Saturday, July 21, 2012

Ants, Ants, Ants! [There's no ME in TEAM]










I cycled out to the Laho lake a couple of days ago. On the way I saw a series of ant hills which were a lot bigger than the ant hills I remember growing up in Pennsylvania, which were volcano-shaped mounds of sand between 2 and 4 inches high. These Estonian ones start at about 2 feet high and seem to get up to 5.

Now that's what I call TEAMWORK.The Pyramids of Giza are diddly squat comparatively. I mean, even if Moses' people didn't have the wheel, dude, these little guys don't even have arms and they're building something that's, I dunno, a million times their size?

Apparently there is an ant "Kingdom" not far from here in which there are are nearly 1800 nests on 188 hectares of forest. Bordered by the Valgesoo Bog (oh! the name mixes memory with desire), it's reportedly the largest colony of Formica Aquilonia (red wood ant) in all of Europe.

Picked up a book on the bookshelf here about this area (sorry don't know the title in English, that seems to be the one part they didn't translate)... the Bog apparently has a bloody history:

The ant way of life, including their warfare, is astoundingly familiar to that of humans. One such war took place in 1998. A logging concession was issued for a spruce wood situated by the Valgesoo Bog. However, this forest was a home to numerous ant nests and after completion of the logging, these starving ants migrated to new areas where they met militant resistance by local ants who fiercely fought for their food supply. Johannes Martin, a myrmecologist, has witnessed a mass grave of ants: 15 meters in length and about 30 cm in width, covered with a thick layer of empty ant shells. According to estimations made by researchers, up to 50 million ants were killed in the war. 


Delightfully droll...

These were some postcards I picked up at a paper store in a dog-eared mall by the bus station in Tartu. 




Sorting through my pictures from the past days it occurred to me how postcard-esque the scenery is here in Southern Estonia. Thinking about taking some of these gently tufted landscapes, sprinkling some glitter and a twittering sparrow on top. 

 














Wednesday, July 18, 2012




Last night I was rummaging through the MoKS library and found this book/zine. It's called Dream Whip #12. In simple hand-written block lettering it tells vignettes about all the scummy bus stations, flop-houses and cul-de-sacs of middle and western America. Totally engrossing.

Why I gotta make it so complicated, I thought; all this yammering on about deconstructing the narrative. This is what I love about travel and place... or at least the memory of travel and place ... how things flatten out a bit into these sorts of tableaux. Bits and pieces of what people say, the smell of the grass, newspaper clippings.

There was no name on the zine, so I googled around and turns out it's created by this famous respected zinester Bill Brown... who's also hooked up with Microcosmos publishing and Cult Dead Cow, two things I'm glad to have discovered ....

http://microcosmpublishing.com/catalog/zines/1115/
http://www.cultdeadcow.com/









This being my first official "residency", I'm trying to understand what the time-spent fiddling to actual production ratio is. The first thing I'm learning, I guess, is to accept that the process is the work; I'm not going to just shit out perfection.

It's just that... I always thought that if I had 6+ hours a day, minimal distractions and adequate space to work on art, after just a few days I would have a pile of stuff. But it spreads itself thin like peanut butter. Wide, but thin. Not a lot of sandwiches to report just yet I'm afraid.

But I thought perhaps posting about what I’m at—regardless of how much I’ve finished— would establish some sort of trajectory for where I am and where I'm going, now that I'm about 10 days in.

To give a context, here’s what I proposed to the MoKS people when Max wasn’t going to be able to come for most of the residency and I had to say what I would do myself….

I would focus on the travel narrative/non-narrative side of the SOFAR Channel. As I think we talked about in the proposal, we conduct photographic and sonic-recording expeditions and later look for clues in the aleatory results of double- and triple-exposure photographic techniques and random audio recordings. We are looking for the non-narrative story below the surface.
As a writer, painter, radio-dj and dynamic reader, I'm interested in this place that exists between the narrative and the non-narrative. I am often searching for it in my sound work and hand-made books. How can you stretch and manipulate time and frustrate chronology in time-based media like sound, or in linearly-conceived techniques such as prose? What I would like to do is excavate and investigate some of my recent travels and work on a sonic-graphic book. The idea is to locate this place – or perhaps the better word is landscape -- that exists between the places I have seen, the unpredictable memories of them -- and the places that I read about/experience virtually. I would do so using sound and images acquired in my actual travels, and those virtual and imaginary ones that haunt me.Though I can't predict the exact product just yet – that will depend on my meditations while there -- I can say that I would like to produce an actual book (short, given the amount of time) that is complemented by sound. Both will be "-scapes" that are however not static, they will move without being linear or chronological.

So above some action shots from the 'book' I sortof said I'd work on. The shapes here are extracted from photos from Baku, which you can see in the brown-paper research slips in the last photo. Trying to somehow assemble like with like. Lots of mounds, arches, curves and bumps.

Aforementioned nouns that become images...

Meanwhile I've been doing the sort of surfing on the web that I suppose can be classified as artistic research. Spelunking the depths.... But hang on, maybe I'll do that in another post. For now, behold, studio in-progress-shots -- and voila, document it and I'm no longer doing nothing, nuh?


Dear blog. What did I do today? My knee-jerk answer is "nothing". But just because it almost all happened on the computer, doesn't mean it wasn't something. DOCUMENT< DUMMY!

