Saturday, August 8, 2009

A Little Too Hot, A Little Too Cool

Setting up for Summerfest in Eleanor Tinsley Park with a sweet backdrop

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Woody and his hive



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Heron in the grotto



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Muff and Johnny, Sisyphean television pushers



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across the Sabine Street bridge



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at the skatepark



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cool little spot



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Kara came to town from Santa Fe


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and Becca had flowers in her hair


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did ya know it was the 40th anniversary of Woodstock?
(don't pray for rain)








Friday, August 7, 2009

Hey Developers, Finish Whatcha Start

Or this will happen...


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Ah, youth


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Townhomes turned into toy tagger war at the corner of 45 feeder and Eichwurzel Street

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Word Art

Ha ha ha, silly spam...


Dearest,

Kind regards,I am julliet , tall, slim, fair and a very good looking girl that loves travelling and dancing, a student, that loves to be loved,kindly permit my contacting you through this medium ,I am compelled to contact you via this medium for obvious reasons which you will understand when we discuss details of my proposition. Pls I will like you to reply to me through my mail address mbogo.julliet4@yahoo.fr so that we will know each other very well, I am looking forward to your positive confirmation to enable us have an important discussion the we will start from there which will include my introduction, I will send my pics later.Thanks and God bless,

Summerfest Smooth

ROAR. I is Notz In Herr. Allovitz gonn 2 my Hed.

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ROAR. I is Notz In Herr. Allovitz gonn 2 my Hed.

Summerfest
August 8+9, 2009
Eleanor Tinsley Park

Houston, Texas




Daniel Adame

Nancy Douthey

Woody Golden

Cody Ledvina

Frank Olson and Johnny DiBlasi

Performance Art Lab

Patrick Renner

Skeez 181

Article




Distinguishing tastes prevail in cooler climes, but in the thick, humid air of Houston no filter adequately separates the good from the bad, the new from the old, and the kitsch from the art. Fearful of the smell in their armpits and the vines growing in through their windows, arbiters of taste leave the city in droves during the summer, leaving Houston to the rats, the bats and the armadillos. For decades the summer has been a time to celebrate the undercarriage of art in Houston, the rough-and-tumble makers of all things expressionist and unwieldy. We invite you to experience the flavor of the warehouse shows and alleyway installations that mark Houston’s brutal summer in the midst of an all-new phenomenon, an actual summer music festival.


With public and performance art ROAR will work with the environment, the people the park and the heat. Michael Rodriguez seeks to anthropomorphize the world, and here at Summerfest will bring life to the park in his simple, humorous style. Woody Golden’s 24-foot hive will rise out of the crowd, providing a meditative space in the midst of madness. The Performance Art Lab will be out in full force, ambushing unsuspecting passersby with whimsy or terror. “The cult of performance Art” is out to convert you!

Always able to dominate spaces with his scrap and wood sculptures, Patrick Renner will be out with a new installation work in Eleanor Tinsley Park. Sisyphean questions about man and technology will not be answered, but thoroughly, exhaustively probed by the collaborative team of Frank Olson and Johnny DiBlasi. Jonatan Lopez, a summer resident at Project Row Houses, will tear himself away from his site-specific installations to bring his innovative metalwork to the public. Graff king Skeez 181 and his buds will be out enjoying the scenery, painting large works all day.

Look to the trees for Daniel Adame, where you may find the artist performing one of his physically exhausting pieces. Nancy Douthey brings her emotional performance art back from the West, where she recently wrapped up a tour of famous Land Art and tourist havens documented on the blog In Search Of the Center. Straight from the joanna, Cody Ledvina and Katie Haught spreading propaganda to the masses- just don’t trust it! We aim to adulterate your concert experience with the weird, wacky and wild art of Houston’s emerging scene.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Franklin Sirmins sez:











Studies for Interventions pt. 1, 2004



A dear friend, Charles Nelson, was from Houston, and he went to HSPVA. A professor at Morehouse College, he was really an integral part of the Atlanta art scene with a show up at the Contemporary at the time of his passing last week. He passed away at the age of 39.

http://www.nexuspress.org/education_currentschedule.asp

http://counterforces.blogspot.com/2009/07/rip-charles-huntley-nelson.html

If you can link to or mention it would be much appreciated.

