- Nerdy Jewish boy wearing a “Physicians for Social Responsibility” t-shirt: Hot
- Chelsea boy wearing a silver hoop in each ear, an Armani Exchange baseball cap, and a “Pain is Fear Leaving the Body” t-shirt: Not
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Thought while at the gym today
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Categories: General -
Linkage
- The real story of the big Ellsworth Kelly sculpture at MoMA, via artblog
- Gifts for Mac Geeks, should you feel the need to buy me something
- Marc Almond recovering from motorcyle accident
- iPod ghettoblaster
- Vatican show of ancient sculptures shows what they might have looked like painted (as they always were)
- Article by Andrew LaVallee on C.B. Cooke’s public access show as a weekly exhibit of his video art
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Categories: Linkage -
The alternative alternative fair in Miami
We won’t be in Miami for the various art fairs in early December. We’re boycotting the state right now.
However, if we were, our first stop woud be the Frisbee Art Fair.
[via Monya Rowe
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Categories: Culture -
Happy Thanksgiving!
It’s the best holiday. It’s about food and family — chosen or biological.

Spicy Kumquat and Cranberry Preserve — in processNo, of course I’m not cooking. James does all of that!
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Categories: Food and Drink -
Crime / Art
It’s embarassing to admit that this is the first time I have read William Gibson’s Neuromancer. Here is my favorite quote so far:
Blank walls, no windows, a single white-painted steel firedoor. The walls were coated with countless layers of white latex paint. Factory space. He knew this kind of room, this kind of building; the tenants would operate in the interzone where art wasn’t quite crime, crime not quite art.
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Categories: Culture -
Art, blogging, and intellectual property

Charles Mee, playwrightJames and I attended the Rhizome Blogging and the Arts event tonight. During the discussion, Lisa from CultureKitchen mentioned the concern about intellectual property and just letting art or writing be out there that scares so many artists and writers. I was reminded of the wonderful and generous playwright Charles Mee. His website, called the making project, has the complete texts of his plays. If you wish to perform them as written, or essentially as written, you have to get permission as they are copyrighted. Otherwise, if you want to use elements of them in your own work, they are free. To quote from the site:
Please feel free to take the plays from this website and use them as a resource for your own work: cut them up, rearrange them, rewrite them, throw things out, put things in, do whatever you like with them—don’t just make a few cuts or rewrite a few passages, but pillage the plays and build your own entirely new piece out of the ruins—and then, please, put your own name to the work that results.
But, if you would like to perform the plays essentially or substantially as I have composed them, they are protected by copyright in the versions you read here, and you need to clear performance rights with…
James and I saw him at Wallsé when we were there with friends for one of the Monday night wine dinners (a bargain I might add). We were probably the only people in the place excited to see him. We didn’t react as strongly to seeing Kristen Johnson at the next table…
If you prefer to read his plays via a real book, I recommend History Plays.
P.S. I’m going to turn comments back on for everything but political posts. Those attract too many right-wing idiots finding people to argue with via Google.
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Categories: Culture -
I love the world!
My favorite link so far to the new ArtCal is one from a discussion board in New Caledonia.
The title of this post is my favorite line from Tony Kushner’s Homebody/Kabul.
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Categories: Culture -
Linkage
- Webcams in Venice
- The MoMA Annual Artist Pass
- Angels in America as an opera by Hungarian composer Peter Eötvös – we have his Three Sisters opera on CD and it’s amazing
- Photos of new Apple Store in Ecuador
- No wonder we never make it into the Artnet photos — we never look as glam as the lovely ladies of Wallspace do in this photo
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Categories: Linkage -
Senator Charles Schumer is an awful Senator
Charles Schumer, quoted in Newsday
“We will have to review his record very carefully, but I can tell you already he’s a better candidate than John Ashcroft,” said Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), a member of the Judiciary Committee, which will consider Gonzalez’ nomination. Still, Gonzalez has his own civil liberties baggage. He wrote a controversial February 2002 memo in which President George W. Bush claimed the right to waive anti-torture laws and treaties designed to protect prisoners of war.
Note that Gonzalez called the Geneva Convention “quaint” in that memo.
Schumer also voted for the war in Iraq, the Patriot Act, and the Defense of Marriage Act (as a congressman).
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Categories: Politics -
Openings / Events Calendar
I haven’t been diligent about updating the openings calendar lately, as I was getting ready to launch my new and improved version, with information on recommended shows, not just openings. I present:
I apologize that there are no iCal or RSS feeds yet. Those are coming soon.
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Categories: Culture