Wednesday, August 31, 2005

My thoughts go out to everyone affected by hurricane Katrina. I can't even imagine what it would feel like to have to evacuate my community and lose my home. The Best Friends web site has had some interesting info on the hurricane relief efforts of area animal shelters.

Here are the Fair Isle gloves in progress. I nearly abandoned them because I didn't like the colors but then DH suggested I make the fingers in a medium blue rather than the light green color. That should make all the difference. I may run out of the dark blue color before I finish.


Good news

Good news for performance art. When RoseLee Goldberg gets to business, it will hopefully mean a new level - of performance, of course:

RoseLee Goldberg, Founding Director of PERFORMA, has announced programming plans for PERFORMA05, the first biennial of new visual art performance in New York City.

It's interesting to note the term they use is "new visual art performance" - at last starting to clean up the conceptual mess the word "performance" has been creating.

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Here's the blueberry lime jam/marmalade recipe I plan to use from the current edition of the Ball Blue Book of Preserving. I honestly don't even remember the flavor but DH recalls it fondly and has requested I make it again.

Blueberry-Lime Jam

Yield: About 6 half-pints

4 1/2 cups blueberries
1 package powdered pectin
5 cups sugar
1 Tbsp grated lime peel
1/3 cup lime juice

Crush blueberries one layer at a time. Combine crushed blueberries and powdered pectin in a large saucepot. Bring to a boil, stirring frequently. Add sugar, stirring until dissolved. Stir in grated lime peel and lime juice. Return to a rolling boil. Boil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat. Skim foam if necessary. Ladle hot jam into hot jars, leaving 1/4" headspace. Adjust two-piece caps. Process 15 minutes in a boiling water canner.

Building room

Among the various projects by Oda Projesi, the art group created by three young Turkish women, the Annex presented at the 2003 Venice Bienale is one I find particularly powerful. One of Oda Projesi's main interests is the notion of room, as a part of the house and as space. The difference between space and room seems crucial: room is inhabited. It is the space closest to skin. Annex is the portrait of a typical dwelling, one that was meant to be temporary (as a shelter after the earthquake in Adapazari), but ended up as permanent. What we get is the transformation of an asbtract space into a human one - but this change seems to be doomed to fail. The house grows annexes, built in wood, that differ from one family to another. Oda Projesi focus on these differences, which illustrate ways of life, needs, habits: people. Those are poor people who can't afford anything more, but the pictures and descriptions force the viewer to go beyond the all-too-simple statement of poverty. They are maps that allow us to approach someone who seemed distant just a moment ago.

Monday, August 29, 2005

Better than art?

Keith Gladysz over at January Blog quotes Nietzsche about the trouble with geniuses. Basically, they're bastards. Nietzsche suggests that geniuses were not great men, because great men do not act as awefuly as most geniuses did. And he goes on to say:
We have perhaps more need of great men without works than great works for which such a heavy price has to be paid in terms of human souls. But at present we barely understand what a great man without works might be.
This raises several interesting questions. For one, how good is a good work of art? Is it enough for an artist to make good/pretty art (does it even help?)? Or is art more of a personal fancy, an entertainment? And does aspiring to more make sense? Are the people educated on Mozart and Shakespeare, on Bacon and John Cage, better people? Or is the talk about educating through art, or even evolving thanks to it, pure bluff of those who simply enjoy being the elite? Nietzsche seems to be saying that one can do better than art. So here is my question: can an artist do better than art?
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Friday, August 26, 2005

Another couple

For your art spectator's pleasure: interviews with Bjork and Matthew Barney. I found reading them "as a couple" told me a lot about the contemporary art scene, the way artists think, work, create...
(Has anyone seen the latest Matthew Barney film, Drawing Restraint 9?)

Morning exercice

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Sudden Stops

Ginny Bishton, Walking, Sudden Stops (2003)
Here are the Floral Fair Isle gloves by Carol Wassell in progress. I have a decent Shetland wool stash so I'm able to get similar colors to the original. We'll see... I am doing these on size 1 dpns in a mixture of Harrisville Shetland, Campion, and J&S jumper weight. I'm keeping my fingers crossed I don't run out of any of the colors.


Me

I feel tempted to turn this blog into an egocentric trip - to write just what I need to research and develop my own works. And I don't think many people would mind (or notice).
The thing is - that was not my objective. The objective was to dwelve into the flesh of new art and discover it anew. Or simply, to learn. To study the things that catch my attention, to write them down like one pins down a problem or takes a picture. The idea was - and is - to grow a possessive blog.

