Do you ever look up through the grate and see the sun?
Do you still paint crowned oil skulls and acrylic bones
-a new sewer Sistine- God's hand touching the black glove of Iron and Wine?
It's too bad he damns artists to the bowels of the cities. Have you ever seen Van Gogh?
Do you still paint crowned oil skulls and acrylic bones
onto New York City's intestines, whistling Coltrane while we sleep?
It's too bad He damns artists to the bowels of the cities. Have you ever seen Micheaux?
I heard you escaped on Halloween and stole the moon's teeth.
In New York City's intestines, whistling Coltrane while we sleep,
you sold the molars, Warhol and MIles use them as lanterns.
I hear you
escaped on Halloween and stole the moon's teeth,
but that he took your eyes, just to see Eden's winter and Saturn's weather.
Is it true
you sold the molars?
Warhol and Miles use them as lanterns.
I hear you
sold your soul to the moon and took back your eyes,
just to see Greenwich winter and and Manhattan weather.
Is it true
that when we die we can meet our heroes from our favorite books?
Some say the ghost of an overdosed artist lives under these Mondrian streets,
and he paints a sewer Sistine with God's hand touching the black glove of Iron and Wine.
Your neighbor, now a young mother, wonders
"Does he ever look up through the grate and see his son?"
1.18.2010
1.07.2010
1.05.2010
The truth about cats and dogs (and babies): we don't care.
There are far too many blogs and status updates out in the internets about babies. Most people don't give a shit about the developmental progress of your baby, but you. Same goes for your cat, dog, or chinchilla.
Just saying.
Just saying.
1.04.2010
Bitch, I wish you WOULD burn my motherfuckin' clothes--with your triflin' ass.
A few weeks ago I witnessed an R. Kelly protest. It's not often that I see protests in Detroit, so this kind of threw me for a loop. Like, for real, of all the problems you could be upset with in this city, you choose to protest R. fucking Kelly? I guess they're speaking their minds about something, right?
I'm sure you all know the "Real Talk" video he masterminded. Pure genius in my opinion.
So when I saw this sign in the women's room, I couldn't help but laugh.
I'm sure you all know the "Real Talk" video he masterminded. Pure genius in my opinion.
So when I saw this sign in the women's room, I couldn't help but laugh.
Bear emotions
I was talking with my friend the other day about things that infuriate us. I answered with responses like: ignorance, racism, hate, lack of respect, obesity...you get the picture. And here's a picture that fills me with an infinite sadness and anger.
At a farm in Vietnam, bile is pumped from a sedated Asiatic black bear, violating national law. Thousands of wild bears have been captured to supply this traditional medicine.
12.13.2009
12.08.2009
Sequin Explosion
My work station: sequins, pins, Xacto, random images, world map, pills (antibiotics), wine, beads, glasses, handmade paper, large paper beetle, glass panels. Not pictured: glue gun, music, space heater, me.
Best part is: all my materials are "recycled".
_-
My newest creations that have helped me quit smoking. Now there's a little art therapy for you.
11.30.2009
Love and Some Verses
I was hired to clean my friend's mom's house the other day. As I was cleaning her house and getting annoyed by all the trinkets (pain in the ass to dust around), I realized that there must be a story behind all these tchotchkes (I hoped, anyway). So when the woman came home I asked her about it. She was so delighted to tell me the story of how she possessed all these knickknacks.
It got me thinking about how sentimental I am. Nearly everything I own has a good story behind it. I have no problem throwing shit away if it doesn't mean anything to me, but most of the things I own, I will have for the rest of my life.
Then my mind proceeded to music and why I love it so much. I guess it's in part due to my sentimentality. I'm in love with the idea of love. I'd even call myself quixotic. And I like music for its ability to convey all the emotions of love. The joy. The confusion. The irrationality. The hurt.
So here are some love songs. Call me sentimental.
Iron and Wine- Love Vigilantes
Cat Power- Still in Love
CocoRosie- By Your Side
Lauryn Hill- Can't Take My Eyes Off of You
Lykke Li- Little Bit
Why?- Good Friday
It got me thinking about how sentimental I am. Nearly everything I own has a good story behind it. I have no problem throwing shit away if it doesn't mean anything to me, but most of the things I own, I will have for the rest of my life.
