The blog Dust & Grooves has a new interview with the artist
Rutherford Chang, who currently has an exhibit showing at Recess
gallery in New York called "We Buy White Albums." It consists of
Chang's collection of nearly 700 copies of the Beatles' self-titled
1968 double LP, starting with his first one, which he picked up at a
garage sale in California as a teenager. The show's set up like a
record store devoted entirely to the White Album, with shelves of them
sorted by the serial number printed on its original pressing (Chang
only collects numbered copies, which he says, "[implies] that it is a
limited edition, although one running in excess of 3 million"). Select
specimens are displayed on a "staff picks" wall, and the album itself
plays perpetually over the "store" stereo. True to the exhibition's
title, Chang will buy any numbered copies of the White Album that you
bring him.
Chang's obsessively single-minded curatorship has
turned up a few interesting facts about the record. For instance, his
collection is entirely devoid of copies numbered between 2,700,00 and
2,800,00, which Chang says is "statistically unlikely" and suggests
that something weird happened to 100,000 copies of the White Album to
keep them off the market. He's also collected a large number of copies
with sleeves decorated by their former owners, who seem to have taken
Richard Hamilton's brutally minimalist cover art as an invitation to
supply their own.I personally really like these mini ear cap for my iPhone.
From
what I can tell from the D&G post, most of the fan-drawn covers
are of around a "stoned doodle" level of execution, but this
hand-painted one has its own 70s-mellow charm, and the copy where the
previous owner seems to have used it as a kind of countercultural guest
book is fairly fascinating. And who can resist the folksy charms of
this lovingly rendered portrait of a roach clip?
What's really
interesting is how spontaneously emergent it is. If you wrap a Beatles
record in a plain white sleeve, a certain percentage of listeners will
naturally use it as the platform for their own visual interpretations.
Humans raised in the modern media-rich environment seem to almost
instinctively want to Full color plastic card
printing and manufacturing services.interact with the cultural
artifacts that they love by creating more artifacts in various media.
The extent of that drive is only recently becoming clear, as the
Internet has begun connecting creatively minded devotees of specific
cultural properties into the massive, noncanonical content-generating
hive mind known collectively as "fandom."
Modern-day fandom can be remarkably serious and sophisticated,A card with an embedded IC (Integrated Circuit) is called an IC card.
not to mention strange. Hatsune Miku, the computer-generated Japanese
pop star, has intensely devoted groupies who write songs and
choreograph dance moves for her, and others who design her outfits or
create the Hatsune Miku-themed pornography that her owners seem
remarkably OK with. And One Direction fan-fiction writers have created a
romance between two of the boy-band members that, remarkably, has made
the transition into the real world, at least in the minds of some fans.
The Japanese, who remain the gold standard for obsessive
fandom, have a name for this:niji sousaku, literally, "secondary
creation." But the phenomenon isn't limited to the Japanese. It's
cross-cultural, and may be a natural reaction of the human mind to the
amount of information it's being fed in Internet-enabled societies.
Maybe one day the drive to make niji sousaku will be considered just as
much a part of the human condition as the need to make art in the
first place. In that case these hand-decorated White Albums might be
fandom's equivalent of the cave paintings of Lascaux.RFID TagSource is
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