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State of the horse, Palo Alto
IF this little magic doo-hickey is not f-ing with me gray matters, Palo Alto before it was a city near Leland Stanford’s farm was a horse owned by Leland Stanford the farmer and driven by his famous jockey Charles Marvin. As evidenced by this fine 1890 painting.
Charles Marvin also wrote a book “Training the Trotting Horse” that he dedicates to his boss man. I would guess that beyond this scanned version Stanford the farm I mean world class university has a library that someone if not me can access this for reals.
(and somehow I am flashing to the vampire documentary I just saw at Guild and how powerful and seductive beings sometimes acquire us mere mortals as slaves)
Steve Staiger surely knows more about this scoop, so to speak. (When you say “horse” and “scoop” in the same breath, watch your step. There’s also a song that I heard Buddy from Nashville sing at a house concert at hedgehog I think, something about the guy whose job at circus is picking up after the animals. I’m the guy who…)
edit to add: and if anyone cares I got to this (link) because I wanted to see if Christopher Felver who made a doc about Ferlinghetti and has a book on musician photo portraits I borrowed from library has a palo alto connection and what I got instead was that an online auction was selling a Felver portrait of Bukowski next to an oil from 1890 about “Palo Alto” the horse. Which is like Bill Rose looking for a nanny online and instead finding Felstiner essay about “this dust of words”.
Waxwings at 250
Laura Jacobson and I crossed path at Peet’s, she on her way to nearby studio me to this virtual world of 1’s and 0’s and signifying monk keys.
Sundry topics flew by, as the lines shrank. One, the line for her ordered coffee to be made. Two, the line I was to not stand it, to order.
The bottom line: City of Palo Alto Public Art Collection should include a Laura Jacobson – she lives Downtown North, went to Gunn and has studio here in town —
edit to add,the next day, because just as I typed above “town — ” my order came up and I thought good place to stop. But then:
—– Forwarded Message —–
From: Laura Jacobson
To: Mark B Weiss
Sent: Thursday, March 5, 2015 9:24 PM
Subject: Re: portrait of laura and waxwing, 2012
Wow, that was fast! So cool to run into you. And so glad to hear that Terry’s project is almost headed to Seattle. She must be in the studio very late these days. Thank you for the plug, the post, and the links to the posts! I hadn’t seen the 3-year-ago post so that was a fun surprise.
I would vote for flight there and the ride back to enjoy the coast line — it is so gorgeous!! Nothing can beat digging your toes into the cold sand of the beaches along Rte. 1.
Laura
––––––––––––––––––––
Laura Jacobson
studio: 4030 Transport Street
Palo Alto, CA 94303
url: http://www.laurajacobson.com
cell: (650) !!!-CLAY
On Thursday, March 5, 2015 9:46 AM, Mark B Weiss wrote:
that’s as far as I got before my coffee came up….just as well.
you may recall, as I did, and then found via the internal search function, that three years ago I had you pose for a photo, and its placement on my blog. I still have not actually written about your work or you, just these odd tangentials. In the previous piece, I can side-tracked playing a game wherein in each paragraph there were succeeding alphabeticals: a, b, c. It started, I think with Laura Jacobson (l, j) and Nelson Mandela (n, m) plus the photo that says”first floor” but I used as r, s, t…
you are probably too busy to focus on what I am doing here.
Terry meanwhile is trying to finish up what will be an installation next month in a group show in Seattle asian art museum, Wing Luke. She now claims we will have to drive there, since she does not trust shipping the work. on one level that’s cool, in that the process of getting there becomes part of the work. on the other hand, i hope she takes her friend minerva and lets me fly up separately.
mark w
i think that title also references a middlebook sculpture at Westin Hotel palo alto
if thou think this is weird, keep in mind that the original reference is to a Nabokov piece:
Karen- (in honor of her honor)
Not to confuse you, that I am six or seven deep in things I ran by you then dropped, but I want you to take a peek at this link, about the art of Palo Alto artist your neighbor Laura Jacobson (she lives huzzah and was sup actually). In my blog yesterday I suggest that her work should be in our Palo Alto public collection, perhaps at 250 Hamilton perhaps even your office.
I suggested specific pieces I wanted to donate to then-mayors Sid Espinosa (a New York skyline by Stacey Carter) and Yiaway Yeh (a color chart by Rob Syrett). I have this notion that there should be a fund to purchase in honor of each mayor, a piece of art. (I tried to donate the two pieces I just mention but got caught up in the red tape and still have them).
Laura Jacobson and I crossed path at Peet’s, she on her way to nearby studio me to this virtual world of 1’s and 0’s and signifying monk keys. Sundry topics flew by…
View on markweiss86.wordpre…
Preview by Yahoo
I don’t know if this piece is still available, but you should check her out nonetheless.
Mark Weiss
and1: I admit I’ve never read “Pale Fire”
I was the shadow of the waxwing slain
By the false azure in the windowpane;
I was the smudge of ashen fluff -and I
Lived on, flew on, in the reflected sky.
And from the inside, too, I’d duplicate
Myself, my lamp, an apple on a plate:
Uncurtaining the night, I’d let dark glass
Hang all the furniture above the grass,
And how delightful when a fall of snow
Covered my glimpse of lawn and reached up so
As to make chair and bed exactly stand
Upon that snow, out in that crystal land!
Posted in art, ethniceities, Plato's Republic, sex, sf moma
Tagged 250 hamilton, ceramics, laura jacobson, palo alto public art collection, terry acebo davis
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Ruthie Foster rocks the Freight Tuesday
I met Ruthie Foster a few years back in Austin, Texas and cut her set once or twice over the years, so I am excited to see her full set next week, Tuesday, March 10 at Berkeley’s Freight and Salvage. It’s actually a triple-bill with Joe Ely and Paul Thorn.
