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Sunday, December 30, 2007

Splendour in the Grass




What though the radiance
which was once so bright
Be now for ever taken from my sight,
Though nothing can bring back the hour
Of splendour in the grass,
of glory in the flower,
We will grieve not, rather find
Strength in what remains behind;
In the primal sympathy
Which having been must ever be;
In the soothing thoughts that spring
Out of human suffering;
In the faith that looks through death,
In years that bring the philosophic mind.


- William Wordsworth

Saturday, December 29, 2007

2008


..time to update the website. New additions coming soon- I expect at least one of the three paintings that I'm working on in my studio to be done within the month. Another will follow within 2 months. Then there's that Beast that might take another year or two. It's already been one year. Perverse, eh ?

Monday, December 24, 2007

Eros and Eschaton


I actually made this video so you'd better watch it...or not....do whatever you wan't..

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Dystopias: Adrian Ghenie, Robert Olsen



Adrian Ghenie at Kontainer

I was hoping to write a substantial piece on this one, but unfortunately I find myself distracted by some renovation projects and the mulling over of a large essay I have been considering for some time but now finally have the spare metabolic energy to produce. Regardless, I found the Dystopian thread more salient in this latest round of openings than the consideration of an idealized Utopia as suggested by the Vielmetter press release. My inclinations were confirmed by the synchronous appearance of another handful of paintings by one of my new favorites, Adrian Ghenie. Discussions of Utopia should not be taken without considerable grains of salt and serious examinations of the catastrophic fallout left in the wake of Societies' latest failed experiment in the production of mass ordering, namely the autocratic and dictatorial manifestation of Marxism that still stubbornly lingers in Europe's Socialist inclinations. Certainly, recollections of the bleak and brutal landscape of Ceauşescu's Socialist Republic provide fodder enough for the noire recombinations of memory that Ghenie mines with such textural and atmospheric richness. It's great to see the emergence of not only History as a concern of content, but as a guiding attractor for the principles of image production. Southern California, absent any deep history of it's own, has often looked with curious bewilderment at the relics of Europe's Great Millenia, politely placing a few scattered remnants of the continent's artistic patrimony in a dusty attic on a hill in Westwood known as The Getty Center. Most visitors never even get to the art, overwhelmed by the theme park architecture and sucked into the spectacular vista afforded of their own favorite landscape. It might be a healthy exercise for the arbiters of West Coast culture to occassionally poke around in this Great Repository to seek parables applicable to the present tense.....





photo: Jacques de Beaufort
Robert Olsen at Susanne Vielmetter

The ominous foreboding of the endlessly rotating Union 76, the eschatological tremblings of this Post-Historical-Pre-Apocalyptic Era, have become a ubiquitous leitmotif in popular culture. This was the weekend after all, in which the Will Smith re-make of The Omega Man opened in theatrical release. Chatting with Robert early in the evening we inevitably began discussing the coming challenges that will be hastened by the almost certain depletion of fossil fuels and the enormous impact this will have on the worldwide economy. With the absence of oil, the brutal frenzy of Capital will sputter to a halt, which will preclude not only the flawed but successful compromise of modern industrial civilization, but almost certainly will nullify the grand designs of the sanctimonious political animals that unfortunately still hall monitor the art-scene. The relevant question seems to be not "if" but "when" the paradigm shift will occur, and to what extent shall the transformation evolve. Although the sustainable civilization of hunter-gatherer culture offers a certain lure to the burnt-out denizens of this sprawling nightmare of a city, I feel like we are capable of a whole lot more. So if the goal is not to engage in some sort of Mandarin Re-Education of an already overwhelmed public, at the very least we can bring to the fore the lessons learned in that far-off land across the Atlantic. History has a lot to say about the future...but we can easily miss the message if gets muddled by the simmering rage of blindered academicians or the prestidigitations of highly motivated Dream Sellers.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Stunned

.....nuthin really happens in this video so don't bother watching unless you wan't to hear a great song.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Robert Olsen video of a Cup


..he also has videos of a rotating 76 sign, a decorative paper ball, and birds eating corn. None of them is as good as the cup, though.

