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March 2008

March 28, 2008

The reality of the time art takes

James_casabere_lisson_03
Image of a work by James Casebere

"For the artist, any artist, poet, painter, musician, time in plenty and an abundance of ideas are the necessary basics of creativity. By dreaming and idleness and then by intense self-discipline does the artist live. The artists cannot perform between 9 and 6, 5 days a week, or if she sometimes does, she cannot guarantee to do so. Money culture hates that. It must know what it is getting, when it is getting it, and how much it will cost. The most tyrannical of patrons never demanded from their protogees what the market now demands of artists; if you can't sell your work regularly and quickly, you can either starve or do something else. The time that art needs, which may not be a long time, but which has to be its own time, is anathema to a money culture. Money confuses time with itself. That is part of its unreality."

- From Art Objects, Jeanette Winterson

March 27, 2008

Today's List.

Love some of the expansive possibilities the internet offers. Continue to strive for full freedom of choice about how and when to use it (as opposed to addictive pulls to overinform myself, overinspire, etc.)

Walk part of the way home from studio. Swing arms. Notice signs of spring.

Slow movement. slow design. Idleness in the service of imagination, not laziness.

Put on list: find Jeanette Winterson quote about artists and idleness to share here.

Slow and luscious food preparing and eating. Consume no poisons that can be avoided.

Start reading those Borges stories and the book on Janet Cardiff.

Stop blogging for a day or two. (whoops). Ignore Google reader for a day (whoops).

March 26, 2008

Fixed sewing machine, finished the shirt.

Shirt2I did it! Burda pattern number 7798, shirt.dress.blouse. I did the shirt, in a pale natural colored linen. My next step is I am going to embroider on it in white embroidery thread, a simple line drawing on the bottom part.

For those following the sewing machine debacle, the problem was ridiculously simple and SO the product of a nervous amateur seamstress. Somehow I just threaded it wrong. After taking the entire machine apart, cleaning everything, changing the needle, experimenting with the tension, putting it all back together and sleeping on it, I woke up and re-threaded it and it was fine. Allow me to pause and roll my eyes...

OK, so what did I learn, besides a million things about sewing from a pattern? This piece was a learning piece as I make my way toward designing five perfect patterns which will comprise a uniform of sorts for me: patterns which are all interchangeable and layerable and multi-seasonal.
Shirt1 The goal: to obsess madly over sewing, patternmaking, fashion, and my wardrobe in the short term,  in order to create a long-term life in which I rarely ever have to shop, and I am neither distracted by the constant changes in the fashion world nor am I walking around in ratty hand-me-down clothes as resistance to the mass-produced clothing industry. Feel good in my clothes, spend less money, resist sweatshops and mass production, and spend my time on more interesting things. Rad!

So some elements of this pattern could be a part of the final pattern which is a base shirt pattern. It might be too complicated: these things have to be simple and fast to make (although I will undoubtedly get much speedier each time I make one). There is something about the pleats and a-line style which make me feel a bit like theater curtains on a stage where people have gathered to witness some boobage. Its a bit too boob-framing. But I should probably just get over that.

And, in this particular round, the armholes are a tiny bit tight and its a leetle tight around my rib cage. Other than that, it fits pretty well. I am going to alter the pattern slightly (eek!) and make one more using something other than linen (just to see). Thanks to all those who commented and gave advice about the sewing machine!

March 25, 2008

Winter Soldier: Iraq Veterans Against the War

Wintersoldier

I am taking a moment away from obsessing about art to announce the following:

WINTER SOLDIER

Did you all know that on the 13th-16th of this month, an historic event happened in Washington DC called Winter Soldier, in which hundreds of Iraq War veterans testified about the horrible conditions of their lives as soldiers, and the horrible crimes they are being forced to participate in overseas? Probably not, because they media didn't report it. Iraq Veterans against the war organized the event, which resulted in many active soldiers in Iraq sending emails immediately wanting to join the movement to end the war.

Read about the event here.

This is big, and its big that the media won't touch it. Regardless of your feelings for or against the troops being in Iraq now, the media should have reported this significant event. Lets all take a moment away from our crafting and write some letters to the editors!

March 23, 2008

Blissful day of crafting ends in tragedy!

Today was the BIG DAY of learning to sew using a pattern, and deciding to Learn Things and Do It Right. Historically I have approached the sewing machine less like a tool for the serious craftsperson and more of a plaything, like fingerpaints. This has resulted in some less-than-elegant alteration and patchworky-type projects that were essentially useless when finished. So today was the day to get real and make something I will want to wear for a long time. (For those of you who don't follow me, this is part of my new obsession - see here.)

