Let's talk about Style Lab areas

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momus, i'm beginning to think you have some sort of financial stake in vice. outside of the "critical support", of course.

-- jess (dubplatestyle@hotmail.com), November 11th, 2002.
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Jess. No, but what really lies behind my attitude is an admiration for Williamsburg. I hate it when people attack the labs where people are preparing future styles. And that's what Williamsburg is, to me. (Like Mitte, like Harajuku, like Menilmontant, like Shoreditch, recently satirised in TV show 'The Shoreditch Twat' in the UK.)

Now I know why people attack the cliquey and often pretentious behaviour that goes on in these 'labs'. Of course trustafarians play a part, and can be obnoxious. But I think people who can't participate are often just jealous that they aren't able to get into the playpark. So they pretend it's stupid, and stand outside throwing stones.

Maybe we should start a new thread. 'Let's talk about Style Lab areas.'

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 01:39 (twenty-three years ago)

heh, you know momus i went to art school, lived in nyc, and dj'd. so it probably wouldn't have been a great leap to end up in williamsburg/electroclash/nu-pigfuck by now had i a. cared to and b. stayed on the east coast. that is, if the jealousy argument rings troo. (and lord knows i'm pretentious and part of the "media elite".)
-- jess (dubplatestyle@hotmail.com), November 12th, 2002.

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 01:43 (twenty-three years ago)

also, i just don't buy it, because every music which has ever really meant anything (with the possible exception of the ever nebulous "indie") to me has come out completely UNfashionable geographic ares/scenes of illrepute. (at least until style labs/hipsters/white folk picked up on them.)

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 01:45 (twenty-three years ago)

(which is i think why there will always be an unmanagable divide between jess & momus: our points of reference/interest just clash beyond reconcilliation.)

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 01:47 (twenty-three years ago)

Yes, I can see you're part of the future style posse, Jess, because your post to the other thread was a full day ahead of your post to this one!

I'm not just talking about music. It's also fashion and art.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 01:48 (twenty-three years ago)

Suzy to thread! (Wake up, little Suzy, wake up!)

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 01:55 (twenty-three years ago)

(heh another mile in the unmanagable divide: i care not for fashion nor art.)

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 01:56 (twenty-three years ago)

But I think people who can't participate are often just jealous that they aren't able to get into the playpark.

Well then, what do you recommend to those of us who aren't allowed to sit at the Cool Table?

j.lu (j.lu), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:04 (twenty-three years ago)

At worst, tolerance, like hippy parents who tolerate their unruly kids. At best, vicarious consumption through the designated organs of each Lab. Above all I'd recommend talent, cos these places are meritocracies. (Of course, their definition of talent skews a bit to the skateboarding school, but never mind.)

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:09 (twenty-three years ago)

How do I become a style scientist?

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:14 (twenty-three years ago)

Do I get to kills rats and stuff?

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:14 (twenty-three years ago)

You get to terminate the validity of the styles of the generation immediately preceding yours, which is deeply satisfying.

And there's lots of wild sex and orgies and stuff.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:22 (twenty-three years ago)

oh i see! like diesel style lab!

bob zemko (bob), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:27 (twenty-three years ago)

"they pretend it's stupid"

guess what? like everything ever the answers lie somewhere boringly in the middle. i know not of other areas but shoreditch is as deserving of mockery as it is of praise. now i can understand ruling in favour of creativity (or rather whichever side you happen to be on) but why does it have to come at the cost of imagining said places as hubs of pioneers persecuted by a jealous laity? why fool yourself!

bob zemko (bob), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:35 (twenty-three years ago)

it's like diesel style lab

There isn't a branch of Diesel in Williamsburg. They have their own mini-mall with no-brand-lab-boutiques stuffed with clothes by local 'designer terrorists'.

(I kid you not, I photographed a label tag in one Billyburg store that described the girl who made the garment as a 'designer terrorist'. I can probably find the photo for you if you like. I think it was made pre-9/11 and hadn't sold. It dated from the halcyon days of the In Flight exhibition, a show at Deitch which had, as its catalogue, a satirical In Flight magazine full of instructions on how to hijack a passenger jet.)

