Thursday, August 10, 2017

Walls on the way out

I took a motorcycle trip to Sarasota the other weekend. I got sunburned on the way down and rode through thunderstorms on the way back up. While in Sarasota I visited Angie and her boyfriend, and Aaron Persh and some other friends too. I retrieved a canvas from the school storage racks, which had been a monkey on my back for a little while. The canvas has a sketch of a nude model I'd been working with while at Ringling. 

I'm working on this big wall at Fancy's Pets in Crystal River. It's about eighty feet long, by twelve high, with a deep stucco textured surface. The wall is going well. It's subtly stylized and it's been a kind of long term relationship, with big corrections, and moments of vivid inspiration. All in all I'm trying to keep my head on about it. Recently I emailed a picture of it to Shaun Thurston for critique, and he obliged with a long phone call, while I stood in front of the wall, and we talked about the painting and physics (light) and life. This is what creative community and friendship are all about. 

I began working on Fancy's wall at different times of the day, and experienced different people (who get off work at a certain time, etc. ) coming to talk to me. Captain Tim came up to me and said I was his guy for a mural that he wanted on his building at Pete's Pier. On his suggestion I drew up a wall and bit an Al Parker illustration, pretty directly. I put in a day's work on it today. My dad bought the paint for it. My family has been really great about supporting my passion. The paint helped to hone in on the palette in efficient time. Captain Tim's giving me 200 dollars for the wall. The plan is to wrap it up tomorrow.

I've been talking with the City of Crystal River to do a mural in city hall. When I sat down for a meeting initially, I told them that I as basically doing Fancy's for the cost of paint, and they wanted that too. I asked if they wanted to pay me, and Molly (really, it was just a meeting with Molly) gave the empty promise of exposure, and I kind of said well I don't really need the wall. And then I kind of entertained the idea and kind-of rolled and apologized for being a diva, and said yeah, it could work. So I've been working on that sketch, and contacted a biologist for consultations regarding native flora and fauna, and have gone through revisions, and the city payed my way in to Three Sisters Springs Park for research, and it's been pretty good and I have a design in development. Now that I have a decent sketch, and also now that I've got two distinct paying exterior walls, I went back to the city and asked Molly for 200 dollars to do this mural, and otherwise I don't feel very motivated to do it. So I'm waiting on a call from them. I'm sitting on a good design, so I'm happy and sitting pretty. 

That's it. Shaun pitched a wall in October for a mural festival in Jacksonville, to which I jumped. I think I'll have a mural portfolio I can stand by for a little while pretty soon. I'm twenty-seven years old now. 


Friday, August 4, 2017

Motorcycle Trip

Plan has gone not terribly, but not operating at a ten. A friend of mine quotes some study (he read it in a book about quitting smoking) that stating intention offsets motivation to preform the task. That’s not written too clearly, but I guess some relief occurs, or sense of accomplishment by stating, you get the idea. 

I’m very sore now. I’ve been sore for a week, escalating due to my engagements. Habitat for humanity had me erecting interior frames, which was harder work than I was used to I guess. Since, I’ve been waking later, missing the most recent Habitat shift entirely. The work on the wall has been equal in hours per session, but it seems the nature of the work has changed, as I am fatigued. I like the feeling somewhat. It helps to justify the downtime as healing time. After I overslept for my Habitat shift, I geared up for a motorcycle trip down to Sarasota, to close loose ends. These included picking up my big sketch on canvas of a model. I called Ringling campus police that let me into Bayou103, where I ripped it off its eight by five foot support, folded it up, and got off campus for the last time in likely a long time. Another thing I went down for was to see Angie before she headed off to New York for a few weeks before her next semester starts up again at Ringling. Turns out, her boyfriend (whom I like), also had plans of spending (as much as possible) time with her before she left. Angie and I got some conversation in anyhow. 

I’ve kept to meditating, but after the Sarasota trip, I feel that the drive is gone. The motorcycle trip down there I left my arms bare to the sun, and got a good red bake on my forearms. I didn’t eat much while in Sarasota. On the trip back there were scattered thunderstorms, for which I took breaks, and made rain predictions and risky stretches on wet roads. I took a three hour break half way through. I controlled my breathing and kept an eagle eye. In total the trip back took eight hours. When I got home, the parents were gone somewhere, and the house was staged, and lit, and outside there was a heavy fog and cold light. I rolled a joint. 

That motorcycle trip had me questioning the existence of a higher power afterward, and again, my meditation habit has been in question of late (not that it would reason to be). Then I saw some video with Elon Musk suggesting our likelihood of being actually in a simulation, and also the existence of a higher power as one of two-hundred billion versions of ourselves that is in control of the simulation. I entertained that the motorcycle trip was carried out by the god version of myself; the in-control-one-in-two-hundred-billion self. I had a one in two hundred billion experience. 