Robert Olsen's Youtube page

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Things to Do While Waiting for the Apocalypse


...i know, i know...the kaleidoscopic edit is getting old...c'mon gimme a break I need a better version of Imovie. Anyways it's my favorite Holy Sons song.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Studio Visit: Jacques de Beaufort



..just published, a revealing glimpse of yours truly as documented by Dennis Hollingsworth. Everything you always wanted to know but were afraid to ask.

check it out...

Friday, November 30, 2007

Freescha-Moving


I met Freescha online a while back but lost touch after I dumped my myspace account. They live in the Valley near Valley College...I always loved this song..seemed like a great match for the psychadelic studio pan. Think I'll drop those chaps a line...

Logan's Run Apocalyptic Ending Sequence


...yes there is life after 30.

Logan's Run Re-Mix

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Brain Lecture 6 Limbic System: Hallucinations, PTSD


BrainMind via Hollingsworth

Nanking and Hobbes


The Human Animal creates invisible circles around groups and communities that give them identity. Moral codes and attitudes do not apply to Individuals from rival groups outside of this circle, who can in fact be imagined as sub-human or sub-animal. This is because it is necessary to destroy and eliminate communities that threaten the resources or safety of the group in question.
This is known as a Hobbesian Dilemma:
As a result, Hobbes believes that it is psychologically unnatural for altruists to exist. If just one narrowly self-interested person exists no altruist can survive unless he/she becomes narrowly self-interested too. In such an environment, known as a State of Nature, Hobbes argues that a person must always be suspicious that another will attack in order to maximize his/her own self-interest. Therefore, in order for a person to maximize his best interest, he must attack the other person before that other person can attack. Each such conflict between two people in a state of nature has been termed as the "Hobbesian Dilemma." However, in the field of Game Theory, the Hobbesian Dilemma has the same structure as a "Prisoner's Dilemma."

Hobbes believed that the "Hobbesian Dilemma" results in a State of Nature because morality is an unstable enforcer of social cooperation. According to Hobbes, a stable enforcer can only exist if not one person can deviate from the established rule by which the rest adhere to. Since cooperation among people is biologically necessary, a stable enforcer must exist. Hobbes believes that the best form of social enforcement is the existence of an all-powerful sovereign.


....which explains why governments exist and wage war with each other...because if there was no government, people would exist in a state of anarchy in which the Rape of Nanking would look like a mild argument. Funny how nature and biology are the driving forces in large abstract social concepts like "Nations".

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Greensky Greenlake


...is a great song by Dead Meadow. Trotting out most of my paintings from the past couple of years it seemed like the best soundtrack for this pointless yet somehow satisfying montage. I'm on an i-movie kick, so probably am going to be making some random and perhaps ill-advised jabs at this new dimensional avenue. You tell me.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

studio pans


Dennis has got me hip to the whole video tip. We shot some footage in my studio and are hopefully going to push it around until it turns into something cool. Watching the raw outtakes in his loftish editing bay I was struck by the sound of my own voice..,I never knew there was such a deep and resonant authority in those pipes. Michelle says I kinda sound like Terence McKenna minus the geeky mister rogers bit . So if nothing else, I might have a future as an interviewer in arts related blog based video projects. I mean if this turns out it would be fun to produce an ongoing series of artist interviews and short pieces...maybe even start a blog devoted to the whole idea. Imagine the possibilities..following Steve Canaday around for a day... a stop-motion sped up video of a Bart painting...a shirtless Mario Correa mixing paint...you get the idear.

Back at home and curious, I fired up my digicam and this was all I could manage to figure out how to do...but just wait my pretties...just wait.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

I'm thinking of moving to Paraguay







George Bush and his family just bought several thousand acres of land in Paraguay, which according to most computer models is the country least likely to suffer ecological damage from nuclear fallout patterns. Hawaii is also attractive. At the very least I need to get LASIK surgery within the next couple of years.. there won't be any contact lenses or optometrists in the coming war storm. Might also be a good idea to invest in some lead.