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:37 (twenty-three years ago)

So is it true that the term "sneaker pimps" arose from a clan of travellers that the Beastie Boys hired in order to do detective work in different cities to sniff out where all the hot styles were, so they could coopt, and remain relevant?

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:39 (twenty-three years ago)

I hadn't heard that, but I think the BBs were being self-ironic. But 'sneaker pimps' is the guys companies like Nike employ to tell them what styles are buzzy on 'ver streets'. There are guys like that in Japan too, the sort of 'informers' of the hip world who relay info to the big style corporations.

It's not inconceivable that there are people in B'burg who work for, say, Diesel or Urban Outfitters or whoever. Members of Fischerspooner work(ed) for Donna Karan. But the High Street version of the Style Lab styles will always be just a bit more boring. They'll always leave the diversity and subversiveness on the cutting room floor. Which is why it doesn't take away the labs' raison d'etre to say that there is commerce with commerce going on.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 02:48 (twenty-three years ago)

There's a woman I work with in my dull and unglamorous job who's in her 50s and is an administrative assistant. She went back to college and got an art degree when she was in her 30s, and every fourth sentence she speaks is prefaced with, "Well, as an artist..." She spends an inordinate amount of time designing programs and flyers for conferences and that sort of thing; laboring over getting the colors and proportions *just* right, trying out different papers and printers, experimenting with different software, elaborately critiquing the designs other make and submit to her. I thought she was going to have a stroke or at least severe emotional breakdown over the internal newsletter she just finished. She obsesses to a ridiculous degree over things that other people are going to maybe glance at once and then toss away.

I don't know anything about art, but this is just fascinating to me; it makes me think of the image I've formed of Warhol or other pop artists based on cultural osmosis: that obsessive, neurotic attention to detail over something completely trivial (this could be completely wrong, obv). Except this *is* trivial; there's no galleries or scenes or commerce involved, and I doubt anyone's going to beat a path to her door hailing her as the next outsider artist. Of course, I'm also not sure that my interest in the way she behaves isn't shaped to some degree by the pop art scene, by people who called attention to this type of behavior by selling it. I guess my point, if I even have one, is that value is where *you* find it (whoa, dude. deep huh?). Momus finds it in Williamsburg; everything I've heard/read about it has made it sound like a glorified art school: lots of stuff being made that wouldn't necessarily be interesting to people outside of the scene being bouyed by the social network. Personally, I find whenever I'm around people I have *too much* in common with, I feel stifled. I guess I need people like my coworker, who lack that self-awareness and codification that come with scenes, to be creative.

chzd (synkro), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:05 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, good point. I certainly wouldn't argue that all creativity or the best works of our time flow through such areas. Would Dostoyevsky have lived in Williamsburg? But I do find such places reassuring, because I recognise 'my kind' there in big concentrations. People who do (like me) spend an insane amount of time choosing this shade of puce rather than that one, this drum sound rather than that one, and have the illusion that it really matters. And I feel protective of those people.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:13 (twenty-three years ago)

I would also say, as someone who has worked this year for Nike and also for Nick, that the work you do for The Man is very different from the work you do for Self and Scene. Client-originated projects are different from self-originated ones, and scenes are successful (just as individuals are) when they can successfully negotiate a balance between the word done for Money and the work done for Me / Us.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:18 (twenty-three years ago)

(Strike the tautological 'successfully'.)

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:19 (twenty-three years ago)

What the fuck is a "Style Lab", and why do I feel like I dislike the concept even not knowing?

Dan I., Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Oh god, somebody else take this one please.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:23 (twenty-three years ago)

Maybe it's just about different media then? As a hem hem aspiring writer, I find it necessary to observe different types of people, whereas if I was an aspiring painter or in a band I'd want to be around people who would recognize the styles and signs and sounds I was using, and give me encouragement.

chzd (synkro), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:23 (twenty-three years ago)

At worst, tolerance, like hippy parents who tolerate their unruly kids.

This is the sort of thinking that gave the world Hampshire College, and the world is no better for it, Mr. Momus.

In all honesty, my sometimes ridicule of areas like that isn't because of the people you describe, it's because of the people who are there because they aspire to be the people you describe. It's a fine line but I really doubt you don't know what I'm talking about with that. That's why "Style Labs" are so fucking annoying - they're full of assholes pretending they're part of the Style Lab.