Yesterday I painted on the wall. The business owner came to our house directly and asked me to change the design of the wall. This was after three design meetings, with approvals all along the way. Now, I’m kind of free-painting on the wall, painting blind. Today, I went to the wall and felt too pooped to start. I’m taking the weekend, and we’ll see what comes. I need to think about the painting in a wholistic sense as it comes to a close. I’m getting closed to finishing, maybe. 


I’ve got a couple offers on the table for other mural projects. I won’t go into details, but it would be special circumstances indeed to take on more mural projects at the moment. 

I'd dropped off four glass sculptures with Debbie at the local glass studio before setting down to Sarasota, and she fired two in my absence. They did not turn out. Whereas my experience in school and my understanding from reading stated a fourty-hour kiln cycle, Debbie tried to get away with a four hour cycle, keeping the glass at 1500degrees for ten minutes, rather than two hours, with relative abbreviations throughout. Luckily, she chose a good couple to experiment on, and I'll be shopping around for a kiln-relationship in Philadelphia tentatively. I bought some plaster-silica mix from her, and said goodbye for now. The idea now is to make a bunch of molds, and weigh out my glass, to take to Philly to try to get a glass caster's kiln to use. 

Also before Sarasota, I went diving in Three Sister's Springs, for reference videos to assist with the design of a mural for City Hall's Visitor's Center. The dive was like the motorcycle trip- cold, wet, eerie, with an acute earthy deathy quality. The springs were nice and scenic, however without sun on that day, the swim out to it in the river with tannic black water, was unsettling, and again, the cold. 

That's it. Looking at the calendar, it's more about wrapping up here in Crystal River than spreading out. Let's see if I keep my cool. Who am I talking to?- this could be a simulation. . . 

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Projects

I'll write for a few minutes, before my tinder-window opens up again. I've developed some vices which are neither here nor there. Talking to strangers on tinder has been a mostly positive experience.

I'm living with my parents still, to move at the end of August tentatively. After that trip up north something happened, and I feel more mature.

I've taken to meditating, twice a day twenty minutes in the morning and twenty in the evening. It's helped me calm down for one thing.

I got used to repairing books at the library- not sure if I documented that yet; I took a volunteer position at the library and repaired books three mornings a week for a while. This supplemented my studio practice at the parent's house. That worked for a little while, but once I got the hang of it and understood it to my satisfaction, I terminated.

I'd been doing footwork to get a mural going on this big wall in town on the side of a pet store. It's the best wall in town. It's got a heavy stucco texture, north-facing, on the busiest highway where residents and tourists alike can see it! I'm honored to be on it now. I think I'd floated the idea before, but this time I called the owner's cell phone, and got it with an open account at the paint store.

I signed up with Habitat for Humanity and started doing construction on Tuesday mornings. I've learned a lot about how houses are built, and have been taken underwing of the professional contractors on site because of my competencey.

I'm working also on glass sculptures for casting. I have several molds ready and the glass weighed out, just shopping around for a kiln-buddy that's ready to fire them. I have a meeting tomorrow with Debbie, downtown and she says if I'm willing to risk my pieces, she's willing to offer her kiln, no guarantees. Fair deal.

I have a tinder date coming up next weekend. Hope I don't jinx it. We're going to Devils Den for a morning dive.

City of Crystal River took notice of me painting the big pet store wall, and called me (after I'd been trying to reach them to get a wall for a little while, they had my phone number). They want something done in the visitor's center, so I have early morning plans tomorrow to go dive the Three Sisters Springs, to gather reference video for the design of the job.

There was a big 'Cousins Weekend' event here which is an annual family gathering, where extended family is invited and welcome to come and spend time together. The moms and dads like it because it's like a built in daycare party thing, and all of the food and accommodations are taken care of by my parents. It's nice to see that they can offer these things so humbly in their lives. I enjoyed time with the extended family.

That's most of it. I want to go down to Sarasota kind of vaguely. I need to pick up this big canvas of a nude girl that I was working with, to bring up to philly maybe so I can chip away on it there. It's a long term project I'd say, and at this point the setting is non-replicatable, so it will go from photo and memory. What's good about this is I can apply the knowledge I have yet to learn to it, once I have learned it (how stagnant is that). Also, there's a time frame, as Angie will soon leave Sarasota for New York, and it would be the last time to see her in a long while, and there's a painting that I have that's hers in spirit, bc I saw how she looked at it when she looked at it. Maybe Tuesday after Habitat.

Cheers.

Friday, July 28, 2017

PHL, NYC, BOS


I get on a plane and fly to Philadelphia. I arrive in the evening. Shops are closing and I ask some yuppies closing a clothing brand store if they know where the Apple Hostel is- just down the street. I check in and they have these covers on the bedsheets called ‘The Bedbug Solution’. I’d slept in a bedbug hotel in Sarasota not too long ago- cheap room, my third time staying there. 

I came to Philadelphia to see the show in the PAFA museum. It’s an annual show of student work, juniors and seniors, and MFA students too. The school guts the museum and hangs student paintings, and they’re all for sale. On opening night this year, over $300,000 of student paintings were sold. As a tentative fall student, I felt strongly that I should see it. 

