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Archive

Entries from January 1, 2006 - January 31, 2006

Tuesday
Jan312006

Baghdad Journal

Somehow, watercolorist Steve Mumford, convinced his wife to let him go, the editor of an on-line arts magazine, artnet.com, to issue him a press pass, and his hands to produce beautiful images. All this during the invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Mumford's book Baghdad Journal (Drawn and Quarterly, 2005) is a large-scale, saturated visual narrative that deftly captures soldiers and citizens, stay dogs and looters, elegant mosques and burnt out wrecks, beat up sedans and Bradley fighting vehicles–all the texture, color and human drama of the post-Saddam era.

Steve details his first-person narrative as an artist struggling to understand the value his presence can bring to the situation. The results provide illumination on how a peaceful man with no ties to power or influence (and a limited budget) can navigate and survive in a looted landscape; how citizens of an occupied country can extend a helpful hand to a stranger; and, how art can be created in the context of war.

From Baghdad Journal:

Drawing here takes a little getting used to. The Iraqis are intensely interested in most things western, so the presence of an American sitting on a stoop or at a cafe making a drawing always elicits an avid audience. Every brushstroke is watched, and people have many questions. The Iraqi sense of personal space is very different from a westerner's; here people crowd in so close they're touching me, and men feel free to stab at the paper to point out someone I've drawn whom they know. If an onlooker blocks the view, however, he'll be shouted at to get out of the way. Sometimes a passage is greeted with a round of "tsk, tsk, tsk," which in Iraq doesn't necessarily connote disapproval as much as interest (I think).


I spend a few hours working on Karada Avenue, the mecca for appliances and satellite dishes. It's a major boulevard, the sidewalks cluttered with big stacks of boxes, satellite dishes arranged like blossoming flowers as far as the eye can see in both directions. Sometimes you have to go through a maze of these boxes to continue down the sidewalk. The usual chorus of "Hey, Mister!" follows me as I go. When I locate a good vantage point to draw, the salesmen come out to look, then offer to pose. One pretends to flag down a cab, and then has to explain to several irritated cab drivers that he doesn't in fact want a ride, much to the amusement of the others.

I spend a few hours working on Karada Avenue, the mecca for appliances and satellite dishes. It's a major boulevard, the sidewalks cluttered with big stacks of boxes, satellite dishes arranged like blossoming flowers as far as the eye can see in both directions. Sometimes you have to go through a maze of these boxes to continue down the sidewalk. The usual chorus of "Hey, Mister!" follows me as I go. When I locate a good vantage point to draw, the salesmen come out to look, then offer to pose. One pretends to flag down a cab, and then has to explain to several irritated cab drivers that he doesn't in fact want a ride, much to the amusement of the others.

Review from Publishers Weekly:
Starred Review. With countless war accounts already in from Iraq, it's refreshing to get this dispatch told, from the perspective not of a journalist or a photographer, but of an artist. Mumford, a New York City painter, first arrived in Baghdad in April of 2003 and spent about a year there, and in other cities, accompanying U.S. troops on patrols, raids and combat missions. But the most arresting images in this illustrated journal come from his more mundane interactions: with people in cafés, at a meeting with a local imam, at a galley favored by local Baghdad artists. Mumford writes that, for him, "the act of drawing slowed down the war, recording the spaces in between the bombs," and it is through these spaces, the day-to-day of life in a country where life runs minute-to-minute, that Iraq and its war become illuminated in a way that we rarely see. At first glance Mumford's watercolors carry something of the hasty urgency of courtroom art, but this impression is soon belied by the images' depth of feeling and nuance. Accompanying the watercolors are passages from his journal, written in a lucid and reflective style that perfectly matches these quiet spaces pushing out at the surrounding chaos. His is a remarkable document.

>> Read Steve's journal on-line
>> About Steve Mumford
>> NBC's Person of the Week

Friday
Jan272006

Sundance Shorts

Don't miss out on the Sundance Film Festival... especially the fun and freaky (and free!) on-line shorts.

Definitely one of the standouts is Beyond Iraq directed by Tom Eldridge, which shows wounded vets conquering their injuries through conquering the slopes.

