 1966) and Alcheringa (a journal published by Boston University in 1975), two exemplary gatherings that illuminate the historical, material and social circumstances under which theory informed art (and vice versa) in the early works of some of today's most celebrated experimental writers. Also includes a special insert, The Infernal Method, written, designed and printed by Aaron Cohick (NewLights Press).
OUT OF PRINT
MIMEO MIMEO #2: features Emily McVarish on her artist's book Flicker; James Maynard on poet Robert Duncan's early experiences as an editor and typesetter; Derek Beaulieu on the relationship between the influential Canadian poetry journal Tish and Black Mountain College; and an extensive interview with Australian poet and typographer Alan Loney conducted by Kyle Schlesinger. Cover is by Emily McVarish.
OUT OF PRINT
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