Richard Kostelanetz

Richard Cory Kostelanetz (May 14, 1940, New York City) is an American artist, author and critic.

He was born to Boris Kostelanetz and Ethel Cory and is the nephew of the conductor Andre Kostelanetz. After a lifetime in Manhattan and thirty-five years in its SoHo district, he has moved his studio christened Wordship to Ridgewood-SoHo, as he calls it, in Far-East Artists' Bushwick. He is a passionate defender of the avant-garde.

Education

He has a B.A. from Brown University and an M.A. in American History from Columbia University under Woodrow Wilson, NYS Regents, and International Fellowships; he also studied at King's College London as a Fulbright Scholar.

Grants have come to him from the Guggenheim Foundation (1967), Pulitzer Foundation (1965), DAAD Berliner Kunstlerprogramm (1981–1983), Vogelstein Foundation (1980), Fund for Investigative Journalism (1981), Pollock-Krasner Foundation (2001), CCLM (1981), ASCAP (1983 annually to the present), American Public Radio Program Fund (1984), and the National Endowment for the Arts with ten individual awards (1976, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1990, 1991). He also assumed production residencies at the Electronic Music Studio of Stockholm, Experimental TV Center (Owego, NY), Mishkenot Sha'ananim (Jerusalem), and the MIT Media Lab, among other entities.

Works

He came onto the literary scene with essays in quarterlies such as Partisan Review and The Hudson Review, then profiles of older artists, musicians and writers for The New York Times Magazine; these profiles were collected in Master Minds" (1969)'.

Not one to shy away from controversy, he turned on his literary elders with The End of Intelligent Writing: Literary Politics in America (1974). SoHo: The Rise and Fall of an Artists' Colony (2003) evinces not the Latest but the Last. In 1967, he signed the “Writers and Editors War Tax Protest,” vowing to refuse to pay taxes raised to fund the Vietnam War.[1]

Books of his radically alternative fiction include In the Beginning (1971) (the alphabet arranged in single and double letter combinations), Short Fictions (1974), More Short Fictions (1980, and Furtherest Fictions (2007)); of his mostly visual poetry, Visual Language (1970), I Articulations (1974), Wordworks (1993), and More Wordworks (2006).

Among the anthologies he has edited are On Contemporary Literature (1964, 1969), Beyond Left & Right (1968), John Cage (1970, 1991), Moholy-Nagy (1970), Breakthrough Fictioneers (1973), Scenarios (1980), and The Literature of SoHo (1981).

A political anarchist-libertarian, he authored Political Essays (1999) and Toward Secession: More Political Essays (2008) and has since 1987 been a contributing editor for Liberty Magazine.[2] In 1973 he was one of the signers of the Humanist Manifesto II.[3]

Media

Uniquely among his literary contemporaries, Richard Kostelanetz has also produced literature in audio, video, holography, prints, book-art, computer-based installations, among other new media. Though he coined the term "polyartist" to characterize people who excel at two or more nonadjacent arts, he considers that, since nearly all his creative work incorporates language or literary forms, it represents Writing reflecting polyartistry. "Wordsand" (1978–81) was a traveling early retrospective of his work in several media.

Partial list of works/media

Essays
Alternative Exposition
Book Autobiography
Memoir
Political Criticism
Profiles of Major Artists & Intellectuals
Arts History
Social History
Cultural History
Literary History
Book Reviewing
Music Criticism
Literary Criticism
Music Journalism
Extended interviews
Film & Video Criticism
Book Art
Iris prints
Radio Plays
Radio features
Silkscreen prints
Audio Documentary
Drawings with lines & numbers
Hörspiel (German ear plays)
Electro-Acoustic Musical Composition
Texts for Composers
Video narration
Multiplex Holography
Transmission Holography
Documentary Photography
Creative Photography
Performance Texts
Verbal Poetry
Satire
Visual Poetry
Verbal Fiction
Visual Fiction
Acoustic Fiction
Travel Writing
“Creative Non-Fiction”
Editing of Taste-Making Anthologies
Literary Journal Editing
Autobiographical video
Organizing Assemblings
Cameraless video
Audiovideotapes
Public art proposals
Documentary film
Narrative film
Abstract film
Experimental Prose
Text objects
Kinetic installations
Live media presentations
Thematic collecting of certain books, verbal art, and Rockaway postcards
Overseeing seminars in experimental writing