"Deal With Reality or Reality Will Deal With You"

FIVE THEMES FOR NICOLAS ROEG

The Man Who Fell To Earth

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Steven LaRose: portraits or landscapes from the uncanny mist


The paintings have a quiet Zen-like presence. They are not spectacular, radiant, theatrical, or lustful desirous objects, but instead possess a subtle and poetic beauty-one that would be easy to miss in the constantly moving image stream of todays artworld. Mostly they remind me of European art between the Wars..the short lived and nearly forgotten movement known as Tachisme, or l'art informel-perhaps as washy liquid acrylic minimal offspring of the work of Otto Wolfgang Schulze(a.k.a. Wols). But unlike Wols who propped his paintings against the Existentialist rhetoric of Sartre and died apocalyptically young from tainted horsemeat, Steven LaRose offers no theoretical polemic or tragic romantic persona for us to frame his activities. In fact he offers very little of the sort of knowing and affected context that has become de rigueur for entre into the elite pocket of what is considered "important" art 'round these parts.

What we get instead is something much more interesting and fresh, something that could've only come from a place outside of Los Angeles, outside of the grinding and ferocious tumult of professionalism that so quickly can turn the creative impulse into one more McProduct , replacing what was once candid and hopeful with the dour and cynical mannerisms of ironic nihilism. I've never been to Ashland Oregon, but a quick search on the internet filled my imagination with visions of a lush and verdant arcadia full of rolling hills, free-spirited hippie chicks, and old timers smoking pipes outside the General Store. I form a picture of a late summer evening in some sort of amphitheatre where crowds are happily lounging in the cool grass as live New Age sitar fusion music floats over the gathering while free-loving all natural nymphs surround me on a hemp picnic blanket. A winsome Castillian beauty with flowers in her hair leans towards me with a lump of sugar placed between her full lips...
Ashland, Oregon
nude protest in Ashland
So it might be that the Ashland that I have invented in my mind bears little or no resemblance to the actual, but what is important is that Ashland is NOT Los Angeles. Steven said that he started blogging to connect to a group of peers, a community that was larger than the very small handful of likeminded souls that have decamped in said mountain town. This is why I'm even writing this post, because it was through this serendipitous process that somehow we came to each others attention. But despite this connectedness, his work, or his motivations and reasons for making it remain pure of spirit-unsullied by the cold mechanistic forces that might've ripped his project to shreds if it had tried to emerge in this environment.


It is the genuine belief in the creative urge that one is left with after immersion in this world. The very simple act of dropping some paint on a panel and moving it around is in fact a truly exciting and revelatory process which we are in constant danger of forgetting. No marks are completely intentional or unintentional, no forms can be replicated. Out of this field of contingencies, the artist loosely orchestrates the emergence of a composition.- a taxonomy of coincidence. The Uncanny Mist is neither representational nor abstract, neither portrait nor landscape. It is open to all of these possibilities, a plenum of choices, a union of opposites. In the Mist the words "man" and "nature" dissolve into meaningless syntactical constructs and we begin to see the ground of being emerge unadorned by linguistic hallucinations.





Later as my class was reading reviews and eating pizza at a nearby restaurant we started to talk about Steven and how much he seemed to resemble his art-how it was impossible to separate one from the other, and how his enthusiasm and excitement were gleefully contagious leaving us all with a smile and feeling of discovery. One of them observed: "I really like that guy- he didn't seem like he was trying to impress us. He was just being himself."

"You know he's not from LA," I reminded them.

"Oh- no wonder."






Steven LaRose: portraits or landscapes from the uncanny mist

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Social Instability





This widening gulf between the haves and have-nots has been a consistent trend for a generation or more. Economists largely agree about the primary underlying reasons. New technology has made many jobs obsolete, while creating dramatic opportunities for wealth in computers, finance, and media and entertainment. Global competition has done the same. As middle-class assembly-line jobs vanish, and routine white-collar work gets outsourced overseas, the value of education and special skills rises. The power of unions continues to decline.

