Am I the last to notice that Austin powers back story is based on Michael antonioni ‘blow up’?

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Stickers and tattoos and a bit of world views


Guest column by Sara Dumanske
(I met Sara when she worked at Karen Imperial’s gallery on Bryant St in Palo Alto; I had her stickers on the bumper of my Chevy Cruz until I sold that about six months ago).

If you’ve ever been five years old you’ve probably found some stickers and promptly decided the
next logical step was to cover yourself in them. You were, of course, a genius!
As an illustrator, I find designing my next sticker and designing my next tattoo to be the exact
same process. The steps are as follows:
1. Pick a subject.
It could be a pop-culture reference, a stylized quote, or just some funny idea you had like an
“ice cream sand-dollar wich”.
2. Design it.
You have to think about the overall shape – -how is it going to look on a sticker sheet, in relation
to other stickers you have? Et & c. The same goes for a tattoo – -how is it going to look on your
body, in relation to the other tattoos you have? Et & c.
3. Make it happen!
My favorite sticker making websites are stickerapp.com and stickermule.com because there
are plenty of product options and they are easy-to-use. I upload my artwork (either originally digital
or scanned and photoshopped to perfection), play about, and place an order.
Once I have a tattoo idea I shop the #SFTattoo or #OaklandTattoo pages on Instagram and
find the perfect artist to execute my idea. In the case of my “ice cream sand-dollar wich” I
found Jess Koala (@jess_koala_tattoo) at Castro Tattoo and reached out. Together we created
what is my favorite tattoo to date and a relationship that has led and will lead to more tattoos
in years to come. 
Really, tattoos are just permanent stickers on your body and stickers are just tattoos for
everyday objects. My reusable water-bottle has thoughtfully laid out stickers the same way a
tattoo artist would lay out a tattoo sleeve. So whether you are planning on poking stickers onto
laptops or stick-and-poking tattoos on yourself, it all starts out with a great idea. 
Sara Dumanske is an artist/illustrator/writer who has designed book covers, stationery, and
many a sticker. You can find her @PaintedWit on Instagram and Etsy, and at paintedwit.com.

If you meet Sara you might ask to see her sleeve

 
 

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But not to be confused with Marilee Talkington and her “sticky time”.

And1:

Nor the reggae jazz drummer Sticky who played with Michael Franti

what about a bird who is also a hippie, a cross between Woodpecker, Woody Woodpecker and like Jerry Garcia, a “ Woodstocker” in the song below — right after he says “Sticky on percussion, mashing up the place” — there’s a bird I think in the Woodstock poster plus didn’t Charles Schultz peanuts have a Woodstock bird — is that same bird? Bird 🦢 🐦 🦅 

just a hipper or hippier version of the Schultz character or the poster bird 

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smorecupine by Sara 


Andand:

 

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Jim Eshelman pole vault for Stanford, 1966

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He was also a Cubberley grad. I’d nominate him for the Cubberley Hall of Fame (talk to Dan Fowlkes, Bret Baird or Hans Delannoy).
But going forward, with our tax dollars from COPA and PAUSD using the site for cultural and educational post-BLM matters, we need to rename the space, for someone not associated with eugenics.
How about The Bill Green Center? (For national champion in the 400, but missed the 1980 Moscow Olympics and died young due to a neuromuscular disease: no, It was cancer but ironically enough presented as loss of movement of his feet as Keith Peters describes in a great obituary: metastatic esophageal cancer after an undetected malignant spinal tumor caused sudden paraplegia.

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Yesterday, last year or medieval?

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Aram James a retired public defender and also an activist in our community – – a former Gunn football player from the 1960s, who, also as much as anyone else avidly followed my three attempts at running for city council, sent me a video.
The video is dated June 19; some people call it Juneteenth.
The first thing I noticed is that officer reifschnider, who I’ve met, reminds me of a weird cross between Jack Webb in Dragnet and Rod Serling In the twilight zone.
I’ve never heard of the genre of Orwellian spin doctor of torture videos paid for by the tax payers.
Ironically the events take place at “ happy donuts”.

they try to explain why the surveillance camera goes in and out although to me it looks like it was deliberately deleting incriminating parts.  It’s hard not to be cynical and believe that our tax dollars have bred a bunch of liars. In our name, they do this.
with black lives matter there’s a lot of talk about race these days but I’ve also felt that class is an issue.  The man in the red shirt our neighbor, I would say I’m guessing he’s relatively poor more than he is or isn’t Jewish is or isn’t white is or isn’t black is or isn’t Latino. He’s X-x. He’s ACTG. He is our neighbor he is a citizen and fellow human being he looks like a kid.
It’s hard not to think of George Floyd: how much longer will they force his face or his chest into the floor or the steel bars? Will he keep talking or will he expire before our eyes?  Will they kill him? Will we kill him? Will we kill ourselves?

