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161<br />

I<br />

Boris had pledged to smoke less, and therefore placed the pack on a small<br />

cupboard next to the bathroom door. For each cigarette, he had to stand<br />

up and go around the table into the dark hallway to the bathroom. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

brief, compulsory breaks structure our conversation. We speak German.<br />

A few days after arriving in New York in 2004, I called Boris Lurie and made<br />

an appointment to meet him at his home on the Upper East Side somewhere<br />

in the sixties later in the evening. He greets me as if we have known<br />

each other for a long time. Friends have told him about our events connected<br />

with NO!art in Leipzig; the program booklet is lying on the table.<br />

He serves tea in large plastic cups. We sit across from each other, he in his<br />

reading chair next to the television set and the brand new DVD player, given<br />

to him by a filmmaker friend, and me on the narrow couch between tall<br />

stacks <strong>of</strong> newspapers. I have a view <strong>of</strong> the kitchen at the other end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

quite long and sparsely lit ground-floor apartment, and in front <strong>of</strong> it to the<br />

right, the desk <strong>of</strong> his secretary, who comes by to organize things with him a<br />

couple <strong>of</strong> times a month. Above it on the wall, newspaper images and family<br />

photos.<br />

02<br />

BORIS LURIE<br />

“Anmerkungen zu<br />

Kunst, Leben und<br />

Politik,” in: Neue<br />

Gesellschaft für bildende<br />

Kunst, ed.<br />

NO!art: Kunstbewegung<br />

in New York<br />

1959–64, Berlin: nGbK,<br />

1995, p. 127.<br />

“But I managed, I bet you I’m the only one; I managed to bring a<br />

whole pack <strong>of</strong> photographs through all the ghettos and concentration<br />

camps . . . I don’t even understand now how I managed to do it,<br />

I was lucky, I wasn’t searched or whatever.” 01<br />

In between them: a portrait <strong>of</strong> Josef Stalin.<br />

“But, if it weren’t for Stalin, I wouldn’t be alive today! And, yet, communist<br />

neophytes keep on badmouthing him!” 02<br />

One poster announces a NO!art show, another advertises an exhibition by<br />

Wolf Vostell in Gera in 1993 with the avant-garde formula “Leben = Kunst =<br />

Leben” (Life = <strong>Art</strong> = Life).<br />

<strong>The</strong> state <strong>of</strong> Boris Lurie’s apartment has been described many times. <strong>The</strong><br />

person who lives here does not like separating himself from things, preferring<br />

to leave them to mature on tables and walls with the aid <strong>of</strong> planned<br />

coincidence. Part <strong>of</strong> his oeuvre was created in just this way.<br />

01<br />

BORIS LURIE<br />

in: optimistic | disease |<br />

facility: Boris Lurie,<br />

New York—Buchenwald,<br />

a documentary by<br />

Naomi Tereza Salmon<br />

(Germany 2003), time<br />

code 00:08:51.<br />

“I’ve been sticking photographs with articles cut out <strong>of</strong> newspapers<br />

and journals on the walls <strong>of</strong> my workroom for years, so that I don’t<br />

forget the present, which becomes the past. <strong>The</strong> clippings yellow,<br />

fall down; I then tape them up on the wall again. It creates collages<br />

that age with time . . . .” 03<br />

03<br />

Ibid., p. 126.<br />

EIKO GRIMBERG

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