Then my mind proceeded to music and why I love it so much. I guess it's in part due to my sentimentality. I'm in love with the idea of love. I'd even call myself quixotic. And I like music for its ability to convey all the emotions of love. The joy. The confusion. The irrationality. The hurt.
So here are some love songs. Call me sentimental.
Iron and Wine- Love Vigilantes
Cat Power- Still in Love
CocoRosie- By Your Side
Lauryn Hill- Can't Take My Eyes Off of You
Lykke Li- Little Bit
Why?- Good Friday
11.17.2009
11.15.2009
Tightrope- Yeasayer
I spent the weekend researching schools and programs and was completely overwhelmed...so overwhelmed that I was forced to go out and buy myself a cheap bottle of wine and smoke some herb. It helped- as it always does. I'm also on day 7 of not smoking, which is going really well, but making me a little irritable. After getting a nice buzz on, I started a few new pieces for Peter's gallery opening show in Tempe (they're going to be very cool- I'm excited about them). I'm also very excited about the programs I've decided on:
NYU
U of Denver
Florida State (Florida?)
American U
Boston U
U of Minnesota
They're kind of schizophrenic choices, but the programs are all very interesting and practical.
In all honesty, this has been the stupidest year of my life. I hate saying that, but it really has. But, I finally feel like I'm back on course and things are going really well for me. I'm feeling great and in control. Go LB!
NYU
U of Denver
Florida State (Florida?)
American U
Boston U
U of Minnesota
They're kind of schizophrenic choices, but the programs are all very interesting and practical.
In all honesty, this has been the stupidest year of my life. I hate saying that, but it really has. But, I finally feel like I'm back on course and things are going really well for me. I'm feeling great and in control. Go LB!
11.09.2009
You Shook Me All Night Long
I love this video for many reasons- the hair, the clothes, the music, the MOVES- but mostly for the innocence. (I'm totally stealing some of that fancy footwork.)
11.08.2009
Boom Shakalaka
I took my test on Saturday and did way better than expected, which means I can really choose to go anywhere! I guess the studying really paid off. Now for the dreaded application process. My only requirement in a program is that it needs to be somewhere I want to live (which kind of disqualifies UofM). Perhaps this isn't the smartest way to choose a program, but I don't care; I need to like where I live.
Contenders: NYC- Columbia, New School
Philadelphia- UPenn
Denver- UofD
Durham-Duke
Pittsburgh- only place where I don't know anyone (not a bad
thing, just sayin')-Carnegie Mellon
Tempe- Univ. of Arizona
Ann Arbor- UofM
*Gladly accepting convincing arguments for or against any of the listed cities.
Contenders: NYC- Columbia, New School
Philadelphia- UPenn
Denver- UofD
Durham-Duke
Pittsburgh- only place where I don't know anyone (not a bad
thing, just sayin')-Carnegie Mellon
Tempe- Univ. of Arizona
Ann Arbor- UofM
*Gladly accepting convincing arguments for or against any of the listed cities.
11.02.2009
10.30.2009
There should be
*So I've done a lot of posting recently as a GRE exercise. It's been extremely difficult to stay focused during my study sessions, so I thought I'd keep myself entertained and interested by making the process have a concrete product. I've got one week before the exam, and am on schedule: final week- the writing (not that I would write any of this on the actual exam, but getting my brain conditioned por lo menos). So this is the last of my trials...
There should be a five-year ban on making movies about zombies or the apocalypse.
There should be a one-year prison term for rubberneckers.
There should be a way to rewind life so that you can take a person back to their childhood for a day. And not so they can enjoy it, but so they can see that childhood sucked just as bad as, if not worse than, adulthood, and then they can finally stop pitying themselves for having grown up and will realize that adulthood is just as wonderful as, if not better than, childhood.
