Brrrrrrr.

I am crazy to get an auto rickshaw. I think they are way cool and perfect for tooling around this small town and for jaunts into the countryside. What do you think? Then, to take it further, the indians have auto rickshaw races>>. Dinesh Kini has written a nice synopsis of the wonders of the auto rickshaw. Maybe we could attach a snow plow to the front of it? Just kidding.

School excused today due to windchill. So "hail, hail, the gang's all here"! Am trying to get all the stuff on my desktop to a level I can leave it with Erich for a week--so, am a bit frantic. A surprise project was literally popped on me at 6 p.m. on Friday with the wrong direction from one person (to find out after 6 hours of work) and then the re-do that took until mid Sunday. I was not totally happy. That's done, so we can move on.

Am researching transporation modes, prices etc in London.Feel like I am getting a handle on all of this. The best site is Britain Express that plugs all sorts of deals, and travel opportunities that are not so evident. I have discovered this too late, but for the next time...However, the big "ah ha!" was that most museums do not charge admission. Yay!!

More later.

March


March comes in like a lion and out....

Maybe all of these stock market high jinx are the "coming in like a Lion" thing. But, we will need to wait and see with the weather!

28


Thirty day hath September,

April, June and November.

All the rest have 31....

Except for February,

which has 28!

Celebrating 28 Days!

Steam coming out of my ears


Work continues apace. Setting em up and knocking em down. Hopefully, I will have a stretch of time to start on a 16 pp. pub. I do for the Museum of Glass. Lots of copy, lots of pictures and the whole jigsaw puzzle of fitting them together without it looking like anyone did anything. Now, what is it that you do?

London trip announced--We, the students of Syracuse University ISDP Program (to close in 2008) are going to London 3/12--for our contact period. These contact periods expose us to a range of illustrators and illustration related folks--generally 4 folks a day for 5 days. We also get critiques from the assignments we do, and catch up on the status of our thesis. So, we get this note....4 illustrators and 1 painter. That is all there is lined up. Essentially a days worth of exposure for the cost of a big plane ticket, hotel and food and a weak dollar. Although my plans were to see some museums, I think that has expanded to seeing a lot of museums. Not my plan, and to be honest, not worth the time right now. How can SU think that pulling people out of jobs, billing and paying jobs, for a totally inadequately planned contact period is acceptable. Maybe there is no thinking. Just kind of doing--not real doing...I mean, the V & A have a spectacular collection of childrens books and illustrations--why isnt that planned in? Couldnt we get a meeting with the curator there etc? There isnt anything happening that one couldnt do on their own. The SU connection could open doors that might not open to individuals and it is not being leveraged. There is absolutely nothing special going on here. It reeks of someone wanting and delivering on a family vacation, forgetting the real purpose of the trip to fall by the way side. I could lead a tour of western Massachusetts starting with the Rockwell, the Clark, Mass Moca, the Carle Museum, the Yale Museum and cover more in a week than this is planned. Unacceptable. Absolutely unacceptable. Can you gather, I am pissed?

I just hope there is no trouble with the thesis. I do not want to continue with the burkas--and to be honest, I did them to be game, but not to make this my hook. I could take them further--but I am bored with them...and that isn't something that will get you up in the morning, and grab your entire weekend. Plus, marketing them???
The birds have my attention and interest. I can market them, and they can be leveraged into a bigger world. Carol told me about the Duck Stamp competition. And there are a bunch of wildlife, naturalism galleries that might be interested in this stuff. Plus, the individual reception I have gotten is positive. As Erich says, flowers and/ or birds are classics. Who doesn't love birds? My thoughts exactly.

Richard and I commiserated. He told me all about High Fructose, a new publication in the Juxtapoz mode that is less about graffitti and more about painting. I am good with another entry in that world and am going to seek it out and get back to you.

Am listening to a great audio book (Audible), The Hummingbird's Daughter--an inspired, layered story on a ranch in Mexico. It is very dense--and verbally has similar clues to Pan's Labyrinth and the third Harry Potter. I am only an hour into it--and it is around 15 hrs.--but its great so far.

More later>>

Politicians and actors playing politicians


another work in progress>>
Last night's Oscars featured actors playing queens and dictators and at the same time, a presidential candidate won for his salient movie on the state of the environment and world. It was good to see this venue focus the spotlight on things and people that are important. It almost seemed that the messaging transcended the glamourpusses in satin dresses, the movie folk in diamonds and rhinestones. Considering the absolute chaos the world is with the world leader, a "Gentleman's C+", the random shooter and perfect Condi is making. It was good to see the class geeks and freaks having their moment. Bravo!

