For not having carved a pumpkin in years, I think we did pretty good.
Have a HAPPY HALLOWEEN everybody!
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Sweet Crude
The documentary Sweet Crude looks incredibly powerful. I'm really looking forward to seeing it.
Sweet Crude is a documentary film about the Niger Delta of Nigeria -- the humanitarian and environmental devastation there in the wake of 50 years of unregulated oil extraction, the history of non-violent protest by Niger Deltans demanding control of their own resources and the emergence of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).
Want to get involved? Click here.
Sweet Crude is a documentary film about the Niger Delta of Nigeria -- the humanitarian and environmental devastation there in the wake of 50 years of unregulated oil extraction, the history of non-violent protest by Niger Deltans demanding control of their own resources and the emergence of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).
Want to get involved? Click here.
Monday, October 26, 2009
The Impossible Project ain't so impossible after all.
Eeeeeeep!!! There are no words for the BIG BIG HAPPIES I am feeling right now. But I'll try to spurt some out. I've been waiting with bated breath for the return of Polaroid film for SX-70 instant cameras. And dare I say....it's coming back!! Mid 2010!!!
Thanks to The Impossible Project.
***from the website***
The Impossible Project inspires Polaroid to re-launch Instant Cameras
We are pleased to herewith announce a history making cooperation between Polaroid and The Impossible Project:
As we have created quite some buzz about Analog Instant Photography over the past 12 months, the Polaroid licensee - The Summit Global Group - now can't resist any longer and announced at a press conference on October 13th in Hongkong that they will re-launch some of the most famous Polaroid Instant Cameras.
Therefore they are commissioning The Impossible Project to develop and produce a limited edition of Polaroid branded Instant Films in the middle of 2010.
The Impossible Project is proud and excited that its ambitions and all the relentless work that has already been invested are now becoming the foundation for Polaroid's comeback as a producer of Instant Cameras.
Large-scale production and worldwide sale of The Impossible Project's new integral film materials under its own brand will already start in the beginning of 2010 - with a brand new and astonishing black and white Instant Film and the first colour films to follow in the course of the year.
Monday, October 19, 2009
amee king - portraits
It's here! Please check out my new blog that is dedicated to bellies, babies and families. At the moment, I won't be posting regularly. It's more of a gallery space to share a selection of my portrait work.
Please pass it along if you know someone interested in booking a documentary portraiture session. Thanks!
www.ameeking.blogspot.com
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Falling hard.
Fall is my most favourite season. The crispness, the cozy, the colour, it's all so satisfying and makes me swoon. The colder weather doesn't seem to be deterring our garden in the least. It's the best feeling to be able to walk into the yard, midway through October, and see this:
Arugula is still going strong.
And the mizuna too!
Friday, October 9, 2009
I keep thinking about camping...
and sad that it will be a whole other year before I get to go again. Where did summer go? Winter camping doesn't interest me in the least. But I've always wanted to do a late fall trip...
A few more pics from camping Labour Day weekend on Rain Lake in Algonquin. Seems like forever ago. Good times indeed.
This last photo kills me.
A few more pics from camping Labour Day weekend on Rain Lake in Algonquin. Seems like forever ago. Good times indeed.
This last photo kills me.
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Nuit Blanche!
Last night was Nuit Blanche in Toronto. I hung out in Zone C for a couple of hours and had fun strolling along with Jean and Gill. The free fleece blankets, hot chocolate and campfire sausage were a tasty treat on a damp night. My favourite installation was The Apology Project. Hearing a heartfelt, genuine 'I'm sorry' over and over again felt really really good. It was such a comforting art piece. I also loved Bicitycle. You couldn't help but laugh when you saw it. And what's not to like about Jamie Kennedy's homemade sausage!
Zone C: Urban Disaster/Catastrophe/Survival Actions.
Curated by Makiko Hara
Urban Disaster/Catastrophe/Survival Actions will address the universal human ability to accommodate and survive memories of war, disaster and catastrophe through strategic creative survival actions. The intent of the projects is not to examine the ongoing disaster of catastrophe, nor to manifest some socio-political message on the global situation of disaster. Rather, it proposes an unexpected temporal physical and intellectual territory where we can put ourselves into a flow of imagination - to question how we can creatively revitalize our life, regain a joy of living, and share the aspiration of renewal.
Gillian was the set up guru for this first installation. She worked so hard to pull it off. Well done woman!
Catastrophe Theory, 2009. Randy Gledhill and Berenicci Hershorn
Randy & Berenicci present a retrospective of their critically acclaimed video and installation works spanning the last two and a half decades of the 20th century that focuses on the concepts of catastrophe, ritual and rebirth. This will be the first compilation of an extraordinary body of work to be presented in the city in which it was created.