I dropped my fellow 'resident', sound artist Felicity Mangan off at the bus stop, and then took a swim in Mooste Lake, alone in the drizzle. Delicious and refreshing, only hearing the raindrops on the surface of the water. The last four or five times I've visited the lake it's been swarming with squealing, extremely blond children doing cannonballs off the crooked pier.

That was pretty much the last experience I had in the material world for while. I spent the afternoon doing lot of digital housecleaning which I can here share the results of, as this blog will soon take the place of my facebook page. I hope.

I finished my JETLAG ARCHIPELAGO radio broadcast for tomorrow night on Reboot.fm. (Tune in tomorrow (Sunday, July 15th, 2012) at 11PM Berlin time (CET) to http://Reboot.fm or 88.4 on your FM dial in Berlin.) It's a mix of field recordings from my trip to Azerbaijan in June, done in collaboration with my SOFAR Channel partner and main squeeze Max. I also managed to get together my photos from this trip (one above).... and posted them on my flickr page.

So this is all the first stage I guess:: editing and gathering.

At the the Risotto-laden dinner table with MoKS members I found myself still a bit tongue-tied when asked about whatever it is I do; again my first thought was, "nothing". But isn't that the art friends? Reporting something out of nothing?

Speaking of which, I was able to visit MoKS resident girl friday Siiri's annex here in the house. She has a fascinating collection of colorfully aged plant material, as well as a gigantic wardrobe, inherited from her boyfriend's family. I found it terrifying and am still thinking about it. It is a portal, I think, to larger things --



It was at the gentle behest of the orientation booklet for my/our residency here in Mooste, Estonia (at the wonderful MoKs), that I have begun blogging in such a conventional way. I bristle a bit, but in a sense this is what I’m here to do, or at least what I proposed to do: synthesize experience.

Now, as someone who writes more or less for a living, in my own practice I consider art- and sound-making a liberation from the confines of language. I look to it as a retreat, a quiet vacation, because it’s something I don’t have to talk about. There are no topic sentences, necessarily, when I draw; abstract sound doesn’t need to be jammed into a narrative, or at least the rules are more lax. In any case I start to squirm when I read artist-composed texts on process, artists’ statements, gallery PR, Artspeak – down with artists talking about art!

But the thing is you’ve got to have some of that kind of talk stowed away in your satchel, else how do you get places like this? Proposals are made up of such things, minimalist sculptures are propped up by a thousand words. Would I even be here, with the opportunity to make art, if I weren’t able to talk about it?

ANYWAY, my idea while here is rather to figure out how to, erm, express what I’ve done and where I’ve been, not about what I’m going to do. I’ve thought about making a book, tape… basically a blogless blog. That I blog about, separately.
“?” your eyebrow says ?
As I’ve gotten older, or perhaps as the world has gotten faster and younger, I’ve gotten lazy about documentation. Beyond uploading photos to flickr and sometimes gathering field recordings together for radio pieces, I don’t report thoroughly where I’ve been and what I’ve seen. I certainly think about doing so, but then there’s this resistance to calling things what they are. Isn’t that what everyone’s doing? My many modes of expression—the written, the visual, the sonic—fight it out and then eventually just let it lie.

There’s also, in my mid-thirties, a dwindling interest in my own story. I quote Chris Kraus quoting Deleuze:
“Life, as Deleuze once observed, isn't personal”.
Now, this doesn’t mean I’m about to dump “I” and become an undercover, investigative reporter…
Though perhaps it does?

I guess working as an artist these days can permit being an investigative reporter dutifully researching things that have no reliable association with reality. Key word here, folks, is reliable, because we’re not going to engage in any discussion of reality at this juncture. The project for me, though, now, is to subtract as much of the personal – heck – anthropomorphic as possible.

Basically I’m going to start with form, shape, color, temperature, degree (see images, above). As I’m considering recent experiences in far far faraway places like Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Turkey I’m reviewing the photographs I took and investigating recurring shapes.

Though I’m reticent about working with writing in a figurative sense, it’s still a sort of home for me – so as I abstract all this stuff I begin to think in parts of speech.

I wrote on a scrap of paper a few days ago:

“My mother would proofread and she would say ‘I want to shake the adjectives right out of you’ == I imaging a sifter, when you squeeze it all the nouns fall out. THINGS == And then the colors are the adjectives, the nouns are allowed to be words, the adjectives must be illustrated

What if I could somehow form sentences, entire narratives, made of non-signifying (in a linguistic way), entirely visual and sonic parts of speech?

TO BE CONTINUED


So far I have four or five blogs (see links below), all equally neglected at this point. Been trying to break up my personas, make them digestible, bitesized. But things keep happening, and I’m unable to choose under which rubric experiences or thoughts belong. And then I find myself editing and honing the thoughts and experiences, the found pictures, the videos, the snippets of things out of existence.

This will be a NOUGHTIES ’00s-style blog / facebook stand-in where I just talk about ... everything. A big stinkin' pile. ‘Cause it’s ME. Does this make me a blogger, she asks without a question mark or a smiley face.

The title of this blog comes from Samuel Beckett’s "Molloy":
Oh I know, even when you mention only a few of the things there are, you do not get done either, I know, I know. But it’s a change of muck. And if all muck is the same muck that doesn’t matter, it’s good to have a change of muck, to move from one heap to another a little further on, from time to time, fluttering you might say, like a butterfly, as if you were ephemeral.
My fractured online self:

http://maragoldwyn.com

http://barriochinoberlin.blogspot.com/

http://fashiontrashology.wordpress.com/