There should be a movement to reverse the recordability and portability of music, to take us back to a time when you had to be in the presence of a musician in order to hear music, that is, unless you were listening to a recording in that most primitive of music boxes—the heart—with all its false notes and turned-around phrases, echoes, warped waves, and rattling walls.
There should be a presidential election where none of the candidates are allowed to talk for the entire year leading up to the election. And we will choose our leader based on the work they choose to do and what they get done with their hands and sweat during that fundraiser-free, oh so commercialless vow of silence.
*Let's pretend you're the ETS graders and you give me a (drum roll) 7/6! Which reminds me of this.
There should be a five-year ban on making movies about zombies or the apocalypse.
There should be a one-year prison term for rubberneckers.
There should be a way to rewind life so that you can take a person back to their childhood for a day. And not so they can enjoy it, but so they can see that childhood sucked just as bad as, if not worse than, adulthood, and then they can finally stop pitying themselves for having grown up and will realize that adulthood is just as wonderful as, if not better than, childhood.
There should be a movement to reverse the recordability and portability of music, to take us back to a time when you had to be in the presence of a musician in order to hear music, that is, unless you were listening to a recording in that most primitive of music boxes—the heart—with all its false notes and turned-around phrases, echoes, warped waves, and rattling walls.
There should be a presidential election where none of the candidates are allowed to talk for the entire year leading up to the election. And we will choose our leader based on the work they choose to do and what they get done with their hands and sweat during that fundraiser-free, oh so commercialless vow of silence.
*Let's pretend you're the ETS graders and you give me a (drum roll) 7/6! Which reminds me of this.
Aisle 2- tampons, candy, lighter fluid, baking soda, and rulers
We live in a supermarket society. You can buy fruit, beer, donuts, coffee, fix a flat, lotto tickets, cigarettes, porn magazines, bread, rock salt, and/or cough medicine when you stop for gas. I spent some time in Ukraine, and they still, for the most part, operate on the old school specialty shop model: you go to a butcher to buy meat, you go to a baker to buy bread, you go to a low-to-the-ground baba at the market to buy fruit, you go to the chocolate shop to buy chocolate, you go to a gas station to buy GAS—NOT FOOD. Even in this country, superrich people operate this way, they go to food “boutiques”—they don’t go to Kroger. There’s a reason why Ukrainian people (and many other non-American cultures- Spain, for sure) and the superrich shop this way—it’s better.
The downfall of a supermarket society is that nobody knows anything about anything. I go into a coffee shop in a nearby city and ask for a Cinnamon Twist (which is a fancy name for a cinnamon roll) and the barista says “Is that a drink?” And I say, “No, it’s one of your desserts.” I ask for a double espresso in a demitasse, and she says “What is that?” And I think, “Are you here to work in a coffee shop, or are you just hanging out behind the register while you wait for the Lady Gaga show to roll into town?” So I explain the subtleties of the size and shape of the demitasse and even point out its location on top of HER espresso machine. So then she picks up a coffee mug and says “This one?” And I say no. You get the picture.
I go to Target, which sells rugs, bicycles, plasma screens, books, vacuum cleaners, and peanut butter, but nobody really knows anything about any of these things, except where they are located. They can’t review a product, tell me about its quality, how long it will last, where it was made. When I bought a rug in Ukraine, she told me where she got her loom from (her grandmother), where she bought her dyes (Hungary), and how she cleaned the raw wool (in the river). She told me the story of how her grandmother left her the loom with the expectation that she carry on the Hutzel tradition of rug making and that all the patterns she designs remind her of a particular person in her life.
Yes, I know, you don’t want to hear a family history every time you buy something, and neither do I. But even if I did have to listen to an old woman talk for a few minutes every time I went to the store, I would probably be better off for it, and I would definitely prefer that to facing a whole world of stores that expect me to expect their employees to be dumb. Is this only in the Midwest?
The downfall of a supermarket society is that nobody knows anything about anything. I go into a coffee shop in a nearby city and ask for a Cinnamon Twist (which is a fancy name for a cinnamon roll) and the barista says “Is that a drink?” And I say, “No, it’s one of your desserts.” I ask for a double espresso in a demitasse, and she says “What is that?” And I think, “Are you here to work in a coffee shop, or are you just hanging out behind the register while you wait for the Lady Gaga show to roll into town?” So I explain the subtleties of the size and shape of the demitasse and even point out its location on top of HER espresso machine. So then she picks up a coffee mug and says “This one?” And I say no. You get the picture.