It's well cool to not be part of the FUTURE FASHION WAVE (TM) or whatever the hell the hipster goons are meant to be - but it's not cool to be a not-part-trying-to-be-a-part. That's just annoying.

Also, I don't like having to go to Williamsburg.

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:27 (twenty-three years ago)

Okay, I should really attempt a definition, since I came up with the term.

Presumably Dan would be comfortable with the idea that there are consumption areas in every city. That's where you go shopping, or looking at exhibitions, or watching films or whatever. The things you buy and see in these 'consumption areas' have styles, right? Some of the styles -- a Rolling Stones album, a Coke can -- change very little over the decades. Others change all the time; new products come and go, smaller companies tend to take bigger risks. They can find new gaps in the market by experimenting with style.

Now, maybe Dan would also concede that there are production areas in many cities too. Some are just factories and sweatshops. Others are more specialised in R&D. They go further out in terms of the risks they take, they attempt to do more than just make new products. Often they focus on changing the world. You recognise these areas the moment you enter them. To the list above I could add places like Civic Center or Santa Monica in LA, Castro in SF, Olympia in Washington... Every city has them. Even Edinburgh. It might just be one record store, one art gallery, one cafe, but you're going to know that those are places frequented and fuelled by a self-selecting elite of (insert enraged deprecating epithet here)s.

The poet Robert Lowell (who never skateboarded) once said that being a poet was a bit like being a scientist. Maybe very few people know your name or will come into contact with your work, but that doesn't mean that it isn't going to filter through, trickle down, butterly-effect and ripple out through the world, changing things.

Let's turn the clock back to 1960 and nuke SF's Haight Ashbury and London's Chelsea. Now FF back to 2002. Is the world different? I think it probably is, and I say, personally, a lot of the things we love and take for granted are suddenly missing.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:46 (twenty-three years ago)

(We don't need to nuke areas in reality -- property developers do it for us. Which is why, if we have this conversation again in five years, the areas will probably be quite different ones.)

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:51 (twenty-three years ago)

Thank you! Really, that cleared things up. Hey, so you're talking about, like, the secret underground trend-setting lair from Josie and the Pussycats, right? "Pink is the new black"? That sort of place is just as imaginary in real life Momus. You're falling victim to your fascistic tendencies again. You're assuming a given impact, assured from the productive moment just because it springs from "a self-selecting elite."

Are you forgetting that there exists many times more "chaff of production" than that which actually makes itself felt (ie: brings itself into recursive consumption)? Don't you think the lines of, I don't want to say influence, but something like that are more diffuse?

Dan I., Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:57 (twenty-three years ago)

Or let me put it this way: why put the argument in terms of geography? Places don't produce, people do.

Dan I., Tuesday, 12 November 2002 03:59 (twenty-three years ago)

also, i just don't buy it, because every music which has ever really meant anything (with the possible exception of the ever nebulous "indie") to me has come out completely UNfashionable geographic ares/scenes of illrepute. (at least until style labs/hipsters/white folk picked up on them.)

To expand upon Jess's point, wouldn't signifying a locale as a Style Lab only help its inevitable implosion? That would seem a premature call to all the culture vultures to which Ally is referring.

In fact, I'd further argue that this concept of a Style Lab is eventually "Style"'s biggest handicap, as it makes basic assumptions that only a few atoms in this world, at any given time, is allowed the distinction of proclaiming relevant fashion, music, art, what have you. This is all too convenient to all the fashion companies and major record labels... oops, excuse me... Style Wards and Style Dispensers (teehee), because that saves them precious scout time. Meanwhile, there are tons of artistes out there -- Momus's kind -- who are grossly overlooked because they can't afford to move and compete with all the wannabes.

It just seems silly to me that "style", "art", etc. being these omnipresent abstract qualities are being treated like some natural resource.

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:00 (twenty-three years ago)

At least, not this kind've production. Sorry. Obviously, places do produce.

Dan I., Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Your turn to define, Dan. Define 'fascistic'.

Over-production is an important part of production.

