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I will walk many times with friends down the street and they’ll say, “Hey Weegee, here’s a drunk or two drunks laying in the gutter.” I take one quick look at them and say, “They lack character.” So even a drunk must be a masterpiece. 
—Weegee, BOMB 20/Summer 1987

I will walk many times with friends down the street and they’ll say, “Hey Weegee, here’s a drunk or two drunks laying in the gutter.” I take one quick look at them and say, “They lack character.” So even a drunk must be a masterpiece.

—Weegee, BOMB 20/Summer 1987

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In this time we are living in artists continue to play a special role in society by virtue of their patience alone. In the face of marketing machines that co-opt and disseminate the aesthetic production of creative producers more rapidly than ever before, patience is the distinguishing quality between art and advertising. 
—Madeline Hunt-Ehrlich, BOMBlog 2011

In this time we are living in artists continue to play a special role in society by virtue of their patience alone. In the face of marketing machines that co-opt and disseminate the aesthetic production of creative producers more rapidly than ever before, patience is the distinguishing quality between art and advertising.

—Madeline Hunt-Ehrlich, BOMBlog 2011

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David Seidner Don’t you think an enormous problem with the American entertainment industry today is that nothing is left to the imagination and the people involved feel compelled to answer all the questions?Joan Tewkesbury Oh all the questions! And not only to answer them…but show and tell them.DS How do you as an idealist function within that system?JT I’m not doing real well, obviously. I just spent two weeks of my life on a project with people who want every step nailed down, sealed down, how can we get the tear to come here…DS Laugh tracks.JT Yes…maybe not laugh tracks, but certain issues that are so closed that you don’t give an actor an opening in the structure to work in. You give him this signed, sealed, delivered container. And they must open the container a certain way, get into the container a certain way, and get out of the container a certain way. It’s not the way to work.DS Painted footsteps in dance class.JT Precisely. Or pictures that you paint by number.

BOMB 5/Spring 1983

David Seidner Don’t you think an enormous problem with the American entertainment industry today is that nothing is left to the imagination and the people involved feel compelled to answer all the questions?

Joan Tewkesbury Oh all the questions! And not only to answer them…but show and tell them.

DS How do you as an idealist function within that system?

JT I’m not doing real well, obviously. I just spent two weeks of my life on a project with people who want every step nailed down, sealed down, how can we get the tear to come here…

DS Laugh tracks.

JT Yes…maybe not laugh tracks, but certain issues that are so closed that you don’t give an actor an opening in the structure to work in. You give him this signed, sealed, delivered container. And they must open the container a certain way, get into the container a certain way, and get out of the container a certain way. It’s not the way to work.

DS Painted footsteps in dance class.

JT Precisely. Or pictures that you paint by number.

BOMB 5/Spring 1983

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America is such a strange culture. It has all this wildness in it. And yet the heart is so dead.

James Purdy, BOMB 5/Spring 1983

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I am an aesthete; that is the one “sin” I confess to. If I do have a public message, it is that aesthetic facts—beauty, style and elegance, grace and connectedness—are crucial to life. 
—Alexander Nehamas, BOMB 65/Fall 1998

I am an aesthete; that is the one “sin” I confess to. If I do have a public message, it is that aesthetic facts—beauty, style and elegance, grace and connectedness—are crucial to life.

—Alexander Nehamas, BOMB 65/Fall 1998

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The emotional life of a character I’m playing leaks into my life, and sometimes changes the way I see things. Sometimes for the better, sometimes not. It draws my attention to a certain part of my life that mattered a great deal to my character that maybe I would normally have overlooked. 
—Maria Duval, BOMB 5/Spring 1983

The emotional life of a character I’m playing leaks into my life, and sometimes changes the way I see things. Sometimes for the better, sometimes not. It draws my attention to a certain part of my life that mattered a great deal to my character that maybe I would normally have overlooked.