I go to Target, which sells rugs, bicycles, plasma screens, books, vacuum cleaners, and peanut butter, but nobody really knows anything about any of these things, except where they are located. They can’t review a product, tell me about its quality, how long it will last, where it was made. When I bought a rug in Ukraine, she told me where she got her loom from (her grandmother), where she bought her dyes (Hungary), and how she cleaned the raw wool (in the river). She told me the story of how her grandmother left her the loom with the expectation that she carry on the Hutzel tradition of rug making and that all the patterns she designs remind her of a particular person in her life.
Yes, I know, you don’t want to hear a family history every time you buy something, and neither do I. But even if I did have to listen to an old woman talk for a few minutes every time I went to the store, I would probably be better off for it, and I would definitely prefer that to facing a whole world of stores that expect me to expect their employees to be dumb. Is this only in the Midwest?
10.29.2009
Rose-colored glasses
Everything is green. You can build a green house, not a greenhouse, but a house that is built with the environment in mind. Even cars are green, and I hear that there’s going to be a green Bible soon, with green-lettered verses where God’s Creation is mentioned. Everything is recycled and recyclable, natural, organic, transfat free, no CFCs…
Don’t get me wrong, I try to buy things that don’t absolutely devastate the earth as they travel from soil to shelf, but sometimes I wonder about this green explosion. Yes, we should all try to fight evil, be green, buy and eat good things, but as long as our greenness is just another route of consumption we’re still headed down the same road.
Yesterday, they taught us to fear for our safety in smaller cars and then sold us SUVs ; today capitalism has gone green, and they tell us to fear global warming and then sell us hybrids. I have a friend who lived in South Africa for a few years a few years back, she told me Al Gore winning the Nobel Peace Prize was ridiculous. She sees all our greenness as a last-ditch plead for some fantastic forgiveness from a God whose Creation we’ve ruined—it’s all a bandaid, she says. And while I loved “An Inconvenient Truth,” as I stepped to the counter today at a glass-walled, vegan menu, fair trade coffee café, I find that I have a hard time arguing with her.
Don’t get me wrong, I try to buy things that don’t absolutely devastate the earth as they travel from soil to shelf, but sometimes I wonder about this green explosion. Yes, we should all try to fight evil, be green, buy and eat good things, but as long as our greenness is just another route of consumption we’re still headed down the same road.
Yesterday, they taught us to fear for our safety in smaller cars and then sold us SUVs ; today capitalism has gone green, and they tell us to fear global warming and then sell us hybrids. I have a friend who lived in South Africa for a few years a few years back, she told me Al Gore winning the Nobel Peace Prize was ridiculous. She sees all our greenness as a last-ditch plead for some fantastic forgiveness from a God whose Creation we’ve ruined—it’s all a bandaid, she says. And while I loved “An Inconvenient Truth,” as I stepped to the counter today at a glass-walled, vegan menu, fair trade coffee café, I find that I have a hard time arguing with her.
We used to drink water from the spring
We used to gather food and cook it over a fire, now we dig up coal to make a fire in a plant to make electricity to send to a freezer to freeze our food on its ways to a grocery store where it will stay frozen in a freezer powered by electricity (fire) so then we pick it up and start another fire in the internal combustion engine of our cars to take the food home turn on a light turn up the furnace throw away our junk mail and pop our “food” into a microwave (more electricity/fire) that will “cook” it for us, if cooking means altering the chemical composition of the food so much as to destroy any nutritional value left after it was picked from the vine too early to be frozen so it could be reheated. What?
We used to drink water from springs, now we pollute the spring to make a plastic bottle then build a factory to purify the water and put it in the bottle that polluted the spring in the first place, and we do this so we can have drinkable spring water. Right.
We used to eat corn, now we eat high fructose corn syrup.
