Present Tense

Present Tense

Bonnie Marranca

1976. It was a very good year. The world that PAJ entered upon its

founding forty years ago was made by artists and audiences
and critics and editors, artistic directors and founders of
organizations, spazi, publications, and all the cafés and bookstores and galler-
ies. Everyone who lived and worked downtown understood that the performance
culture was something they helped to make. They cared about it, fought over it,
wrote about it. Downtown was held together and felt important because it was
valued by all those who worked in this artistic world. Valuing it meant that there
were standards of achievement and excellence, acknowledging that it was also
O.K to fall short because the work was part of the “experimental” arts.

PAJ was conceived in one of the then well-known Village spots, Café Borgia, at
the crossroads of Bleecker and MacDougal streets, across from the legendary
Café Figaro, both no longer there. Shortly after starting out it was edited from
a $300-a-month railroad apartment on St. Marks Place, a celebrated street that
is itself the subject of a new book. Two of the founders of Mabou Mines, Ruth
Maleczech and Lee Breuer, lived in the same building where their Re.Cher.Chez
studio eventually opened in the basement. Today it seems that the dangerous and
dirty streets of a Manhattan on the verge of bankruptcy during the mid-1970s is
exerting a strange charm for a city that is now gentrifying block by block, E
displacing the old neighborhood inhabitants and small shops with over-designed
and high-priced restaurants and boutiques. The new economy has decentralized
the downtown community and made it impossible to live and make art in Man-
hattan with a modest income.

What I remember throughout the seventies more than any feeling of fear was
the youthful excitement of going to graduate school, writing for the Soho Weekly
News, starting the journal with fellow student Gautam Dasgupta, seeing theatre
several nights a week, and sitting leisurely in cafes. There were no teaching jobs in
NYC when we left graduate school so we had other jobs and started the journal,
with no clear vision of its future. When someone stopped by the PAJ office with

© 2016 Performing Arts Journal, Inc.

PAJ 112 (2016), pag. 1–5.

1

doi:10.1162/PAJJ _e_00289

l

D
o
w
N
o
UN
D
e
D

F
R
o
M
H

T
T

P

:
/
/

D
io
R
e
C
T
.

M

io
T
.

e
D
tu
P
UN

/

j
j
/

l

UN
R
T
io
C
e

P
D

F
/

/

3
8
1
(
1
1
2
)
/
1
1
7
9
6
1
1
4
P
UN

/

/

j
j

_
e
_
0
0
2
8
9
P
D

.

F

B

G
tu
e
S
T

T

o
N
0
7
S
e
P
e
M
B
e
R
2
0
2
3

an article we felt free to drop everything and talk for two or three hours about
theatre and books and who was doing what new work.

Publishing is very different now that so much communication is done by email,
and who would visit the office and stay for a long conversation and then follow
that with dinner? Spontaneity has become a rarity in the controlled access to
overscheduled lives. Interface is just not the same as face-to-face as the inhabitants
of twenty-first- century cafés sit mainly behind computer screens, rarely convers-
ing with strangers. In “The Time of Broken Windows,” which he wrote for the
ottobre 12, 2015 issue of the New Yorker, critic Louis Menand reminds readers
that unemployment was 11% by 1976 and in the prior six years over 600,000
jobs were lost in New York. “The decade between 1972 E 1982 was the worst
extended economic period since the nineteen-thirties,” he points out. Looking at
old photos of SoHo, on the edge of which the journal eventually moved due to
climbing prices in the East Village (!), I am reminded of its dilapidated buildings
and dark, grimy streets of broken cobblestones, which have long disappeared to
be replaced by fashionable shops and multi-million dollar luxury apartments
taking more and more of the sky. Little could I have imagined that the Fluxus
“Tour for Foreign Visitors” that I participated in on the streets of SoHo, with Nam
June Paik, George Maciunas, and Jill Johnston, on May 4, 1976, would decades
later become obsolete in a neighborhood where so many tourists now map out
their own journeys on smartphones.

No sooner had I begun to think about what I might write for an editorial at the
start of our fortieth year, than I came upon another article on the seventies, Questo
one by the writer Edmund White, published a month earlier in the New York Times,
on September 10, under the headline, “Why Can’t We Stop Talking About New
York in the Late 1970s?” By now numerous references to the seventies had been
working their way into print and social media. Besides recalling the affordable
food and housing, the accessibility of people, the high quality of the arts, E
the mixture of social groups that characterized that era, what caught my eye in
White’s article is his observation that “it was the last period in American culture
when the distinction between highbrow and lowbrow still pertained,” and that it
reflected “a late-age Modernism and a 1960s-era radicalism: a paradoxical com-
bination of elitism in aesthetics and an egalitarianism bordering on socialism
and utopianism in politics.”