Bibliography

  • "A Critical Look at the Critics", Twentieth Century ( essay, Spring 1966)
  • The Theatre of Mixed Means (1968)
  • Master Minds (1969)
  • Visual Language (1970)
  • In the Beginning (1971, novel)
  • Recyclings, Volume One (1974)
  • The End of Intelligent Writing: Literary Politics in America (1974, criticism)
  • I Articulations/Short Fictions (1974)
  • Openings & Closings (1975)
  • Portraits from Memory (1975)
  • Constructs (1975)
  • Illuminations (1977)
  • One Night Stood (1977)
  • Wordsand (1978)
  • Constructs Two (1978)
  • And So Forth (1979)
  • Exhaustive Parallel Intervals (1979)
  • "The End" Appendix/"The End" Essentials (1979)
  • Twenties in the Sixties (1979)
  • Metamorphosis in the Arts (1980)
  • More Short Fictions (1980)
  • Reincarnations (1981)
  • The Old Poetries and the New (1981)
  • Autobiographies (1981)
  • Invocations (Folkways Records, 1983)
  • American Imaginations (1983)
  • Epiphanies (1983)
  • Recyclings: A Literary Autobiography (1984)
  • Autobiographien New York Berlin (1986)
  • Prose Pieces/Aftertexts (1987)
  • The Old Fictions and the New (1987)
  • Conversing with Cage (1988) (second ed., 2003), a collage of interviews with John Cage.
  • On Innovative Music(ian)s (1989)
  • Unfinished Business: An Intellectual Nonhistory, 1963–89 (1990)
  • The New Poetries and Some Olds (1991)
  • Politics in the African-American Novel (1991, criticism)
  • Solos, Duets, Trios & Choruses (1991)
  • Published Encomia 1967–91 (1991)
  • On Innovative Art(ist)s (1992)
  • Wordworks: Poems New & Selected (1993)
  • A Dictionary of the Avant-Gardes (1993)
  • On Innovative Performance(s) (1994)
  • Minimal Fictions (1994)
  • An ABC of Contemporary Reading (1995)
  • Fillmore East: Recollections of Rock Theater (1995)
  • One Million Words of Booknotes, 1959–93 (1995)
  • Radio Writing (1995)
  • Crimes of Culture (1995)
  • John Cage Ex(plain)ed (1996)
  • Thirty-Five Years of Critical Engagements with John Cage (1996)
  • Ecce Kosti (1996)
  • Vocal Shorts: Collected Performance Texts (1998)
  • 3-Element Stories (1998)
  • Political Essays (1999)
  • SoHo: The Rise and Fall of an Artists' Colony (2003)
  • Autobiographies at 60 (2004)
  • Thirty-Five Years of Visible Writing (2004)
  • Film & Video: Alternative Views (2005)
  • Ghosts (2005)
  • More Wordworks (2006)
  • Autobiographies at 50 (2006)
  • Home & Away: Travel Essays (2006)
  • Book-Art, Anthologies, & Alternative Publishing (2006)
  • On Sports & Sportsmen (2006)
  • The Maturity of American Thought (2006)
  • Furtherest Fictions (2007)
  • Vertical Single-Sentence Stories (2007)
  • Toward Secession (2007)
  • The Art of Radio in North America (2008)
  • Skeptical Critiques (2009)
  • Innumerable chapbooks and editions of poetry, fiction, and innovative prose.

Reviews

His work has been acknowledged at some length(s) in the following and additional works:

References

  1. "Editors and Staff". Liberty Foundation. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  2. "Humanist Manifesto II". American Humanist Association. Retrieved October 15, 2012.

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, September 17, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.