We struggle through life constantly trying to find each other with plaintive cries of Marco and Polo. We convene for pots of tea and discussions about everything and nothing. Somehow goats found their way into our repartee. There promises to be no logic to our content, just bits and pieces that we find on our travels.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Goat Of The Day

Ok, so this post is pretty much just nicked from my love for you is a stampede of horses, but the goatiness was just too good to refuse. Montreal based artist Brad Woodfin has painted a series of mysterious goats for his latest exhibition: The Returning. The combination of goats AND art together is getting me all jittery with excitement.

Giarra

Le Classique No. 342

Betorz

I'm sitting writing this in a cafe and a stranger just walked past, atonally mumbling some mangled lyrics: Sheep are very boring, goats go to heaven. Too perfect.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Maybe My Essay Would Write Itself If I Put A Bonnet On and Ran Away With A Mysterious Stranger.

Friend

hey

still the pope of procrastination?

18:00Me

hells yes

you?

18:00Friend

no

but i am the duke of doing fuck all



My attempts to study this weekend are a farce. For a little bit more procrastination, here are some pretty book covers I found while looking up dramatic farces in Spanish. 

Ring is in the air!


Well it turns out we all have exam-time backgrounds. I too have adopted a mantra of sorts. Mantra? I don’t think that’s the right term. Anyway, mine reads “This too shall pass”.
The story behind it is quite long and has Jewish/Turkish Origins. Pretty much king Solomon wanted to take his chief minister down a peg or two, so sets him this obscure test; “go find a magic ring that makes sad men happy and happy men sad…my son” I’m pretty sure he would’ve said. “Also, get it done before the night of this specific festival, my son”. Night before the task it due some local jeweller works it out for him. The minister turns up to the festival with a golden ring baring the inscription “This too shall pass”.
The king realises his wealth is fleeting and he will be dust one day.
During exam-time dust is the best I can hope for.

The trick with the saying is getting it down before holidays start…nobody likes a dusty spring.

Friday, October 23, 2009

My Mind is A'Wanderin'


These last few weeks of springtime have had me drunk on blossoms and sunlight winding through bright green leaves. There have been many wide smiles while riding home on my bike in the evening inhaling the heavy scents from sun soaked flowers. 


The end of the university year is drawing near and thusly there are many things to be done involving writing things that sound intelligent and memorising large quantities of information such as exactly what are the functions of third person pluperfect and the subjunctive in indirect speech. 

However, the distraction of life and spring time is making me feel more like this when I try and sit down in front of the books. To quote Bernard Black I can feel a bit of my brain falling away like wet cake.

I have set this as my desktop background and hope that it might just convince me to get something done. You can buy the print from Mary Kate McDevitt here

Friday, October 16, 2009

If I Could I Would Build You A Whole New World Out Of Paper

I love paper. I like drawing on it, writing on it, reading it. I like the way it feels and all the possibilities that can stem from something so bland as a single white square of it. One of the oft-told apocrypha of my childhood is that one christmas I was sitting on Santa's knee and upon being asked what I wanted for christmas, I answered 'A big roll of sticky'. Barbie be damned, all I wanted was a big roll of sticky tape so I could stick pieces of paper together and make things. When I got older I became enchanted with the story of Sadako and have contributed twice to sending one thousand paper cranes to Hiroshima's Children's Peace Monument. 



I started thinking about this all again the other day because I saw a fantastic documentary called Between The Folds. I just love watching passionate people get excited about something wonderfully esoteric that they've adopted as a passion. At first I thought the documentary would just be a series of lovely, slightly crazy people talking about making animals out of paper. However, Vanessa Gould has crafted an elegant documentary that flies through the realms of craft, to art movements and mathematicians exploring the possibilities of paper as a modeling tool. 



I think it is something very special if someone can manage to get me so excited about maths. This guy conveys infectious enthusiasm for the subject:


As well as making incredible mathematical origami 

I also stumbled, quite by accident, upon James Roper, who has incorporated origami into his sculptural installations.

Construct, Into The Fold exhibition 2005-2008

I want to go home, ignore my obligations and fold creases to make something unexpected. I want to go and write letters to someone I haven't talked to in a long time, with a pen and a nice piece of old paper. Go home and make a cup of tea and curl up and inhale the smell of old book pages.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Goat Of The Day


This here drawing comes courtesy of my lovely friend, the divine Miss Sophie Hopmeier. She originally passed this goat with a note of enigma in his eyes for publication in BLOCK journal. It floated somewhere near the surface of my memory recently and I new it had to reappear for some I Know My Goat love. Thank you Miss Hopmeier. 

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

The Best Things (live) Under The Sea

.
Kraken - Lawrence Yang

Well hello there! And thanks to Marco and Polo for letting me guest blog. You can normally find me over at A Whistle and a Milkshake, a food and music blog that doesn't, unfortunately, accommodate my other great love - sea creatures.

I am absolutely, and shamefully, oblivious to the goings on of most of the world. More specifically, the parts of the world that aren’t covered in water. Quiz me about the economy and you’ll meet a blank face. But if you ever need anecdotes about octopuses, I’m your girl.

