Sunday, July 31, 2005



I finished the Gull Wing socks from Socks, Socks, Socks. I'm not in love with the pointy heels - they're not noticeable in this scan but are easier to see in the original pattern photo in the book. These socks are also a gift for a girlfriend's daughter. I used Froehlich Blauband for these socks in a lovely lilac color.

Now I'm back to the Aran Island Mittens from Folk Mittens. I hope I can concentrate on the socks because I'm worrying that the Red Sox will trade Manny before the trade deadline today.

Saturday, July 30, 2005

Portuguese young talent


Diana Silva, Heart Necklace (2003)

(This is a neckless made with the crochet technique, I believe)

ps.: I have just bought bluetooth for my laptop, at last, which will allow me to post pics and films from my mobile phone. Meaning - expect more terrible quality "new art" photos and films from Portugal!

Cities/People/Bodies

Is there a surface that goes beyond itself? How deep does it go? Can we go so far to the surface of the picture, we go beyond it? It is only skin, matched and resampled as in a game, as in a text. And what are they really saying through the skin? This is who we are? This is what we are? Identity? So close? So quick, so easy?

Tokyo I
Berlin
Cape Town I
Buenos Aires
Deception

Selected pictures from The Nude Adrift Portfolio, by Spencer Tunick (at the Guy Hepner Contemporary gallery in London)

Friday, July 29, 2005

Workshop

I'll be directing a workshop next week in Montemor-o-Velho, entitled "Between Performance and Theater" (Portuguese link). I want to explore the zone between acting, enacting, performing and participating, so it should be a lot of fun and pretty challenging.

Birdwatching (1)

During the Serpa seminar, I did some filming. The goal was a specific type of (experimental) documentary, but the bad quality of sound made it unviable. One of the filmed sequences, though, came out amazing: a group of birds flying around in the setting southern sun.

Every time I saw the material, I became fascinated with the moving image, its fluidity, its combination of harmony and power and playfulness, the games of shadows and highlights. The entire scene lasts less than a minute, probably about 30 seconds. On the other hand, it seems just the right amount of starting material.
But for what?

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Blur Building


My girlfriend has made me discover the Blur Building, by Elizabeth Diller and (husband) Ricardo Scofidio (Diller&Scofidio - notice her name comes first, very nice and rare!), or rather, the recordings of it (scroll for the article), as it was disassembled after the Swiss Expo in 2002. It seems like a truly extraordinary project - a building that's a cloud. Witty, poetic, and above all - real!
It reminded me of one of Woody Allen's funniest characters - the man that became out-of-focus in Deconstructing Harry.
Diller&Scofidio have made and collaborated on many other fascinating projects, ranging from performances, to installations, to video art.
Long live artist couples!
Remember when I was so amazed at the enormous size of my sock yarn stash? Well then it may surprise you to learn I've recently added to it.







This is Knitpicks' new solid-colored sock yarn, Essential. I love the price and I have a few projects in mind. The lighter green on the top will become the Leaf Socks from Socks X3 and the orange on the bottom will become the Tiger's Eye socks from the same book. Then I will have knit all the socks in the lace section of the book. I may also use the burgundy to do a cabled pair from one of the little VK socks books.

Portuguese multimedia


The Portuguese center for digital arts Atmosferas has been quite busy recently. First, they made a retrospective net exhibition of Portguese net art in the last years. Now, they (along with Etic, the media art school they are a part of) are starting a 2-year Masters course in Games and Interactive Media. It is a unique program in Portugal, and was created with the support of YDreams, the immensely successful multi-media Portuguese company (with several multi-media installations on their account). I'm really glad things are happening around here.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Of art and terror


Art in the age of global terrorism.
The feather and fan sock pattern from Socks, Socks, Socks is a lot like potato chips. You just can't knit just one pair. I hope to make a pair for myself some day. This pair is knit in Regia for a friend's 8 year old daughter. I hope they fit.