The desk man at the hostel complimented my style, both before and after I got a substantial hair cut, and new glasses (old glasses hinge broke). I felt a little silly in front of him since he told me that, to the point where I may avoid returning to this hostel. I realize this is irrational. 

In my rucksack were too many books, and too many clothes. I read through Lessing’s Lacoön, and Doctorow’s Walkaways and gave the Lessing book to a desk-guy at the hostel who studied German history, and the Doctorow to a store called The Book Trader in exchange for credit. 
I brought my skateboard, and between that and the stuffed backpack I felt like a schlepper. I bought a smaller book called Contradictionary, and a Chomsky book called Who Rules the World. I read Contradictionary. Chomsky is, well, I’ve read him and it’s really a lot to take in- not complaining, just I haven’t finished it yet. Shouldn’t have bought that book. 

I went to the Museum, and contacted a friend too, a PAFA alum. I saw the majority of the work alone, and was throughout very pleased that I made the trip up. Large scale paintings done well. I wrote each name of the artists in the show in pencil in my notebook, too look up later. My friend Darryl met up with me at the museum and we took a lap around so he could speak personally about some of the paintings. He was working at the museum as a docent basically, though his title is different. He’s interested in going to grad school at the New York Academy, while continuing to live and work in Philly.
I think I stayed in Philly for four days. I took long skateboard rides, though not as heroic as on my former trip up in the spring. I went to the Jewish Museum and learned a bit of history of Jews in America, which wasn’t the spot of Jewish history I was most hungry for, but it was interesting nonetheless. 

Some walks at night, some beers. I didn’t contact Philly residents that I knew, or my to-be roommate. I became involved with a restricted diet, and the walks were a part of that feeling my body experience. On some evening, an art walk was in order in Old Town Philly, and I chatted it up with a couple of girls who’d set up in front of the Apple Hostel. One was Madi, and I can't recall her roommates name, but she had a dislike for me. Madi and I talked about painting for a while, and the girls invited me to their apartment across town to meet some friends. The friends didn’t show up, but Madi and her two roommates and I enjoyed some good conversation. 
It was time to go. I booked a room on airBNB in Brooklyn, and set out to catch a bus to NYC. I entered a Chinatown (Philly) park where there was a great big lantern festival going on. I sat at a bench and re-organized my things. I went from a backpack to a backpack and a tote bag, books in one and clothes in the other. I was not yet ready to commit to throwing anything away, but need be, the tote bag was all ready for the bin. Just outside of the park was a bus, heading to New York thirty minutes hence. I paid $8 and rode up, arriving in Chinatown (NYC) in the late afternoon. I set out to find the New Museum, but became confused, and made my way to my favorite restaurant, where I got an order of red bean smoothie and straw mushrooms, sitting in my regular spot in the front by the register on the north side of the interior. I’d made a mistake in booking the Brooklyn room, and I had no place to stay on this night. I made arrangements to stay up on 161st street. I think I went to the theater on West 4th street, dropping off my tote bag of clothes (a shirt from a punk band, and a pair of slacks that I got from a thrift store for 20 cents while on a motorcycle trip to Sarasota after being stung by a bee up on my underwear line in my shorts). I saw this movie called Band Aid, featuring Fred Armisen. The film was written and starred by this brilliant woman. Jewish woman. I became very involved with the movie. Her, Zoe Lister-Jones, writing illuminated minutiae built into relationships, and gender dynamics, and Jewish culture and history. Fred Armisen was a hoot, playing his cast-type. I felt like a new person leaving the theater. I did not expect such profundity from such an unassuming plot. When I got out of the theater, I skated uptown with traffic. I found some nice smooth roads. It’s incredible that in Manhattan you get these little pockets of traffic, and sometimes there are empty longitudes that allow for a twenty block stretch to be traversed with almost zero cars. It was great to be riding again. I probably made it up to 14th before cutting west to ride on that smooth jogging trail that goes for miles up Manhattan. I was warmed up, and set to ride to my hostel for the night, which I did- about one-hundred and eighty blocks north along that trail as the sun set. 
The hostel was plush and $86. The other hostel in New York was in Brooklyn, (where I have two murals riding) and was booked up. It usually runs half this price. Who is this ‘hostel’ designed for? Hostel in this context gives you a built-in cafe, and an entertainment room with a big tv- it’s too much. I finished this other book I was carrying called Half World, in which a biologist proposes to preserve half of the planet’s surface to nature without human interference. It was a very unsatisfying book, and far from a concise thought. 

