New Studio

When I arrived at the Art Institute I got a pretty good draw in the ’studio lottery’ where student’s names are drawn at random and you may pick the studio you want from what’s available. We first year student got to pick from the dregs, but I did end up in one of the nicer of the studios that was left. I’ve enjoyed it.

Last week on the drive to a Bible study during rush hour, I called in for a contest on ESPN 1000 radio here in Chicago. I won. Now just in case you folks that live way out don’t understand, a whole lot of people listen to sports radio in Chicago. I’ve tried before and never gotten through, but this time I was caller 10 and won tickets to a Fantasy Football Convention. Oh, speaking of fantasy football, I got home that night and I had been randomly selected to pick first in the draft. I’m on a roll here…

So now comes the ‘07-’08 studio lottery, and, face it, Fortuna’s wheel spins both ways. What goes up, must come down.

There was a studio that I have coveted ever since arriving at the Art Institute. Our studios are in the basement, so while we get 15-foot ceilings, we get no natural light… except this one studio at the front of the building. Its ceiling is two stories high, about 30 or so feet, and so it has huge windows high above so that folks can look down on you from outside the building while you work, and the sunlight can stream in. I like two things: natural light, and company. I also don’t mind 30-foot ceilings.

I wasn’t picked first. The first four or so folks were pre-set for various reasons, but then the real lottery came and someone else was picked. They picked me next. I seriously couldn’t believe that that studio was still left. Some folks are just bothered by people spying on them, I guess. Understandable. This studio is nearly twice the size of my previous one (not counting the ceiling) and the studios got a lot smaller after that pick. I’m a very, very happy camper.

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Studio from up above, outside.

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Looking up.

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From the hall.

Presbyterian Disaster Relief Video

Here’s a great video about the work the Presbyterian Church (USA) has been doing in Louisiana and Mississippi after Katrina. That muscular, handsome guy about a minute into the video that shares my last name is the body double for my brother, Scott.

Be Kind, Rewind

I am very excited to say that I finally figured out how to install a plug-in to embed video directly into my blog. I know, I know. You assumed that this sexy, Porsche of a non-blogspot blog could do everything… well, it can. But you have to be a computer nerd and know stuff about “scripts” and “code” and things like that. I’m working on it, but in the mean time I just had to find something that was for dummies… Viola!

Thought I’d kick it off with the trailer for the new Michele Gondry movie that, as a die-hard Ghostbusters fan, looks amazing.

Karen’s New Job!

Today is the first day of Karen’s new job teaching at Loyola University! I’m just really proud of my honey!

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Karen warming up at the State Theatre of Melbourne, Australia.

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Karen doing the “bird” in front of the theatre in Melbourne. The crazy looking man above her is the Momix poster.

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Karen doing the bird near sunset along the Great Ocean Road in southern Australia.

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(This last one isn’t Karen… but this is what it looks like in performance…)

Met Beethoven Today

So I’m walking to work today downtown and I saw a prison bus parked on the street ahead that said GOTHAM on the side. Then I saw lights and figured that they were doing some shooting for the new Batman movie. I got out my camera phone, just in case, and who do you think I saw… Beethoven! Or for you Harry Potter fans, Sirius Black. Actually it was Gary Oldman, who plays Beethoven in one of my favorite films (for three specific scenes, actually) Immortal Beloved. He’s a favorite actor of mine.

When Karen and I saw Joan Cusack a few months back we left her in peace, as she was just walking down the street, but since Gary was working, I decided I’d say hello.

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Gotta love Chicago!

W.C. Don’s to Close

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The closest I ever got to seeing the kinds of indie rock bands that are the regular fare of Rob Matthews and many of my other Philadelphia friends, was a little bar/club located in a double-wide trailer in a borderline bad part of Jackson, Mississippi called W.C. Don’s. This place was small, hot and dark, but it was one of the places I ended up occasionally my freshman year of college (1993). Over the years many, many unknown bands played there, and I’m sorry to say that I missed such unknowns as REM, Widespread Panic and the Flaming Lips, as mentioned in the linked article below. I did see Galactic, a New Orleans based jam band that ended up becoming much more well known. I think the cover was $3. The other draw was that they accepted school IDs as proof of age. My fake one said I was 21, and it’s hard to believe that anyone bought it (my age, not the ID… the ID was perfect…) because at age 18 I looked about 15.

Don’s came back to me recently because The Spares, folk-country-americana band of our pastor’s wife, played there on a recent tour swing through God’s country. She said it was the worst show of all time, and hates Jackson. Now she certainly should know better that to judge a city by it’s most seedy rock club, but having been put on a double bill with a hardcore band probably didn’t help her impression. You should check out the Spares, Jacksonites, buy a CD and maybe she’ll feel better about the town.

Anyway, that little reminiscence is just a lead in to saying that, perhaps as an act of divine judgment, W.C. Don’s is closing forever. Here’s an article about it.

ESP Round IV

Just heard that The End of the Tunnel will remain for another year at Eastern State Penitentiary.

