As for yin and yang, it is more familiar in our house as the blue and grey symbol of the Army's 29th Infantry Division. Susan's step-father was with the 29th Division when they went onto Normandy Beach on D-Day. The reason for the yin and yang symbol for the Division was that it was composed of units from both Maryland and Virginia that had fought on opposite sides (blue or grey uniforms) during the American Civil War.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Yin and Yang
As for yin and yang, it is more familiar in our house as the blue and grey symbol of the Army's 29th Infantry Division. Susan's step-father was with the 29th Division when they went onto Normandy Beach on D-Day. The reason for the yin and yang symbol for the Division was that it was composed of units from both Maryland and Virginia that had fought on opposite sides (blue or grey uniforms) during the American Civil War.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Total Disintegration
The possum was part of Seth's Disintegration Collaboration project. "Was" is the operative word. He has now disintegrated into thin air. The cage was still neatly in place with the rocks around it, which would mean 4-legged animals didn't carry him off, but he is gone. Vanished. It had to be a 2-legged animal. But the only access to our back yard is through a privacy fence gate between our neighbor's house and ours, or by climbing over an 8-foot high chainlink fence, or by scaling a 40-foot high rocky ledge.
The creepy part for Susan is that someone was in our fenced back yard. When? The creepy part for me is that someone else wanted a dead possum enough to steal him.
As for the original Disintegration artifact, neither rain or sun or hail have done much of anything to it. Its resilience amazes me but then so does the fact that I survived 32 years of corporate groveling.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Singing Tonsils
Friday, March 27, 2009
Falling Leaves
The picture above was taken with Susan's new camera. We are sort of at a dead-lock on that new blogging book she gave me. I've offered to learn all about how to use her new camera in exchange for her doing all the photo work (Photoshop Elements 2.0) and blogging for me. I'm just pretending The Book hasn't been sitting there on the table, untouched. She's just pretending I'm going to start getting on the computer once in a while. And she's starting to talk about a new version of Elements. In the meantime, she fiddled with the color on the picture.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Suminagashi
I learned about suminagashi at a bookmaking meeting. I already had black sumi ink and I bought Photo-flo but buying more paper in our house is like carrying coals to Newcastle. So I made do with what I had instead of using rice paper and therefore my results were poor. Except for when I grabbed a sheet of graph paper. I love graph paper.
And of course I had to fiddle with it in Photoshop. Or, as I've been told, it's called "Pimp My Photo."
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Fishing and Forget It
Sunday, March 22, 2009
SXSW Wraps Up
Who are some of the up-and-coming names that got good buzz (not that I would know, just quoting here, but watch for them, SXSW is a pretty good incubator): Brooklyn's Grizzly Bears, Scotland's Glasvegas, Jonelle Monae, and Ladyhawke.
Who else showed up? Rachel Ray threw a mojito party for the New York Dolls, Perez Hilton (who?) was here and so were the Miller Lite Girls. Parties were also hosted by Mashable, Facebook, and Google.
What was a lot of the buzz about? Moo cards, Poken and Foursquare. The latest word on The-Latest-Interactive-Thing is that if politicians and celebrities (Oprah has a Facebook page, Ellen and Diddy Twitter) do it on daytime TV, how uncool has it become?
The biggest glitch? AT&T didn't have enough bandwidth and iPhone coverage was erratic.
What, if anything associated with SXSW -- Film, Interactive or Music -- was actually in my miniscule Semi-Aware-Of brain section? The Miller Lite Girls! Actually, I like some of The Proclaimers (500 Miles, I'm On My Way). But (and I know you know this), Susan is the one to tell me all about this stuff and keep me vaguely current. I haven't twittered yet but one of these days I AM going to learn how to text.
These pictures are from Austin Art Garage's Art Rock City, an unofficial day show they had for the SXSW art fans this afternoon. AAG is the gallery that shows my work (here). A typical Austin crowd, Joel Ganuchenau (gallery co-founder) playing, and yours truly helping contribute to the recycle bin.
Now a final closing note for all you aging hippies: Austin, being its typical self and SXSW encompassing everything it can, had a Million Musicians March for Peace on Saturday. The Grand Marshal was Wavy Gravy, of Woodstock and of the Hog Farm. Does SXSW have any claim to being the first to have an eclectic mix of musicians for its line-ups? Nope. Woodstock's closing two acts were Sha-Na-Na followed by Jimi Hendrix.
Dream on, SXSW children, you'll never come close to my generation's Woodstock.
Friday, March 20, 2009
SXSW
No.
Don't.
Please stay home.
We have enough people here.
Especially enough slackers.