I took a train to my new residence in a spot in Brooklyn off the 4 train way down Eastern Parkway somewhere probably near the big cemetery. Nice spot. African neighbors. My host/roommate was clearly running his four-bedroom like a mini hotel/ flop house and when I said hi, he did not reply. I got the message right away. He played piano very beautifully, and had this little crested dog. He’d practice behind the closed door of his room with that little dog for hours every night, and in the early afternoons pack the dog into a little carrier and head out, presumably to some piano gig or maybe some intense piano school, or to give in-home lessons. In the basement room were two kiwi graphic designers, who’d been evicted in the middle of the night by their landlord on the pretense that he’d discovered he could be charging twice the amount for their apartment, and in the fourth room was an effeminate guy who had a standard poodle puppy, and a job doing shoe displays at a department store. I didn’t know what that guy was going to do with himself. He had a lot on his plate. I could hear him watching tv mostly. 


I’d come to New York on a kind of spirit quest thing. About a year ago I’d (with some intoxication) offered to help put my friend through school to the tune of one year. We’d kept in touch and I’d tread lightly about the subject, but kept it in my mind, as my offer was a kind of timidly approached commitment to her, and to my allocating funds, and all this stuff. I sought advice from a friend who said ‘don’t’, and became involved mentally in how this might impact our friendship. I found something in the ‘Contradictionary’ book about charity, which it defines as two-faced gift which serves only to reinforce pre-existing power constructs, while indebting the receiver socially and fiscally. A burden, something like that. That clarified it for me, and I knew beforehand that Madeline was uncomfortable about a possible arrangement. So my long walks and skateboard rides, and reading and movie choices, at least on this trip had a direct relationship to Madeline and this tentative decision. I thought maybe I’d go to the school that she was to attend and write a check. I’d called my CPA in advance to understand tax implications. 

I let Madeline know I was in town, and in no hurry. I went to the Brooklyn Public Library two days in a row, going to the third floor and going through a stack of books on American Impressionism, and American Western Paintings. I saw that many of these paintings were housed in Museums in Boston. I got the idea to go to Boston. Madeline contacted me while I was in the BPL and we agreed to meet up at the Metropolitan Museum, where I gave her the Contradictionary book as a gift. It was wonderful seeing her. I actually feel very comfortable around her. It’s a great friendship, complimented by her interesting painting and art. We saw the Thomas Hart Benton New School mural, now installed at the Met. We paused in front of a Rockwell painting. We ogled in a room full of Tiepolo roughs. After the museum, I rode the subway with her back to her house in Queens, and invited in, we went through some box wine talking about artists and painting and art, and schools, and plans. It was very sweet, and I said goodbye just before the sun went down and drunkenly tried to ride back to my neighborhood on my skateboard, to which there was no issue save my sense of direction. I ended up taking a train back after miles of guesswork and arrived home after midnight. 

Other great hints in New York, quickly, I saw this jazz band in Bryant Park where the drummer had his seat chained to his bass drum so it wouldn’t run away. That was a big epiphany to me, of course! I went to an O'keeffe show at the Brooklyn Museum which was brilliant. I’d gotten into O'keeffe in the Library at Ringling, having gone through her artist raisones. I felt that I didn’t need to see the paint as much as in other shows. The images seemed to me to read like pictures, I saw the paintings for themselves, without ‘tricks’. She made it happen. The show included some of her outfits, handmade and very clever. I saw these paintings in the New Museum by Lynette Yiakom-Boakye which opened my eyes to contemporary painting and portraiture in that they were all fictitious sitters. Further, the paintings hung low to the floor and gave an intimate feel to the large exhibition room, which had dark burgundy walls if I recall. Also in that museum were a series of installations and a video piece by Kaari Upson in which she ‘plays/embodies’ a hyper-concerned new home parouser, yelling ‘House-hole! House-hole House-hole! House-hole House-hole!’, pointing at electrical sockets and doorknobs, and anything else that compromises the integrity of materials such as drywall in their unaltered manufactured form. As a kid who’s moved a number of times, and ‘shopped’ for houses with my parents, her character struck a chord with me as she, crawled into otherwise neglected spaces, and addressed her feelings with great sensitivity like a child-nagg-prodigy. How embarrassing to shop for a house. 