Yeah, I'm all for diffuse production (with the ultimate utopia being Beuys' 'Everyone is an artist') but for the moment we live in a world of specialisation and concentration, and that can be exciting. It's just really exciting to arrive in Berlin Mitte, for instance, and see Kitty Yo's office, and feel something special in the air. Or to arrive in B'burg and see those 'asymmetrical hairstyles'. Cos it's possible that a couple of years down the line 'asymmetrical' is how your own hair will be.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:03 (twenty-three years ago)

Actually, Momus, one's first foray into Olympia would more likely make one say "The fucking hell? This place was a style dictator?".

Hell, having grown up in Santa Monica, I would have said the exact same thing... except now, Santa Monica has since become Hollywood 2, and would distinctly lift its cigarette holder and fake cheekbones in honor of your comment.

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:03 (twenty-three years ago)

Is this like the would you kill Hitler in 1923 question? If we did go back in time and bomb these places do you cease to exist Momus?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:05 (twenty-three years ago)

Momus, in this case it's referring to an assumed centralization of agency (into these little spots, these Style Labs, the offices and various other playgrounds of the producers)

Lemme think about the specialization thing for a minute...

Dan I., Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:07 (twenty-three years ago)

Just to be clear: I don't think Momus is a fascist. I think he's a shallow superficial moron who's really hyped on the idea that he's somehow a truly unique and special individual.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:10 (twenty-three years ago)

I remember about 5 yrs ago a slew of books came out dealing with these themes. Not surprisingly they now seem as silly and irrelevant as iCast.com.

Aaron A., Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:10 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think Momus is a fascist. I think he's a shallow superficial moron who's really hyped on the idea that he's somehow a truly unique and special individual.

Well, Alex in SF, are you really in SF? Because if you are, you must be gnashing your teeth all the time. Cos it's packed with people ten times 'worse' than me in that respect!

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:16 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think you're a fascist either Momus. "Ribbing" and Hitler just go so well together. But certainly not a moron either! You just need to stop creating a division between the secret world of the arty producers that are the real creative force behind everything and everyone else, the plebes, the current future's ditch diggers and janitors.

Dan I., Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:17 (twenty-three years ago)

Hahaha I pity them too, dear-y, don't you worry. I don't save it all for you.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:17 (twenty-three years ago)

"Would Dostoyevsky have lived in Williamsburg?"

Best ILE question of the day...

Mary (Mary), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:20 (twenty-three years ago)

And what if everyone in the world thought they were as great as the people in Castro / Williamsburg currently do? Would they all need cutting down to size, or would we actually have a new Renaissance?

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:20 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think Momus is saying anything too controversial. He agreed w/ Beuy's "everyone can be an artist!" comment and hasn't called anyone a future janitor. The examples he lists from the past are all good ones; his only oversight might be that a lot of what turns out to be influential isn't recognized as such at the time. How hip was Dusseldorf in 1974?

chzd (synkro), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:21 (twenty-three years ago)

Beuys' line is actually an adaptation of Marx's view that everyone should be able to work without alienation, without 'the division of labour', and in such a way as to earn the fruits of his / her labour. Marxism is as much about getting creativity recognised as it is about equality.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:26 (twenty-three years ago)

Haha what makes you think that everyone in the US doesn't think they are as great as the people in the Castro/Williamsburg do (most people certainly seem to think they are singularly IMPORTANT wherever they live--those two places don't have any monopolies on self-absorption ya know)?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:27 (twenty-three years ago)

most people certainly seem to think they are singularly IMPORTANT wherever they live

Then your insult to me is forgiven, and rather meaningless.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:29 (twenty-three years ago)

Well, since Style Labs only seem to be limited to a humble list of expensive neigborhoods, I guess we'll never have a new Renaissance, will we? *Sniff*, if only you could see the tears that are now dampening my exquisite lavendar periwig.

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:30 (twenty-three years ago)

We don't need to nuke areas in reality -- property developers do it for us.

But the property developers wouldn't be doing anything of the sort if not for the people I was talking about...culture vultures, as better said above, that's your real qualm there. And, I'm sorry, but 90% of the people I meet and interact with in the trendy "Style Lab" areas are of that type of persona. That's why everyone else gets shoved out. And that's why the WHERE is completely unimportant and the concept of "Style Lab" becomes useless...