So first I had to just gaze lovingly for a long time at the pattern. Patterns are just so beautiful, and delicate and crinkly:

Sewing1

I literally spent HOURS just getting started. I found the pattern to be kind of intimidating at first. I resist instructions as though they are entirely unimportant, and then when I decide to use them I am faced with total intimidation, as though suddenly the pattern is a gizillion times smarter than me. But, it seemed to be going well by several hours later:

Sewing2

And by 10pm this evening, I was at the stage of finishing off the armholes and thinking about the next step, doing the zipper in the back. (Cute, isn't it? Its a wee sleeveless shirt/tunic kind of thing (over the hips, to wear with pants ) and made of a lovely linen.)

Sewing3

When suddenly, My sewing machine just went ahead and BROKE in the middle of stitching a seam!

Sewing4

ARG! Anyone have a Husqvarna Classica 90? After a lovely day of sewing happily away, suddenly the top thread and bobbin thread were getting all caught up underneath the foot and knotting up and freezing the system. I unscrewed some stuff and looked in there (this image was taken after I unscrewed it - you can see the bobbin holder is missing) and found a whole bunch of fiber dust which I removed with a dry paint brush. The I put it all back together, and it was still not working. I hadn't been doing anything different when it started happening either - I was literally in the middle of sewing a seam, just chugging along down the road, and suddenly it all just stopped.

Any ideas, craftistas?

Is it just the universe's way of telling me that 8 hours was enough time to spend sewing a shirt, wickid cool as it may be?

March 22, 2008

Two New Drawings.

2newanatomydrawings

These are 2 details from two new drawings which I have posted to my Flickr account.

*UPDATE*: the one on the right with the hearts has already sold. The one on the left will be listed in the Etsy shop on Monday.


March 21, 2008

Slow Design and making our art sustainable

Slowdesign_2

OK, After yesterday's teacup fun I am researching the slow design thing more extensively.

A sustainable slow designer will design to:
1. satisfy real needs rather than transient fashionable or market-driven needs.
2. reduce resource flows and environmental pollution by minimizing the ecological footprint of products/service products.
3. harness solar income - sun, wind, water or sea power and renewable materials
4. enable separation of components of products/service products at the end-of-life in order to encourage recycling, reuse and remanufacturing.
5. exclude the use of substances toxic or hazardous to human and other forms of life at all stages of the product life cycle.
6. engender maximum benefits of well-being to the intended audience
7. educate the client and the user by encouraging sustainable literacy and graphicacy.
8. exclude innovation lethargy by re-examining original assumptions behind existing products
9. dematerialise products into service products wherever there is proven benefit in terms of individual, social and/or environmental well-being
10. ensure physically, culturally, emotionally, mentally and spiritually durable products
11. maximise products benefits to socio-cultural communities.
12. encourage modularity: to permit sequential purchases, as needs and funds permit; to facilitate repair/reuse; to improve functionality.
13. foster debate and challenge the status quo surrounding existing products.
14. publish sustainable designs in the public domain for everyone’s benefit, especially those designs which commerce will not manufacture.
15. promote Design for Sustainability as an opportunity not a threat to the status quo
(from www.slowdesign.org)

Wow:
Slow cities. Thirty-two towns and cities in Italy have signed up to the Slow Cities Charter that focuses on maintaining and/or recreating local identity, a sense of community, quality food production and environmental improvements. Closely allied with the Slow Food movement, Slow Cities is a way of thinking about a city’s future, engaging its inhabitants and welcoming its guests.

Slow design links:
Slow Design
Slow Lab
Slow Planet Operated by the wonderfully named World Institute of Slowness. Of course, the site isn't really live yet...I guess we'll have to wait for it.
Slow Food
Sustainable Every Day
Slow Design Blog

Questions for any of you that are familiar with this or are just reading along with me.
- How can these principles apply to "fine artists" and "crafters"? How reliant are we on unsustainable materials, methods, models, and distributions?
- What are the challenges to rebuilding our practices based on sustainable principles? Particularly as artists, who often are so economically unstable? How do we address our economic realities in the short term while becoming healthy and responsible for the economic needs of the long term? How can these things become in concert with each other, not in conflict?
- In other words, how can making the changes required also be sustainable for us in terms of paying next month's rent?

Discuss.

March 20, 2008

Molly's teacup and bringing slow design into the studio.