I walked Eastern Parkway, and there’s a ton of Jews at this one section. One day a Jewish younger man stops me and asks if I’m Jewish, and I say no, (though I felt equally justified in saying, well, yes, truly), and I’m stuck there, because I have this respect and hunger for the knowledge of their history, and he decides to go through a little bit of law with me, mentioning the laws for the gentiles, including that an animal is not to be eaten if it is not yet dead, and over the rim of his glasses he looks at me and clarifies, ‘Lobster, because you boil them alive, that’s no good’, and I got it- no questions. I said thanks. 
Long walks. Healing. The feel of traveling. Alone with love. Control and lackthereof made intimate. 
My mom called and wanted to get me a present for my birthday- a computer. I worried about the e-waste. She said that she wanted to bless me, and why wouldn’t I let her bless me, and I thought about the relativity of moral reasoning, or that some one’s one may not apply to another’s. I accepted the gift. I now have an ipad. It’s kind of nice. My reading and my painting have both gone down since, I imagine, but it’s mostly a case of different not better or worse. I hope I can sell this thing and get some money from it before the technology outdates itself. I went through the old meat packing district and saw a couple handfuls of galleries, including Hauser and Wirth, where I bought a book on Picabia and a book of collected essays from Philip Guston, which I went through most of so far. I visited a friend Elijah in his apartment, and gave him the Picabia book as a half-loan. I bought a ticket to Boston, checked out of Brooklyn, and took a bus four hours North, after swinging by the Whitney to see the Biennial show, where I saw works by Dana Schultz, Frances Stark, Ulrike Müller, Celeste Dupuy-Spencer, and a section of Sarah Hughes paintings that caught me of guard in a great way! Now THIS is one great solution to contemporary painting. That’s about the height of praise for me. So in Boston, I’m pretty immediately lost. I realize I’ve been to this train terminal before; once on my way up to Portland, Maine. I got on an in-town train and found my hostel, a nice place, after a number of wrong turns and help from some frat boys with beers and an ipad, and then a couple with beers and a smartphone, and then finally a late-evening meter-cop. I took a walk. I think I broke my fasting regimen that night, by going to this dumpling house, where I ordered one thing, and instead two things came out of the kitchen. I thought it strange, but since I don’t speak Vietnamese, I figured either they got the order wrong, or I made a mistake. Taking it in stride, I ate what was presented to me. Just thereafter, a head-guy came over and lifted the top of my serving dish off to see that I’d eaten the food, and gave me a look, then reprimanded my server. It was clear to me that I’d eaten someone else’s order at that point. The dishes were taken back into the kitchen and my correct order was brought to me. Seeing that I hadn’t eaten in days practically, I ate that too, and paid a bill that accounted for two-not-three dishes, a happy middle. I returned to that restaurant a few times thereafter, and was recognized with a smile and a wink each successive time. 

In Boston, I had noting in particular to do, except look for these paintings- a cross section of early American works and impressionist works. I think I spent four days there. I saw the Harvard Art Museums first, which had a great German expressionist collection, and kind of like a Metropolitan Museum breadth of other works. The Scheeler painting was out in some other museum at the time, which was a disappointment I didn’t know to expect until I arrived and saw the painting in the brochure. I went then to the MFABoston, which is a giant museum, akin to the DIA in Michigan. There was a show called Matisse’s Studio, which had Matisse’s paintings hung next to the actual objects depicted. This trick was carried on also in the Museums permanent collection room where big Sergeants hung. It was very enlightening to see the vases and chairs, and pots, and all in reality, and how the artists went about portraying them. Very sobering. This trip, seeing the Matisse show reminded me of seeing the Aarken and the Louisiana Museums in Denmark, where I did not think I would come across Hirsts et al, or that time in Basel, Switzerland where I saw that Picasso’s Absinthe Drinker painting, which inspired me so greatly. Blind discovery. I had a cappuccino at the museum cafe, and went in for another round of looking at paintings. There was no shortage of old white guy portraiture, and maybe even worse, the seemingly obligatory Wiley paintings. I saw that painting Watson and the Shark, which I’ve always thought of as a clumsy painting, but I read something about it being revolutionary in its depiction of an ‘ordinary’, (non high-echelon) current event, bridging a gap, though I find it hard to believe it was the first, Goya comes to mind, and Velasquez and his handicapped children. 
I left the museum having made a good dent in Boston’s big art cemeteries. The Contemporary Museum was open late that night, so I made it a big day, and made a pilgrimage there. All of the employees at the contemporary were young and cute, which I tried to handle cooly. Turns out, they’re mostly students of an affiliated art school. The museum was full of complicated installations and McContemporary monuments. I saw this film called Nonoseknows, by Mika Rottenburg, which juxtaposed a fictional and fantastical narrative with industrial production of pearls. A woman sits in an office, clocking in to smell flowers, which cause her physical distress and in turn she sneezes out plates of spaghetti and related foods. So, her job seems surreal and harmful and meaningless, Also there, in the film, connected by a string through the floor of the woman's office, on the other side of the world (flipped camera) a young girl turns a wheel, at a table where others sit, introducing pearl production-inducing irritants into living bivalves. The metaphors are drawn between consumption and destruction, dissolution and arbitrariness. Great film-piece. There were a couple of clever paintings there by some woman. A painting from the eighties I recall. There was a big retrospective of this guy’s work, I forgot his name. It asked a lot of the viewer in its pretense only. I found it hard to enjoy on a topical level, and harder to decode. It reminded me of Anslem Kiefer at times. I stood in front of this big plate of cooper with radial scratches surrounding a hole-pattern (esoteric reference to the floor-board air holes from a southern church in the Underground Railroad) in the upper right corner. “What does this mean?”, asked our docent. I was hard-pressed to answer, but I played off of another participants suggestion that the sun pattern was uplifting, countering with the fact that the scratch pattern seemed to me to lead towards to hole pattern, while stopping short, which to me spoke to a task undone, and left me feeling sad, to which she then agreed with me. God’s eye view, we were standing in front of basically a plate of cooper, very slightly modified by a conceptual artist. 