We used to listen to music, now we listen to [put random auto-tuned robotic voice black dude here, or any of the Youngs will work, or any of the Li’ls].
As you can see, I could clearly go on, but I'm sure it's obvious why I'm skeptical about this thing called human progress.
KitKat patty wack, give the kid his goddamn candy
I love working on Thursdays. I have the greatest group of volunteers who come and help out at the warehouse. They don't come on their own volition, but are forced to come by the State of Michigan in order to receive welfare. If they can't find work for three months, they must start community service to continue to acquire skills. But it doesn't matter because most of them are hard workers regardless.
All of these women are inner-city women with at least one child. They talk about the funniest shit when they're here. And I have to say I learn a lot about the hardships, realities, and the culture of these people. And anyone who knows me, knows that I love anthrolopolgy... and Halloween.
That being said, I was talking to them today about Halloween. I mean, Detroit is infamous in regards to this holiday (it wasn't until recently that I became aware of Detroit's exclusivity in this tradition). But, unfortunately, due to the causes and the effects of this infamy, the children cannot trick-or-treat in their own neighborhoods. As a result, many of them end up getting bussed in or driving into the suburbs to trick-or-treat or trunk-or-treat. [People hand out sweet treats from the trunks of their cars in parking lots. (Something about this seems contradictory to everything I learned as a child.)]
As I live on the "8 Mile" division between Detroit and the burbs, many of these children end up in my neck of the woods. Oh, and I hear about it. I've overheard numerous people talk about "the bullshit of having to give these kids candy on Halloween (they don't even have costumes)".
To this I say: Go fuck yourself! The point of Halloween is to give kids candy (and diabetes). Who cares if these kids are in your neighborhood; put that KitKat in that cute kid's pillowcase and wish him a happy Halloween. Wake up and realize that he would probably rather trick-or-treat in his own neighborhood anyway.
This city is ours. It's not a "their problem" situation we have here. In fact, this problem is really a microcosm for a larger issue of national security; a problem I see as closer to boiling than Iraq/Pakistan/Afghanistan. No one wants to share their candy.
All of these women are inner-city women with at least one child. They talk about the funniest shit when they're here. And I have to say I learn a lot about the hardships, realities, and the culture of these people. And anyone who knows me, knows that I love anthrolopolgy... and Halloween.
That being said, I was talking to them today about Halloween. I mean, Detroit is infamous in regards to this holiday (it wasn't until recently that I became aware of Detroit's exclusivity in this tradition). But, unfortunately, due to the causes and the effects of this infamy, the children cannot trick-or-treat in their own neighborhoods. As a result, many of them end up getting bussed in or driving into the suburbs to trick-or-treat or trunk-or-treat. [People hand out sweet treats from the trunks of their cars in parking lots. (Something about this seems contradictory to everything I learned as a child.)]
As I live on the "8 Mile" division between Detroit and the burbs, many of these children end up in my neck of the woods. Oh, and I hear about it. I've overheard numerous people talk about "the bullshit of having to give these kids candy on Halloween (they don't even have costumes)".
To this I say: Go fuck yourself! The point of Halloween is to give kids candy (and diabetes). Who cares if these kids are in your neighborhood; put that KitKat in that cute kid's pillowcase and wish him a happy Halloween. Wake up and realize that he would probably rather trick-or-treat in his own neighborhood anyway.
This city is ours. It's not a "their problem" situation we have here. In fact, this problem is really a microcosm for a larger issue of national security; a problem I see as closer to boiling than Iraq/Pakistan/Afghanistan. No one wants to share their candy.
10.14.2009
A sad crescendo of existence. I can laugh now.
Low moments that have made for good stories.
I went to visit a friend (female) in a nearby village. Upon seeing her, I hugged her and started humping her leg involuntarily. I instantly started crying- from laughter and sadness. I realized I hadn't been hugged in almost a year and I fucking INVOLUNTARILY humped my friend's leg!