Remember that movie from 1991? " ...Presents a day in the life in Austin, Texas, among its social outcasts and misfits, predominantly the twenty-something set ... "
Susan and I try to just stay home for the crazy SXSW week but this year she had a brief brain-fart and thought she wanted to go to the SXSW Interactive. Thankfully she regained her senses and I didn't have to navigate all the closed-off streets downtown to drop her off (Yes, Austin closes off streets for the events. Think lots of $$$ coming to Austin, thanks to all those trust-fund-baby slackers.)
There is a meme out there floating around in cyberspace where you put things together to make a record album. Susan found it on other people's blogs (here and here, for example) and was ready to get pulled into that big time-sucker but successfully fought it off. There's no reason to try to randomly generate a band name when these names are already taken by REAL bands:
Abolone Dots
So how does this all tie in with the picture above? That's the little stone from inside Peevey's head, rephotographed with Susan's NEW camera that she hasn't used yet but I obviously have. The words written on it are my misquoting from "The Littlest Birds" by The Be Good Tanyas. A way cool song.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Sunday, March 15, 2009
At Work
We're doing our taxes today. And probably tomorrow. And maybe the next day, unless Susan smashes the computer monitor in. As you can see, our money is on the move, getting ready to go to our government. Then, our government will give it to AIG who will give it to their executives who earned a bonus because they are "highly valued employees whose retention is necessary to the company's continued success." We aren't sure who is being fooled here but we don't have much choice in this matter -- it all falls under the management of the Department of BOHICA.*
*BOHICA: (boo-HEE-ka) Bend Over, Here It Comes Again.
Friday, March 13, 2009
The Soldiers
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Disintegrating
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Welding + Ceramics
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Bye, Bye Baltimore
If you lived in Alabama this is what you looked like on the afternoon of March 1, 2009.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Baltimore-American Craft Council, Finale
Another potter, Justin Rothshank, had some very interesting pieces that combined good design sense with decal application, as explained on his website. He had some pieces similiar to these Lincoln pieces but with Obama's image on them: "Sold out, taking orders." Of course. He was another person who was very patient in answering our "How did you do that?" questions. Being a student means you constantly feel intimidated by all the skilled artists you see, but being a student means you can get away with asking a lot of questions. They probably look at me and think "This guy can't possibly be competition" and give me lots of help. Which I need.
I don't exactly understand what Richard Saja does because he says it is "Historically Inaccurate", but Susan says it is very clever, very humorous and meticulously done. When she went to look at his blog there was a link for another blog where she found his very cool ProtoBolsters and fell in love with Emmanuel.
Note: All artists shown here gave us their permission to post from their websites and/or cards.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Baltimore-American Craft Council, Part 2
Sam Taylor answered my numerous questions while Susan was intrigued by the images he used. His card was a keeper -- watercolor paper a friend had loosely painted on, torn into squares with his data stamped on the back. Much more creative than the usual handouts.
Jim Rosenau makes furniture, including book shelves made from vintage books. He doesn't just randomly put books together but instead carefully selects them to be sure they all relate to each other. He has a a great subtle sense of humor and his work shows this. As he says on his This Into That website, "You'll never look at books the same way again."
Note: All artists shown here gave us their permission to post from their websites and/or cards. The surprising thing is not that they gave their permission (everyone we asked did) but that they were so surprised we asked!
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Baltimore-American Craft Council, Part 1
The work above and the two following are from Talya Baharal who was ever so patient and gracious in answering all my questions. The first piece is sterling silver, iron, steel and copper, a small piece about 4" in diameter. She calls this series "Urban Landscape Jewelry" -- a perfect description. The second piece is steel wire with flax and abaca paper, it's from her "Skin Forms" series. I've admired her work for years and the link to her website has always been shown on my blog.
The red quilt shown below is from Erin Wilson. She makes meticulous, tiny detailed squares and each one is different. The quilt below is only 42" wide, that means each square is only 3". The second picture shows a little more of the type of detail work she does, as the piece is only about 16" high. She has been selected to show a quilt at Quilt National 2009, which is sort of like making the Super Bowl for art quilters.
Thomas Meyers went way beyond patient in answering all of Susan's questions as she was very intrigued by the ethereal nature of his paper works. (He also makes luminous glass pieces). This image isn't great but it will have to do as a reminder of his work. What doesn't show is that there are layers underneath that make bare impressions on the top so that you feel that there is so much more to "read". The pieces made me think of communications from outer space.
George Peterson is a very skillful sculptor and not only does he make beautiful wood sculptures, his work is shaped with hand-held tools. The second image below could be either skateboards or ancient African masks -- your choice.
Look for more artists' work in the next few days.
Note: All artists shown here gave us their permission to post from their websites and/or cards.