Just launched the Mother Tongue Kickstarter Project I am hoping to fund. Beyond trepidation at whether it will succeed or not, I have a lot of things to think about. Although there is always a need to define a project, (especially if there is a grant deadline) to me the project itself is an organic thing that will have it's own will and will eventually settle into what it wants to be. If I pay attention.
To do:
Contact organizations in Europe to set up interviews for the project.
Contact friends in Europe to set up meetings, interviews.
Research audio equipment
Start learning German
Think about general itinerary
Keep thinking about the end goal - what is the simplest, most direct reason for this to be in the world.
Is there really a need or even a possibility for a borderless society that preserves within itself multiple identities that come from our tribal beginnings?
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Stuffed Animal Project at KO
Here is a link to a stuffed animal donation organization.
Make a comment about your project.
Make a comment about your project.
Kingswood Oxford Residency
Below are some questions I asked at a presentation of my work at Kingswood Oxford. Here is a link to the power point presentation.
I hope to have a conversation with you - the students about how these questions can lead to making art. Please make comments to start a conversation. I will be checking every couple of days.
Does art have to stay in a frame?
Is it ok to break the law?
Can art be in the everyday?
Is it ok to lie?
Is it ok to destroy things?
Can you alter public property?
Is it ok to do ridiculous things?
Can you farm with a bike?
Can we be at home in nature?
Can the world be your school?
Is it ok to panhandle?
Can you shape the future?
I hope to have a conversation with you - the students about how these questions can lead to making art. Please make comments to start a conversation. I will be checking every couple of days.
Does art have to stay in a frame?
Is it ok to break the law?
Can art be in the everyday?
Is it ok to lie?
Is it ok to destroy things?
Can you alter public property?
Is it ok to do ridiculous things?
Can you farm with a bike?
Can we be at home in nature?
Can the world be your school?
Is it ok to panhandle?
Can you shape the future?
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Currently working on BREAD CYCLE WORKS
Through planting and harvesting a field of wheat in Hartford’s Frog Hollow neighborhood BREAD CYCLE WORKS is interested in engaging people in a communal way in order to affirm our relationship to the land and the physical and metaphoric sustaining qualities of bread. We aim to celebrate a multicultural calendar of rites and community activities associated with planting and harvesting. The breads we bake from the wheat will be shared with the Frog Hollow Community and volunteers and eaten at a fiesta.
Monday, June 8, 2009
Gypsy Wagon Prophet Theater
truthWhile living in Sofia I became interested in the Roma community of the city. They are most visible traveling the streets in their horse carts collecting scrap material from the trash or work sites. This marginalized community is living on the periphery of Sofia’s life in ghettos, economically impoverished and socially separated. In Sofia they are the only people still using horses, so there is a historic chasm between the Roma and the Bulgarians who drive cars. This mixture of contemporary and historic technology that can be observed in Bulgaria was my initial inspiration for creating The Gypsy Wagon Prophet Theater.
I wanted to give a voice to the Roma people by using their own traditional sayings. These sayings such as “What is a lie to you, is truth to me” contain clues to the history and identity of the Roma. See video.
I wanted to give a voice to the Roma people by using their own traditional sayings. These sayings such as “What is a lie to you, is truth to me” contain clues to the history and identity of the Roma. See video.
rageI used a video projection of a slot machine on a screen mounted on a horse wagon. The slot machine spat out Bulgarian Roma sayings as the wagon traveled through Sofia. The wagon traveled through zones forbidden to Roma wagons by the decree of the mayor such as the square in front of the parliament building and other center city locations. The sayings become scrambled with time as the words start to be randomly selected by the slot machine creating a sort of chance poetry.
To me the slot machine represents chance of birth, profiteering at the expense of the poor, fortune telling. The horse wagon represents a marginalized minority holding on to their historic way of life in a sea of contemporary society represented by the cars.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Sofia Underground Performance Festival
This week the Sofia Underground Performance Festival is happening here. It promises to be quite an eventful and interesting week in Sofia.
I am doing a second annual performance with my pal Rebecca Parker - 24 Hour Conversation as well as organizing an electric KIDS performance exchange with my good friend Emcee CM. He is organizing a KIDS has some work to do schedule of events in NYC and we thought it would be nice to set up a virtual bridge between Sofia and New York and give people a chance to collaborate. We hope to have the website function as an open ended space for performance instructions and documentation that can be used by folks from all over the world. On May 23rd the Gypsy Wagon Prophet Theater will be traveling the streets of Center City Sofia
I am doing a second annual performance with my pal Rebecca Parker - 24 Hour Conversation as well as organizing an electric KIDS performance exchange with my good friend Emcee CM. He is organizing a KIDS has some work to do schedule of events in NYC and we thought it would be nice to set up a virtual bridge between Sofia and New York and give people a chance to collaborate. We hope to have the website function as an open ended space for performance instructions and documentation that can be used by folks from all over the world. On May 23rd the Gypsy Wagon Prophet Theater will be traveling the streets of Center City Sofia
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Temporal Monuments
The name of my project in Sofia is Temporal Monuments. It has moved dramatically from my initial intention of doing video projections on buildings. Living in Sofia for a few months I have become increasingly aware of people begging in the streets, selling flowers on the corners or plying any kind of skill such as playing the accordion and dancing or carving wooden figurines.
While some might find this unsightly I see these people as survivors. I see Roma wagons cruising the streets for recyclable goods and I think about sustainability. These goods would otherwise find their way into a landfill somewhere. When there is a lack of resources sustainability becomes about survival.