Next day I went to The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. 
I’d heard of this museum before, I think from looking at Sergeant paintings, as she had a lot of those. The paintings were hung in a salon style. Let’s back up. Isabella Stewart Gardner came from big money, married into big money, made her own money, and then inherited a lot of money. She collected original manuscripts and paintings, and fine furnishings also. I was there to see the paintings, which were secondary to the ‘museumness’ of the place. It was her home. Perhaps I had the wrong mindset. The paintings weren’t particularly lit. And I took them in as collection items in their housing place rather than, I don't know, conceptual statements, or particular narratives. More so the statements. I had a tea in the cafe and wrote into my notebook which I bought from a street artist in Philly for seven bucks. Ironically, it says ‘one cannot both feast and become rich’, pretty loaded for a seven dollar notebook. I drank this tea, my waiter was painfully gayish and I became unfortunately fixated on this happy couple outside in the garden, having their meal. Next to my table was a mid-thirties woman, totally bitching about her friends, to her parents chagrin and cringing. It was difficult to stay cool. Or focused. What was there to focus on? My mind began to talk to itself and a familiar ghost sat with me at the table. I got out of there, and not long after, got out of Boston. I’d frequented this place called Bukowski’s, where I got a soup left beers a couple nights. Once, I went in and after the first, I’d developed this narrative about my beautiful server, and when she asked me if I would like another drink, defeated, I said no like the world was ending, and left. I left Boston maybe the next day. I found this cheap flight, because I had a credit on my account from delta, who’d short-notice (at the gate) cancelled a flight due to weather in December, so I flew back to Sarasota, Florida for sixty bucks. 





Thursday, June 15, 2017

PC, Tlh, JAX

I left this big one for later, this blog post. It might be fun, let's see if I can get a swing going. I cut my left index finger with a knife today, so that's a lot of what I'm focusing on at the moment. Really stupid cut. I was cutting through a sausage link with my finger on the other side. It was a reckless mistake. Anyway, so let's get on with it: 

From Panama City I left on a Greyhound bus for Tallahassee. Panama City was becoming claustrophobic and I felt that there was no reason I should be there. More so, I wanted to get to Philadelphia for this PAFA spring semester show where the school guts the contemporary museum to hang student works, all of which are for sale. Apparently $300,000 of work was sold on opening night, so I felt inclined to see this thing. What's more, it was a great way to step outside of pomp which might have come from spending my birthday with my collected family. I asked for no gifts, etc. I thought about how I thought about how Jahovahs Witnesses think about birthdays- not as a cause for celebration, but as an opened ape rather for an earth experience. I thought to put some weight on it. So I bought a plane ticket and a bus ticket and was off. I missed the morning bus out of Panama City, and returned three hours early for the afternoon bus to make sure I wouldn't repeat the mistake. My mom drove me there in her Tesela car. I find it funny and embarrassing pulling up to a greyhound station in a 100K+ car with falcon wing doors. I try to swallow my pride when those doors go up and just think, 'that's what those do and isn't that unique'. In the bus station, a quiet group was activated by this one really loud-mouth girl from Miami. I left while she took a speaker-phone video call with her infant relatives. I went outside to read a little bit of a book. I don't know which. I read Lessing's Lacoön, Nathan, and some play with a woman's name, Minna Von Barheim? I was on to something else, can't recall (edit: Doctorow's, Walkaway) I went back in and the phone conversation had ceased. She'd moved on to engaging the room, and that wasn't the worst. It became kind of nice- entertaining at least. There was a big black prison guard who was there to make shire this newly freed inmate got onto the bus (inmate looked like he was ready to slit some throats tbh), the hypocritical conservative know-it-all, and this funny Caribbean black guy who seemed super shy but was adamant about saying, 'you don't know, I can get crazy', with his baby face. He was this anomaly. He'd taken a trip from Orlando to Panama City for the three-day (Memorial Day) weekend, and inquiring about the cab ride to the beach it was stated that it would cost him 30$, to which he asked whether it was worth it or not, and the cab driver said 'not really', and our friend took him at face value and said, "well, take me to the greyhound station, I'm going back home". When this story came out of him, the room was think with social what-the-fucks. There was this other younger gentleman too, who'd been invited by his girlfriends family to come stay wt their beach condo. The girlfriend ended up hooking up with some other guy, and I guess our friend here at the greyhound station decided to cut his losses and leave. Not too much more to go into. The old conservative man would not stop talking and gave me a terrible impression of what old age could be like. The Miami loud-mouth asked everyone's zodiac signs, to which she said I need to have my own chart altogether, and I felt she was right about that. 

