IdleRich

IdleRich
Fortuitously, the demand for writing and art suitable for a broad audience increased as education became more accessible and literacy grew in the 19th century. Many young writers capitalized on this opportunity and turned to the increasingly popular newspapers for income. Bohemian writers such as Gautier, de Nerval, and Borel contributed serialized novels, short stories, reviews of plays, and other creative works to newspapers and published their own journals on art, literature, and politics. Likewise, bohemian playwrights such as Henri Murger and his circle of impoverished writers, who were known as the “water drinkers” of Café Momus, produced scripts to entertain the growing population of bourgeois theatergoers (Seigel 1986). These writers filled an existing need with their writings on politics and culture at large while creating a niche for themselves with accounts of their titillating bohemian adventures, readily devoured by both bourgeois and bohemian audiences.
In 1911 Mayakovsky enrolled in the Moscow Art School. In September 1911 a brief encounter with fellow student David Burlyuk (which nearly ended with a fight) led to a lasting friendship and had historic consequences for the nascent Russian Futurist movement. Mayakovsky became an active member (and soon a spokesman) for the group Hylaea [ ru ] (Гилея), which sought to free the arts from academic traditions: its members would read poetry on street corners, throw tea at their audiences, and make their public appearances an annoyance for the art establishment.

Burlyuk, on having heard Mayakovsky's verses, declared him "a genius poet".

In December 1913 year Mayakovsky along with his fellow Futurist group members embarked on the Russian tour, which took them to 17 cities, including Simferopol, Sevastopol, Kerch, Odessa and Kishinev. It was a riotous affair. The audiences would go wild and often the police stopped the readings. The poets dressed outlandishly, and Mayakovsky, "a regular scandal-maker" in his own words, used to appear on stage in a self-made yellow shirt which became the token of his early stage persona. The tour ended on 13 April 1914 in Kaluga and cost Mayakovsky and Burlyuk their education: both were expelled from the Art school, their public appearances deemed incompatible with the school's academic principles. They learned of it while in Poltava from the local police chief, who chose the occasion as a pretext to ban the Futurists from performing on stage.
 

wektor

Well-known member
Fortuitously, the demand for writing and art suitable for a broad audience increased as education became more accessible and literacy grew in the 19th century. Many young writers capitalized on this opportunity and turned to the increasingly popular newspapers for income. Bohemian writers such as Gautier, de Nerval, and Borel contributed serialized novels, short stories, reviews of plays, and other creative works to newspapers and published their own journals on art, literature, and politics. Likewise, bohemian playwrights such as Henri Murger and his circle of impoverished writers, who were known as the “water drinkers” of Café Momus, produced scripts to entertain the growing population of bourgeois theatergoers (Seigel 1986). These writers filled an existing need with their writings on politics and culture at large while creating a niche for themselves with accounts of their titillating bohemian adventures, readily devoured by both bourgeois and bohemian audiences.
sounds like the live woops has been living for the past 20 years
 

shakahislop

Well-known member

enjoyed this photo in the article, which accurately captures what going to some of this kind of thing is like

IMG_8988-2048x1365-1-1024x683.jpg
 

shakahislop

Well-known member
IMG_3895.jpeg
East Village, I think it's just opened. Is there a word for this style yet? If not I'm calling it Dimescore

I can't put my finger on it but a lot of films I've seen recently have a related set of aesthetic coordinates.
 

shakahislop

Well-known member
Which films? Asteroid City maybe I'm thinking, sort of, I dunno, maybe not.

yeah wes anderson for sure, not that i've seen much of that, it's so offputting to me i watched about half an hour of that hotel one and never went back

Don't Worry Darling had a similar look to this cafe. maybe White Noise as well.
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
yeah wes anderson for sure, not that i've seen much of that, it's so offputting to me i watched about half an hour of that hotel one and never went back

I always had a powerful hatred of his whole schtick but I've softened a little in my old age, I can get through his films now. The hotel one was actually the first I didn't hate.

Don't Worry Darling had a similar look to this cafe. maybe White Noise as well.

These are bars?
 

shakahislop

Well-known member
there's a pop punk thing going on in brooklyn. two friends have started seperate pop punk bands recently. i'm in a coffee shop in greenpoint and they're playing a whole blink 182 album. that retromania thing from a decade ago is still a thing i guess, how retro
 

sus

Moderator
What's scary is if it never leaves. It's just perpetual retromania forever and ever. It becomes meta-retromania, a nostalgia for eras that weren't nostalgic for past eras.
 
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