Not sure the segue,but I had downloaded this unattributed aphorism and illustration from the website of Poor Clare’s an order of nun’s founded by St. Francis of Assisi. (If you are a catholic and orthodox very observant “Plastic Alto” reader you may have also read recently something about basketball, and maybe the visual arts, this all sort of runs together. Writing about Austin or just mentioning it, makes me want to go eat a taco or burrito for lunch, here at 3:15 on a Wednesday; I’m also fixing to sneak into a movie, the mockumentary about vampires, at the Guild in Menlo Park, hopefully with my sweetie, TAD, now I’m way off subject. Safe passage here to Ruthie, her crew and her manager Charles Driebe of Atlanta who I first met by phone when he managed Henry Butler in 1999 and I produced a Henry Butler show here, plus did a ride-along a clinic HB did in Fremont for School for the Blind; don’t get me wrong, Ruthie Foster is sighted.

Not sure last time I saw God, or Ruthie Foster, who comes to Bay Area next week with a holy trinity of troubadours and truth-mongers
edit to add:
This is one, reviewed 39 times, my friend Malcolm “Papa Mali” Welbourne produced in 2007:
and1:
This is one came out last summer, reviewed 28 times and features Meshell Ndegeocello:
Ai Weiwei inspires Weiss
I’m hoping to see the Ai Weiwei show at Alcatraz, meanwhile I am reflagging here something I wrote about the Ai Weiwei documentary “Never Sorry” back in 2012. I cannot quite recall what I meant by imagining an oblique set of derivative works that read “SO SO RRR” other than “r r r” I sometimes use for laughter and I do notice typography.
Svayambh-PA, or New Residentialist Platform(NRP)
I saw the documentary film about the Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei, “Never Sorry” and it put me off the fence for good on whether or not to run for Palo Alto City Council. Ai Weiwei was imprisoned by his government most believe because he criticized the government’s role in the death of more than 5,000 schoolchildren in a 2009 earthquake in Sichuan. He claims that “tofu” construction — he means shoddy or subpar — in a government sponsored infrastructure was at fault for all the deaths. Part of his reaction was an art installation in Germany with 9,000 backpacks installed on the wall of a museum there.
He has an uncanny and unique ability to blend creativity and social activism. Although it would be extreme to compare China nationalist government either to our challenges nationally or locally, I definitely believe and have stated in various forums that maybe…
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More Palo Alto Posters
The wordpress blog “EPA and Around the Bay” had two posts on Susan O’Malley’s “Community Advice” project from 2012, I’ve reblogged here
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Posters in Palo Alto
The wordpress blog “EPA and Around the Bay” also known as Slyder24 and sometimes “Tony” documents a lot of street art, stickers and stencil work. He also logged at least five Susan O’Malley pieces, from 2012, archived there and reblogged here at Plastic Alto.
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I shot 450 photos at 22 high school basketball games this season
and1: this one is on my camera/ phone but shot by I think former Coach Redfield, and shows me in front of the exact basket where 30 years or so prior, in 1981, my junior year at Gunn I scored my one and only varsity field goal, in a Titan route of what was then called Bucsher Bruins. I was put in at high post, against a zone, and Alan Ng, breaking the press, tossed me the ball and I wheeled, past the man, maybe dribble as I advanced down the lane, went off the glass and in. I’ve done that hundreds or thousands of times in practice and exactly once for the record. I played for a 25-3 league championship and CCS-runner up team, with a high school All America and eventual Knicks NBA draftee Kent Lockhard, who got about 1,500 points and over 500 field goals to my onesy. On consecutive possessions, maybe three of them, the exact same play and I made two but missed two free throws as well, giving me 4 career points. Buchser, that is, where Steve Bartkowski, Joe Charboneau and Mark Langton all excelled.
Lancers top Gators as easy

St. Francis Lancer Curtis Witt congratulates Sacred Heart Prep Andrew Daschbach after exciting 64-59 contest in CCS semifinals Tuesday at Independence High in San Jose.
Hats off to tiny Sacred Heart prep for coming within one trey, by Mason Randall of tying top-ranked St. Francis of Mountain View Tuesday in the CCS semifinals.
The Lancers prevailed 64-59 but clearly had the fear of God put in to them by their mid-Peninsula brethren. The Gators team featured several members of a football unit that defied the odds to win the Open contest this fall, including Randall, their QB. You would think that suiting Ben Burr-Kirvan even for one game might have been worth a bucket or two Tuesday when it counted most.
As I exited the game I brushed against the lines of sportsmanship, near the St. Francis bench. I greeted the reserve guard Riley Quinn, who saw no action Tuesday but was a contributor on football. We exchanged high fives and I said “Good game, son. Good luck”. I saw Quinn during warm-ups, running the drills with his mates. Here is a quote that Riley attributed to former Major League pitcher Jim Abbott and told a writer for the Chron two springs ago (and it does dovetail or overlap with my Susan O’Malley tribute yesterday):
“… believe in yourself, find your own way, and use the talents you’ve been given … great things can happen!”
My own observation is that as the years recede the difference between my opponents and my teammates blurs; now the distinction is between being able to run and play at all compared to when I would fill nearly ever afternoon with some type of exertion or game:
And1: a bad pun in headline about the Saint’s hometown. Other than those warm-ups I’ve never seen Quinn; he’s been written about in local and national media.
