But I'm tired. And need motivation to go on, in the blog and in the remains of the real world. So this time, I want to think about the direction I'm heading artistically.

First, there is the dilemma: theater, performance, fine (new) arts or cinema. All of these interest me to a great extent; none fascinates me enough to choose it and leave the others behind. Is it possible to carry on so many roads? Only if one has the power of a bull, the endurance of a camel and the mind of a monkey. It overwhelms me. Of course, there are artists who do it (almost) all (Greenaway, Matthew Barney, Forced Entertainment, and several others). But I'm not quite there yet. This is a lonely road for now, and the choices are significant - that means, there are few real-life obstacles and what one wishes to do actually changes what one does (as oppose to other periods in life when reality bites and sticks and doesn't let go that easily). So, going back to school would definitely be a good idea. Getting a Masters somewhere, in something. (is it worth it?) And guess what - they don't have a MA in theater/performance/new media/cinema.
Enough of sad life stories. What about art?
Two artists I have managed not to write about are Vanessa Beecroft and Maurizio Cattelan. Yes, I wrote about their recently discovered intertwining, but frankly that was just avoiding any serious writing. Actually, I find them both very interesting, I think they do have some things in common, but would like to write about it some more. And I can't. I'm not ready for it. I think the game(s) they play is so subtle that one can easily go into quick judgements that mean nothing - either praising their "strength", or criticizing the many things they are commonly criticized for. For starters, I would say Cattelan is a modern-day Warhol (I know very little about Warhol, as he knew little about Marilyn/Campbell's/the electric chair). And leave it at that for the moment - for my argument's sake. As for Beecroft... well, it's more complicated, since she says less. Whoever says less wins, says one monk to the other - you lost, answers the latter.
Extrapolating, what I want to use from Beecroft is the idea of a perfect order - or rather, of a completely aestheticized reality. It pleases my theater-moulded mind's eye. People as objects, and, might I add, objects that could be people. In that case, we should rather say: personas. This reminds me of another great performance - Zhang Huan's To Raise the Water Level in a Fishpond. The performance is translated into pictures - and what we have is actually archive footage. This is a very interesting phenomenon in live art - the "live" part becomes ambiguous. But not put into question, only blurred. We need the conscience of it being, or having been something real. Once we have it, it can very well be represented by a picture, a film, a text or a fingernail. Because through this footage we get to travel in another way. Maybe it's a little like the fascination for biographies?
Going back to Zhang Huan's work. Contrary to Beecroft's girls (and sometimes boys), Zhang Huan's men have stories. They are all about the stories. They are migrants, the cheap labor force that moved from the countryside to Beijing looking for work. And, according to the artist, in China fish is the symbol of sex, while water - the symbol of life. Now that we have the cosmogony, the pictures speak. The beautiful pictures speak. Beecroft's pictures don't speak. They ostensibly shut up, as abstract painting or some contemporary theater work (Goat Island, some Forced Entertainment). Tim Etchells from Forced Entertainment has a method of writing for performance which is basically writing lists. The spectator fills the blanks. Minimalist? Hmm... no, not quite. Simply a very small narrative. Notice that Zhang Huan also doesn't say much: he doesn't judge the people, he doesn't interpret them. He shows them.
Then, there's another idea I really like - the intimacy of reading something for someone. As in, reading out loud, but not for the world, just for someone. I'm not sure where I got that from, there are probably some artists working on it, but I only remember my Dad and my Grandfather reading me books when I was a kid. And then - oh, I know! - I think it was Daniel Pennac who wrote a book describing his experience as a school teacher. He read books out loud for the teenage students. Impressive.
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Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Here are the Aran Island mittens from Folk Mittens in some fingering weight Cormo I bought at Taos Wool Festival. These lovely mittens continue to defy being scanned well. They're just too bright despite playing around with the brightness/contrast. Anyway, they're finished and are going in my Christmas present basket. I did a peasant thumb which I prefer to the sore thumb in the pattern.




I received several requests for the blueberry-lime marmalade recipe. I no longer have the original recipe but it will most likely be similar to the blueberry marmalade recipes HERE and HERE with lime as the only form of citrus. I have ordered some more canning books so I'll let you know if I find the recipe again. Otherwise I'll improvise.

I still have the Latvian mittens to knit and I'm starting on the Fair Isle gloves in a PDF file HERE.