And yes, the Dostoyevsky question is the best of the day. Hell, that should be its own thread.

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:32 (twenty-three years ago)

one's first foray into Olympia would more likely make one say "The fucking hell? This place was a style dictator?"

haha, I grew up in Olympia and have never seen it as anything but a cultural backwater with a thin film of college student creativity over the top.

chzd (synkro), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:34 (twenty-three years ago)

Well, since Style Labs only seem to be limited to a humble list of expensive neigborhoods, I guess we'll never have a new Renaissance, will we?

Except if the next big style area is right here, where you're posting. (Rent on the real estate of this thread very reasonable.)

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 04:38 (twenty-three years ago)

Suzy - right, that's what I thought. So isn't his promotion of Style Labs as a general concept which has a beneficial impact on the "masses" somewhat disingenuous. Isn't Momus-style a cottage-industry which, like most cottage-industries, deserves respect and protection but whose appeal is by definition limited? i.e. you could talk about the latest trends within Momusism just as you could talk about the latest trends within embroidery, and to their followers both are the centre of their worlds.

Tom (Groke), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 12:34 (twenty-three years ago)

I see exciting things happening every day where I live.

"Exciting" is in the eye (or mind) of the beholder. The real effect of these "style labs" is to hype what its elites believe to be worthy of interest, and you, Momus, drank their Kool-aid.

j.lu (j.lu), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 12:36 (twenty-three years ago)

is Momus at the leading edge of style in general or is he a connoisseur of a certain aesthetic which he has identified with the idea of "style"

I was in a record store on Sunday and they had none of my records, but they had a genre heading called 'Folktronica' and a divider for my label American Patchwork, and I felt actually that I had changed the world in some tiny way. Much more so than if they'd just had a couple of my own albums.

Having been on the fringes of many, many movements (but never really at home in any of them) I think my style and the fashions of the day are in a continual dialectic, altering each other without making each other untrue to their natures. In any given decade I can point to the people with 'my' kind of sensibility. In ancient Rome they're satirists like Martial, in 21st century they're perhaps making Flash pieces. But something links them.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 12:40 (twenty-three years ago)

(grrr the dickhead i am currently editing just invoked duchamp-as-authority in order precisely to establish an anti-duchampian line!! my professional deformation = i read far too many idiots stuffed full of by-the-yard art-school theory COMPLETELY MISSING THE POINT OF THE STUFF THEY HAVE BEEN HIRED TO DISCUSS)

my motto for today = JEL IS A COTTAGE INDUSTRY TOO!! (pigeons have you met mr cat?)

mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 12:42 (twenty-three years ago)

i read far too many idiots stuffed full of by-the-yard art-school theory

My sympathies, there's nothing worse than that turgid prose. I liked Bank's Faxback exhibition, where they scrawled on gallery press releases their outrage at the stupidity of the things therein, and faxed them back. They were London's cleverest pariahs after that.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 12:48 (twenty-three years ago)

I would like to point out at no offense to Momus before going further that I am neither under his magical spell of meeting nor did I ever hate him. I don't entirely disagree with all of the points he is making in this thread; however, I think that, like with everyone arguing with him, his opinion of fore-front style and culture is based very heavily on that which he likes personally.

The bottom line is that there's really no such thing as a Style Lab, Idea Lab, or Fashion Lab because it's too easy, it defines everyone as "masses" and "the other" which is highly silly because, as bnw said way up thread, where do the so called labs come from?? There's artistry in every neighborhood, somewhere. It might not be Momus's idea, or Jess's idea, but it's there...

Anyway I am talking bollocks cos I made the mistake of GOING TO BED and thus missed all the conversaion.

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 14:37 (twenty-three years ago)

(Ally makes her saving throw vs Momus' magical spell of Meeting!)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 15:26 (twenty-three years ago)

I would like to point out at no offense to Momus before going further that I am neither under his magical spell of meeting nor did I ever hate him.

Feel it, don't fight it, baby! You know you want to! ROWR!