Today, I think what people realize is missing in New York City is any sense of
bohemian life that characterized downtown in that era, though admittedly it is a
much safer and more beautified place. A city needs an avant-garde culture, just as
art does. For those who experienced the remarkable artistic and intellectual city
life in the seventies there was certainly an edgy feeling of freedom and creativity

2  PAJ 112

l

D
o
w
N
o
UN
D
e
D

F
R
o
M
H

T
T

P

:
/
/

D
io
R
e
C
T
.

M

io
T
.

e
D
tu
P
UN

/

j
j
/

l

UN
R
T
io
C
e

P
D

F
/

/

3
8
1
(
1
1
2
)
/
1
1
7
9
6
1
1
4
P
UN

/

/

j
j

_
e
_
0
0
2
8
9
P
D

.

F

B

G
tu
e
S
T

T

o
N
0
7
S
e
P
e
M
B
e
R
2
0
2
3

and promiscuity in all its manifestations, held together by a fairly stable com-
mon core of arts knowledge. Any attempt at compiling a list of remarkable and
long-lasting artists and artworks produced downtown in the years immediately
before or after PAJ began publishing would sound too boastful. This is the world
PAJ entered into, supported, and was shaped by, and to whose history it would
contribute.

Infatti, recent books have also brought attention to this period in New York,
including Patti Smith’s memoir Just Kids (her new M Train is in part an ode to
drinking coffee in neighborhood cafés), Brad Gooch’s Smash Cut, Edmund White’s
City Boy, Rachel Kushner’s novel The Flamethrowers, and the new City on Fire by
Garth Risk Hallberg, celebrated as a devastatingly accurate novel set in New
York City in the seventies. Art exhibits, television shows, memoirs, essays, E
journalistic references continue to focus on this historical moment. It’s impos-
sible not to refer to the seventies at this starting point of our fortieth year. For
the 100th issue, In 2012, I wrote extensively about the evolution of PAJ through
the decades and their different demands on a journal, and in relation to changes
in the field of theatre and criticism. But “100” was about the content of so many
journal issues up to then. The “fortieth year” represents more of a reflection
on the passage of time. So, you will pardon me if I have brought some murky
black-and-whites into our high-definition era.

When all is said and done that was then, and now is now. I am not interested
in the seventies as a nostalgia trip but rather as a point of historical context and
always-present archive of personal memory since this is the artistic world in
which I found myself as a young critic. My first book, The Theatre of Images, era
completed the same year, 1976, PAJ was founded, and it included everything
I knew about the contemporary arts up to that time, learned mainly from the
artists downtown. If decades ago critics and audiences were preoccupied with
attempting to understand and write about the American arts in their breakaway
from Europe and creation of singular vocabularies, now our tasks are different.
What are they, I wonder?

One of the long-term interests of PAJ is the development of performance history,
which is why we have been recently publishing memoir-style contributions—Anna
Koos of Squat Theatre, Kenneth King on the Warhol Factory, Kestutis Nakas on
the Pyramid Club, and in this issue, Tom Walker of the Living Theatre, whose
narrative also serves to honor the peerless Judith Malina, who died this year.
Likewise, the entire archive of Live, the zine-style magazine we published from
1979-1982—a virtual who’s who of the downtown performance scene—has
become available free to subscribers on our website. In addition to our com-
mitment to dramatic forms, represented in PAJ 112 by Richard Maxwell’s Isolde,

MARRANCA / Present Tense  3

l

D
o
w
N
o
UN
D
e
D

F
R
o
M
H

T
T

P

:
/
/

D
io
R
e
C
T
.

M

io
T
.

e
D
tu
P
UN

/

j
j
/

l

UN
R
T
io
C
e

P
D

F
/

/

3
8
1
(
1
1
2
)
/
1
1
7
9
6
1
1
4
P
UN

/

/

j
j

_
e
_
0
0
2
8
9
P
D

.

F

B

G
tu
e
S
T

T

o
N
0
7
S
e
P
e
M
B
e
R
2
0
2
3

there is the attention to artists’ writings and original works, with contributions
by Douglas Dunn and Oana Cajal. Carol Becker provides a thematic essay that
considers utopia in our age and, coinciding with his 100th birthday in 2016, È
an essay by Eric Bentley on political theatre, a classic from the journal’s archive
for a new generation of readers. As we move into the future, PAJ Publications,
the book division begun in 1979, has also begun publishing a series of small-size
paperbacks, called Performance Ideas, for titles that crossover all live art forms.

To some extent editing a journal is a utopian project in itself that compels every-
one involved to keep searching for those thought-provoking works and essays,
and the dialogue around them, that open up unknown pathways in conscious-
ness. What I have carried away from the seventies is the sense that there could be
great pleasure in being drawn into imagined worlds other than our own, Dove
images generate their forms of new knowledge and texts reconstitute language.
From the start, PAJ has held the belief that the health of any art form is tied
to the rigor of critical thinking circulating around it. Artistic experiences that
break through the known world bear gifts of intellectual prowess and wonder
and disturbance, reconfiguring the natural order of sight and speech. They have
a reality all their own.

