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April 21, 2008

Best Friends, Superheroines, and Women in Ministry

Amyandsarah

My best friend in the whole world, Sarah Sentilles,  just published her second book. It's a bad-ass feminist book. It's a book I have seen in the making since before she started writing it, one that draws on very personal experience and then reaches out to include dozens of incredible women and issues that are in my opinion nationally and globally critical in terms of sexism, oppression in general, the environment, humanity...its a brilliant book. It's a big challenge to our religious institutions (especially Christian ones).You should read it. (Special alert to all my fellow crafties: She interviews a founder of the Church of Craft!). I'll say more when I finish devouring it. 

Sarahsbook

It's called "A Church of Her Own: What Happens When a Woman Takes the Pulpit." Find it here.

Sarah and I co-directed a community art center together (which I had founded in 1996) from 1998 - 2001. We wrote grants and dreamed up huge things and discovered that we are extremely happy when collaborating on creative projects together. Our minds get firing and we get all spazzy and brilliant stuff generally pours out of the connection.

Sarah and I were also superheroines together. Being a superheroine is hard if you don't do it with a best friend. I mean, being a woman minister is hard - can you imagine being The Mad Priestess? That's her up there, in her pink and gold robes, getting ready to street-corner preach with her Holy Booble, and then sprint off to fight injustice with me.

My superheroine power, of course, was to maintain hope and optimism even when I would run face first into a telephone pole while sprinting off to fight injustice. Wouldn't the world be a better place if we could all maintain self-confidence in the face of our shortcomings?

Green Light and The Mad Priestess are still waiting for our music video, which we hope to have choreographed by Paula Abdul, hopefully on one of her wackier days. If anyone has a contact for us in Hollywood, please leave names, numbers, etc in the comments here. Does anyone know Michel Gondry?

April 16, 2008

Time to vote on the subject of my next gocco print.

Goccosketch_2

OK, so I am sketching away like crazy, thinking about my next series of gocco prints, which will involve nature, miniature-painting-style decorative pattern, and my usual cities that are both in a state of decline and creative reconstruction (depending on the day). A bunch of versions of various drawings in progress are now at Wondercabinet Flickr headquarters. which are your favorites? comment on the best ones. i'm curious what y'all think.

March 11, 2008

The second Little Lake Painting

Lake2

I am having fun with my new little paintings and drawings of lakes and rivers (and in this case, mountains). Who knows - maybe soon some of these will be for sale in wondercabinet. For now, they reside in my Flickr headquarters. Enjoy!

Also, I have been collecting reviews of the Whitney Biennial. Getting ready to go see it soon. Here are some interesting reviews, debating what the Biennial is really saying about arts and the economy, and the role of artists in these times:
New York Times
Edward Hussein Winkleman
Ben Davis/Artnet magazine
TimeOut New York

March 03, 2008

Insomnia Freakout Art Project of the Week

Fabriclove1
fabrics by pat speth, anna maria horner at purlsoho.com

OK, first of all, I just checked my blog stats, and I'm getting huge visibility here today on my otherwise sleepy blog. And the referring addresses field isn't telling me much. So tell me in the comments, where are you coming from? And furthermore, W e l c o m e ! You've made it to my blog just in time for an entirely new rant about something I haven't blogged about before.

I was up all night spazzing out about the reawakening of a decade-long fantasy I've had to replace all the clothing in my wardrobe with a series of hand made garments based on 5 simple patterns that I have drawn in my sketchbooks 1,000 times. The idea is to solve my long and agonizing relationship with shopping, the clothing industry, sweatshops, sexism in the fashion industry, consumerism and crappy fabrics all in one fell swoop, and become a person who loves to get dressed in the morning, and looks and feels creative and cozy and happy. Ambitious, you say? Indeed! Which is the reason it's been like #58 on my to-do list for any given week. But at 2am this morning (of course) it was crystal clear to me that this idea isn't going away, and just might have more of a profound impact on how I walk in the world than I usually imagine. SO I better do it already. You live once, etc.

So these 5 patterns. They are easily adjusted for winter and summer concerns (long and short sleeved versions, for example). They can be created in a variety of fabrics and textures, all interchangeable and fun. They can be fancy or chill. Once I have the hang of making them and actually learn to sew (slightly important factor) they may be pretty quick to make and I can perfect them as I go. I can get gocco fabric ink and print designs on my own fabric (or I can buy beautiful fabrics like those in the image above). I can embroider on things while watching Jon Stewart at night. Perhaps I will have a little help from Burdastyle patterns (Open Source patterns!) while perfecting my own.

My inspirations and godmothers in this effort:

Andrea Zittel. A genius sculptor and designer who managed to get famous in the NY art world making clothes. Her clothes become uniforms that are meant to be beautiful, functional, easily customizable and modular, and free the wearer from the shifting tides of the fashion world so that s/he may focus on getting on with life. Its anti-capitalist fashion basically, a phrase which makes me giggle. 'Cuz its still fashion. She made one uniform that she wore every day for a year. She makes garments that are crocheted from a single strand of yarn. Her felted garments are the most amazing and I want one so so so bad. Some examples:

Singlestrand_2

She started a business recently called the Smock Shop, where she employs other artists in customizing and selling her basic smock designs. The "How to wear" section sums up her philosophy in a lovely way:

"
when to wear: Wear your smock whenever, wherever, and however – every day, and for every function. This will save you time, money and energy. Rather than agonizing about what to put on each morning you can move on to larger things like experiencing the world in it's fullest and learning about new things. We promise that your full life will be far more exciting then your full closet ever was."

Clothing is just one aspect of Zittel's work which involves questioning and redesigning every aspect of living. Gotta check her out. Here's an interview with her.

And my other big inspiration right now:

Alix

Alix McCauley of treehouse28.etsy.com

OK, I love this woman. I found her when she was an Etsy featured seller long ago. She nailed it with a limited range of fabrics and a simple sewing style using a serger (I suppose) to make curvy, wavy seams. She mixes and matches simple shapes and forms to make a huge line of totally comfortable, beautiful, simple, practical garments that could easily become a whole wardrobe of no-nonsense, no-worry, hot, funky, all purpose outfits. It also seems like her clothes could really adapt to the style of the wearer - they could take on different looks depending on how you wear them together and what kind of accessorizing you do (or don't) - what kind of boots and coats you wear, etc. This woman should have a web site where people can post pics of themselves wearing her clothes in a variety of ways. I am the happy owner of a sleeveless hoody dress (in black) and it's a STAPLE of my wardrobe. Thanks Alix.

So how am I going to actually go through with this long-stifled dream? Company. Enter my beautiful and talented crafty friend Waliyyah: who wants do do a similar thing! Once per week, we are going to get together and work on our sewing. Same time, same place each week. Progress will probably be slow at first and get faster as time goes on. It's a great start. Yay!!!