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 15:51 (twenty-three years ago)

(Momus attacks with Internet Leching!)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 15:55 (twenty-three years ago)

(This is news?)

Graham (graham), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:03 (twenty-three years ago)

(Graham casts Droll Witticism 15' Radius!)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:05 (twenty-three years ago)

(Well Duh!)

Graham (graham), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:11 (twenty-three years ago)

See, Momumel and Ally were one of the couples I thought would be fantastic together when I was doing my imaginary ilx matchmaking. This only proves it.

Nicole (Nicole), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:17 (twenty-three years ago)

Uh, thread of the year? (And Momus and Ally were perfectly charming to each other when they met in February, rah!)

I prefer the points brought up here and there that place the Internet (or some part of it) as its own, hrm, style lab (god, that term just sounds weird). Who needs a place in real life when you can chat with everybody if you're into exchanging ideas?

"Behold, my new song. Have an mp3!"

"Thanks. Here's my latest design work."

(Obviously real life places to chat and talk aren't going away, but no need to make them so privileged. If you're stuck in a fairly dreary town and like-minded souls want to do something and your only option if you want to go out and hang around somewhere for a bit and talk is a Starbuck's at the end of a drab minimall, then go to the Starbuck's! Hell, make it the Denny's if that's the only place open after midnight. You could also gather at someone's house or apartment, but I think everyone likes the idea of going to someplace where you don't have to clean up after the empty glasses and coffee cups. ;-) )

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:28 (twenty-three years ago)

Hell, make it the Denny's if that's the only place open after midnight.

NONONONONONONONONO. Denny's is the devil!

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:31 (twenty-three years ago)

Here's the thing: While a Fashion Lab must be started by a group of people -- settlers who must gentrify what is almost assuredly a minority-dominated area (thus it is affordable and ripe for pillage) -- if it gains notice -- either within other Fashion Labs or in a broader sense -- the FL possesses a power all its own. The name becomes the key. It becomes a tag for an artist/designer/musician to pin to themselves, thus identifying them with a style/scene/ethos. But here's the disingenuous part: Like Ally said, this will attract the Kulchur Vulchurs, who seem to swoop from one FL to another. They attach themselves to the scene or its ideals (perhaps subtly (or not) mutating their own work) for monetary or personal gain. I mean, how many bands/designers/artists have moved to Williamsburg simply because of the name? Many, no question. And now that Williamsburg has been identified by real estate brokers/businesspeople/the media as an affluent area, the rent's pricey, so the gypsy caravan struts onward, now to Red Hook (although RH is difficult as shit to get to, which should isolate it and keep it from getting _too_ huge). So this is not at all an organic process, but then again, neither is style.

As for how much power these things wield: Lots, but not in a direct sense. You see, almost everyone despises these folks -- rich art-skool kids who get ripped-collar employment that consists of schmoozing and not much else -- so they are hesitant to adapt their style. But, it quite often filters through several more trustworthy levels and then finds its way to the mainstream. Exhibit A: Avril Lavigne. The whole electro skinny-tie-over-t-shirt look has been prevalent in NY since I came here two and a half years ago. It's worked its way through the cultural maze and now dons many a 12-year-old braces-clad girl in Oklahoma. But is this really a victory? Does this establish Williamsburg as a culture mecca? In glossy magazines, it already has, which, of course, means that the swan song is on.

Yancey (ystrickler), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:38 (twenty-three years ago)

I wanted to make a serious contribution to this thread but:

A) The entire remit of the discussion is a scene/mindset that I dismissed shortly after entering college, mostly because the people I met who identified with it were universally loathsome and stuck-up and I didn't want to be associated with them.

B) The sequence of Momus posts that begin with "The elite of the black American subculture is very lucky, because for whatever historical / cultural / psychological reasons, they find themselves in the position of being totemic not only for the US public but for educated consumers throughout the world," infuriates me beyond rationality.

Hence my attempts to turn it into a D&D session.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:47 (twenty-three years ago)

dan, i thought the part about a sexy, dangerous, upwardly mobile (this is the funniest part) underclass depicted in black popular music would be yr favorite.

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 16:59 (twenty-three years ago)

D&D is always a good option.

NONONONONONONONONO. Denny's is the devil!