Mollyhatchteacup_2

When I was an Etsy employee and had a stable income and spent a huge portion of every day on the site, the urge to just BUY BUY BUY all the time was totally insatiable. I realized I had to focus all of that NEEDING into something containable. A vessel, if you will, to contain my need. So, I decided to start a mug collection,  and to buy one new mug from a ceramic artist on Etsy each month until I had replaced all the crappy mugs in  my home with gorgeous handmade ones. I now have 8 of these beauties, photos of which I will post shortly.

So now I no longer work for Etsy, but my desire for these things continues, and begins to shapeshift ever so slightly. Introducing item number one from my teacup collection!!

The image above is a teacup which is now smiling before me to the left of my keyboard. Made by the incredible Molly Hatch.

This is why I love the internet. I could have bought this teacup at a store. But then I wouldn't have happened upon Molly's web site. From her web site, I would not have found her blog. Or her other blog. From her blog I would not have discovered her interest not only in the history of ceramics, which I know nothing about, but in her interest in the principles of slow design. I do know about the slow food movement, and I know designers and farmers and all kinds of other makers are engaged in a slow but exciting process of making our practices more sustainable and healthy for creatures and planet. I am new however to the specific principles of slow design.

So I read about it. And had I not done so, I may have once again struggled painfully in my studio that day with the sheer amount of time and patience and PROCESS involved in developing ones self as a sculptor. I may have had a harder time remembering that to work slowly is good. To work out of sync with the flow of capitalism and "the market" is very good - in fact, critical for artists. I would have spent time thinking about how I could increase my production and lower my costs and get something ready for my Etsy shop by the end of the day, rather than doing what I did: allow a new sculpture to emerge without a plan. get down with the balsa wood and glue gun and old cardboard and just see what emerged. Add another set of ideas and principles to the process of me figuring out how to both make art for a market and make art for the sake of developing a body of creative work for its own sake, whether it will be profitable or not. Thats where the really really interesting stuff comes for me.

It not that I don't have that epiphany over and over, and so many times before reading about slow design. But as an artist living in a heavily, obsessively, addictively consumerist culture, you need reminders ALL the TIME that YOU are in charge of the pace, that YOUR pace is just right, and there isn't some other model of production you are supposed to be conforming to.

So back to Molly Hatch, and how yesterday, it all started with a teacup. Reading about Molly and her work on her blog, I was also reminded of how interested I have become in making utilitarian objects, such as (in my recent endeavors) sewing clothing, or making mugs. This is a hard thing to admit in the so called "art world" (you know, the one that calls itself "the art world."). It's considered like practically the death of your career to go from making work "about ideas" to making work that's meant to hold your ginger ale. As if those two things were mutually exclusive. Which every great maker of utilitarian objects knows they are not. And we could of course go into the historical reality that the women have often been the makers of utilitarian objects, and the men the communicators of ideas (while the women brought them their ginger ale). So sexism is infused in all our values about creativity, and making, and minds, and communicating, and art itself.

Anyhoo, if it weren't for the physical presence of the teacup sitting on top of a pile of Styrofoam peanuts in a cardboard box, with a postcard tucked in next to it with Molly Hatch's web site address on it, and then the internet, the tool with which I discovered more about this cup's maker, I would not be telling you all this now, and I would not have gotten a peek at Molly's work in progress, a new series of teacups which will be released at some future date. So now I know to RSS Molly's blog and keep up with her, so when those new cups hit the shop I can go running to get one for myself, to keep cup #1 company on my shelf.
Thanks to Molly's teacup, I brought some extra support and confidence with me to the studio, and Molly made another true fan. Thanks for selling and blogging online, Molly!

March 18, 2008

Ben Grasso Paintings, Marcel Dzama, sewing, and toast.

Bythebulrush

This painting by Ben Grasso is called "By the Bulrush" and is part of an exhibit of his work at Thierry Goldberg Gallery in NY. Which I haven't seen. But I want to soon, because just this image alone makes me want to paint with oil again. I'm still obsessed with decaying architecture as metaphor (and as itself). Maybe I always will be?

I also want to see this exhibit of Marcel Dzama's work. Sculptures, dioramas (I LOVE dioramas!) and paintings  by an artist whose repertoire is expanding in a most fabulous way. Check out this beautiful diorama:
2007_dzama2211200

RANDOM:
- Thanks to the lovely Waliyyah Muhsin for leading and navigating me through my first experience in the mammoth world of Joann's fabrics. I'm ready to start my first handmade outfit after weeks of horribly awkward attempts at "altering" existing clothing from my closet. May I have better luck with sewing an outfit from scratch!

- Wonderful toast innovations here and here.

- Thanks to the Etsy Storquettes for featuring me today in a Storque article on handmade weddings.

People's thoughts and feelings about art...

...as told through animals.