October 12, 2011

Since 1980: Your Share of What You Produced

From Alternet:

According to Paul Buchheit, a professor with City Colleges of Chicago and founder of fightingpoverty.org, “if middle- and upper-middle-class families had maintained the same share of American productivity that they held in 1980, they would be making an average of $12,500 more per year.The size of our economy, he wrote, “has quintupled since 1980, and we all contributed to that success. But our contributions have earned us nothing. While total income has also quintupled, percentage-wise almost all the gains went to the richest 1 percent.” This upward redistribution of wealth “translates into a trillion extra dollars of income every year for the richest 1 percent.”
We don't have a tax problem. We have an employment / wages problem.

If you live in Dallas, TX, see Occupy Dallas.

October 11, 2011

Our Spending Priorities

Nice visual summary from True Majority. Click on the image for a larger version, or find an even larger one here.

August 19, 2011

Dallas VideoFest 2011

. . . is Sept. 21 - 25!

To my extreme regret, I have to miss it 'cuz I'll be out of town, and before that, I'll be too busy to put together the kind of chronologically-ordered schedule I've provided in previous years.

However, the Fest website is here, with lots of info and, I'm sure, more to come.

And I guarantee that if you go and see all you possibly can, you'll see things you'll remember with interest and pleasure for the rest of your life.

UPDATE: Something just happened to penetrate into my hard-at-work space today, about a program called Women Art Revolution; and if I were able to make the Fest this year, I wouldn't miss it.

August 14, 2011

From the DIY Front

I'm saving up a few items for future posts, but had to sneak back to share this:



(Thanks, Ben! More at Dark Roasted Blend.) So, who's turn is it to be the "designated excavator"?

(B.t.w., just happened to notice, this is my 1,206th c-Blog post. So if you're missing my usually-more-frequent-posting {see Temporary Hiatus for Big Project below}, feel free to check out a few previous highlights:

Ten Things You Need to Know About the Infowar
The Case for Wikileaks
On the Creative Time Summit 2 (NYC, 2010)
Reasons for instigating the ART WORK in dallas
(2010) series.
On Rotozaza's GuruGuru.
On Kalup Linzy's Keys to Our Heart.
On Matthew Barney's Drawing Restraint 13 and Ryan Trecartin's A Family Finds Entertainment.
Analysis of Patti Smith's and Jem Cohen's cover music video of Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit.
Gaga Quest: a review of Lady Gaga's Monster Ball show.
Descriptions of works shown in THE PROGRAM
(2008).

For posts explaining why It's the Derivatives, Stupid (before even Planet Money was talking about them), see here and here; and if you'd like more on the same or related topics, click on the label at the bottom of one of those posts, "follow the money."
)

August 7, 2011

Temporary Hiatus for Big Project

I'm working on a multimedia art/reality project that will consume my every waking moment for the next several weeks. I'll reveal more when it's done.

Until then, please bear with my silence; and check back here around the end of September! I promise, I shall return! With good stuff!

(And if you live in Dallas and would like to help, pls contact me.)

(And b.t.w., no, I don't believe the world's ending any time soon. It may be the end of the world as we knew it; but I believe we're on our way to re-creating a better version – I'm working on it, and send my love to all others who are, too.)

July 27, 2011

More "After Hours with George Quartz"

The artist sometimes known as George Quartz is a former Good/Bad Art Collective member and CentralTrak resident and shows at Cris Worley Gallery, and he also operates under the personas of La Maladie Tropicale and Jock Ewing.

I find his "After Hours with George Quartz" operation very interesting (previously, briefly blogged here) – he does a live-taped, "talk show"/ performance art -type of work that's like Dick Cavett meets The Twilight Zone. The next one is this Friday.

At the one I saw, the "guests" learned who they were supposed to be at the same moment they were announced to the audience, and none bore any physical resemblance to the celebrity they were to impersonate (e.g., "Joe Namath" was a black female). The "celebrities" were of the 70's-ish vintage emulated by the show.

The ensuing, improvised interviews were sometimes boring, sometimes funny, sometimes weird, usually opening with discussion of the celebrity's career and personal life (about which the guests, mostly young-ish, often knew little or nothing) and culminating with questions such as, "Liz, what is Beauty?", or "George, what is Art?"

Meanwhile, "Quartz" has most of the trappings of a live-taping tv show going on, including a talk show band and a monitor facing the audience that flashes "APPLAUSE" at the appropriate times. And the video actually produced from this performance is beyond-true to 70's or earlier production values (excerpts from the resulting "show" can be viewed on Quartz's vimeo channel).

In short, this is great, wacky parody; but there's a lot more than that going on.

The next Quartz taping/performance will be at the Texas Theatre in Oak Cliff, Dallas, at 10PM; more details here (together with links to visuals). Be part of the audience, and you might end up on "tv."