Video of my performance

At last, here it is: the video document from the performance/installation I directed a couple months ago (together with Verónica Fernandes). The performance was made by the theater group of the Superior Institute of Social and Political Sciences in Lisbon (ISCSP). The video was shot by Sérgio d'Almeida.
Since the performance was site-specific (or site-related, to be safe...), it is simply impossible to recreate it. It was a piece that was based on intimacy and sharing, and that is just about impossible to convey on film, unless the film is not related to the event. It came out quite different to the actual event, somewhat darker and, as I mentioned, more distant.
I had a dilemma concerning the spoken words. I didn't think it was crucial to give translation, but if you don't know what someone is saying, it can be so frustrating you think you're missing out on something. So I did translate the fragments, omitting just the parts that are closer (how close?) to music/soundtrack than to an actual spoken text. For your information, here is the translation of the words that are spoken out in those parts:

tu: you
tudo [tuh-duh]: everything/all
tenho [teh-nyo]: I have
tédio [teh-d-you]: tedium, ennui, boredom

I could write about it for a long time, but let me just explain that "Entre" (the title of the piece) in Portuguese means "enter" (as in: "to enter" or "please enter"), as well as "between".




(The film file's URL: Link)

update 24.08: I have uploaded a lighter (9Mb) version of the film.

Not too deep


(via)

Sunday, August 21, 2005

What's in a concept?



Damn it, labeling is a horrible thing.
The above is part of any artist's standard lithurgy. Why name things? Why give them categories, stickers, definitions? Doesn't it kill the art?
Of course, one answer is because we want to talk about things, and we can't talk about them if we can't say anything about them. This time, though, let's leave this classic apology.
What I'm more interested in is how artists can profit from the tags their art gets.
Take an example: site-specific work. We all know what that is: a work that is meant for one specific place. Or rather: a work created thanks to the place, with the help of the physical context of a particular, none-black-or-white-box environment. (Unless, of course, you're Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset, then the white box is perfect for site-specifics)
But there are some who find the term "site-specific" to be to vague. Take dance critic Camille LeFevre. In a recent article she distinguishes between site-specific, site-adaptive, site-influenced and al fresco (dance) work. Why would somebody go into such a trouble as to cut everything into small pieces? Why not just let the artists live and do things? Or is it just pure academic sharpnel thinking?
Most of the time it probably is. But the question of site-specific work has been recenly on my mind, and I discovered the name could make a difference.
You see, if we believe names refer to descriptions and/or specific objects (see philosophical accounts of names), a name can tell us something about reality. What does it matter to an artist?
Maybe it should. Site-specific work is incredibly en vogue these days. Here in Portugal, as in other places around the world, more and more artists take up the challenge of working things out in the wild, wild world.
And then, they don't. They often simply present material outside, or at a specific site (an abandoned building, a park...). A work at a specific site is not necessarily site-specific work. The latter, according to LeFevre, is the unique fruit of an artist's relation with a place:
site-specific dance is of one place and no other. Without the site, the dance ceases to exist. “To move the site-specific work is to re-place it, to make it something else,” writes Nick Kaye in Site-Specific Art: Performance, Place and Documentation, echoing visual artist Richard Serra’s definition of site-specific: “To move the work is to destroy the work.”
This definition is a challenge to an artist. I would dare say that even Richard Serra himself wasn't always up to it: some of his works seem simply placed somewhere and not made out of somewhere. Then again, nobody says site-specific is better. Still, it can be a new way of looking at things, from the ground up. And here is the thing: if you know it, and you're honest with it, it might just work. But it's very easy to misunderstand the names, to misuse them, to create a light version. To choose a shortcut. And then the works seem like decoration, like ornaments. And then I so often wish the work had been kept in a room, black, white, or of any other color.

Both pictures are of the exhibition How Are You Today?, by Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset (2002, Galleria Massimo de Carlo, Milano)

Saturday, August 20, 2005

Nude Art


Duchamp, Nude Descending a Staircase (1912)

The noblest in art is the nude. This truth is recognized by all, and followed by painters, sculptors and poets; only the dancer has forgotten it, who should most remember it, as the instrument of her art is the human body itself.
- Isadora Duncan (1878-1927), The Dancer of the Future (1928, written ca.1902)

Friday, August 19, 2005

Your other shadow


Meet the Shadow. Get to know it. Don't be aggressive, or it will flee. Stay still, and wait for it to get closer and... "be the art, be the art!" (spoken out with a slightly, ever so slightly ironic tone). Simple and effective? Or cheap special effect?

