the tisraeli republic

Where the women are strong, the men are good looking, and the small dogs are above average. Scroll through or peruse the archives. Here is also where you will find up to the minute coverage of (a)Bonac, a photo essay exploring what it means to have grown up in East Hampton, NY. All photos © Tara Israel. email: tara.israel@me.com

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John McWhinnie

John McWhinnie was one of the good ones, and I was lucky enough to consider him a friend and mentor.  I met him when I was working at a restaurant when I was in high school, eventually leading to work at GHB and a relationship that I still hold close to my heart.  I could write volumes about what John means to me, personally, professionally and artistically.  Hell, I even have a tattoo that is partially inspired by a conversation we had about a Ruscha painting when I was 21.  Instead I offer you this interview.  There will never be another one quite like him.  You will be missed.

petersutherland:

John McWhinnie is a rare book dealer, publisher, and a true fan of far-out counter cultures and ephemera. 

http://www.johnmcwhinnie.com

This is an interview and some photos i did with John for a magazine that went out of business before it was published.  Enjoy. !!!

p

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PS-How did you get started in the rare book game?  What do you like about it and what do you find challenging or frustrating about it?

JM-  I got into rare books through the back door that most rare book dealers secretly enter: book collecting and academia. I was finishing my doctorate and found that I had become increasingly bored with my job as an adjunct professor. I was also on a fellowship that, while generous by academic standards, left me strapped for cash. I decided to sell parts of my book collection, a collection I had assembled through assiduous cultivation of a whole range of miscreants: from flea market dealers to upscale book dealers across the country.
                        My collection was well catalogued and ready to sell. Years before I had spent a stint at the rare book and manuscript library at Columbia University. It was while cataloguing the letters of Tennessee Wiliams, Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, among others, that I realized that most text-book history is a crock of shit; that real history lies embedded in the actual historical documents I was reading and cataloguing. I remember one particluar moment I had while cataloguing an early draft of Tennessee Williams Streetcar.

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