This is great news, even though it blows my three year prediction. I’m just glad that I don’t have to spend my winter break in Philadelphia demolishing the beast. I do predict that’s how I’ll use my vacation time in winter ‘09, however. Nothing quite gets me going like the thought of life in the penitentiary, brandishing a Sawzall while braced against sub freezing temperatures, slicing hundreds of feet of steel pipe, and hauling away thousands of pounds to one of Philly’s gritty scrap steel yards. Nothing will compare to the feeling when the dirty paw of the manager slaps a grimy $20 dollar bill in my hand and I know that it’s all I have left to show for a couple thousand bucks worth of pipe and about 300 hours of my newborn daughters life. Plus a few pictures.

Seriously, though: I am not looking forward to it.

Some may remember a post I did a while ago where I though I could barely make out the pipes on a digitally enhanced satellite photo from Microsoft’s answer to Google maps. Well, I found a new one on the same website, and this one is a no-doubter:

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News in General

First of all, it’s finally warmed up a bit here in Chicago. By warm, I mean low 90s, which, by comparison to where I grew up (New Orleans), is like a nice late fall day. It’s really not hot at all, y’all. I think it’s appropriate to pay homage to Chicago summer weather to atone for my snide attacks this winter (1, 2). It has been, by far, the most comfortable summer of my life. Frankly, I think it makes the winters worth enduring.

Work is going well for me, although between my working and Karen dancing I have very little time to spend in the studio. I’m OK with this, actually. Summer has always been a slow time for me regarding production of work, but I tend to do a bit of the important reading and thinking that make fall and winter my most productive seasons. One very exciting part of my summer job has been learning to use some of the advanced fabrication equipment at the school. Had I not taken this job, I would have had to take a class to learn some of these things — and probably not as thoroughly. I actually conducted a CNC orientation yesterday. Here’s the machine we use. To know it well enough to teach it is very exciting. And I’m getting paid!

Karen is out of town right now, for a dance workshop in Houston. Karen’s folks are here while she’s gone. It’s a great exchange: they get to spend lots of time with Anna, and I get to retain my sanity. I can remember how difficult it was surviving without Karen while she was traveling with Momix, and I’m happy that Anna is spared being subjected to life as the daughter of a bachelor, if even for one week. She does like mac and cheese and “Ronald Donald,” but no healthy, growing kid deserves cuisine like that for an entire week. She already generally looks a bit like Ronald McDonald when I get her dressed. That is, like a clown. A final note on having help this week: I’m a pretty good craftsman, and I can build, or learn to build/fabricate most things while working pretty naturally with a variety of materials, but I think God created long, silky hair to keep folks like me very humble. I have NO idea how the women in this family install a hair clip so that it won’t fall out within five minutes. I’m in awe, and I’m grateful Grammy is around!

Sometimes I second-guess my frequent sports posts. (how’s that for a non sequitur…) I think that perhaps it’s not good to follow a sports team so closely. Professional sports really is a fantasy world. That’s why I can’t wait for college football season. Seriously, my main reservation about following sports is the time it takes up to listen, watch and to read about. If I spent all of that time reading good literature, exploring the library, and doing other kinds of research, I’d probably be better off as an artist. To tell you the truth, I just don’t know. Part of me wants to respond that this makes me more well-rounded, but that’s probably hogwash. I’m sure there are plenty of well-rounded people out there who become well rounded by learning to play the piano, not listening to ball games. The Romans had a phrase that I remember from high school latin, Panem et Circenses: Bread and Circuses. I remember it vaguely as referring to the means by which the Roman ruling authority was able to keep the citizens pacified. As long as you keep the people fed, and keep the people entertained, then you can do what you will. I think fed and distracted is even more accurate. The one thing an artist cannot afford to be for any long period of time, is distracted. I willingly distract myself far too frequently with infinite, meaningless rabbit trails (”reading the news”) on the internet, and keeping up with baseball, football, golf, auto racing, cycling, etc… I so willingly and easily distract myself with all of the distracting offerings that life in America affords. Panem et Circenses… gotta give that one some thought.

I’m currently reading Anne Rice’s Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt, on my brother’s recommendation. I’m finding it fascinating, and very enjoyable to read. It’s an imagined account of Jesus as a seven year-old. I think I’m enjoying it so much because, as a former atheist, Rice explicitly affirms the incarnation in her introduction. It’s allowed me to relax reading it and know that I’m not reading some veiled attack on orthodox Christian theology.

I’m currently listening to Bach arrangements by Leopold Stokowski. Karen is currently rehearsing a reconstructed Doris Humphrey modern dance work titled Passacaglia, set to Bach’s Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor. We searched iTunes to find the piece so that I could listen to it, and stumbled across Stokowski, who arranged the version the dance it set to. I love Bach, but I have never heard Bach played like Stokowski conducts it. I’m tempted to say that I’ve never heard Bach before. It’s just unbelievable to have heard a particular piece of music so many times, to have loved it, and then hear it one more time and marvel at the fact that it can become so completely brand new, so completely, completely sublime.

I’m off to the studio today, for a bit. I need to begin cleaning and organizing for the school year. I also might try to go to the Museum of Contemporary Art and the Art Institute to see some shows that I’ve neglected seeing yet.