I got locked inside a train garage- inside the train. I was so scared. I called my friend, Eddie, and asked him what I should do. He didn't have much advice. I eventually tried climbing through the window, but reconciled that the drop would be too much. So, I pried the door open, jammed my backpack between the doors, and jumped. I was about a 1/2 kilometer outside some random city with the equivalent of $.50 in my pocket. Not a good situation.
I saw a man fall down a flight of cement stairs with his bike in hand. I didn't do anything. I waited to see what the other women would say (one being his wife) who witnessed the event. She yelled, "asshole". I laughed. Then I felt bad for who/what I had become.
A friend and I spent three hours deconstructing a text that may/or may not have had romantic implications (the ellipses were a definite sexual innuendo). That was the most exciting thing that happened for many weeks.
A friend called to tell me he found a human ear on the ground. I asked, "Did you take a picture?" Was that really an appropriate response?
Determined that it was easier to leave the food out on the stove because then I wouldn't have to reheat it the next day and dirty another pan.
Saw a dead body in the trunk of a car and didn't think much of it.
Definitely had more than one "I-just-want-to-go-to-the-forest-and-eat-meat moments".
Have used something other than toilet paper to do the job of toilet paper. And was proud of myself for being so resourceful.
I went to visit a friend (female) in a nearby village. Upon seeing her, I hugged her and started humping her leg involuntarily. I instantly started crying- from laughter and sadness. I realized I hadn't been hugged in almost a year and I fucking INVOLUNTARILY humped my friend's leg!
I got locked inside a train garage- inside the train. I was so scared. I called my friend, Eddie, and asked him what I should do. He didn't have much advice. I eventually tried climbing through the window, but reconciled that the drop would be too much. So, I pried the door open, jammed my backpack between the doors, and jumped. I was about a 1/2 kilometer outside some random city with the equivalent of $.50 in my pocket. Not a good situation.
I saw a man fall down a flight of cement stairs with his bike in hand. I didn't do anything. I waited to see what the other women would say (one being his wife) who witnessed the event. She yelled, "asshole". I laughed. Then I felt bad for who/what I had become.
A friend and I spent three hours deconstructing a text that may/or may not have had romantic implications (the ellipses were a definite sexual innuendo). That was the most exciting thing that happened for many weeks.
A friend called to tell me he found a human ear on the ground. I asked, "Did you take a picture?" Was that really an appropriate response?
Determined that it was easier to leave the food out on the stove because then I wouldn't have to reheat it the next day and dirty another pan.
Saw a dead body in the trunk of a car and didn't think much of it.
Definitely had more than one "I-just-want-to-go-to-the-forest-and-eat-meat moments".
Have used something other than toilet paper to do the job of toilet paper. And was proud of myself for being so resourceful.
10.07.2009
Bottom of the Ninth
The internet is remarkable. I truly believe it to be the greatest invention ever. It's a sea of information at your fingertips, a place to stay connected, a opportunity to influence people to action on a global scale, and a creative outlet for so many.
As I grow older, I often think about what a blessing it would be to have a conversation with my dad.
It would go something like this:
Me: Hi, Dad.
Dad: Hi, Laudenski. What's cookin'?
Me: Not a whole lot. Work's good- could use some more money. Ya know.
Dad: Yeah, well, hang in there. I've been thinking about adding some flowers around the base of the cherry blossom tree. Want to see what they've got and pick some out with me?
Me: Sure.
(At this point we would get in the car and Dad would turn on some Tiger's baseball.)
I know it's nothing spectacular, but it'd be priceless.
I stumbled upon a touching website that honors a woman's father. This is why the internet is so cool.
As I grow older, I often think about what a blessing it would be to have a conversation with my dad.
It would go something like this:
Me: Hi, Dad.
Dad: Hi, Laudenski. What's cookin'?
Me: Not a whole lot. Work's good- could use some more money. Ya know.
Dad: Yeah, well, hang in there. I've been thinking about adding some flowers around the base of the cherry blossom tree. Want to see what they've got and pick some out with me?
Me: Sure.
(At this point we would get in the car and Dad would turn on some Tiger's baseball.)
I know it's nothing spectacular, but it'd be priceless.
I stumbled upon a touching website that honors a woman's father. This is why the internet is so cool.
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