Monday, July 25, 2005

Googlography


As part of the Day-to-Day Data exhibition which presents several "artists who collect, list, database and absurdly analyse the data of everyday life" (curated by Ellie Harrison), Jem Finer's On Earth as in Heaven recreates the map of heaven - on earth. The idea is to localize the names of the stars that compose the main star constallations. The names can refer to places, but also objects, people, erotic drawings.
I imagined initially that all the stars would have streets or towns named after them (or themselves be named after terrestrial locations), but this was far from the case. Using Google as a research tool I found that star names were more often than not the name of an object, a document, a person, something transient at a specific time and place…
Using Google as a research tool? This is our world, this is our geography. This is the universe. Of course, I would probably have done the same thing (then again, I might have taken the trouble to check somewhere else, you never know). But it's strange, the way we seem to combine the conviction that we live in a global village with, indeed, a village mentality.
But the work is nice, and the online version quite appreciated by this village person.

Ps.: Jem Finer is also the author of the longest music piece in history: longplayer, which is to play uninterruptedly for a thousand years (it began on January, 1, 2000). You can listen to it (streamed) here.

Questioning modernism




Art by people like Richard Serra leaves me confused. Not that I'm shocked, not at all. I just find it, well, unconvincing. The huge steel plates, the massive cubes, the imposing shapes... it seems like a simplicity that's, well, out of date. I'm really having difficulty writing about this, as I'm not sure of what I think, feel, or would like to feel. Yet somehow, I find this doubt to be very important for me.
You see, it seems too heavy, too closed, too proudly hermetic. Remember this quote? "Nobody thinks sculpture's going to change the world", but then, Serra's wish is to "change the way you see, even minutely". There is a paradox here, a human one, but one which is no less irritating. What are these blocks of steel? Just this, blocks? In that case, shouldn't I take him seriously and consider them no more important than any other element that would "change the way I see, even minutely"? Wouldn't simple (and cheaper) binoculars do the thing? Do I really need this to change the way I see? And what does it mean, to change the way I see? Can you hear the ever-present note of classic modernism? I'll give you a hole, and you'll lift the world with your sight. Oh, brother. How classic that sounds today. And what are we supposed to do with yesterday's revolutionaries? Their space today seems ridiculous, or worse - funny. The pure form. Pure just doesn't sound right, does it? Their talk, their fafarafa, is good for the art market, which replaces the "beauty-based" language games by "truth-based" ones. And we have the Abramovićs of inner truth, the Serras of object-ive truth, and so on. They had 30, 40 years to read up on philosophy, on arts, on history. Their talk has gotten smoother, it developed into systems, or semi-systems, always open, as the post-structuralists wisely advised. The curators love it, the prices go up. They are now part of art history.
And I, the spectator, yawn. It might be my ignorance, my not taking their ride. Or, to put it in another way, I don't have enough strength for them, I can't handle all this essence. The masters of essence. With their squares and circles, plain surfaces, monochromes and voids. It's not a disliking, it's more a getting-tired, a thirst for content. And I'm not alone. The new artists are here. The little narratives, the concrete, but meaningful (signifying, something), stories, adventures, textures that reveal forms, directions, opinions, origins, contexts, those little narratives develop, combine, they feed off each other, and yes, off the modernist power trips, their dreams of the infinite, their need for space. And, well, (the artistic) now happens. Hesitantly, at first, making tiny, unbalanced steps, swirving and turning, crawling and going sideways, but somehow, it's more up-to-date for me than what the venerable revolutionaries are. It is more open, direct, it's more modest, but more aggressively reaching out. And I like that. I like the rusty marks the tools leave. Serra's, well, I don't know how he does it, but, paradoxically, his works don't stain.
At least not my young and innocent skin.
I should have both the Aran Island mittens (wonderful, wonderful pattern!) and the second pair of feather and fan socks to show you this week. In the meantime, here are a few more garden photos. Keep in mind that I live in a dry and hot climate.

