• Get Your War On

    New ones are on the web site. A sample:

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  • Free speech?

    Please see Mr. Ashcroft for permission to exercise your First Amendment rights.

    Anticipating this, groups are meeting every day to plan the great demonstration against Bush and the war at the Republican convention next summer.

    Back here in the city, he works on plans for what he and everybody thinks will be the biggest of political demonstrations.

    “People hate this war,” he says. “I don’t know how Bloomberg got in there with them, but now he is going to get driven out, too.”

    Dobbs was involved in the peace demonstration last February when the police and a federal court judge, Barbara Jones, who committed a thoroughly suspicious act, collaborated on treating nearly a million New Yorkers as potential criminals. That day, Bloomberg tried to act as if he didn’t even know a march was on.

    This time it is totally different. Dobbs reports that the police told him that applications should be made to the Secret Service. That puts Ashcroft in charge of thwarting the demonstration. The same Ashcroft who will be inside Madison Square Garden being welcomed by the Mayor of the City of New York, Mike Bloomberg. That is more than enough to blow Bloomberg and all his color pamphlets out of the job.

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  • Freedom

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    Two U.S. Army soldiers, of Charlie company, 1-22 Infantry regiment, 4th Infantry Division, look inside the pockets of an unidentified Iraqi boy while patroling a street in Tikrit, 193 km (120 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2003. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)

    To quote our glorious leader:

    I will repeat myself, that the more progress we make on the ground, the more free the Iraqis become, the more electricity is available, the more jobs are available, the more kids that are going to school, the more desperate these killers become, because they can’t stand the thought of a free society. They hate freedom. They love terror. They love to try to create fear and chaos.

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  • Whitney Biennial 2004

    The press release with the list of artists is out. Am I too connected, or is the Whitney being insufficiently daring? Should there really only be a couple of names I don’t know on the list? This isn’t even my line of work.

    One more thought. I was amused when the Times article said this.

    Two years ago, while Ms. Iles was in charge of its film and video and Debra Singer, the Whitney’s associate curator of contemporary art, selected the performance and sound art, the biennial was primarily put together with one pair of eyes, those of Lawrence R. Rinder, the Whitney’s curator of contemporary art. Critics felt it tried too hard to look for little-known artists whose work turned out to be unremarkable.

    I thought that show had too many people I had heard of already, rather than too many “obscure” ones.

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  • A nice summary for Rumsfeld

    Marie Coco has a nice summary in today’s Newsday of answers for Rumsfeld’s memo — all from Senator Bob Graham’s Oct. 10, 2002 speech on why he opposed the Iraq attack.

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  • Save the Children

    The religious right, including the president and his brother in Florida, believe that gay adoptions are a threat to the sanctity of good Christian American families. I think these nice church-going people are doing enough damage without any help from us homos. These people were getting money from their church, which they drove 30 miles each way to attend to help pay their rent.

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    Come Alive New Testament Church
    The Jackson family. Bruce, middle row, second from right; Keith, bottom left; Michael, bottom center; Tyronne, behind Keith.

    Bruce Jackson was found rooting through his neighbors’ garbage, so weak from starvation that he could not open the Tastykake that the shocked couple had given him out of pity.

    Two weeks later, investigators and neighbors are still trying to make sense of two sharply contrasting realities: four adopted youngsters starving in plain sight and a family that was widely seen as loving and deeply religious.

    The Jacksons are in jail in Camden County, charged with starving and neglecting the 4-foot, 19-year-old Bruce and three other boys adopted from the New Jersey foster care system — Michael, 9, Tyronne, 10, and Keith, 14 — so seriously that none of them weighed more than 50 pounds when they were found by the police.

    Bruce, who was adopted eight years ago, when he was 11, was taken from his biological family because they were also starving him, according to case files at the Division of Youth and Family Services. At the time, he suffered from medical ailments caused by the lack of food.

    Still, though the children were homeschooled, they were not hidden away. The parents drove the 30 miles from their home here to the Come Alive New Testament Church in Medford every Sunday.

    To Pastor Thomas and the congregation, the abuse allegations are impossible to fit with the image of the struggling family that always had a small donation for the collection plate when it came around but needed help from the church to pay for its electricity and rent.

    “I have told many people that I have never seen that many kids together be so good. I never saw them fighting, and I never saw them arguing, and I said, ‘Wow, every family should be like that.’ “

    Ed Cotton, the director of the Division of Youth and Family Services, met with Bruce Jackson on Sunday at the hospital where he is being treated and was given a very different picture of his life than the pastor did.

    Mr. Cotton said that it did not appear that Bruce Jackson had any friends. “I asked him whether he went to church or not. He said that he was not allowed to go because he was bad — because he liked TV earlier in life, one of his big punishments was that he was made to sit in front of the TV for hours with it off. Stuff that doesn’t make sense.”

    Mr. Cotton said the children may not have understood that they were being mistreated.

    “I think these kids were convinced by the foster parents that they had eating disorders,” he said.

    Mr. Cotton continued, “These are bright kids, they read well, they’re smart, they’re polite, and I think they’re realizing what happened was not anywhere near the norm.”

    Chief Thomas J. Garrity Jr. of the Collingswood Police Department said Monday that Bruce emptied a box of cereal after he arrived at the station.

    He was photographed holding the empty box, and clutching a stuffed tiger that is kept on hand to comfort young abused children.

    Bruce, the one mentioned at the end of the article, is 19.

    UPDATED: Here is a good article on the GOP’s plans to use gay marriage as a major issue in the 2004 elections.

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  • Lea DeLaria in Beckett?

    That’s an odd bit of casting. Worth Street Theatre is going to present Lea DeLaria as Winnie in Beckett’s “Happy Days.”

    For other Beckett, I highly recommend seeing Beckett/Albee with Marian Seldes and Brian Murray. For discount tickets, use this link, or call 212-947-8844 and mention code: BATMC79.

    Also, the BBC did a very interesting set of films of Beckett works, including the three monologues in Beckett/Albee.

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  • Decadence

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    Yes, I actually saw a skinny little guy wearing these $300 Gucci sneakers at my gym yesterday, talking on his cell phone while “working out”.

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  • Daniel Reich Gallery

    Daniel Reich finally has a web site!

    On a somewhat unrelated note, Christina Mazzalupo has updated her web site. Check out the recent collages.

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  • Art To See

    I’m still busy coding, so here are some art recommendations:

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    Tom Sanford
    The Defosition, 2002
    Oil and acrylic on panel
    60” × 80”

    Tom Sanford at 31 Grand in Williamsburg. He has a weblog called thug4life.org dedicated to his transformation to Tupac, but it seems a bit messed up at the moment. We started following him after picking up a work on paper by him at a benefit for Groundswell.

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    Paul Mullins
    Sugar (Hood Up)
    acrylic on panel
    48” × 48”

    Paul Mullins at lyonswier – think Lucien Freud meets Nascar. Really brilliant painting technique.

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    Chris Ballantyne
    Untitled (Split Double), 2003
    acrylic and ink on paper
    12 × 16”

    Chris Ballantyne at DCKT Contemporary – beautiful suburban/landscapish show recommended to me by Andrew LaVallee.

    Joe Ovelman’s wall piece (search my site for other discussions of his work) at Apartment 5BE Gallery. Also, I have a gallery of one of his outside wall installations.

    The inaugural exhibition at a new new media-oriented gallery called Bryce Wolkowitz is definitely worth a visit. Here is a work by John F. Simon made from an Apple Titanium PowerBook:

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    aLife
    Software, Apple G4 Titanium Powerbook, Acrylic Plastic
    2003
    21 × 17 × 3.5 inches

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