These people on the streets of Bulgaria living by their wits are just making ends meet, but as a result not putting the kind of pressure on their environment most people of means do.
So this begging and hustling I see as hopeful. It’s like fishing, hoping to collect a bounty, something positive, helpful to one’s survival. It is about being opportunistic, working with what you have. In academia it’s called writing a grant proposal, here on the streets there is a more immediate and pressing need.
These are the people that I am interested in establishing a temporal monument for.
While some might find this unsightly I see these people as survivors. I see Roma wagons cruising the streets for recyclable goods and I think about sustainability. These goods would otherwise find their way into a landfill somewhere. When there is a lack of resources sustainability becomes about survival.
These people on the streets of Bulgaria living by their wits are just making ends meet, but as a result not putting the kind of pressure on their environment most people of means do.
So this begging and hustling I see as hopeful. It’s like fishing, hoping to collect a bounty, something positive, helpful to one’s survival. It is about being opportunistic, working with what you have. In academia it’s called writing a grant proposal, here on the streets there is a more immediate and pressing need.
These are the people that I am interested in establishing a temporal monument for.
Monument
I found a headless monument in the park on the corner of Pirotska and Opalchenska Street and thought it would be a good space to honor regular folks in. An older couple told me that on top of it used to be a bust of Georgi Dimitrov – the Bulgarian Communist Dictator. After Dimitrov’s death a mausoleum was erected in the center of Sofia where he lay embalmed like Lenin on Red Square. Post communist political changes saw the mausoleum demolished.
I was later told by a policeman who was half-heartedly trying to stop us from completing our project that the bust was of the Russian writer-philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev who’s writings were based in Christian Spirituality. He was a Marxist and a revolutionary who gradually walked away from the radical Marxism of the Bolsheviks and found himself on the “Philosophers’ ship” of the exiles the Bolsheviks sent out of the country.
Both contenders for the monument were tied to Marxism, a philosophy promoting the equal rights among people.
So a temporal monument to the people at this spot seemed appropriate. I asked some friends to work on it with me. We created a set of stairs for easy access, cleaned graffiti from the monument, laid flowers and made a plaque to the Bulgarian people. You can see the video of the project and some photos I posted below. If you are in Sofia you can go to the site and take a picture of yourself on the base. Send it to me if you do. Here is a map of the location.
I was later told by a policeman who was half-heartedly trying to stop us from completing our project that the bust was of the Russian writer-philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev who’s writings were based in Christian Spirituality. He was a Marxist and a revolutionary who gradually walked away from the radical Marxism of the Bolsheviks and found himself on the “Philosophers’ ship” of the exiles the Bolsheviks sent out of the country.
Both contenders for the monument were tied to Marxism, a philosophy promoting the equal rights among people.
So a temporal monument to the people at this spot seemed appropriate. I asked some friends to work on it with me. We created a set of stairs for easy access, cleaned graffiti from the monument, laid flowers and made a plaque to the Bulgarian people. You can see the video of the project and some photos I posted below. If you are in Sofia you can go to the site and take a picture of yourself on the base. Send it to me if you do. Here is a map of the location.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Are they biting? Кълве ли?

MONUMENT TO THE HOPEFUL FISHERMAN
Кълве ли?/Are they biting?, Performance, Sofia, Bulgaria, March 2009
Кълве ли?/Are they biting?, Performance, Sofia, Bulgaria, March 2009
To make art in Sofia I am looking for the spaces between spaces. I am trying to figure out the potential, the possibilities. I am searching for the margins of the built environment for the places not yet resolved. Those spaces are alive with possibility. Can you catch fish in a puddle in Sofia? No, but you can catch lots of smiles, greetings and the proverbial Кълве ли?(Culve li?), Are they biting? What are you getting? Som (catfish). They are bottom feeders – opportunists. Just like so many have to be. It is a fruitless activity, but somehow full of hope. Yes. They are biting. The opportunities to be inspired, to figure it out, to create are everywhere in Bulgaria.
ICH BITTE SIE FUER 1 WORT
MONUMENT TO THE HOPEFUL BEGGARICH BITTE SIE FUER 1 WORT / I BEG YOU FOR ONE WORD
Bahnhof Friedrichstrasse, Berlin, Germany, March 2009
For the Fulbright Conference in Berlin I created a performance at the Bahnhof Friedrichstrasse.
In many countries especially in the West, begging is considered a contemptible occupation practiced in order to receive money dishonestly for obtainment of food, drugs or alcohol. Historically however, the western tradition has been known for respecting beggars such as Diogenes of Sinope and Lazarus. I am the least of these, were the words Jesus is recorded as saying in the bible about less fortunate people, beggars included. In many countries of the east like India, Japan and others begging can be considered a spiritual occupation, which frees the beggar from material concerns such as labor for money and keeps them on the path to enlightenment.
My decision was to beg for something considered non-material – a word. I was interested in the attitudes and behavior of people towards someone in a position of a supplicant. What kind of poem could come from the words collected in a specific location in a specific city? In this case, it was the Friedrichshtrasse train station in Berlin.
The experience was humbling. Many people did not realize I was begging for a word, did not look at my sign and thought I was asking for money. They avoided my gaze, completely ignored me, or walked a large circle around me. I felt that I was putting them in an uncomfortable position of having to make a decision about giving. On the other hand, twenty-eight people chose to give a word. This relationship between those in need and those with resources plays out on a regional and world scale and the decisions to give or not to give are crucial to our future.
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