(via)
Life continues to be busy here. The cooler weather is helping me get more done than usual. I can't drink caffeine so I will take any help I can get to be more productive. I'm waiting impatiently for the new Dale of Norway Turino Olympic pattern to be published as I'm considering making myself a sweater. I hope they have a cardigan design as I don't look that great in boxy sweaters. I think I'll probably make it in Heilo this time rather than substituting cheaper Nature Spun.

After a 7 year hiatus, I'm getting back into canning. I didn't bring all my supplies when we moved to New Mexico so I just ordered a new canning pot and supplies and lots of books on home preserving. I have to go to the local hardware store and grab some jars. Currently my plans are to can some peaches in light syrup, a blueberry-lime marmalade DH likes, a tomatillo green salsa (recipe HERE), pickled beets and some plain old raspberry jam. I was thinking about doing some jams with chile peppers but most of the people on my jam gift list are not that adventurous and we don't eat that much jam. Canning, like knitting, gives me lots of great gifts to present to friends and family. I have already decided to do only homemade gifts this year for Christmas.

My current spinning project involves a popular angora rabbit named Hank. Hank is so popular that apparently he even has a line of notecards with his picture on them for Wild Fibers magazine and his antics are often chronicled by his bunny caretaker, Anne, on her blog.

Peaches obviously finds Hank quite attractive so I thought I'd get some of THIS fiber - a mixture of Hank and some gorgeous alpaca. My plan is to spin up the Hank fiber then make a pair of gloves or mittens with a small amount of Peaches' fur spun up for the trim.

From top to bottom, Hank/alpaca fiber, Hank skeins, Peaches' skeins spun on my Tracy Eicheim spindle purchased at Taos Wool Festival, and at bottom right Peaches' fur knit up into a fuzzy swatch. I'm not totally sure these two colors go together but I'll figure out a way to make it work. Hank & Peaches would want it that way.


Thursday, August 18, 2005

The Polish Joana Vasconcelos

Julita Wójcik, Peeling Potatoes (Zachęta Polish National Gallery, 2001)

I think now is a good time in art for women, and for folklore. What is being underlined are small, intimate human gatherings. A niche culture appeared, created for a very small group of viewers, almost for oneself. I mean internet galleries and the possibility for anyone to create his own page.

(...) But you leave this niche.

I am a simple girl and feel no need to pretend, to pose as someone else. Making art I'm not doing anything different than any person on any given day. I don't want the spectators to reflect on anything for even a second: it is all already given [literally: "served" - Vvoi]. The more realism, the better. A full naturalism, that's the way I am, simply Julita Wójcik.
Oh, if you follow the link in her name, I think you will agree with me that it is very far from a "full naturalism" or, even more, "realism" (and she doesn't want us to reflect on it? pl-lease!). It is a type of visual poetics we can find in the Portuguese artist Joana Vasconcelos, playing with the traditional, the simple, the everyday, and giving it new meanings, "elevating it" to the statute of high art - or rather, as I imagine Wójcik would prefer, elevating the so-called "high-art" to the level of true human, intimate creation.
But it's tricky, being simple. Because, whether you like it or not, whether you admit it or not, as an (public) artist you're on a stage. And that changes a lot:


And that, my dear friends, is why I like Peeling Potatoes.

Mona Lisa revisited (yet again)

I know, I know this is too easy. But somebody had to do it. And I shouldn't be always so damn serious.

Visual Noise



There is something immensely attractive about chaos. Participating in it, even witnessing it, enchants, makes it difficult to resist, as if it - made sense? All the Pollocks of the art world know it - their chaos makes sense, it is no chaos, it has a structure, a fine combination of hazards and traps that guide you into something, and thus out of chaos?

If you have ever complained about all the visual graphomaniacs gone wild in the digital era, if you've felt uncomfortable about the idea of millions of bad pictures meetings millions of innocent (and not-so-innocent) eyes, Photo Noise is water for your mill.
If, on the other hand, you firmly believe all this can be good, and mabe even used as material for other pieces, Photo Noise is the place to be.
Then again, if you don't really care, bare with me, see the archives, dance in your room to the music of Scarlatti and drink white Martini with lots of ice.

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Here are the Latvian mittens from Nancy Bush's Folk Socks in progress. I'm using Essentials sock yarn from Knitpicks and I'm quite fond of this color - kind of a pumpkin spice although it looks redder here. I do believe this yarn will pill but I can live with it. The price is right.