Tallahassee-wise, I hadn't orchestrated much, but put a post on Facebook that I was coming through, to no avail. I went straight to Allsaints Cafe and got a coffee. I'd already reduced my diet a couple days prior, in Panama City, as I'd been overeating. I got a coffee and a bagel after some time, and took a walk. I was considering which hotel I would end up staying in, and that alone feeling rolled in like I was on the road. A friend named Heather and I met eyes at some point, in this parking lot of a bar, and there was a little hip-jig thing that went on, as we're both flakes I think, and maybe both open but don't want to be hurt, or something, maybe both utterly cordial, and wanting to be respectful of each other's time. I don't know. I was happy to see Heather. She was someone whom I met at a very critical and raw time in my life, whereupon I'd just made the switch from 'Robbie', to Kemeys, and I also fell-in with this really loving and supportive group, complete with cuddle piles and talk about your feelings sessions. She'd just moved back, and also in the group was a pretty boy guy who I had a deep bond with, and this woman who I thought was god, and other comers and goers whom I thought the world of. I wanted to talk to Heather more, was a big takeaway from those times. 

Here, in Tallahassee, she was going to get a drink or two at the bar, and asked if I wanted to join, and I didn't pass it up. We both got two. After a bit she asked where I was staying. I said some motel, I hadn't decided, and she offered her bed. She contacted her roommate who said it was cool, and we both took off from there to go 'check in' so to speak. I got acquainted, met the roommate, and he and I agreed that the door would be unlocked at around midnight, when I was planned to come in for the night. From there Heather was headed to her partner's house, and she gave me a ride to a house show I'd heard of from the barista at the coffee place. I saw a touring band from Chicago, and met a few graffiti nerds that I'd not become acquainted with. They seemed nice enough, and a little absorbed with being cool, even though I tried to roll out the red carpet out for them a little bit. A friend of mine who'd played the show gave me a ride therefrom to a friend's house, where I met up with Cosby- a good old art friend. He's younger, but I look up to him in more way than just his stature. I've mentioned him before- he's a great guy. We drank as per usual at his cousin's house and Cosby mentioned driving me to Jacksonville the next day, and also alluded to going to paint some graffiti at the skatepark- like old times. So, I agreed naturally. I 'finished' my piece really quick because this cinderella was due to Tuten into a pumpkin, and I had to get back to my hosts house, so I spilt and Cosby ended up going over a third of my piece with his last letter- just like old times. I had a good rest at heather's house. I called Cosby in the morning, and he was really looking forward to driving me to Jacksonville. I cancelled my car reservation and hung out at Allsaints to wait for Cosby to come scoop me up. I bought him lunch and gas, and we were on our way. 


The trip to Jacksonville was filled with interesting conversation between Cosby and I. Turns out, he's a Taurus, which made a lot of sense when I found that out. I'd been getting along with Tauruses swimmingly of late. I felt like our friendship grew at that moment.Arriving in Jacksonville, I phoned Shaun- another art-friend, whom I'd helped install large murals with. Cosby and I met him at a cafe. Cosby had recently become a bonafide professional artist, specializing in murals, so he and Shaun had a lot to talk about. I was very happy  to sit back and let them have this time. Cosby's so low key, or something, that somehow I get opportunities that seem custom-designed for him. Then again, same can be said about some of the opportunities that come his way. He's often on projects that I thought I would've been involved with years ago, but have yet to come in fact. Cosby is strong in following through and applying himself- he's grounded. Cosby splits and goes back to Tallahassee, Shaun and I kick it. He finishes up some paperwork for a mural, and says I came at a perfect time, and that he wants to go get drunk. He says this in a silly way, and we both understanding what our drinking together looks like. I want to do something with the night, so we decide on a long walk to the bar, which was great through the neighborhoods of Jacksonville's Riverside, 30's bungalows abound, sun setting, talking philosophy a bit, getting thirsty. I suggested this ninny-bar, and it was a nice spot- up on a roof, ten dollar cocktails. 

I got something called Rosy Slipper or something, and he got like a Rusty Boot or something. We drank those, got tipsy, and moved on, drank more liquor, then beer, then more beer, then wine I think, and then more beer. It was a great night. All in all Shaun and I had each other, which gave us a sense of freedom to talk around to and with others. We got an Uber ride back to his place, and I guess we were taking really deep, and he made note that the journey to consciousness may well be the process of convincing oneself that the space in between one and another is real. Something like that, and I took it in and felt the sensation of leaving my body, and I came-to when my autonomic leg kicked back to catch me from falling backwards. 'I'm drunk', I thought but did not say. The concept was clear. Bedtime right after that. I woke in the morning feeling well. Hell. I ordered an Uber and went to the JAX airport, where I boarded a flight to Philadelphia. That's surely enough for one post, for one night. We can both agree that this is for the benefit of my mental health first and foremost. why I need this is another thing altogether. Sometimes I read them. Sometimes other people read them. I hope the writing brings you joy as it does me. I'll pick up where I left off, hopefully writing a little more concisely. Peace.  

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Panama City, bby boy

So I went to Panama City. 