I know I owe you a little more on the Chinese Xiamen Dadaist, but today is not the day. Am a little pressed for time. Have 2.5 hrs. doing volunteer stuff at the school--and some rush stuff on the desktop. Maybe later tonight?

IF: Communication


The burka is in essence a shield between the woman on the inside and the world that surrounds her. The burka communicates that she is a woman -- and no more. It communicates privacy, conservatism, and her distance from the broad community of people. Only when she is within the confines of her family, the burka is lifted, and she can communicate as the individual that she is.

Mass Moca Delivers as Promised!


Lincoln Number Three
Greta Pratt
Love. Mass Moca rocks! We got there when the doors opened (which was tremendous as they are closed on Tuesdays--but as it was school break week in Mass, they stayedopen this particular Tuesday). All the exhibitions we saw were unbelievable, inspiring and smart.

The work in the Ahistorical show included a ballet inpired piece from Yinka Shonibare, some interesting work from Allison Smith, and a great series of giclees from Greta Pratt.

Still from Un Ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball) 2004
Commissioned for the Moderna Museet, Stockholm. Produced by Moderna Museet and Sveriges Television. Courtesy Stephen Friedman Gallery, London
Back to artist page

Shonibare's Ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball) was a piece that was a blend of african and colonial styling and stereotyping--combining a dramatic ballet film telling a story combined with dance--taking the tight conventions of american dance of the 1700s and blending with those of tribal african dance. The actual costumes ala formal costume of american colonists were created out of kente cloth--with bright colors, strong patterns and bold presentation all the way down to the shoes covered in fabric. The lace was orange, and the tights were purple, orange, green and red. It was beautiful and thought provoking--causing us to question what would have happened if the people at the time had blended versus been so separated in class, money, position, education and place. You can see some films of his work here>>
The Tate page says this about the Masked Ball piece:

Un Ballo in Maschera (a Masked Ball) 2004 is Shonibare's first film. It presents the assassination of King Gustav III of Sweden in 1792 through the medium of dance. Costume highlights ambiguities of identity and gender, while the lack of dialogue and repetition of the action ask us to consider the conventions of narrative and the structure of film.

From the Tate on Shonibare:
Yinka Shonibare was born in London in 1962 and moved to the Nigerian capital of Lagos when he was just three years old. He studied at the Byam Shaw School of Art, London in 1984-9 and completed a BA at Goldsmiths College, London in 1991. Shonibare considers himself ‘truly bi-cultural’ and strives to open up debate about the social, cultural and political issues that shape our histories and construct identity. His works challenge assumptions about representation by playfully blurring the boundaries between stereotypically Western ideas about ‘high’ art and traditional categorisations of ‘African art.’

Victory Hall
Allison Smith
10'x 18'
wood and metal, 2005

Allison Smith
, using many different craft types from embroidery, sewing, woodworking, calligraphy, pottery and costuming created a diversity of piece speaking of america. Her calligraphic piece which resembled the Declaration of Independance spoke to gay rights,gay parades and the position of gay people within the society. She created this extrodinary wall of wooden guns, swords and knives--hanging them as they are in the Governor's Palace in Williamsburg--in a series of circles and patterns essentially showing the power of the state in a decorative manner. She created this wonderful mannikin--dressing it as a peddler woman with an enormous basket filled with embroidery, pottery, knit objects, woven straw objects to question aspects of american history (ie. a sampler of a teapot that said "Remember the Boston (teapot)" etc. Well done, well thought out. Simple and strong ideas.

Notion Nanny
Allison Smith
Notion Nanny Project 2005-2005
from the Muster:
ABOUT THE ARTIST.
ALLISON SMITH, a Brooklyn-based artist, is interested in the notion of “authentic reproductions” – a common if oxymoronic phrase describing contemporary objects or tableaux that conjure historical aesthetics and episodes. In her sculptures and mixed-media installations, Smith investigates the ways in which a simple prop, bridging past and present, can come to signify more than its appearance suggests. She creates colonial handcrafts, Civil War memorabilia, and 19th-century weapons, often arranged to transform the exhibition space into that of a historic home or period room.
For the past ten years, Smith has conducted an investigation of the cultural phenomenon of Civil War reenactment, or Living History, founded on the belief that historical events gain meaning and relevance when performed live in an open-air, interactive setting. Smith has appropriated the reenactor’s aesthetic palette to produce sculptural installations that examine the role craft plays in the construction of national identity. Over the summer of 2004, Smith organized a weekend encampment on the Catskills property of Mark Dion and J. Morgan Puett in which artists came together to create their own unique historical event. Emerging from that experience, the Muster on Governors Island is the most complex project she has undertaken thus far, broadening the Civil War metaphor to reflect on current events, and involving potentially hundreds of participants.
Smith was born in Manassas, Virginia in 1972. She received a BA in psychology from the New School for Social Research (1995), a BFA from Parsons School of Design (1995), and an MFA from Yale University School of Art (1999). She participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program (1999-2000). She has had solo exhibitions at Bellwether gallery (2002) and the Eldridge Street Project (2001); her next show at Bellwether opens May 26, 2005.