Studio 360's Kurt Anderson has a quality interview podcast with founder Robert Redford on his evolution from leading man to leading the vanguard for innovative and independent cinema.

From the interview:

"There is a darker strain in my heritage, or a perversity, whatever - I always believed my whole life if things got too good, maybe it's time to stop. Because you want to be careful you don't fall in love with either success or yourself. I felt with that kind of success at the end of a very productive decade of work, it was maybe time to stop, take a pause and go back to zero a little bit and think about what I was going to do next; but beyond that, maybe give something back.

"And I came up with the idea for the Institute, as a workplace for young artists, for having a place to work, because that's what I would have liked. And then, focus on independent film because it was a category that was pretty much dead at the time. It was pretty much in the academic realm of NEH and NEA grants, which is great. But it's small sphere."

>> Read full transcript
>> Go to the Sundance Film Festival

Friday
Jan272006

Needled

I missed the tatoo craze, but am amazed at the Byzantine intricacies of skin art.

[via Cool Hunting]

As Needled was a Yahoo pick this week, it held off on further posts about scantily-clad tattooed burlesque queens. At least for a week. Instead, it stayed focused on tattoos in the news with some potent photos and links to Guatemala gangs and their prison ink, creative ways tattoo artists have adapted to harsh zoning laws, and a public service announcement on why one should beware of traveling tattoo salesmen. In shopping, Needled picked Diabolic DVD as their source for films with a body art edge and looked at the Dooney & Bourke tattoo heart banana bag. For a bit of history, Needled posted links to vintage photos of tattooed ladies in traveling circuses as well as to modern day freaks.

Wednesday
Jan252006

What makes IDEO so... IDEO?

Most people take vacations to the ski slopes, or tourist destinations. This winter, Dominic Muren, product designer and writer for IDFuel, decided that visiting IDEO would be more fun. He wanted to see what makes a firm like IDEO so successful at continually turning out concepts that not only answer design questions, but answer them in ways that are often so far off the beaten path that they create entirely new product definitions.

Check out what he uncovered.

IDEO helps companies innovate. We design products, services, environments, and digital experiences.

Dominic Muren is an Industrial Designer/Mechanical Engineer working as a toy designer in Chicago. He loves mechanical design, materials, and flan. His idols are the Eames's, and James Dyson.

Monday
Jan232006

The Monkey King of China


An ancient Chinese legend comes to life at Chicago Children's Museum! This traditional tale describes the curious Monkey King’s adventures through foreign lands as he causes mischief in the emperor’s palace and finds himself trapped under a mountain for 500 years. This interactive exhibit lures you in when the courageous Monkey King is given a chance to redeem himself by escorting a monk to India. You can learn lessons the Monkey King reveals as you help him overcome the perils he encounters in his journey.

Become a mischievous monkey and try to steal the emperor’s peaches before he catches you. Play pranks at the dinner table in the Heavenly Palace. Fly over China, climb through Buddha’s fingers, and extinguish the flames of a burning mountain with the goddess’s fan. Discover China’s mystique in this imaginative, one-of-a-kind exhibit!

Asian American Social Network: Special Partner of Chicago Children's Museum.

[Photo from Adventures in Chinese Culture: The Monkey King's Guide, the East Asia Program at Cornell.]

Sunday
Jan222006

Blueball Mania


Need a reminder of what efficincy and teamwork is all about?
Check out this wonderful animation at blueballfixed.ytmnd.com.

Rube Goldberg meets SimCity.

[Thanks to Leah Silverman.]

Tuesday
Jan172006

From Book to Blog: Creating An Online Journal


Saturday, January 28, 2006
10:30 AM-3:30 PM
RSVP and advance required (space is limited).
To register, please call 412.231.3169 or write to education@mattress.org
Act 48 credit available.