First here is my rather pathetic herb garden. The baby squirrels ate some of the dill but the rest is intact.




Some sort of sedum that survives really well without getting watered regularly.




Finally, here are the red hot poker plants that remained after a gopher sucked a few plants underground. Look near the barrel. Those are the Sandia Mountains (named because they turn the color of watermelon in dusk) in the background.


Sunday, July 24, 2005

Portuguese folk


Here, have some Portuguese music. This one comes from the north of Portugal. I've discovered it recently, and I was stunned. Its similarity with Corsican poliphony fascinates me. At the same time, it hasn't had the privilege of a commercial promotion, so it is slowly fading away.
And why is it here, on the New Art blog? Well, I have my reasons, but if you find its inadequate, well, live with it. And enjoy.

Thursday, July 21, 2005

I've been wondering for a while why I haven't been challenging myself with my knitting. I thought for a while it was because I crashed and burned with my Level III submission and then I thought maybe it was because it is getting more difficult to see charts well late at night.

I've finally figured it out. It is because I'm such a product-oriented knitter. So far in 2005 my production has been way down and I didn't want to start a project that took more time. Lately it is so hot hot hot that all I can do here is knit and watch cooking shows on tv. I'm now finishing more projects therefore I'm more interested in doing some complicated projects.

I'm almost finished with my 2nd pair of feather and fan socks and am halfway through the Vine Lace socks both from the Socks X3 book. I have also started on the Girly-Girl socks from the Spin-Off book. All three pairs are going to the same girlfriend so I am working on them simultaneously.

To challenge myself a bit, I'm planning on starting the Aran Mittens from Folk Mittens as soon as I can work out the gauge. There's no way I'm knitting them in worsted weight on size 3 dpns - I'm going to either use sport or fingering weight Cormo. I also just ordered some of the new Knitpicks solid-colored sock yarn for the fancy Leaf socks in Socks X3.

The baby rock squirrels are finally out and about. One hangs out by the back door and one hangs out by the front door. They are so adorable! Here's a photo of one of the nests. Look for all the twigs stuffed in the rock wall behind the white chair.




If it ever cools off I can sit out here and knit.


Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Sweet, sweet art

The Polish National Gallery of Contemporary Art Zachęta has just announced it will have publicity in the form of candy. (No, not a sculpture of candy. Just candy.) This is the result of an open contest, won by Michał Rokita, a 24-year-old architecture student from Krakow. The candy is to be distributed not just to cultural venues, but also to supermarkets. Rokita says he wants it (and Zachęta) to be publicized (a commercial for a commercial?) as a cure for sadness, pessimism, lack of culture and monotony of everyday life. It will be packaged in a similar way to medicine, with a special information note containing the Gallery program. A box of the artsy sweets is to be very cheap, costing about 2 złoty (0,5 euro). The suggested flavor is llemon.

(via Gazeta Wyborcza)

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

The scanner didn't do justice to this baby hat. The colors are off and you can't really tell that it is a mushroom cap or toque that puffs out in the center. It was knit in Nylamb on size 2 dpns. The curlicues on top are done by casting on 20 stitches, knitting in the front and back of each stitch then binding off purlwise.




The hat is from a set including a dress and cardigan from Dale of Norway's baby book #124 which is amazingly still in print and available for sale from HERE.

It is the same pattern book I used for the bunnies and ducks and garden tools cardigan seen below . If I have time before the baby is born I may make the bunnies and ducks hat from pattern book 124 but use different colors.


Modern-day Bosch?


Alessandro Bavari
definitely has the ambitions of being a modern-day Bosch. I'll leave it up to you to judge.

Conservative

It's been a while since my last visit to the angry and consistent Mark Vallen at art-for-a-change. If you feel like your love for the avant-garde needs a clear adversary, pay him a visit.

