Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Ex-girlfriends of ex-boyfriends and competitions...





I've got a special treat for you: a BBC archive (brand new) on the value of record collecting and dealing. Just click the beat mining below...

"BEAT MINING WITH THE VINYL HOOVER"


The radio show even references historical contexts such as the work of composers Stockhausen and Xenakis!
and the show references the track "Unwind yourself" which always makes me think of this promotional video now:

A Perfect Day

Today is a perfect day minus the inevitable frustration of not being able to watch PJ Harvey's music video "A perfect day Elise" online in the UK. But the swans and ducks are cruising the canal and soon there will be baby swans. Someone is nest sitting across the river and it hasn't gone unnoticed.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Bomb It...Housepaint Style


I just came from a Housepaint event at the Royal Ontario Museum, Signy & Cléophée Eaton Theatre in Toronto. The night brought together an artist named Dan Bereron (aka fauxreel), a city councillor (Adam Vaughan), a curator (Devon Ostrom) and an artistic director (David Liss of MOCCA).

Devon Ostrom started off the introductory remarks by describing some of the art events he has participated in. The list was impressive. Check out some of the visuals here on the them.ca website. One of my favorite projects involved the organizers getting inmates in a prison to select graffiti artists' work that they liked. The artists then came into the space and put their art up on the wall. The results of this activity included an increase in social actions in the community space, an increase in attendance in this area of the prison, pictures for families taken in front of the art, and inmates creating their own art work.

Adam Vaughan, the city councillor, began by remarking on how his lengthy resume demonstrates his age and proceeded to donate extra cv information about his beginnings as a cartoonist (an attempt to mark his street credibility). He continued by tying the concept of weeds to graffiti (the task force that deals with both lawn weeds - that is people complaining about too many weeds on their neighbors lawn - and graffiti) in his use of metaphors. He didn't mention that people complain significantly more about the weeds of their neighbors' lawns than they do about graffiti (that's the statistical reality of the matter).

David Liss described his position in the field as the "gatekeeper of culture" and discussed graffiti art as a "global movement." Finally, Dan Bereron discussed his beginnings as an artist and why he got into "creating works outdoors." He explained that the street art he saw in England inspired him because it was inclusive.

The question and answer period didn't offer any profound debate or insight but entertained the crowd with a few laughs here and there.

What strikes me now about the conversation were the aspects that evoked the global or universal language of graffiti art. For example, Devon mentioned an art project where artists from different nations painted on bank notes. Adam Vaughan referenced a local public school in his district where for Chinese New Year's the students decided to sing reggae tunes with French words. Vaughan added that Toronto is one of five or six cities in the world where that type of cultural mix is possible (and proceeded to link this to his theme of despair, poverty and creativity by saying that "THAT is the culture of the poor"). ?? David Liss remarked on graffiti art at its best as an affirmative act of resistance and a 'global language.' Finally Dan's reference to the UK in general, or the scene in Montreal, provided him with some points of comparison to Toronto. Both Devon and Dan wanted to make explicit that this artistic movement was middle-class in Toronto.

What to make of all this?

I'm not sure yet (maybe it's a girl thing - no women were represented in the discussion panel or Q&A). The debate did sound like the same one I heard in Toronto about seven years ago. The cultural position of some of the graffiti artists over this time have been elevated and given more value and attention so perhaps that's the best result of public forums like this, that is promotion of talented artists like Elicser.

What is worthy of checking out is Well and Good who are doing great historical documentary work to share the stories of some (of my favorite) Toronto writers.


Writing Toronto's (Hi)Story from Well and Good on Vimeo.


Finally, here's the BOMB IT documentary site and a trailer for the film about global graffiti culture from a little while ago:



The general consensus during my trip to Toronto seems to be that the creative (street) artists making art and dance don't want to be tied to hip hop too tightly. Both dancers and writers that I've been talking to say that they want to advance their cultural productions in ways that suit their local inspirations and trajectories rather than fit to a model of what people think it should be (the global opinion on what is b-boying or street art). It's probably this collective mentality that has allowed so many artists to veer off the course of dogma and into their own expressions.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

This is the Life: hip hop documentary about the West Coast



I just saw Sole perform at a show in London Ontario with Thesis Sahib and DJ Gripski among others.

Speaking of Myka Nine though... (the above sentence and poster was the prelude...)

"THIS IS THE LIFE" is a documentary that focuses on the underground rappers (as well as dancers, event organizers, DJs, and audiences) that made up the Good Life cafe L.A. rap scene that began in the late 80s.


Here's some more Medusa and Myka Nine who are two of my favorite artists featured in the documentary...

Medusa


Myka Nine


B-boys that want to 'learn' how to freestyle just need to listen to some of that and it'll all start to come out...

Here's the b-boy connection for this blog entry: Medusa was featured dancing in the same music video as Jacob "Kujo" Lyons. In the clip below Kujo discusses his up and coming battle against Junior (from France), learning your own way in dance, having fun and longevity.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Demetri Martin

Seemed like an appropriate time for some jokes about housing situations and throwing stones...



In London Ontario (where I am visiting at the moment) they are trying to reintroduce Trumpeter Swans to the environment. Apparently, they were once a thriving species here but because of hunting and other factors have become almost extinct in Southern Ontario. I've spent the last two days visiting them by the river. They are in a fenced in area to protect them and they seem to be chilling with the other birds of the area without much conflict. I've been feeling an unlikely affinity to them. Apparently they aren't on autopilot when it comes to migration. They head where they can survive and historically heading out of extinction into awareness.

One of those days..

Going to need some more Demetri Martin in the mix. This is part 1 of 6 in the "If I" series to get you started. The rest is on youtube for your viewing pleasure...