The red shirt actually says Stanford medicine —are they a sponsor of the video?

My immediate reaction was to forward this to Ten of  my friends and briefly say will you comment?

Mark Weiss

in Palo Alto

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Palo Alto wokely

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Black Lives Matter collage from SF Chronicle VS Palo Alto Weekly,

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Big ups to Aldo Billingslea ‘Polar Bear…’ zoom Juneteenth theatre workie

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Terry Acebo Davis self-portrait with miscellanous bird art, Hanover, NH slash Dartmouth slash Hood Museum summer 2011

Terry Acebo Davis the artist and her then boyfriend now husband Mark Weiss of Eathwise Productions, Hanover, New Hampshire, summer 2011 – sitting on X Delta by DiSuvero

 


Terry Acebo Davis, a graduate of Cal State Hayward and San Jose State universities and a Cali native, visited the prestigious if moldy Dartmouth College in the summer of 2011 and spent considerable time at the Hood Museum.

She also visited her friend and  teacher Altoon Sultan, in nearby Vermont.

 

You have to look closely

 

Terry and Altoon:

I presume this is by Alice Neel* at the Hood

I was at my reunion and we were in Baker and Terry suddenly remembered that Altoon lived nearby so we comandeered a phone and reached her and went directly over:

Altoon Sultan, Terry Davis 2011

Terry and a corner of the Reserve Corridor, Baker Library, detail of Orozco fresco:

I’m trying to keep this post about Terry (and Altoon) and post later with something about my reunion from nine years ago, but I want to add this picture of me with a John Sloan painting of a rooftop in New York that I wrote about in McGrath’s class. 

edit to add, moments later: John Sloan, A Roof in Chelsea, New York, c. 1941­­/51, tempera underpaint with oil-varnish glaze and wax finish on composition board, 21 1/8 x 26 1/16 inches. Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, purchased through the Julia L. Whittier Fund. P.946.12.2. — I remember that he touched up the birds a bit, adding colors, in 1951 after about 10 years. 
* (Altoon wrote back to say it’s an Alex Katz: 

1974

Acrylic on canvas

Overall: 71 15/16 × 96 1/4 in. (182.8 × 244.5 cm)

Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College: Gift of Joachim Jean Aberbach

P.975.70

GEOGRAPHY/CULTURE

North America, United States

PERIOD

20th century

OBJECT NAME

Painting

CLASSIFICATION

Painting

Not on view

COURSE HISTORY

SART 31, SART 72, Painting II, III, Colleen Randall, Spring 2013

EXHIBITION HISTORY

Top of the Hop, Hopkins Center Art Galleries, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, September 9-December 1978.

The Robert Hull Fleming Museum, University of Vermont, April 11, 2016-June 30, 2018.

Selections: Contemporary Art, Jaffe-Friede Gallery, Hopkins Center Art Gallery, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, December 12, 1975-February 15, 1976.

Second Stage of Modernism: Art from 1945 to the present, William B. Jaffe, Evelyn A. Jaffe Hall, Churchill P. Lathrop, Friends and Owen Robertson Cheatam Galleries, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, June 6-August 16, 1987.

Churchill P. Lathrop Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, September 22-December 17, 2000.

Churchill P. Lathrop Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, June 5-September 25, 1995.

Churchill P. Lathrop Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, January 15-April 8, 1998.

Churchill P. Lathrop Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, February 22-September 7, 1992.

Churchill P. Lathrop Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, December 6, 1993-March 14, 1994.

Churchill P. Lathrop Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, April 4, 2011-August 2011.

Candid Painting: American Genre 1950-1975, De Cordova Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts, October 11-Decmeber 7, 1975.

Acquisitions 1974-1978, Jaffe-Friede, Strauss and Barrows Galleries, Hopkins Center Art Galleries, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, December 8, 1978-Janaury 21, 1979.