Touch yourself

With Mollycoddle, Christine Liu wanted to explore the relationship that people have with their clothes.
Mollycoddle is a dress with a hunger for love and attention. Its wearer needs the dress for obvious (coverage) or nonobvious (personal) reasons, and in turn, the dress needs the wearer. Mollycoddle wants to be touched and caressed by the wearer on a semi-regular basis, but it can be happy being touched by other people, too.

misonde00.jpg

More at we-make-money-not-art.

Monday, July 18, 2005

Digital pinhole



Simple, yet brilliant: create your very own digital pinhole camera (digital camera not included). You can also opt for the alternative polaroid pinhole (a.k.a. pinholaroid).

A very forced entertainment

I have just mistakenly erased a very large review of Agatha Christie, a show by Teatro Praga.
The below text is all that's left.

Teatro Praga is currently the most popular - and renowned - "experimental" theater in Portugal. The sort of work they do actually aims at being experimental. The formula is the following: take a play (or a text that can be adapted into one), present it in a fairly traditional way making it occupy about 1/3 of the show (time-wise or importance-wise), then add 2/3 of a "chaotic" "experimental ambience, with people saying nonsense, running around, laughing madly and crying (very important!), add some cardboard signs with things hand-written on them (very important, could be a way of identifying the "character", e.g. "sad", or "king of the castle", or "Foucault", or all three), add as many references to contemporary philosophers as you can squeeze in (Foucault, Deleuze and Derrida are welcome no matter what the circumstances), add a story about some "scientific" fact with loads of fiction interwoven into it in such a way that the audience doesn't know what the truth is, and finally, the most important factor: add some profound thoughts about what theater is and isn't.

(The conclusion was something along the lines of: Praga are still scared to abandon the classical theater, or to stop thinking about it and asking questions that are neither original or really relevant for anyone but the theater people themselves (though in Portugal nearly only performing arts people go to theater, so this is not surprizing). They don't make for an excessively good classical theater, and they don't dare to follow the often interesting, fresh and new leads they discover in their work. Instead, we are left with some sort of left-overs from all the Forced Entertainments and Wooster Groups that have done the experimentation work much more extensively, and gone much further. It's a pity. And hopefully they will focus more on the research & development,and aim at creating things, and not just scattering them around.)
Oh, and there was a picture that summed up the show:
(now how often do you get that in a review? ;))
Several weeks ago I attended a really sad baby shower at DH's office. He works in treatment foster care with some really sad kids. If I had his job I'd be crying all the time.

I've started knitting a few Dale of Norway baby items for the mom-to-be I met. I'm aware a few stupid knitted items aren't going to matter if you're alone and pregnant and dirt poor but I've always been a bleeding heart. I'm finishing a cute Dale baby girl hat I'll show you tomorrow.

I need to take some photos of Peaches enjoying her new dog beds. I actually bought one for each of the pets but Peaches feels they should all be hers alone. Here she is modeling one of her baskets of bunny toys. She likes to overturn them and eat the basket as well as you can see.


Sunday, July 17, 2005

Hybrid



Calling something "hybrid" is just too easy. The word refers to a combination of two or more species, suggesting some original purity of form which is then combined with other pure forms to create the hybrid.
When applied to the arts, it subtly introduces a biological lecture, hinting at a linear (pluri-linear, but still linear) character of artistic works. Basically: "the work A comes from the combination of styles 1 and 2".

Hybrid, to me, is the beginning. It is the point of departure, it is what we find upon our arrival, it is what me must make sense of when advancing: it is the basic stuff, the original, delightfuly uncomprehensible remix, or entangled panoply of experience. We, I, go through it, cutting away, isolating, naming, framing, sensing. And "the hybrid work of art" is probably just the use of an unexpected tool to get me out of somewhere, of some tiring remix, some hybrid form.

For your viewing pleasure: the art of A.R.Menne.

