Wednesday, April27th, 2011

The space in which we live, which draws us out of ourselves, in which the erosion of our lives, our time and our history occurs, the space that claws and gnaws at us, is also, in itself, a heterogeneous space. In other words, we do not live in a kind of void, inside of which we could place individuals and things. We do not live inside a void that could be colored with diverse shades of light, we live inside a set of relations that delineates sites which are irreducible to one another and absolutely not superimposable on one another.
Michel Foucault
Of Other Spaces (1967), Heterotopias.
This was posted on Wednesday, April27th, 2011 in Architecture, Compulsions, Culture, Photography, Urbanism
Wednesday, April27th, 2011

“Behind the incessant parade of bright images, a gaping blackness.”
Through out the course of my day, I look at hundreds (if not more) photographic images that fall into the genre we call “photography”. RSS feeds of photo blogs have become the easiest and, at the same time, most in unobtrusive method for consuming my daily dose. It isn’t so much the dosage that bothers me. I’m hung up on the concept of what exactly I’m eating up when I’m searching, shifting, and glancing at the endless buffet of fine-art photography that is presented to me…
There is a point where I have to just take my eyes out of focus and concentrate on the idea that the blurred image which emerges might be a better indicator of contemporary photography than anything curated, anything put together into a project…
This was posted on Wednesday, April27th, 2011 in Art, Compulsions, Culture
Sunday, April24th, 2011

1990s Chevrolet Caprice Wagon
I know that this post could very easily be construed as being childish or immature. Trust me, I am both of those things. However, I think there is a deeper undercurrent to what I did at the Mall of America overflow parking lot yesterday afternoon.
Lets preface this a bit. You know, build up a framework before I delve in. I believe that everyone has certain design fetishes. Aesthetic aspects of physical products that appeal to us on a level we can’t quite explain. In turn, we’re drawn to those products and buy them. Really we buy the hell out of them to be more precise. Case in point, the new iPad or Macbook Air.
Now, in order to keep the universe from collapsing into oblivion, there has to be a counter balance to objects that are so compelling we cannot resist. There have to be objects out there that are so repulsive that the very sight of them triggers an innate hatred in the reptilian part of our brains.
For me, one of those objects is the mid-1990s Chevrolet Caprice station wagon. Perhaps it is the nature of the vehicle’s name… don’t we want vehicles that stand for reliability and not impulsive changes? However, I cannot pinpoint my hatred. I see them less and less these days, but… they’re out there. Like a fleet of marauding slug-shaped cars, they haunt me when I drive.
As luck and fate would have it, when I pulled into the Mall of America overflow parking lot, directly ahead of me was a real doozy of a Caprice wagon. Dark brown. DUNG brown even. I had to act to let this other driver know the torture which is seeing them on the road.
And so I did. I left a note. Childish you say? Yes, of course. But something had to be done.

This was posted on Sunday, April24th, 2011 in Compulsions, Life
Saturday, April23rd, 2011

Although the time for this image has passed, I still feel that it is appropriate. This was earlier this week. Yes, this much snow falls in the middle of April. One of the things that I’ve learned here in Minnesota is that we’re always just one tiny step away from slipping back into the misery of winter. You could be out in the middle of July, 90 degree F heat, sweating your ass off when suddenly it hits you… before you know it everything will be returned to the winter. It is a strange feeling. I’m not certain it serves any purpose. The optimist in me hopes it is reminder of how fleeting even the most basic things can be… I won’t bother with lingering pessimist.
This was posted on Saturday, April23rd, 2011 in Compulsions, Life, Photography, Uncategorized
Friday, April22nd, 2011

111O Issue 1 - March 2011
Again, it is another beautiful/flat grey Minnesota morning. If you’ve had the pleasure of living here, today is one of those days where there is no indication of time’s passage and both sunrise and sunset are previously undiscovered shades of gray.
As part of my long slumber from writing, posting, and making, I’ve failed to mention one of the great projects that I was selected to participate in. I’m particularly honored to have a photograph published in the first issue of 111O. As in 111OH, the small, yet stunningly high quality journal takes one photograph, one story, and ten poems and places them together to create something wholly new and irresistible. In no way do I feel this way because one of my photographs was selected for the first issue. I am truly smitten with this project, where it currently is and am exceptionally excited to see where it is going.
Please take a moment to learn a bit more about the work and pick up a copy if you feel so inclined. I have a hunch you will be.
http://111oh.com/
This was posted on Friday, April22nd, 2011 in Art, Books, Photography
Thursday, April21st, 2011

Andreas Serrano, Piss Christ
Its been a while since I’ve posted to this little experiment of all things eclectic, so I’ll kick off my return with a bit of a rant. It is a new morning and I’m sitting here at work thinking about the Easter weekend that is fast approaching. I use the term Easter weekend rather loosely. As an Atheist, this is much more of a “go shopping so you look good when you meet your boyfriend’s parents on Sunday” weekend. Truly something that is much more important and tangible than 2000 year old best selling fiction. Anyway, I’m a touch behind the times and just realized that some Christian nut-job felt the need to attack one of my favorite pieces of contemporary art: Andreas Serrano’s Piss Christ. Now, I get while simple-minded folk would consider this piece to be controversial – the almighty Jeezy Creezy dipped in blood and urine. Gotcha. It is a touch oozy and a bit… anatomical. But then again, isn’t the whole “body and blood” of communion? After all, there is the belief that the second one swallows the wine and unleavened bread it turns into blood and flesh. (Right now I’m drinking San Pellegrino and hoping the second I swallow it turns into a fine vodka)
If I pretend to give myself a partial lobotomy and think like a follower of organized religion, I can get all hot under the collar about this work. But then again, logic and open-mindedness (or simply mindedness) kicks in. Isn’t Piss Christ a rather encouraging metaphor of the sacred and the profane merging together? Isn’t it a not so subtle reminder that religions are human creations… that they are the things of piss and blood?
That said. I’m going to stick to my original conclusions after reading about the incident in France: the only way this piece could possibly be better would be if it were a picture of an actual Christian dipped in urine.
This was posted on Thursday, April21st, 2011 in Art, Compulsions, Life
Friday, April8th, 2011
This was posted on Friday, April8th, 2011 in Art, Images, Photography, Urbanism
Friday, April8th, 2011

In Neutraface - The Ultimate Yuppie House Number
An amazing post from the rather amazing Andy Sturdevant.
CLICKY
This was posted on Friday, April8th, 2011 in Compulsions, Life
Friday, April8th, 2011
Take a litle walk to the edge of town
Go across the tracks
Where the viaduct looms,
Like a bird of doom
As it shifts and cracks
Where secrets lie in the border fires,
In the humming wires
Hey man, you know
You’re never coming back
Past the square, past the bridge,
Past the mills, past the stacks
(more…)
This was posted on Friday, April8th, 2011 in Compulsions, Life
Thursday, March31st, 2011

March 30, 1981
This was posted on Thursday, March31st, 2011 in Uncategorized