Here is a tea cozy done in Peruvian Highland wool. The pattern is HERE. This cozy fits my smaller 20 oz teapot but is too small for my 32 oz pot. I chose the pattern because I wanted a cozy that fits really well. I made one of the cute licorice allsorts but decided against them - too fussy and they'd probably end up in my tea cup somehow.




And here is a bad close-up of one of the patterns from the Aran Island mittens. I need to finish the Latvian socks for an upcoming birthday present but should finish these soon. I really don't have much left to knit.


Visual poetry war

Enjoy the game. (by Jim Andrews)

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Breaking the (city) rules

There once was a street artist who decided to take things to another level. And his name was not Banksy. His name was Roadsworth, or Peter Gibson, as he was later presented by the police. His art consisted in painting. It was based on the premise that a painter needs not create from scratch. The city's canvas is full of beginnings, sketches, potential paintings. As Dali, when lying in the hospital bed during his last months, kept seeing new things appear out of the stones that made up the wall he saw through the window, so did Roadsworth see the streets as an undiscovered land. And discover he did.
Until in 2004 the Montreal Police (the plot of our story takes place in Montreal, Canada) decided he had crossed the line.




They stepped in.



As the folks at Wooster Collective put it,
Roadsworth was arrested for over 80 counts of mischief and is now facing up to $250,000 in fines for his street liberations.
The CitizenShift site has the whole story with pictures, films, and some text. For the street-art curious, there is a decent links page. The site seems to defend Roadsworth, as do Wooster Collective. I would defend some of his work, but there seem to be several works which as a driver (or pedestrian) I would simply find dangerous. They go beyond a subtle intervention (as is the case on the first picture you see) and change the street signs quite drastically. And that, my friends, seems like a naughty thing to do. Especially, since Roadsworth really doesn't seem to have anything against the fact that Montreal has street signs to direct the traffic. And if he doesn't, why subvert it? Unwilling sabotage?

(via)

Saturday, August 13, 2005

VJ... Peter Greenaway

Peter Greenaway, the Welsh author of such films as Pillow Book and The Draughtman's Contract, who is also a multimedia artist, working in media from projections to complex installations/performances to sculptures to painting, has recently participated as Video Jockey in Amsterdam's VJ Temple 11.

Friday, August 12, 2005

How difficult is beauty?

This wheelchair is made of cardboard. It was made by Chris Gilmore. When I first saw it, I thought it was brilliant, extremely powerful. The object of fragility, but which at the same time to many people signifies strength, and ability, here is useless, and (therefore?) meaningful. It is a simulacrum, an image of itself, a fake that is the thing itself - as a disabled person may seem (often to himself) the other version of himself. The perfection of the work makes it all the deeper, all the more painful.
The work is part of the exhibition Beauty So Difficult at the Fondazione Stelline in Milan. A review of the show is called Beauty Not So Difficult. In it, critic Rebecca Robecchi explains the "easy" enchantment of art. She also explains that Chris Gilmore makes things out of cardboard. Many things. Cars, type-writers, scooters (, cows).
And that's when I start to have a problem. I feel cheated, betrayed. The cardboard works for the wheelchair, but why the hell a scooter? If the idea is that the entire world can be made of cardboard, I get it, and it doesn't appeal to me any more than any other model maniac. Yes, it's pretty, and I appreciate the skill, but, well, I think, is this all you've got? Is beauty that easy? You need the skill to make a cow out of cardboard, and then it all works fine? It's pretty? And it's art, as in, valuable art, as in, I am to value it? This seems strangely close to juggling. You can juggle any object you want, but isn't it still juggling?
And damn it, I still like the wheelchair.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

It's not that I haven't been knitting. It is that I've ripped out several projects. I got to the heel on the first Friday Harbor sock, found the pattern errata online, and ripped it out. I started an Aran tea cozy but found another I liked better. I ripped out the Girly Girl socks because I wasn't fond of the lace pattern.

And this mitten I designed is going to be ripped next. Great colors but I made the thumb too narrow - plus there are simply too many ends to work in for such a simple pattern.