Saturday, July 16, 2005

Remapping the world

Mappingworlds is an initiative of changing social (and international) awareness through redesigning maps through non-geographical criteria, such as hospitality, asylum applications, or rivers and floods (okay, that one's geographic).

(via)

Retro innovation

akee2.jpg
Kee, designed by Shira Miasnik , is a motion-based digital music instrument.

akee.jpg

The user modifies the digital output by tilting and rotating the wooden disk.

Movements can define endless parameters: manipulating Kee in different directions, angles and speed changes different qualities of the animation. Pressing the logo button modifies the presets which define the changes in the animation.
It is fairly hard to say from the video how exactly it works, but it seems like a nice combination of "digital" with "retro".


(via)

Friday, July 15, 2005

Life goes on here at Wild Kingdom. Last night Jack the cat spent several hours staring at the washer/dryer and then a few more staring at the stove. I checked and the vent on the trombe wall (which we screened last week) was opened again. DH checked this a.m. and found that a screened vent to the dryer had been opened as well. He gets to move the washer and dryer this weekend see how to make it more secure. I am now changing the sheets on the bed every other day but I still find dead bugs every time. This afternoon I plan to clear everything off the floors in the closets.

Our friend Rod came over last night to watch the game with us. He brought me tons of sweet corn from his garden and asked if I want a few of his chickens so I can have fresh eggs. I would love some hens but this isn't the place for chickens - too many coyotes. I see them often when I'm out in the yard and hear them most evenings.

Peaches is pretty mellow these days. I think the heat affects her more intensely than the cats. I bought her two big fleece dog beds from Petsmart and put them near the air conditioners. She stretches out on them every day and tries to keep cool.

Here are the feather and fan socks from Socks X3 done in Lorna's Lace's Shepherd sport given to me by Lisa. I will probably do another pair soon.

Send your video art/documentaries now!


22nd Kassel Documentary Film and Video Festival
November 8 - 13, 2005
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
LAST CALL FOR ENTRIES
Deadline: August 1st, 2005
Reglement & Application Download: www.filmladen.de/dokfest
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- documentaryFILMVIDEOart screenings
- exhibition MONITORING
- interfiction symposium
- Live visuals

(via)

Earthbed


An old installation of mine.

Slightly off-topic (against hi-tech)

Several years ago (about 1999) I worked as an English teacher in a language training center that had a military technology company as its biggest client. We used their technical guides and prospects as teaching material. It seemed pretty hi-tech, but I never really thought about it, until yesterday, when I saw this:This is given as big news on several blogs. Apparently Seiko/Epson have just presented this "new invention". As you have already guessed, flexible screens were one of the products we had the documents of in our classes. Six years ago. And let me tell you, the prototypes were much more flexible than that. That's what I call going "back to the future". And this is another reason why I don't get too impressed with the "inventions".
If I had the money, I wouldn't mind offering a big prize to the first artist that would manage to create a work with the flexible screens that I would find Very Impressive Indeed.

Rabbit Field - and others


Rabbit Field is an installation where rabbit-like, inflated forms react empathically when one of them is being deflated (i.e. squeezed or poked by the spectators), causing a "ripple wave" within the bunny society. The bunnies also reproduce quickly, increasing in numbers over night, often until they fill the entire room. Since the rabbits' sensors and inflating fans are connected via a central computer, they can be set up to react to their nearest neighbor or to a cousin across the ocean (via the marvelous-and-ever-surprizing web). This sounds really cute (I don't know why the guy on the picture is lying down pretending to be dead).
My big question is: what next? What could we invent using the mechanisms that were elaborated for the use of this project that could go beyond the cute bunnies? Is there anything, or do we have to quickly focus on another gadget? My challenge to you, dear readers, is to think up, and choose to share with me or not, any other ways of using such a "empathic system". How would you see it in your work?

Very Lost Highway

For David Lynch fans. (click on "1=1", the title of the work) For me it's just another consequence of the sillyness of Lost Highway and most of his other films.