The Apology Project, 2009. Maria Legault
The Apology Project will be staged in its largest scale thus far. A cluster of 55 people wearing large brown paper bags on their bodies will congest a public hallway and personally apologize to every person who ventures through them. The uncanniness of this human blockade will disrupt the regular flow of traffic and provoke reflection about passive aggressive behavior. Who are these people? Why are they here? Why are they wearing brown paper bags over their bodies? There is an enigma about what precisely they are sorry for and why they are choosing to continue doing something that they find reproachable. If it is their awkward presence in the space that they are apologizing for, why do they chose to remain there? Why not just stop an offensive behavior rather than continue to indulge in it and apologize?
In the context of Nuit Blanche, endurance will become a significant component of the work as these people will be standing in brown paper bags and apologizing for 12 hours. Time will become a device that at once tests the physical limits of the performers and also testifies to their will to be obnoxious and continue to maintain a disruptive posture even though they are physically exhausted.
Surrounded in Tears, 2004 - 2009. Oswaldo Maciá
"Heaven knows we need never be ashamed of our tears, for they are rain upon the blinding dust of earth, overlying our hard hearts." Charles Dickens, Great Expectations, 1860.
The English Language has developed an extensive vocabulary to classify and understand the act of crying: weeping (associated with deep emotion) is very different to blubbering (colloquial, derogatory) or bawling (associated with children). Bypassing this mass of carefully nuanced and culturally specific linguistic signifiers, Colombian-Caribbean artist Oswaldo Maciá has turned to the semiotics of the raw material of crying itself. In collaboration with composer Michael Nyman and designer Jasper Morrison, Maciá has created a sound installation compiled of one hundred individual cries. Maciá's sources come from ethnographic and anthropological studies to informal sound-bites from everyday life - he asked midwives to record the screams of newborn babies. The work also includes Australian Aborigine death wails from the Torres Straight collected in 1898, the oldest known wax cylinder recordings of crying stored in the British Library. The work does not aim to rationalise crying but draws together personal and universal experience.
BICITYCLE (Bike City), 2009. Kyohei Sakaguchi
BICITYCLE (Bike-city) is a project about mobile life. Sakaguchi is inspired by the lifestyle, innovation and survival skills of homeless people in Japan. His research focuses on two concepts; mobility and recycling. The houses of the homeless are easy to dismantle and remake because people are forced to move their houses. They separate the infrastructures: water, gas, toilet, and electricity. The houses are made from the scraps of the city, as they understand the materials of urban waste are natural resources. Sakaguchi undertakes this concept further through incorporating used bicycles as a survival action for the city. For Nuit Blanche, the artist will create 11 mobile housing units, each attached to a bicycle. The audience can interact and relocate the works within the area.
FIRE AND SAUSAGE: Small Mercies, 2009. Tom Dean
The fires and the Liberty district's remove, the trace of the feral, suggest the aftermath of a collapse, a catastrophe or apocalypse. But what the artist is interested in is the calm after a fall, when we count our mercies and shared the surplus. An economic collapse that has returned us to essentials, warmth and food and social generosity. FIRE AND SAUSAGE: Small Mercies is a social sculpture. It engages and arranges people. Participants congregate around a fire, a cooking station, clustered radially around food and fire. The form remains, enlarging and diminishing, a stable form centered around food and fire. All the complexity and richness and pathos of a social cluster, strangers and friends with some common purpose and focal point, a clustered audience before a spectacle and themselves a spectacle, figures joining and departing the cluster and flowing from one site to another. After the fall, a hobo utopio. With sausage and hot chocolate by Jamie Kennedy, piano by Hank Bull, and poker by Jim Garrard.
Rescue Bubble, 2009. Tomer Diamant
As the humble foot soldiers of disposable infrastructure, traffic pylons solicit an indifferent compliance in our daily navigations of the city. Here however, hundreds are amassed into a single glowing beacon of urgent concern. On the verge of massive stimulus spending, governments are heralding fast-track infrastructure investment as the panacea for current economic woes. Speculative conditions that emerge under such massive spending can stifle rather than foster creative change. With schedules compressed to feed a shovel-ready hunger, unsustainable models can be entrenched rather than challenged. This installation represents an attempt to link imagery from the world of Sci-Fi; that of the solitary, ominous alien vanguard with our current speculative economic reality in order to crystallize a feeling of a looming presence; a foreign, spore-like organism at once familiar and foreign, promising and dangerous. Has the Rescue Bubble emerged to save our world or devour us all?
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