• Security

    In Germany, the entrance to the Reichstag (parliament/legislature) building is right there on a street, where taxis and bicycles ride by (but no private cars), and regular people can walk right up and say hello to the top leaders walking out to their black chauffured cars.

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    Reichtag eastern entrance

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    Reichstag eastern entrance, with a line visible where the Berlin Wall once stood. The Marie Elizabeth Lüders Haus is in the background.

    The British are a bit more paranoid. Their embassy is on a public street, but it is closed to all vehicular traffic, with police and barricades at either end of the block.

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    British Embassy in Berlin

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  • How do artists live?

    Jennifer Dalton, _Contemporary Art According to Jen

    Jennifer Dalton, Contemporary Art According to Jen, 2002, Powerpoint presentation in 32 slides

    One of my favorite conceptual artists working in New York now is Jennifer Dalton. Ed Winkleman has a post with her request for visual artists to fill out an anonymous survey on how they live. If you are an artist, head on over.

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  • Williamsburg recommendations

    My favorite shows in Williamsburg right now:

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    Ryan Wolfe, Sketch of a Field of Grass at Dam Stuhltrager, which presents technology imitating nature in a beautiful way,

    plus, two group shows by the same curator — Elena Sorokina:

    Siemon Allen, Cards (detail)

    Siemon Allen, Cards (detail)

    Enemy Image at Momenta

    and

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    Russian Redux #1 at Schroeder Romero

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  • Harriet Miers

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    Harriet Miers and George Bush, still from an AP video

    For a couple of minutes, I had a post up about Harriet Miers, the new Supreme Court nominee, being a board member of Exodus Ministries. According to Law Dork, via Wonkette, this is not the “Freedom from homosexuality through the healing power of Jesus Christ” organization, but a Dallas based-organization which “seeks to encourage ex-offenders, to reunite them with their families, and to empower them to become self-sustaining, productive, Christ-centered members of society.” No word yet on what they do with non-Christian ex-cons.

    Still, this is one of the least qualified people I have seen in a while being nominated. The employment section of the Washington Post story is pretty underwhelming:

    Experience: 2004-present, White House counsel; 2003-2004, White House deputy chief of staff for policy; 2001-2003, White House staff secretary; 1995-2001, chairwoman, Texas Lottery Commission; 1972-2000, private law practice; 1992, president, Dallas Bar Association; 1989-1991, member, Dallas City Council; 1985, president, Dallas Bar Association.

    According to Atrios, even some right-wingers thing she’s a joke.

    James heard about the nomination today and said, “She can’t possibly get approved.” My response was, “Justice Thomas. There is nothing you can’t get on the Supreme Court these days.”

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  • Bedford Street, Williamsburg

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  • See us in person at the Affordable Art Fair

    The lovely and talented Janet Phelps has asked us to be part of a panel on collecting at the Affordable Art Fair on October 29th. Here is the info I have from her:

    The panelists are as follows:

    Jeremy Adams, Gallery Director, Cue Art Foundation
    Joshua Mack, New American Paintings
    Stacey Gershon, Curator, JP Morgan Chase Art Collection
    James Wagner and Barry Hoggard, collectors, write separate art-related blogs and together maintain an online visual arts calendar.
    Robert Goff or Cassie Rosenthal, Directors, Goff Rosenthal

    We don’t know yet which of the Goff Rosenthal people will attend.

    This panel of collectors, dealers, business men and women, artists, curators, advisors and critics will discuss collecting and how their careers and career choices relate to the way they collect, what they collect and how they collect. The panelists will try to put a human face to the often overwhelming prospect of collecting. Moderated by Franklin Sirmans, Curator and Writer; with Jeremy Adams, Director of Cue Art Foundation; Joshua Mack of New American Painting; Stacey Gershon, Curator at JPMorgan Chase; James Wagner and Barry Hogard, Collectors, Activists, and Critics; and Robert Goff or Cassie Rosenthal, Co-Directors of Goff Rosenthal.

    Details for the where and when:
    The Art of Collecting: 2:30 on Saturday October 29th at Pier 92. It will last about 1 1/2 to 2 hours tops.

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  • ArtCat

    artcat web hosting

    One of the reasons things have been so quiet around here is that I have been working on ArtCat, a service for hosting artists and galleries. The artist part is about finished. Gallery stuff has a way to go, but I have at least one “guinea pig” starting soon.

    Recognize the background image? Unfortunately it doesn’t animate on my Mac.

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  • Phone Cams

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    Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) uses a cell phone camera to record the Senate Judiciary Committee mark-up hearings to discuss the nomination of John Roberts to be Chief Justice of the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill, September 22, 2005. From (L-R) are: Hatch, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee Arlen Specter (R-PA), and Ranking Senate Judiciary Committee Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT). (Larry Downing/Reuters)

    Our senators have turned into the woman that annoys me at my local bagel place by checking her email on her phone while she’s supposed to be working the cash register. She once just took calls, but now she uses a little keyboard on her phone.

    More from the Washington Post here.

    [via Wonkette

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  • In case you are mistakenly considering a vote for Bloomberg

    … remind yourself that Cindy Sheehan managed to visit 21 states and over 50 cities and towns before being threatened with arrest. She had to come to NYC for that.

    Tom Moody has more. Allegedly it was over the use of amplification, but the city wouldn’t give them permits after they were requested, and Union Square can be a noisy place.

    They should have added some religious content. People like the “Black Israelites” in Times Square are allowed to yell anti-white and anti-gay crap and Holocaust denials, using bullhorns, under the courts’ view of the First Amendment. It’s interesting that the denial of permits by the NYPD for things like a Cindy Sheehan visit don’t seem to cause the same concern.

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    Cindy Sheehan speaking out in Union Square with Al Zappala, who also lost a son in Iraq photo: Sarah Ferguson

    [Image from a Village Voice article

    Updated: Via a comment, Kim Arnold just provided a link to some of her video and images from the Union Square rally.

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  • For my readers in Miami

    Two people we know and love have shows in Miami right now:

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    Installation view

    Carlos de Villasante has a solo show at Spare Parts through September 30th.

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    Orly Cogan, Allegory (detail), 2005
    Hand stitched embroidery and paint on vintage linen
    44 × 44 inches

    Orly Cogan is in a group show titled Hanging by a Thread at The Moore Space through October 28. The show includes a few other people we follow and like such as Brian Belott, Christian Holstad, and Frankie Martin.

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