Gorrilla, though not Girls

Juan de la Mora is a Chicago-born Mexican-American artist living in Madrid. His background is in architecture, but his true passion seems to be stencil art. His works are precise games of colors and forms, often introduced in "low-profile" street contexts. While it is clear de la Mora spent a substantial amount of time experimenting with graffiti on the streets, it is no less clear that in his recent works he takes it to another level, creating multi-layered works with autoCAD (architectural software) and specialized cutting-plotting machines. The exhibition I saw in Montemor-o-Velho (here in Portugal) had two distinct parts. One was the manipulation of the word manipulation, starting with a line and then turning it into a wor(l)d that could be inhabited, though remaining ambiguous, something between a room, a house, an abstract form, very much in the modernist spirit. The other (partially shown here) was a grungy, funky yet surprizingly clean way of playing with stencil forms, using the theme of a gorrilla to create dense, powerful imagery. The two parts might seem completely different, until you meet the man - and discover his passion for art, architecture, street creation, freedom, traveling, and... cooking. His dream - to have a restaurant were everything would be de la Mora design. From the space, through colors, smells and tastes. Now that's a new way of understanding Gesamtkunstwerk!



What is it I like so much about the gorrillas? This particular one is called "You and I". Without it's black color (the original model was a famous albino gorilla) it seems humanlike, but also, abstract, unreal, as if it were some sort of a hidden symbol or code, or maybe a map of something. It appears out of the white as, well, sorry, but as a shroud (as in the Turin one). A shroud is the proof of existence, and that's how this feels. Also, it gives me the idea of a medical image, some sort of analysis, so the stains become even more ambiguous and challenging. How do you read a face?


The works are part of the group exhibition Reflexiones at the Galeria Torre de Relógio, in Montemor-o-Velho, which is on until October.

Art world gossip




Yes, I have gotten that low. Maurizio Cattelan and Vanessa Beecroft used to be lovers. And, according to the title of the article, she accuses him of stealing her ideas. The content of the text, however, does not seem to confirm that.
On the other hand, it raises the (so often raised) question of originality and plagiarism in art. Cattelan is quoted as saying: "Was Warhol robbing Marilyn [Monroe's] identity when he painted her? And what was Cézanne doing? Robbing apples? In art, all you can do in the end is appropriate that which surrounds you. So it is never a robbery. At the most it is a loan. Unlike thieves, artists always give back the stolen goods."
Is it always that simple? Nothing is stolen, everything is transformed? Come on, be a little original, Maurizio, don't just repeat old phrases.
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Wednesday, August 10, 2005



It is time for an update on the booklet. Stranded Color Knitting has sold over 225 copies and with the addition of the rabbit photo items at the Cafepress store, has made over $1000 for rabbit rescue. Thank you to all for helping with this. The money has been used for spaying/neutering, veterinary care, food and shelter for rabbits taken in by the House Rabbit Society. I hope also that the booklet has helped knitters learn more about knitting with more than one color, my favorite type of knitting.

That reminds me that I have to work on getting more photos of Peaches for the 2006 calendar. Her 2005 calendar is a big hit where DH works - the kids fight over who gets to turn over the calendar to see the new photo at the beginning of each month. Once I went to a work function with DH and one young girl came up to me and shocked me by telling me the name of every rabbit I'd ever had. They're fascinated by stories about our rabbits I guess.

Here's yet another photo of Peaches stuffing her face. She looks so tiny in the photo doesn't she?



Storker

Avant-garde children?

My workshop in Montemor took place during the Citemor theater festival. One of the plays I've seen there was Tot És Perfecte, created by Roger Bernat, called the "new enfant terrible of the Spanish stage".
The production could be described in many ways. It is a medieval tale with a "making-of" included, a story about love and the meaning of life, a mix between contemporary and ancient/fantasy worlds. But above all, it is a play acted by teenagers. The 14-to-16-year-olds act out their private conversations as if the stage - and the public - were simply inexistent. They talk about things they care about, worry about, love (?). And then, they represent a medieval tale. In a fairly unconvincing and uninteresting way. So what is it that makes the show shocking to some, appealing to most? When not acting the story, the teens are "themselves". With all the consequences. They swear more than a drunk butcher, they talk dirty to each other, occasionally becoming incredibly cruel, some of them even actually spanking others, smoking, or, in one boy's case, undressing and playing with the genitals in front of the public. Oh, and sucking on it. For the acrobatic trick. And the public's guilty feeling of joy.
I tried talking to the actors, the director, several other spectators. I wanted to know what they felt. They thought it was real. And funny. The actors felt just fine about all this, stating that this is who they are and they were not forced to do anything, on the contrary, they were the ones suggesting, and several things they suggested were rejected. The boys who smoked had been smoking since they were 12, the boy who made the exhibitionist trick insisted on doing that and had a long conversation with everyone about what he was going to do.
And of course, my favorite argument: this is who they are. We can't be so politically correct as to censor it. It would be hypocrisy. And come on, this is no big deal really. There have been much worse things happening on stage in contemporary theater, also to teenagers.
Then why is it bothering me? Maybe because I have a few friends who started smoking on stage, and never quit. Or because I remember myself at 14, 15, 16, and the enthusiasm with which I undertook the most silly and unwise things. I suppose I was in the luxurious situation of not being tempted to try them out on stage. Why? Maybe, because there is a difference between what's happening with or without a witness. And because I'm not sure of how far it goes, but I'm pretty sure the young people I spoke to are so even less. Or maybe because I'm just a boring moralist, who can't deal with true avant-garde when he sees it.