Hey now. If it is your ONLY choice, like I said (and obviously their problems in the past dealing with people who aren't white isn't exactly to their credit in the slightest). But consider: you're 16, you're somewhere close to nowhere in the country (and there's plenty of spots like that in California), you need someplace to hang out and chat late on a Friday night with your fellow friendly geeks or oddballs or whatever, and that's all you've got, that or something like it like a Carrow's or a Norm's or whatever.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 17:07 (twenty-three years ago)

If we get onto the race thing again this thread will become as long and firey as the original Vice thread it resembles. I'm not capable of fighting that one, I really don't know enough about the history and politics of race in the US. So there's little point in us all enraging each other.

That said (prepares to put foot in scalding water anyway) what I do know is that, fr'instance, here in Tokyo the 'cool' people are guys like Nigo whose own particular Style Lab, Bathing Ape, is totally indebted to US black street and sport culture. USBSSC (it sounds like a bank!) is associated in most places I've lived with big corporations like Nike, McDonalds, the Hollywood studios. Those corps, the international brands of the US monoculture, skip right over all the art school Style Lab-type stuff, preferring their own recasting of USBSSC as the ultimate vehicle with which to promote capitalist American values all over the world.

That's why I talk about a totemic and paradigmatic function, 'the underclass for the underclass'. It's a very special case, to do with American history / power / psychology. Underclass Lithuanians, Malawians, Filippinos etc are nobody's heroes and don't tend to get their music played in McDonalds and their faces on mega-corporate posters in every major city in the world. They don't get copied by cool cats like Nigo. They're not totemic.
I didn't invent this phenomenon, so don't blame me if you don't like it.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 17:13 (twenty-three years ago)

Is there an address where the members of the USBSSC underclass can send their thank you letters to Nigo for being so kind as to personally profit from their totemic, sexy and dangerous images?

Yancey (ystrickler), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 17:22 (twenty-three years ago)

He seems to own half of Tokyo these days (new stores opening daily), so just address letters to Nigo, Tokyo.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 17:24 (twenty-three years ago)

Grateful skateboarders may also want to write to him.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 17:25 (twenty-three years ago)

nigo is still cool?

proves my point about second wave re-presenters though, making acceptable for collegiate audience and shoreditch office workers?

gareth (gareth), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 18:10 (twenty-three years ago)

Two points, Momus:

1) If you didn't want to get into racial issues, why did you bring them up?
2) I don't blame you for the existence of the phenomenom, but I most certainly blame you for saying, "They're so lucky."

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 18:23 (twenty-three years ago)

1) Sterling brought hip hop in.
2) Can't they be lucky?

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 18:32 (twenty-three years ago)

1) life brought hiphop in.
2) "can't they be lucky?" != "they're so lucky"!!

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 18:40 (twenty-three years ago)

1) Talking about hip-hop is not the equivalent of talking about black culture.
2) "Positive" stereotypes can be (and often are) just as damaging and irritating to the people who have to endure them as "negative" stereotypes. I'm certain that P. Diddy would love to be described as a successful musician, producer, and businessman. I am also certain that he would not appreciate being called "the elite of the underclass", as that sounds far too much like "he's awfully smart and lucky for a colored boy".

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 18:51 (twenty-three years ago)

Further explication of 1): Sterling's first example was JENNIFER LOPEZ. You were the one who started talking about "the elite of black American subculture" and then equated that with "the black American underclass".

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 18:57 (twenty-three years ago)

b-but dan, j.lo said "my niggas are my niggas" on the ja rule record!! she is black american underclass, qed!!

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 19:04 (twenty-three years ago)

Can I say that successful musicians, producers, and businessmen are 'so lucky'? It sounds a bit lame.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 19:32 (twenty-three years ago)

he would not appreciate being called "the elite of the underclass", as that sounds far too much like "he's awfully smart and lucky for a colored boy".

To me 'the elite of the underclass' sounds like a Marxist speaking, and 'awfully smart and lucky for a colored boy' sounds like some KKK member. And to me positive images of someone don't sound much like negative images of someone. For instance, if people say 'Momus is very insightful poster' it sounds a lot different than 'Momus is an idiot whose posts lead nowhere'.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 19:37 (twenty-three years ago)

To me 'the elite of the underclass' sounds like a Marxist speaking, and 'awfully smart and lucky for a colored boy' sounds like some KKK member.