Greta Pratt took photographs of men (19 to be exact) who looked like Lincoln and she dressed like Lincoln. There was a solid wall of framed giclees of these men that have likenesses--some closer than others, posed with the other worldly lighting...quite beautiful and believable. It poses the question of really, what did Lincoln look like given the Lincoln mythology and images that are out there. She also took a group shot of all the Lincolns together which was more amusing than serious which was a cherry on top for me.

We loved the Ahistorical show with the few examples I have cited as just a taste of the intelligence and ideas floating around in this presentation. However, the Retrospective show of Huang Yong Ping was heart stopping and the "Rice Show" were even more noteworthy than this group. It is always amazing to me that this sort of work is continually challenging the viewer to think, compare, and sometimes laugh at things we may not address in our day to day existence. This work holds our interest and always invites you back for more. Mass Moca provides such a wonderful place for work and thought--we all need to support them in their efforts which are done so honestly, earnestly and cleanly to bring work like this to all of us and to be a singular economic driver for North Adams, Massachusetts.
Huang Yong Ping for tomorrow.

nice to know you arent the only one.

Well, bless his little ole heart! David Byrne did a great review of the Dia:Beacon and Mass Moca experiences with a little history and vision behind what is positive about their existence and missions in his journal>> and pretty much nails it. He is much kinder and more balanced than I am wont to be. The only part he missed was the severity and coldness of the staff at Dia. Nasty sort. They have the air of being put upon and much much better than the rest of us morons who don't aspire to being museum guards at Dia. They are pointed and unkind when an unsuspecting guest (read imposition) points a camera with the flash turned off and berates them for their ignorance in wanting to memorialize something visually. No pens in the gallery. And in the lunch room, art DocTrine...that smacks of Chairman Mao.

Dia: Beacon

Visited Dia: Beacon with the team today. Icy folks work there. Work was cool as usual. We particularly adored the Richard Serra ginormous corten steel structures and how we all related to these battleship scaled sculptures. Additionally, we loved the Sol Lewitt installations (mindbending in it's precision and focus) and the new Bruce Nauman fish fountain. The Fish fountain were dozens of scale bronze fish, suspended from a structure over a larger room shaped fountain, with high tech hoses attached to the fish that would regularly sprout water. Beautiful. Of course, there were the artificial glass sculptures with string defining spaces--like leaning piece of glass--It still makes us slightly afraid being around thse pieces. Alex turned me on to this installation of 75 Warhol pieces in once space celebrating shadows. Very cool. Very variation on a theme. And enough to keep us interested--and looking.

Our friend Isabel summed up the gift shop succinctly by relating that there were actual art books on the shelves that were just WORDS. No pictures. 'Nuf said. It was the purgatory that Clement Greenburg promises.

The Catskills were glorious and purple. And Route 2 from Troy to North Adams was stunning. We saw the special moon with "earth shine" with Venus directly beneath as promised on Earth and Sky this morning.

Swimming and Mass Moca tomorrow.

Cheers>>

69 Love Songs

I was listening to Fausto and Marc Felion on Feast of Fools interview LD Beightol, a musician, artist, author and designer the other day. LD was fascinating --talking about Stephin Merritt, Magnetic Fields, anti-naturalism and the 3 volume set of songs (love songs to be exact) called "69 Love Songs". He spoke personally of Merritt, his skill as an artist, musician, composer and director--using his skills and the voices of others to create this opus of songs and lyrics written by Merritt. Stephin Merritt is a true talent, someone with a wonderful range and a distinct style in his work. He also is a very distinct personality who surrounds himself with interesting people--the most curious being the curious Lemony Snicket (aka Daniel Handler) who participates in the album with clapping and accordian playing.