Monday, August 8, 2005

Oops - I forgot one additional Albuquerque knitting blog. I'm not sure why as it is on my list of daily reads. I've corrected the original post but the additional blog is Jenny Woman Obsessed. Go check it out to see a lovely example of a Territorial style home.

I've decided against the new mittens due to thumb problems but I'll show you the photo the next time I get the scanner out. The colors are really nice but they're too labor intensive for such a simple mitten. I also have some lovely angora/alpaca fiber to show you.

It was a busy weekend with little knitting. Today we went to Santa Fe and I checked out Thirteen Moons fiber arts gallery (on Canyon Rd.) again. They had fewer quilts but did have some neat baskets. They had an entire room devoted to an artist who takes found objects like baseball mitts and electric mixers and then elaborately beads all over the. Pretty neat.

I've become somewhat addicted to Book Closeouts . They don't usually have too many knitting books but the cookbook selection is wonderful. The prices are even more wonderful. I can barely wait for one order to arrive to get my 5$ off coupon for the next order.

I told you a while back I'd sponsored a rabbit through Best Friends Animal Sanctuary. (A local rabbit rescuer I adopted Peaches from now works there as head of the Bunny House.) For a $25 sponsorship fee you get a photo and periodic updates about your animal (dogs, cats, rabbits, horses, even barnyard animals and wildlife). I chose a cute guy named Sidewinder with chronic head tilt. Here he is enjoying the great outdoors. He has a girlfriend he's bonded with and loves to take his water dish wherever he goes.


Friday, August 5, 2005

I'm currently working on the Aran Island mittens, a mitten project of my own design in bright colors, and I want to start a new spinning project for some gloves. I will show my progress on those projects next week.

I've been meaning to compile a list of other Albuquerque knitting bloggers. Here's what I've found so far:

Desert Knitter
Nepenthe's Misadventures
Jeannie's Hands at Work
Sheepish
MooKittyKnitting
Hedgeblog
A Woman Obsessed

Let me know if I've missed any.

Finally, in lieu of a Peaches photo, here's a hilarious photo of a music-loving rabbit and his adopted dad. He was adopted from Rio Rancho Rabbit Rescue - more info on some great rabbits available for adoption in Albuquerque at the Four Corners Bunnies web site .



Wednesday, August 3, 2005

NEW MEXICO FIBER RESOURCES

I'm really behind this week but I've been meaning to post something for those of you considering coming to New Mexico the first weekend in October for the Taos Wool Festival. I hope some of my ideas entice you to come - we'll plan some sort of get-together at the festival.

Taos Wool Festival is held in Kit Carson Park in the center of town. It isn't a huge festival but there's a lot for fiber people including animals, sheep shearing contests, fashion shows, etc. They say there will be 68 booths this year which is larger than usual. I highly recommend Elsa Sheep & Wool for my favorite Cormo yarn and La Plata Farms for great deals on spinning fibers. There's also a booth that sells great fiber books and old magazines and Fire Ant Ranch has some fun learn-to kits (learn to spin on a spindle, learn to needle felt, etc.). The best time to check out the wool festival is early in the morning as it get pretty crowded in the afternoon.

In Taos the Apple Tree is a good restaurant for veggie burgers and Mexican stuff. They have an outdoor patio and the wait isn't usually too long. Doc Martin's hotel has some absolutely incredible strawberry French toast for breakfast. There is a surprisingly good Chinese restaurant with great service right on the plaza. There is a little shopping center with a great bookstore, Moby Dickens (check out their great cookbook selection), and a really neat French cookware store with lots of copper, Monet's Kitchen. Taos is famous for their own ice cream, Taos Cow, that you really need to try as well.