There isn't that much difference between the two in my eyes, except that the KKK member will at least tell you that he doesn't like you.

And to me positive images of someone don't sound much like negative images of someone.

I will remember this the next time an acquaintance of Chinese/Japanese/Korean descent tells me a story where someone assumed they were good at math.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 19:47 (twenty-three years ago)

Not just good at math - the girls are extra sweet and innocent and sparkly too!

Sorry, Momus. I can't resist.

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 20:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Er, let's talk about Style Lab areas.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 20:12 (twenty-three years ago)

That's what I call my apartment, as I mentioned earlier.

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 20:15 (twenty-three years ago)

"the elite of the underclass" only sounds like a Marxist out of "Invisible Man".

Also, Dan, I'm quite surprised by your "their isn't any difference" thing which strikes me as fairly sharp nationalism which is something that I'd never have expected from you.

Also, Momus gets Hegel wrong above because he confuses mode of analysis with mode of operations -- dialectics is a hermunetics, not a guide to action. Which is, by the way, why Marxism is a great deal more than dialectics.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 20:32 (twenty-three years ago)

Also, Dan, I'm quite surprised by your "their isn't any difference" thing which strikes me as fairly sharp nationalism which is something that I'd never have expected from you.

I don't know, I think it fits right in with my baseline "People suck ass" philosphy.

More seriously, reading _Invisible Man_, _Native Son_ and _The Jungle_ have painted Marxism and communism as forces just as susceptible to racism as any other in my mind. Also, in my response I was reacting to the _Invisible Man_-type Marxist who would say that type of thing more than the Marxist ideal (hence the equivalization, which is as a general thing extremely lazy arguing).

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 20:50 (twenty-three years ago)

So, what are attributes of places that have no Style?

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 22:21 (twenty-three years ago)

haha: Berkeley

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 12 November 2002 22:57 (twenty-three years ago)

Are 'Style Labs' still actual places. I would think with the internet that they could be just a collection of people from anywhere. Like Bowienet seems like it wants to be this. (is it? I don't know) Maybe ILX to some degree is a 'Style Lab'. It doesn't effect a city center, but it effects individuals all over.

Personally I think it is much cooler to be an outsider artist than one on the inside. Those are the most interesting even if they aren't the most influential.

A Nairn (moretap), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 05:21 (twenty-three years ago)

Actually, I would much rather have some physical place where artists (or friends, scientists, etc) could meet in person fairly regularly and discuss ideas opposed to the internet.

A Nairn (moretap), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 05:31 (twenty-three years ago)

(that came out wrong) but i think you can guess what meant

A Nairn (moretap), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 05:32 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, A Nairn, I'd like to think the internet was the next Style Lab, but it's still texturally and socially handicapped. In other words, you can't sit together with your friend cutting cloth on the internet, you can't taste the chai in the local cafe, you can't fuck the waitress, you can't go to the big Satyrday Knights party where people get naked... all you can do is enter text in a web browser, download data, etc. It just isn't the same... yet.

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 06:40 (twenty-three years ago)

Momus I've never done any of those things. Does this mean I haven't really lived? (I'm only half joking)

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 06:44 (twenty-three years ago)

what an utterly repellent idea

Alan (Alan), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 09:54 (twenty-three years ago)

Surely though ILE is a style lab for the style in which it predominantly works in - ie text. Which also happens to be one of the things we talk the least about (at least the individual style of our text). Why should such style labs be about music, writing, art etc all at the same time, or even be equally groundbreaking in all of these areas.

And anyway, ILE members do go to parties, meet in the pub and occasionally fuck too.

Pete (Pete), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 11:06 (twenty-three years ago)

each other?

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 22:15 (twenty-three years ago)

Haha, you'd be most surprised! Or unsurprised. Whichever it is.

Ally (mlescaut), Wednesday, 13 November 2002 22:57 (twenty-three years ago)

Waitress, more chai!

Momus (Momus), Thursday, 14 November 2002 08:46 (twenty-three years ago)


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