Alfred Eisentaedt
Manhattan skyline as seen from the roof of the Hotel Bossert, Montague Street, Brooklyn, 1943.
From Life Magazine, Time/Life Pictures/Getty Images
(via darksilenceinsuburbia)
William Burroughs’ Third Mind
A state in which something new or unaccountable emerges from the combination of art and writing that would not have come about as a solitary exploit. This eventually led Burroughs to his famous cut-up technique; a “pseudo-fact-o” work of art in itself, but generally a literary device.
DRIFTERDAX
The Third Mind exhibition at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, fall, 2007 visual and textual collaborations of Burroughs and Gysin that were completed mostly in New York City in 1965.
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