Also in that shopping center is the Yarn Shop which is my personal favorite yarn store in Taos. Lots of sock yarn and friendly service. There is also Taos Sunflower in Arroyo Seco on the way to the ski area in a cute building with lots of higher-end yarns. And you all probably know about La Lana Wools and Weaving Southwest (home of the wonderful Rio Grande Spinning Wheel along with a cool walking wheel) which are right across the street from the wool festival.

Visitors to Taos definitely need to check out the Taos Valley Wool Mill where you can see them turning fleeces into yarns. They give tours for festival attendees and you can find out what time they are at La Lana Wools. It is also a really pretty drive to the mill. Up at the ski area there is a neat little store that sells colorful Peruvian handknits called Andean Software. I have to get back there this year.

One really neat thing to do while in Taos is to tour the Greater World Earthship Community. It is a reclaimed gravel pit north of town that now holds earthships. Earthships are sustainable, passive solar, off-the-grid houses designed by famed NM architect Michael Reynolds. There is an earthship right off the highway you can tour and there are occasionally rentals available.

If you have a car, it is a simple drive to Los Ojos through the beautiful Chama Valley to Tierra Wools. This is a spinning and weaving cooperative in what seems like an old general store with a wood stove and weavers working everywhere. They sell lots of weaving yarns and other gift items.

Another idea is a trip to Mora to Victory Ranch where there is a gift shop and guided tours to meet all the alpacas. I hope to get there some day.

Don't forget a trip to wonderful Santa Fe. First you can check out the Espanola Fiber Arts Center (I've never made it there) and then you can go to Santa Fe to Needle's Eye yarn store (lots of Dale of Norway and an incredible selection of needlepoint supplies) and the Santa Fe School of Weaving (also a knitting/yarn store called Miriam's Well) near the Cross of the Martyrs. There is an incredible textile collection (check out the ancient indigo-dyed Japanese firefighter's uniforms) in the Neutrogena Collection at the International Museum of Folk Art along with several fiber arts galleries on Canyon Road. We enjoyed Thirteen Moons gallery where we saw baskets made out of fish and quilts made out of paper.

Albuquerque (about a 3 hour drive from Taos) has the Fiesta Yarns outlet in Rio Rancho and Village Wools (great place to buy Navajo Churro fiber) and Fibernations yarn store in the East Mountains.
I'm going away until Sunday, and am not sure if I'll have access to the internet.

Monday, August 1, 2005

Fear

Marja-Leena's comment to my last post made me discover James W. Bailey's blog about art, mainly his own, with some fascinating insights of a fairly renowned modern artist (I've only just started investigating though). The most recent post is about a French stranger met in the metro, and is "illustrated" by two pictures (or is the text an illustration of the pics?). As I was reading through the blog, I was listening to the uneven, but occasionally excellent wps1 art radio (by the NY-based PS1 Contemporary Art Center) , to a conversation about fear. And I recalled a picture I took a few days ago in the metro. Went back to it, worked on it a little, and here it is:

Look


I guess you could say it's my drying of the puppies.

Popularity

It's incredible: it was enough to put some naked women on the blog, and the clicks keep coming in.

Of puppies and evil

What's in a teddy?
Nothing, if they remain quietly suspended on a string.
Then, Rose begins writing. And the text explains that a short time ago a soldier (with an English name... US Army? British?) was abused by his colleagues for not being of the same color. He was washed, and then scalped. Cleansed.
And then Rose, the old, severe- but- kind- looking lady, goes back to the puppies. She grabs the black one, and washes it. Puts white detergent on it, splatters transparent water. Then spills the filthy, gray water on the floor and puts the puppy back on its place. And leaves. Stopping to look back a couple of times, just to make sure.
Rose and the Teddy Bears is a 20-minute street performance, part of a series presented by the French theater/performance group Princesses Peluches during the FIAR International Street Arts Festival in Palmela, Portugal ("street arts" in this case basically means theater). The quote on the group's site says "Rose makes people laugh and think at the same time". Well, this time it really didn't make me laugh (though some might find the beginning amuzing thanks to the subtly stylized persona of Rose). Once you get it, it's really quite creepy. What I found interesting was that the whole thing would be rather weak - if it weren't presented by this character, which seems from a completely different story. And that's what gives the show its credibility. It's as if the old lady made it easier to swallow something so bitter we are usually tempted to refuse it as a "performance", or even as a direct social commentary.