Surveying the vast field of theatre now it seems that a sense of taking pleasure
in the experience of artworks themselves is frequently missing, that they are
regarded essentially as a manifestation of culture—a statement about something
else. Joyfulness in the sheer engagement with art can be overwhelmed by an
inability to distinguish between the self and the work, the work and the theory.
I ask myself, Is there too much critique in writing on the arts today? Do so many
works have to be “subversive,” a form of “resistance,” or “intervention” to be
worthy: how have they earned those descriptions?

Theatre finds itself in difficult times. The high quality and proliferation of
journalistic reporting can make plays, especially documentaries that engage in
forms of reportage, seem redundant or obsolete. Visual art forms offer a strong
challenge to theatre’s own strategies in film and electronic media. The play is
forced to contend with television drama’s reputed “Golden Age,” praised for
highly developed characters and psychological acting, or TV sitcoms that provide
the sociological arguments once found in dramatic literature—all of which the
downtown theatre in revolt moved away from a half-century ago.

For a long time I have thought that in theatre there is an excess of lamentation
over social crises merely replicating the same themes already saturating the culture
rather than generating works of the imagination and unchartered territories of
intellectual argument and soulfulness. Theatre, pure, needs larger ambitions than

4  PAJ 112

l

D
o
w
N
o
UN
D
e
D

F
R
o
M
H

T
T

P

:
/
/

D
io
R
e
C
T
.

M

io
T
.

e
D
tu
P
UN

/

j
j
/

l

UN
R
T
io
C
e

P
D

F
/

/

3
8
1
(
1
1
2
)
/
1
1
7
9
6
1
1
4
P
UN

/

/

j
j

_
e
_
0
0
2
8
9
P
D

.

F

B

G
tu
e
S
T

T

o
N
0
7
S
e
P
e
M
B
e
R
2
0
2
3

to continue to appropriate works of the past, fixate on pop culture icons, or stage
old films—and expect audiences to assume they are inherently a form of critique.
What’s missing from theatre is an emotional gravity, laser-sharp penetration into
the inner life of the human being, desperate but necessary poetries: the scarcity
of distinctive writing (and text-making) in the non-mainstream theatre is of
noticeable concern, after three decades of collages of texts and non-theatrical
sources strung together, often of very little substance.

Arts writing and scholarship can have a more esteemed and long-lasting influence
if it is less tethered to reigning vocabularies and concepts, and instead roots itself
in a deeper understanding of art forms and artistic process as a starting point to
wherever it leads. And I hope it goes to the ends of the earth. Either independent-
minded, courageous critical writing is more important today than ever or it does
not matter at all in the face of world-shattering transformations—political, social,
environmental, economic, technological.

Most people enter the arts professsions out of a love of sensual experience and
the desire to imagine lives that extend beyond the rules of the workaday world,
not least for an inward freedom. And yet, it is evident that funders, università,
arts organizations, academics, and artists are often running on the same track
instead of generating more diverging necessities. It requires fiercely independent
thinking to challenge institutionalized discourses that risk breeding (albeit
pious) conformity—a responsiveness that pushes beyond the comfort of received
ideas and self-promotion to grapple with extraordinarily complex dimensions of
contemporary life. Perhaps what I mean is an uncompromising focus on being,
rather than on presence or identity.

We need critical thinking against the current, offering new terms of engagement.
We need works of art that are daring and beautiful and dangerous and poetic.
Our theatre age calls out for more worldly, knowledgeable forms of criticism that
won’t settle for what is accepted as progressive theatre. If theatre is going to be
important as an art form in the future then I urge those who work in and write
about it to commit to addressing what is of value in it as art. If I am calling for
a toughness of spirit I don’t feel any contradiction in admitting to desiring at
the same time a certain tenderness and philosophical urgency in the vulnerable
corridors of thought.

As PAJ begins its fortieth year, we are grateful to the readers of our journals and
books over these four decades, and to the many artists and authors whose work
has filled their pages. We hope you will continue to support independent, piccolo
presses at this time of enormous transformation in the publishing industry.

MARRANCA / Present Tense  5

l

D
o
w
N
o
UN
D
e
D

F
R
o
M
H

T
T

P

:
/
/

D
io
R
e
C
T
.

M

io
T
.

e
D
tu
P
UN

/

j
j
/

l

UN
R
T
io
C
e

P
D

F
/

/

3
8
1
(
1
1
2
)
/
1
1
7
9
6
1
1
4
P
UN

/

/

j
j

_
e
_
0
0
2
8
9
P
D

.

F

B

G
tu
e
S
T

T

o
N
0
7
S
e
P
e
M
B
e
R
2
0
2
3
Scarica il pdf