If films such as Finding Nemo, Ponyo or the much underrated Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus have taught us anything, it’s that the underwater world is pretty cool, and it’s one that I’ve always loved. While most people check the ABC or SMH for their daily updates, I’m afraid to say that my news site of choice is www.deepseanews.com . And try as I might, I just can’t muster the same enthusiasm for local elections as I can for frogs that gestate their young in their stomach.

Right?

And I think I’ve figured out why. Like many little kids, I had a thing for mythical creatures. Unicorns, dragons, griffins, Mr Tumnus, mermaids, the whole kettle. Even though I held out hope for Narnia for an awfully long time, I knew that these creatures weren’t really out there. Except for one. The Kraken, the creature about whom Tennyson had written the famous verse, who had been hypothesised by ancient Greeks, actually existed. Although no one, when I was young, had ever seen a giant squid alive, plenty of evidence supported their existence, not the least of which being giant sucker marks born by sperm whales, the scars of epic battles.

I gradually stopped reading Greek myths and legends and started reading about the ocean. From the deep sea hydrothermal vents where blind and blanched white creatures move like ghosts, to whale falls that house bone eating zombie worms, to ancient giant tortoises (like Harriet) and vigilante octopuses, the sea held all those stories I loved. The beautiful and the bizarre, the joyous and the monstrous. And who needs unicorns, when you’ve got narwhals?


Narwhals. So awesome.

If you need more convincing, here are some my favourite weird and wonderful things from under the sea. (With thanks: I wouldn't have found half these awesome things without the lovely Sarah: co-conspirator and workplace distraction of the best kind.)


The fish with the see through head: the barrel-eye fish

The Luidia sarsi starfish: confounding scientists.

Translucent creatures.

I may have mentioned earlier: Bone eating zombie worms My favourite line from that article? "The female worms keep males inside their tube as a sort of little harem that fertilises eggs as they are released."

The vampire squid from hell. A literal translation from the latin.

Blingin' rainbow jelly fish:


This ... amazing thing:



And, when I'm feeling blue, sea otters holding hands:


Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Goddard et Puke


After being misinformed about the availability of the film in many a good bookshop, I finally procured a copy of the Godard film Breathless. I have often waxed lyrical in a wanker-like way at parties on the classic, timeless qualities of the film and its unrivalled ending. Well, one of them. Being a French film, and myself unable to say more than “I would like to buy an apple, please”, I am at the mercy of the subtitles; your trans-language guide to the film. Fine, if not wonderful, as long as some sort of consistency is maintained. My magic ending is only one of three translations available. “It makes me want to ‘Puke’” is treated as somehow equivalent to “It is a little bitch” and “you are disgusting”; which in the final moments of a film has substantially varied impact and implications.

That many endings

I’m trying to share my disappointment without giving too much away about the content of the film, but one of them is dying. It’s a poignant moment.
The difference may seem trivial to some, but that final statement reflects upon the entire story and character arc. It would be like finding out that in the ‘original’ Citizen Kane; ‘rosebud’ was a reference to his lethal rose allergy. If you haven’t seen either, well you’ve probably seen a lot of other good films or filled your time doing other, perhaps even more interactive or creative activities. (Revised ending to the post). When you do get a chance to see ‘breathless’ though, make sure you get the ‘puke’ version.
Also, if you do intend to see it and you should, don’t watch the video below; it is literally every available ending to the film.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Procrastination and Pretty Pictures


 
I've been wasting time recently playing link tag on the interwebz trying to dredge up bits and pieces that may be relevant to my thesis. Today playing that game I came across Belgian artist Carsten Höller.


He is a practicing contemporary artist who also holds a doctorate in biology which does so tickle my fancy for intersections of science and art. 


I think his art holds a good balance between well crafted and realised form and whimsy. He works across a whole gamut of media, which also makes me happy. 

Höller's work also relies heavily on user involvement and participation, an idea which is becoming more and more interesting to me. I wish I could experience his slides first hand. He has installed giant tubular slippery dips in galleries across the world. It just looks like such fun, the way art should be. You can view an interactive 360 degree photo and read more about his slide at the Tate Modern here. Enjoy.

No Really, I Don't Mean To...


The Rabbits' Village School, 1888 

I feel sort of hesitant about writing this post because it is starting a trend. A tag that has been used more than once. Taxidermy. It isn't that I have a fondness for it, I just sort of come across the various examples and they suck me in to a vortex of horror and fascination. 


The Upper Ten or Squirrels Club, Date Unknown

What is it that possesses people to take dead animals, stuff them and then rework them into hideous anthropomorphic poses? I was reading a book about museums and came across the work of Walter Potter. A man who devoted his life to create tableaux comprised of lots of very cute and very dead animals. 

Kittens' Tea and Croquet Party c. 1870s

Count 'em, thirty-seven kittens playing croquet. A further garden of furry delights and tales of taxidermy can be discovered at A Case Of Curiosities.