Franklin

Monday, August 3, 2009

Orange Jack


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Jack wasn't orange, and the orange character pictured above wasn't named Jack. The remarkable intertwining of their lives, however, convinces me of the need to conflate the two; to believe Jack's existence to be eerily similar to what I learned from Pumpkin, our cat. Pumpkin was a cat of exemplary size, a prolific sleeper and non-violent to a fault. His favorite (only, save the normal duties of bodily function) activity was purring, uttering sweet nothings in a treble rumble, and enjoying being pet. His magnanimity in the face of the unknown knew no bounds. I loved that cat, and if it doesn't bother you, I don't mind saying it either.

As a kitten he enjoyed lying on my chest, vibrating with sound as I pet him for hours in a contented stupor. The windows had no shades and light streamed into the small room, bleaching the sheets on the bed with midday glare and letting in jagged rectangles of blue sky at regular intervals. Thoughts swirled with oblivion as the days turned quickly to purple-hued dusk in the 3rd Ward. We sat on the porch and saw neighbors and heard the Texas Southern marching band at night. The cat grew from a tomato to a grapefruit, jumping across the room at string, and eventually grew to resemble a cantaloupe, if the color on the inside was on the outside. We moved back to Austin Street, where Tish had gotten Thor, the vicious tiny grey cat who ruled the dust bunnies of the giant apartment like a minuscule lion on the Serengeti. Her companion Pumpkin began to resemble a water buffalo in this world, and his slothful bliss bothered her to no end. That orange cat, plump with love and victuals, sat in our laps, on our projects, in our books, on the newspaper, on our heads in bed and occasionally between our knees.




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Pumpkin was alwas a judgeless character, but befitting his candor he was a scardy-cat as well. He would seek affection from any and everyone who crossed his path, delighting in rolling over onto his back and stretching out like an unfurling inflatable raft for Stuart Little and his entire extended family. His tangerine and cream stripes stretched out and bunched up on his neck, back and haunches. He looked like a plump grocery store pumpkin, teetering between the ones you decorate with and the ones you eat. He only knew love, and he grew up to be a character of undue devotion and whimsy.

In his final days Pumpkin developed a jaundice that turned his skin a sickly yellow. Under the orange fur it was terribly tough to see, and truly our first notion that he was ill came when he emerged from the back of a closet last Sunday night. He was possessed of two gooey clear jowls of spit, his hair matted and dirty. His eyes stared a thousand miles away. We pet him cleaned him up, put water in front of him and tried to feed him- to no avail. The next morning we brought him in to the vet, where he was quickly whisked away to a clinic when his prognosis was beyond immediate diagnosis.


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Jim Love, Jack, Menil Collection


Monday morning brought back the chocolate grinder of the workweek and with it a tinge of paranoia about the fate of our happy, fat cat- last seen hooked up to an IV and being force fed, as he had neglected to eat or drink on account of his afflicted liver. With time after work and a will to take my mind off of darker things, I slow-cooked pork ribs, a particularly lean and tough bit of them. After three hours and a lot of barbecue sauce named after a football player they were delicious, and the cartilage was buttery and gelatinous. I tossed a chewed bone in the yard for Claire, a particularly territorial Corgi and Pumpkin's best friend. Three minutes of concentrated silence erupted in a din of barking that shook us from our chairs, but there was no real threat to be alarmed about. Instead a short black dog stood at our gate, hungrily sniffing the air.



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Jack, as he came to be known, was very hungry, ravenous even. Tish, softhearted as she is, brought the dog bowl after bowl of food and water and he ate it all. He wanted to play, he was young and affectionate. I sat inside worried that we had just inherited another dog that we didn't have the time to house train and take care of. Undeterred, she made a bed for the dog out of my old bathrobe and stayed in the yard with him. She said he was sweet. I wouldn't see him.


In the morning I went outside to see if the dog stayed the night. Jack had dug himself a hole under the butterfly bush and found a cool spot to rest during the day. He slowly came out from under the ground, his head down and his blue eyes sparkling. My hesitance melted away. He stared at me, silent, and seemed to only want affection.