Cost: $20 ($15 MF members, students/seniors); box lunch included.
Led by new media artist Liz Perry.
Information: www.mattress.org

Participants should bring a sketchbook, journal or artist's book created or in progress, to share online with a larger audience. Participants will learn a range of techniques for creating online books and walk through the process of setting up a free, online illustrated journal, using a digital camera, scanner and free online software. Participants will complete a personal art blog and learn to upload images and text. If possible, participants should bring a laptop and a digital camera. Workshop includes a guided, behind-the-scenes tour and discussion of Messages & Communications.

Elizabeth Perry is a writer and new media artist working at The Ellis School, where she helps teachers integrate technology into a K-12 curriculum, and teaches classes in digital media. She is a founding editor of the award-winning Pittsburgh Signs Project, an online public art project documenting the visual landscape of western Pennsylvania (www.pittsburghsigns.org). Think Cool Thoughts, a children's book she has written, was published in 2005 by Clarion Books. Her formal background includes a BA in English from Yale, and an MFA in fiction writing and PhD in cultural and critical studies from the University of Pittsburgh. Her sketchbook journal may be found at www.elizabethperry.com/woolgathering.

Tuesday
Jan172006

Get all your Monkey News on the Ricky Gervais Show

Thank Zues! Steve Merchant, Ricky and their producer Karl Pilkinton (who is perhaps the most twisted mind of the troica) have a podcast through Guardian Unlimited.

The finest element is the spiraling delivery of "monkey news", featuring unconfirmable recounts of philanderous simians, a tolerant zookeeper (and his wife), and rampaging chimps.

official site | RSS | iTunes

When my wife and I became new parents, one of the best gifts we were given was the first season of The Office, brain-child of and vehicle for the man himself, Ricky Gervais.

With only 2 seasons and one bonus Christmas show, the ride was over too quick. Now there is the American version of the office which is... eh... OK, I guess. Plus the HBO series, Extras. But nothing close to the mania and mayhem of the BBC original.

Except this!

Sunday
Jan082006

The Next Generation of Digital Craftsman

Over 500 Years ago, craftsmen rarely worked for a company. They were contracted for a period time and then moved on to the next contract. To remain competitive in such an atmosphere, many formed “guilds” or organizations designed to provide networking, ongoing training, standards, certification, and even some social services among their members.

Kings did not post jobs in the classifieds to find craftsmen, they contacted guilds who did not compel the employers to hire their members but simply were the only ones who could produce the work.



As “Chief Architect” of PixelCorps, Alex Lindsay merges the very old idea of a guild system made up of independent craftsman with the demands of mastering new and emerging media. PixelCorps serves as a guild for the next generation of craftsmen--digital craftsmen.

They are currently transfering skills in digital imaging and animation to regions in the developing world, so that those citizens may capitalize on the coming media revolution.

In order to survive as a craftsman in this new mediascape, PixelCorps believes companies and individuals must be able to solve the following challenges: inexpensive and on-going training, standardization, access to resources, true production experience and networking with other practitioners.

Globeshakers host Tim Zak talks to Alex about the PixelCorps goals and challenges. Tim wanted to know whether the model can broaden into other areas of technology (ex. medicine, infomatics, engineering, robotics)?

Tim asks: "As someone from the for-profit world of broadcast media, what changes did you have to make as a social entrepreneur?"

Alex shares his experience in working with corporate partners such as Apple, Adobe and others from the film and broadcast world. As the founder of a social-purpose company, he ends the conversation with advice to others who may have an equally audacious vision.

"For me, why bother doing anything else? When you're out there to make a difference for a lot of people--a profound difference--oftentimes many things pop up to help you move further down that path."

Thursday
Jan052006

Bathtime in Clerkenwell

Need something to get you through the first week back after the holidays?

Our long lost freind, Joe Bill Mathews in North Carolina sends us this absolutely charming and zaney animation that redefines the nursery rhyme "four and twenty blackbirds".

Absolutely family (and co-worker) friendly, it'll have you tapping your feet and singing:

"A doodly-bum-dee-bum-dee-bum-dee-homey!"

Bathtime in Clerkenwell
Animation: Alex Budovsky,
Music: the real tuesday weld with stephen coates based on "sweeter then shugar", by the Mills Brothers
From the equally charming video blog, Rocketboom with Amanda Congdon.