PUBLICATION HISTORY

Vincent Rotheschild and Gustafson Taylor, ART what thou EAT, Weintraub & Institute of Wine and Food, Bard College: the Edith C. Blum Art Institute, 1990.

Joseph Brodsky, “Boredom’s Uses,” Dartmouth Alumni Magazine, Trustees of Dartmouth College, October 1989.

John C. Cavanaugh, Development and Aging, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Co, 1989.

John C. Cavanaugh, Adult Development and Aging, second edition, Belmont: Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1993.

Irving Sandler, Alex Katz: A Retrospective, New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1998, p. 58, ill. p. 62

Brian P. Kennedy and Emily Shubert Burke, Modern and Contemporary Art at Dartmouth: Highlights from the Hood Museum of Art, Hanover: Trustees of Dartmouth College, 2009 p.68, no.44.

PROVENANCE

Joachim Jean Aberbach (1910-1992), Old Westbury, New York; given to present collection, 1975.

and1:

 

 

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Lions with Wings, Lvvvv, June 19, 2020 thru June 19, 2021 via WordPress and Bandcamp



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BLUF — BOTTOM LINE UP FRONT: I am starting a record label of sorts, due to Covid, starting with performers who had been booked into my concert series; the name references a landmark on the Stanford campus and or the mythology of beasts and beings.

It’s not a griffin or a Griffin or Gryphon or Griffon,  it’s a lion with wings or hopefully more than one. It’s a mask that can sing, the play is the thing; part luftmensch part Luddite.  Sentient Earthworms by Johanson and wuthering  Heights; Big Rock Candy Mountain more likely, like me?  Blues, jazz, funk, folk: ….Handheld, but you can’t actually touch it.
America the Beautiful with blue Notes morphing into Kol Nidre; take a knee; take two knees, Colin Kaepernick and Gryphon Stringed. Seeds of change. Boots and Bastille or cloth Sackett jacket. (Those little happy and sad masks they have a name — and an emoji, even, Steven — but I keep forgetting the name, no one knows the name — Socks and Buskin, or so they say).

Part “Waters of March”, Part drawings by Richard Serra, An accommodation to COVID-19 but not a capitulation.  The stic,k the stone, to bend, to fold. Two-fold and found object. Covers. Maybe. 650 + 615 minus 404 on the 101, 540, even, or is that odd? Ones and zeros, all and none are heroes. See all, I am nothing; the music stays in the cloud; the kid stays in the picture: I don’t cry when my dog runs away. Out, damn  spot; spitintheholeandtuneagain. To fly with the lion, to lie with the lamb. To jam.

preview:

And1:

Richard Serra, 1967, “To Lift”:

In the mid-1960s Richard Serra began experimenting with nontraditional art materials like fiberglass, neon, and rubber, and also with the language involved in the physical process of making sculpture. The result was a list of action verbs—among them “to roll, to crease, to curve”—that Serra compiled, wrote on paper, and then enacted on the materials he had collected in his studio.

This work, made from discarded rubber recovered from a warehouse in lower Manhattan, is a result of the rubber’s unique response to the artist’s enacting of the action verb “to lift.” As Serra later explained, “It struck me that instead of thinking what a sculpture is going to be and how you’re going to do it compositionally, what if you just enacted those verbs in relation to a material, and didn’t worry about the results?”

At the very least I’ve enjoyed so far chatting with some great artists about the possibilities or singing into their cell phones and then sending me the outcome. I hope to put a bunch of stuff on BandCamp. Until then, keep your mask on but think about your version of sprouting wings and soaring and roaring.

More happy than sad, ideally; wild and crazy yet tech savvy.

 

 

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I thought Anthony McGill #taketwoknees blue note version of ‘America the Beautiful’ sounds like ‘Kol Nidre’ (as did Harumi Rhodes)

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Ben Wade, 1952 VS Beck Way, 2022

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Ben Wade I am noticing today because I am watching a rerun of the 1952 World Series especially the seventh game were Yankees made a big comeback; Wade who ended up as dodgers longtime director of scouting in the ‘70s was shown warming up but did not actually play in that game or series.
meanwhile at the bottom of my screen is scrolling a list of young men drafted into the rosters of the big leagues roughly 160 players and includes a Beck Way from Cumberland Valley drafted by the Yankees also a picture so I am projecting him to play in the Bigs if not the World Series in 2022.

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