Jack stayed for two days. We fed him and hung out with him, but wouldn't let him in the house. He never barked, but graciously accepted whatever we would offer him and was content with what he had. We visited Pumpkin at the animal hospital every day, hoping that he would pull through. The entire month of July had been a messy, stressful terror. As we waited to see if the insurance company would process Tish's application for carpal tunnel surgery, they decided to inject her wrists with cortisone, causing immense pain and immobilizing her. A relative came into town to undergo treatment for liver cancer. I was embroiled in balancing work and art projects like the A/V Swap and public art for Summerfest. To top it all off I have been engaged in a vain attempt to find a position as a history teacher in one of the worst job environments in decades. The stress gave me hives, and we were both on edge. The dog just stared up into your eyes with his eerie blue eyes looking like the ice on a frosted window.




AES+F, Defile


We went to the vet twice on Saturday. The first time Pumpkin was hardly mobile. It took a good 5 seconds for him to respond to the sound of your voice. I tried to feed him, force-feed him a slurry of water and wet cat food, and he gave me a look that broke my heart. After an hour I left convinced that while not every day is a good day it was not a good reason to give up. An hour, two phone calls and a test later we were not so convinced. Immediately after Tish hung up the phone the doorbell rang. Her aunt had driven from Austin and arrived at that precise moment to take care of our sick relative. We left quickly and drove in silence. Pumpkin was purring when we saw him that afternoon. Still unable to stand, we could at least see that he was content.

July 24 (Bloomberg) -- Dealers in the U.S. “cash-for- clunkers” program are disabling trade-in vehicles with a chemical under new rules to prevent those who take the government subsidies from reselling the cars.

Dealers must replace the oil in the “clunker” with two quarts of sodium silicate solution and run the engine, permanently disabling it, according to rules released today by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in Washington. Sodium silicate is a substance found in dishwasher detergent and used to seal exhaust leaks in repair shops. The silicate causes the engine’s parts to freeze and ensures it never cruises the highway again.



After Pumpkin passed away I took a picture of him, morbidly. I thought about Napoleon's death mask and how it felt taboo today to take a photograph after someone has died. I'm no more morbid than a Russian, though, as AES+F proved in their show 2 years ago at The Station, with their series of cadavers dressed in couture, Defile. Their photographs hung life-size on the wall, as if they were about to walk down a well lit runway. Other work included in the exhibit focused on the potential of death or the capability of murder. But these contented souls, Who met their ends in peaceful means, seemed the most alive- an embodiement of human frailty that overwhelmed the emotions in exactly the opposite way a portraits of teenage girls arrested for murder or nymphic youth in an epic and ultimately bloodless set piece film.



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Paper Rad


Like the Paper Rad performance behind Brazil a few years ago I had an hour of experience that heightened all my senses and all my phobias. I puked in the parking lot. There was a dead and bloated weimereiner in the street. We drove past fields of concrete barriers stacked up past the trees. Time stretched on, plodding like techno. The sky turned grey and it started to rain. I came home and talked to Jack about my problems, he stared at me without judgement. I gave the dog a bath. He didn't fight it and it killed a lot of fleas. I pet him and he put his head on my lap. When I went back inside he wriggled under the fence and walked away. We haven't seen him since.




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Danil Adame, what is love, 2006
Westheimer Block Party


Daniel Adame's performane at the Westheimer Block Party a few years ago really seems to illustrate how I feel right now. Dressed in denim work clothes and steel toed boots, Adame arrived at the festival with a 100 pound block of pink chalk and a harnass. At the corner of Westheimer and Taft he began by wandering into traffic, an unseeing and determined look in his eyes. He wove through traffic, up onto the sidewalk back out again. It's not every day that a man carrying a massive block of chalk is blocking your lane and many drivers found their impedance so out of the ordinary they stared and slowed to a crawl behind him. On the chalk, scrawled in script, read "what is love". He won the competion for Best in Show that night, crowned by judge Katy Heinlein.


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Tish!


I would like to remember Pumpkin like this, as a member of a family and a fixture around the house. A part of every day. All I can do now is pet invisible cats and daydream. I think I will make something to house his memory for me.


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Nothing as large as Charlie Robets' MAMBO JAMBO at the Rice Gallery last year, but a wunderkammer just the same.



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I already think I've spilled enough ink in this post to feel like Sean Landers.



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I'll miss that cat.


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Moved Out Gathering



BYOF


M.O.V.E.
Keijiro's Place
July 30

Bring your own flashlight, bring your artwork
exhibit in the dark and party in the courtyard


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pics courtesy this guy


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tools o the trade


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