Well, let's rewind. I dropped out of RIngling College in short because I felt a great opportunity to 'sell high'. The first year was an awakening- what a year, oh my god! Soul-mate, perspective drawing, all nighters, bouts of depression and drinking, identity fluxes. Anyway, all of this craziness was about (i.e. around) learning what pictures are made from- it was boot camp, and it helped me chill out a bit, I think. Second year was just tons of painting- lots and lots of painting. Towards the end it digital was spliced in. It's quite an education. Ringling was a blast. I produced so much and was given really awesome opportunities (including a studio in New York for a summer, and a one-night show for a big metal sculpture at the RIngling Museum, and in general great guidance and facilities)- such an awesome school. Whether I know or not how much more there was to learn there is subjective, but I felt like two years was a great run and I found PAFA school to be strong in all of the areas where I questioned myself, and areas of concentration that went into a vague unaddressed space at RIngling. Ever a rolling stone (and as a kind of policy such), I'll move to Philadelphia in late July, to continue studying painting. Soul mate might have been overkill, have to hedge my bets a little here.. 

Most recent semester: Spring 2017

I finished up Ringling, not terribly strong- I'd put in so much groundwork at the beginning of the semester that after 'spring break' it was kind of a matter of coasting, and in knowing I'd been accepted into PAFA, a kind of 'senioritis' crept in. I focused on glass casting, as the rest of my work was largely painting and the 3D served as resting space- some breathing room. Also, glass, I could hardly figure out its purpose. Why would one cast something to be clear? (Our glass was clear). I cast a couple caves- like, blocks with interior caverns carved out- developed a technique to do so- a two part mold, and I cast a graffiti piece, which could be improved upon, and I cast a couple landscapes, and a couple figurative little 'bangers', (I'd call them, because they have a 'kick'). The little bangers are two. One is a nude woman on a rock face landscape, four inches by four inches with a one and a half inch relief. The other is half the size and is a lion with a sphere (maybe a head, maybe the head of Hercules), maybe a Neman Lion. These are chunky and bold and have a nice naiive quality. I'm pleased with them and in them I feel satisfied with glass. The others, hell, I might melt them down into better sculptures at my other school tbd. 

So the semester ended and I moved into the back half of my parents house da da da. So my sister is about to pop pregnant in Panama City, so as custom (for our family, this being her second child), we drove north by six hours to see her and be with the family, and the new child etc. I felt a pressure to go, and also a pressure to go to Philadelphia sometime before the third of June when a PAFA senior show would come down- I wanted to see that show. So we're in Panama City (PC) on May 27th, and the baby decides he's ready to come out on the 28th, pop! Hooray, all! So we congratulate, and see the baby, and I feel a kinship with this little baby, being born so near to my birthdate (June 1st), and he having my older sister as a mom, and he having a big sister by two years (just like my sister was older than me by two years) who behaves just like my sister. So, he, will in effect be brought up, I imagine in a similar household, or have many similar experiences perhaps. Anyway, my mom wanted 'to see him' and unswaddled him. I felt crazy at that moment. He's like a little recording device and about two hours into the world, he gets unswaddled. It's whatever. I was reading about this site discovered at Vesuvius under a house of prostitution with many baby bones. Like, a baby grave. It is surmised these were buried alive after unwanted pregnancies went through, and the whores went back to whoring, no shame. 

I read something that I believe followed Kant and Nietzsche, about moral reasoning- that it cannot be rightly projected onto another individual or group etc. So, if you see something as immoral, that's kind of your thing, not anyone else's. This has helped me love others more readily, and love myself more readily, turns out, and kind of rhymes with Jerry Saltz's point that criticism is a from of love. I now among other things feel more (intellectually armed at least) inclined to speak my mind, as hey, I'm just an individual with ambiguously reasoned and acquired morals- ready to change and be changed if so they see fit. Whooh! SO, this baby pops out, and I'm suddenly off the hook and eligible to take this trip to Philadelphia, so I buy a ticket and in a day and a half, I'm out of there on a bus. I'm going to end this blog post, to break up the trip from the other trip. It's all a big trippy trip ain't it?

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Side Note


Here's a post about posting


When I come across older posts, often, I like them better. they're written more from the outside in rather than inside out- and that's a quote I borrow from an introduction to Joost Swarte's English publication, Is That All There Is. Anyway, I hope to get back to a more clean style of writing- less panicky and more straight documentary. I also will make an effort to work in a more straight-forward approach. I am reading a collection of lectures and writings from Philip Guston. He's full of great quotes; well read and ever the oppositionist. His working method is linear. I don't know whether his paintings benefit from it, but he seems like a smart guy for it or in spite of it.

I have a good sense of mental health right now, although I tend to wax poetic for hours every day, wondering about whom I will pair up with, then going back to thinking 'it's no-one, of course!', or thinking of how I will spend my time or make money, and likewise I think, 'no how, for now'.

My mind nears rest through my work, and so in fits and starts I'll continue on. I've got more to write, but I'll continue it on another post. Here's to a bright future of clean documentation.