For people in the broad middle class, the economic picture over the past decade has been mixed. Unemployment has been low and inflation largely contained. But behind those reassuring trends, you'll find a lot of volatility in labor markets — what economists call "churn." In short, there's more hiring and firing going on.

That churn had led to new opportunities for many workers, but caused hardship and anxiety for many others. Add to this the fast-rising cost of health care and the decline of employer-paid pensions, and you understand why many middle-class families describe themselves as financially squeezed. Low-income Americans, of course, are financially squeezed as well, only more so.


from NPR.org

Thursday, October 25, 2007

I Ching


Shêng, Pushing Upward
Is the hexagram that I received from the Book of Changes..here is an interpretation:
The image of Oppression changes in today’s Reading into the image of Pushing Upward. This tells you that you WILL succeed in moving onward and upward from the place of suffering in which you have been mired for so long. In one of the verses associated with this image, the oracle says, “The king offers him Mount Ch’i. Good fortune. No blame.” Mount Ch’i was the sacred home of the ancestors in Chinese lore. It was the highest conceivable honor to be granted a place on Mount Ch’i. Persevere, then, through this time of pain, doubt, and uncertainty. You cannot fail to transcend these trials, and come ultimately to a sublime success. In the process you will honor the best qualities within you, and those qualities will be recognized by others as well.


Michelle got the weirdest one..6 straight lines...or Ch'ien, The Creative:
The image of The Creative opens the full sequence of sixty-four images that comprise the I Ching Oracle in its entirety. It sometimes goes by the alternate name of “Heaven,” and it describes the full expression of an element, or a kind of energy, or a category of thought, if you will, that the Chinese refer to as “Yang.” In the philosophical perspective of the I Ching Oracle, which itself is the foundation of practically all of traditional Chinese scientific, religious, and philosophical life, the Yang element is complimentary to the “Yin” element, which is described in the I Ching Oracle through the image of The Receptive, also called Earth. If you know anything about modern physics, Yang is the equivalent of the wave aspect of reality that is complimentary to the Yin, or particle, aspect of reality. Science in the 19th Century, Newtonian science, seemed sometimes to come at odds with religion, or metaphysics, because it acknowledged only the particle aspect of reality, the atoms that supposedly were made of real stuff – hard, cold, opaque, impenetrable, inevitable, stuff. In our own time, after Einstein, scientists have come to acknowledge that there is also something that is ineffable, invisible, weightless and massless, transparent, and essentially inexplicable in the elemental nature of things. This is the wave, the ultimate reality that they hope some day to encompass in the mathematical equations of some as yet to be devised Grand Unified Wave Theory. The Chinese simply called it The Creative, and they viewed it as being something like what we conceive of as God – that is to say, something that has a creative power that initiates the life of all things in the Universe. This primal effectiveness of Divine Creative Power is what you may expect to be working with you to support your every endeavor during the year. Now that’s a momentous judgment to receive from the in Ching Oracle, isn’t it?

Wow dude! Score Michelle!

Call me and I'll do your reading...if you dare, some of them are pretty f-ed up...I think we got way lucky. :)

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Our Lady of La Salette


If the harvest is spoilt, it is all on your account. I have you warning last year with the potatoes but you did not heed it. On the contrary, when you found the potatoes spoilt, you swore, you took the name of my Son in vain. They will continue to decay, so that by Christmas there will be none left. Ah, my children, do you not understand? Well, wait, I shall say it otherwise.
If you have wheat, it is no good to sow it; all you sow the insects will eat, and what comes up will fall into dust when you thresh it.
There will come a great famine.
Before the famine comes, the children under seven years of age will be seized with trembling and will die in the hands of those who hold them; the others will do penance by the famine. The walnuts will become bad, and the grapes will rot. If they are converted, the stones and rocks will change into mounds of wheat, and the potatoes will be self-sown in the land.
Do you say your prayers well, my children?

Our Lady of La Salette