Thursday, July 14, 2005

This is going to be a great baseball weekend with 4 games between the ever-dramatic Red Sox & Yankees starting tonight. DH keeps predicting the Yankees will come back with a vengeance and it is now or never time.

I've almost finished a feather and fan pair of socks I'll show you tomorrow and I plan to start a third pair (the pink girly-girl socks) tonight during the game. I've had several requests for lacy socks so I'm doing my best to get those finished and sent off while it is still hot.

I have the best driveway in the world. Really. This is just 1/4 of it but it is steep and hilly and the perfect driveway for privacy from the world. Friends think of it as some sort of theme park ride and the satellite dish guy even got stuck here once. I don't even bother with home UPS deliveries - they all go to DH's office.




And here is a view from the other direction. I promise I don't normally have entrelac socks hanging from the pinon trees.


Art Blogging

It is never going to be a main-stream activity. A few medium-size names might appear here and there, but art blogging simply doesn't go well with creation. It's a question of time. Of focus. What interests you? Is it art? Or your art? If it is the latter, whyever would you wander away to dangerously other grounds?
Blogging is for the wandering ones. For those who instinctively lean towards the activity the French call flaner: walk around, float, wander, disperse. It is about letting go of your inner discipline, about substituting something for everything, for the unexpected discoveries and rare echoes, for the misty strength of total, absolute, concrete virtuality.
Why am I doing this? To educate myself, to form myself, to see the world, to share it. But why am I doing this? Where from? Out of what, what need, what rush, what drive? Some strange urge to run away, to hide away so that one becomes visible, to keep the artistic discovery for myself- to share it in a hidden (illicit?) way. Obviously, way too obviously, not to be alone. To find ground somewhere else, to know what sort of (artistic?) world I'm living in. Not to be afraid of what happens. To participate in it. Or: to feel myself participate in it. Take a shortcut. Maybe. Take the long way. Possibly. Write, express, yes, whatever. But beyond the obvious. To draw out my world. To myself, to the present posterity (those who will have known me). Why is it better here than elsewhere? Recognition. To re-cognize - to think again, to find out once more. To confirm the presence through thinking. And, since art is a myth, the confirmation seems welcome. And unfair: didn't I want the myth instead of its confirmation?

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Floating

Erin Johnson, I Love You to Death (Chicago, 2005)

A few good links

Personal World Map - don't judge a world by its cover
What good are the arts? - a light-hearted reflection
The Long Tail of Art - aiming to give digitally-curious artists a little money
Hidden horoscope - just a description of just a school project, but it inspires
Busan Biennale - design a work of art for a beach. Be an artist. Travel. Have fun. Stop blogging, for chrissake.

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

On my birthday a friend told me to make a wish because it will come true. I was greedy and made about ten wishes but it looks like one is already coming true. The monsoons are here!

Imagine you are burning in that hot place where Lucifer lives. You can't sleep at night because it is too hot. You can't walk outside barefoot or wearing socks on any surface because you'll burn the bottom of your feet. All the plants is your garden look like they have been fried crispy in the oven even though you water them every day.

Then along comes a wonderful respite - the monsoons. They happen every year in the desert and last for at least a week. Every day in the late afternoon it clouds up and rain comes pouring down. The whole brown dried landscape suddently becomes transformed into a green wonderland. You don't have to change clothes ten times a day and no longer need to take cold showers. I love the monsoons!

Here are the two rejects I told you about. I quit knitting the colorwork socks (pattern from Katherine Pence's Tongue River Farm Sock Collection) because of lack of interest. The other was an attempt at a feather and fan sock in my last 2 skeins of multi-colored sock yarn. I couldn't see the lace so decided to do them plain. Then I decided I didn't like the yarn at all so they're history.


Guerrilla Girls on tour in Poland (2003)

Part art, part feminism, part tourist publicity. Here's a piece of a diary I found by the famous Guerrilla Girls.