—Maria Duval, BOMB 5/Spring 1983

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Inner Resources
It feels good to love our country. We must not say so. I’m divided by a love of our millions of brilliant inventions and how I’ll dumbly sniff and rub each one until I’ve figured out how I can use it for that other thing. Just like a brilliant inventor I too have a body so I know everything’s invented to pleasure a body. I was born to this country and all of it was entranced by my tiny fingers and then I learned where I could put them. Before I was born there was sniffing and rubbing and it formed a tiny unity. Already it was getting too big to call by one name. It was becoming a collection of purposes. Which is like calling the sky a collection of purposes because stars exist. This is why I write little notes to myself reminding myself to take all the notes out of my pockets before sleep. The notes say look at the sky and when I remember to do it I feel very American. I feel American when I want to be able to rub up against what I’m pretty sure is that planet. Planets exist. They hold the names we gave them inside them like a breath. I need to remember to look up the names of the planets I’m seeing. I’m fairly certain of what I’m seeing. It’s too bright to be anything else.

This edition of BOMBlog’s Word Choice brought to you by poet Laura Eve Engel and artist Coke O’Neal.

Inner Resources

It feels good to love our country.
We must not say so. I’m divided by a love
of our millions of brilliant inventions
and how I’ll dumbly sniff and rub each one
until I’ve figured out how I can use it for that
other thing. Just like a brilliant inventor I too
have a body so I know everything’s invented
to pleasure a body. I was born to this country
and all of it was entranced by my tiny fingers
and then I learned where I could put them.
Before I was born there was sniffing and rubbing
and it formed a tiny unity. Already it was getting
too big to call by one name. It was becoming
a collection of purposes. Which is like calling the sky
a collection of purposes because stars exist.
This is why I write little notes to myself
reminding myself to take all the notes out
of my pockets before sleep. The notes say look
at the sky and when I remember to do it I feel
very American. I feel American when I want
to be able to rub up against what I’m pretty sure
is that planet. Planets exist. They hold the names
we gave them inside them like a breath. I need
to remember to look up the names of the planets
I’m seeing. I’m fairly certain of what I’m seeing.
It’s too bright to be anything else.

This edition of BOMBlog’s Word Choice brought to you by poet Laura Eve Engel and artist Coke O’Neal.

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Han Ong By virtue of your gift, this could legitimately be called the Suzan-Lori Parks era.Suzan Lori Parks (laughter) I don’t care about that.HO Bullshit. Yes you do.SLP No. I don’t have to claim that. I honestly don’t. I do care about writing as well as I possibly can.HO Are you writing the best you possibly can right now?SLP Right now, I’m writing better than I possibly can. I spend three years on a play, and I look at it and can’t believe I wrote it. I wonder where it came from. I feel like I’m writing beyond myself.

—BOMB 47/Spring 1994

Han Ong By virtue of your gift, this could legitimately be called the Suzan-Lori Parks era.

Suzan Lori Parks (laughter) I don’t care about that.

HO Bullshit. Yes you do.

SLP No. I don’t have to claim that. I honestly don’t. I do care about writing as well as I possibly can.

HO Are you writing the best you possibly can right now?

SLP Right now, I’m writing better than I possibly can. I spend three years on a play, and I look at it and can’t believe I wrote it. I wonder where it came from. I feel like I’m writing beyond myself.


BOMB 47/Spring 1994

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Since I am part of a certain society, the arrows I aim at myself might also hit the larger target.
Guy Ben-Ner, BOMB 111/Spring 2010

Since I am part of a certain society, the arrows I aim at myself might also hit the larger target.

Guy Ben-Ner, BOMB 111/Spring 2010

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 It’s very hard to maintain ambiguity on screen. That’s actually a quality of moviemaking, it’s like painting, you have to say, “This is the color and this is the form.”
—Volker Schlondorff, BOMB 32/Summer 1990

It’s very hard to maintain ambiguity on screen. That’s actually a quality of moviemaking, it’s like painting, you have to say, “This is the color and this is the form.”

—Volker Schlondorff, BOMB 32/Summer 1990

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