Published by The Esopus Foundation Ltd., Fall 2010. Format: Perfect-bound magazine, 9 by 11.5 inches, 180 pages.
Devoted entirely to television, the issue featured artists’ projects by Alex Bag, Dara Birnbaum, and Johan Grimonprez. Other contents included an interview with Lisa Kudrow and Michael Patrick King relating to their groundbreaking HBO series The Comeback; Norman Lear’s script notes from a crucial episode of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman; 100 frames from Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s World on a Wire, a sci-fi telefilm the legendary director made for German TV in 1973; contributions from two renowned figures from the soap-opera world, director Larry Auerbach and writer Jean Passanante; a re-presentation of the late conceptual artist Keith Arnatt’s Self-Burial: Television Interference Project, 1969; materials from the MoMA archives related to a 1955 NBC show featuring the museum’s director, Alfred H. Barr, Jr., discussing modern art; an essay on the sitcom sofa by Mame McCutchin (with a brilliant poster featuring 64 TV sofas); and answers from Buck Henry, Liam Gillick, Louis Menand, Laura Mulvey, Lili Taylor, John Kelly, and nearly 20 other artists, writers, filmmakers, and musicians, to the question “What Would You Like to See on Television?”
Esopus 15 closed with an audio CD featuring new songs inspired by specific TV programs; participants included Stephin Merritt (Meerkat Manor), Cloud Nothings (The Golden Girls), and One Ring Zero (MythBusters).
Editor’s Note
By Tod Lippy
Self Burial: Television Interference Project, 1969
By Keith Arnatt
Episode 124: The Makings of a Meltdown
Interview with Norman Lear by Claire Barliant
Artist’s Project: Johan Grimonprez
Not It Anymore
Interview with Lisa Kudrow and Michael Patrick King
The Lifer
Interview with Larry Auerbach
The End of the World as We Know It
By Jean Passanante
Artist’s Project: Alex Bag
Seat of Comedy
By Mame McCutchin
Artist’s Project: Dara Birnbaum
100 Frames: World on a Wire (1973)
Film by Rainer Werner Fassbinder; introduction by J. Hoberman
Modern Artifacts 8: The Art of Broadcasting
Introduction by Michelle Elligott
Esopus Invitational: What Would You Like to See on Television?
Angus Trumble’s 1966 In Retrospect
Esopus CD #15: Television