After hearing this engaging and personal interview, I immediately rushed to iTunes and listened to the free snippets of music. I was raving to Erich and he magically presented me with the 69 Love Songs--all as MP3 files. He discovered thisWho would have guessed! So, I am listening to this tome--back and forth and forth and back and am enjoying the whole experience. In a way, kind of like Smile from Brian Wilson.
A stream of music, of thought and ideas.

I somehow think this work links with the Jurassic Museum of Technology, with Lemony Snicket and the works from McSweeneys (McSweeneys books, The Believer, Wholphin)>> there is a common spirit to these endevors which I would like to better understand.

Take a listen to Merritt's work. Its worth it.

Roadtrip!


Off to western Massachusetts for the favorite gallery tour and swimming in the snow. R has work--so we are piling on--and doing the Q. tour of the galleries while he has to do the serious looking, comparing and notetaking. Going to galleries with me is more like going to the park--we laugh, joke and talk loudly about all around us. Sometimes we even learn something. We drink coffee and tea. We buy stuff at the gift shop (often more than the requisite tee).

So, the plan is--first thing Monday to drive to Beacon, New York to see Dia Beacon. Very serious. Very grown up. Very blue cheese. My contingency needs a little push to get started with this stuff...but how to resist humongous sculpture, repetitious art and stuff made from single strands of colored string. There is a Warhol show. What is not to love? Pittsburgh's honored son, graduate of the same institution as their parents? Lots of color? They have gotten into it--and will. Then, back in the wonderbus, and we drive north with a break in Williamstown at the wonderful Clark (albeit it sounds like they have a pretty insipid selection of shows: Claude Lorraine, and a photography show on Ruins in Photography). The photography could be a player with the younger set. And their general collection is great. I think italian renaissance and some gory saints might keep them amused. Then, to finalize the day at MassMoca with two overnights at Porches.

We will frolic in the pool and hot tub (out in the snow), eat breakfast and loiter amusingly until Moca opens at 11. R will be hard at work. Then, we will do Moca for the afternoon with lunch. There are a good grouping of shows (and lets not forget the shows in the kid's area which can be fabulous). More swimming outside, more saunas inside...its kind of continual.

Then home via the Norman Rockwell Museum, one of the world's centers for illustration. They have a show on health related illustration and 323 Saturday Evening Post Covers on show. That should be worth the detour. My hope was to visit the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art...but I think this will happen another day.

Photo is from the Luckystone Lodge yesterday. Great drifts of snow with blue purple shadows. More geese and swans. Great blue sky.

Music + Birds


This is a translation in process for a possible idea for the Chicken Chokers and if not, a good exercise in breaking out an illustration into black, white and red--from a no holds barred--full color blowout. This sort of thing is a puzzle for me--and something they dont address in the illustration program--but necessary as a good illustration broken down into 2 colors can easily become a teeshirt or better yet, a logotype. And, it is not as simple as it looks. I will post the final as soon as it gets done and looks like something (which might be pushing it). I tried this before with my dodo bird, stripping out all the color except black and grey--using a big color for the background. Also with the pumpkin (which I did post--lemme think...). It has a clean look that I would like to develop.

We strolled through the 6 foot embankments of plowed snow to get to the for dinner Thursday night at the Pourhouse. There were 2 of the 5 Chokers and family settling in to hear a trio from Maine, Tough Cats. The Cats were very funny and accomplished and got a great reception from the few of the Tburgers that got out in the cold and snow. The Cats comprised of a trio of accomplished and funny musicians: guitar, banjo and drums. The music was solid and the performing, wild. Part of the drummers kit is an old suitcase that he wails on with brushes...wildly gesturing complete with a very mobile and expressive series of faces. They drove up from NYC for the Pourhouse gig and were going to turn around and go back to Manhattan the next day. All in a days drive! Fun. Very Avett Brothers in attitude and spirit.

See and hear The Tough Cats>>

IF: [anti]Gravity


Was working on some stupid sheep drawings and the IF topic emerged. I have always loved the idea of the french in the mid 1700s with their decorative hot-air balloons with M. Montgonflier. It was balloon mania at the time. This is my bow to antigravity. Up, up and away, in my beautiful....beautiful balloon!

blue sky winter


blue sky winter
Originally uploaded by quarrier.
This is what we found this morning. No more veil of snow. Crystalline, cold and clear. Blue shadows, spidery bass trees with Camp Street in the background. I gotta take more pictures like this tomorrow cause this is the sort of thing we long for in the middle of October to make our clients happy for their holiday cards.