Quote


...to pretend that a man standing on a hill could be doing everything except just standing is simply divorce from life
-Merce Cunningham

Monday, July 11, 2005

Sunday, July 10, 2005

After the avant-garde (?)

A recent article by Margo Jefferson in the NYTimes (free subscription required) about the avant-garde (focusing on theater and the performing arts) is far from what I would call revolutionary or even very useful for someone already acquainted with contemporary art languages, at least if we read it on its basic level. It does, however, show how the "general public" is being introduced to more experimental forms of expression.
It's interesting too see how Jefferson sees - and shows, thus co-constructing - the "new art": she keeps going back to the idea that it's something one has to get used to, a world worth discovering, but not easy to enter. Pretty obvious... but. The spectators are to "suspend judgement", as the artists "are experimenting" and we are to do it with them. But Jefferson admits,
Avant-gardes get middle-aged; they become the establishment. When one goes to the Brooklyn Academy of Music, for instance, one is likely to see the work of artists who belonged to the avant-gardes of the 1960's and 70's and early 80's. Some are perfecting what they've already done. A few keep on experimenting, while some are being better paid to calcify than they ever were to innovate.
And that is a problem. Because avant-garde today, as Jefferson rightly puts it,
is not a designated tribe of rebel outsiders anymore. It is a set of tools and practices; certain styles and attitudes.
Which should be a good reason to redifine experimenting and change the way we see it (and criteria for discovering it). It is far from the idea of people coming up with completely new, unexpected and revolutionary worlds. It is much more about using the current conventions, habits, paradigms, to their best use, exploring how far they take us. And that trip is pretty difficult to execute if we don't understand those paradigms (the darned question of competence, irritating, but true?). But once we do, I see no reason to suspend judgement altogether, other than belonging to a generation that considered criticism to be a horrible idea and "gave itself away". The problem is, the Robert Wilsons and Laurie Andersons (two names cited in the article) are really far from anything one could call innovative today: their art, good as it may be, has been pretty much the same for a long time. And frankly, I see no reason for going on with the suspended judgement, especially, since this attitude hasn't really helped much in introducing the "avant-garde" to main-stream culture. Any ideas about that?
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I know you're familiar with birthday cake but this year I also was visited at home by the birthday snake. As a result we spent most of the weekend duct taping and screening and steel wooling and improving the door seals. DH had to escort the slithery one out the back door with a broom which impressed upon him the need for tightening up the borders. (This house is a passive-solar home with more air vents and ducts than usual.) I hope our efforts pay off in fewer bugs as well.

The highlight of my weekend was a trip to Talin International Market for their anniversary festivities. We saw some beautiful Middle Eastern belly dancers and a life-size Hello Kitty and Chococat but unfortunately we missed the dragon dances again.

Inside Talin we got a passport that needed to get stamped by "ambassadors" for the various countries. In searching for the ambassadors in their traditional clothing we visited many tasting booths. We had chipotle hot sauce, green chile stew, Italian fennel cookies, cucumber rolls with wasabi and pickled ginger, Scottish butter cookies, Indian pea and potato samosas, several servings of a delicious kimchi, mango milkshakes, Chinese potstickers, Vietnamese spring rolls, and Chinese coconut cookies in the shape of cow's tongues. The strangest thing I tried was french fries with banana sauce and DH was nearly killed by some hot hot hot Laotian chile paste mixed with sticky rice.

At the end of the tour we got a free gift after presenting the fully stamped passport. I chose some coffee flavored cookie rolls from Malaysia for DH. I think he's afraid to try them! It is always so fun to hear so many different languages in one place. Talin Market is truly one of the best things about Albuquerque. I bought some inexpensive ancho chiles, Japanese eggplant, Italian olive paste, wasabi peas (my favorite snack) and Mexican soda for DH.

I did manage my first nose kiss ever from Miss Peaches. I had to put some peanut butter on my nose but I wasn't going to take no for an answer.