Musings related to life. Linked from my website, www.comicnurse.com

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Falling

Friday, October 20, 2006

Chicago Treasures



Every event I attend should include some empty drawing space and a small pencil with no eraser.
Went to the newly opened Chicago History Museum last night to hear a conversation between Steve Edwards of Chicago Public Radio's 848, Jon Langford and Tony Fitzpatrick - the latter two Chicago artists I greatly respect. Highlights included learning that Jon Langford buys the wood for his paintings at Crafty Beaver, which is where I also bought the first wood I ever painted. He sang two fantastic songs. Tony read two incredible poems, and had some great quotes. Edwards asked why he still lives in Chicago, after growing up here. He answered, "it's the center of my compass." He talked about his art as "not acts of nostalgia, but acts of history." Two more:
"There is a magical Chicago and it's all around us."
and
"Remember, we speak for the dead."

Monday, October 16, 2006

Cartoon of the Week? Month? Year?

Having worked intently on this book project for about a month now, I've let the cartoon of the week turn into the cartoon of the month. And maybe that's not so bad. For the past two years I've done a cartoon of the week (more or less.) The website has a good sized archive built up, items from which now appear in the monthly e-zine "Gay." If you're interested, it's funny, it's free and arrives as a PDF attached to an email . Subscribe here: http://www.gay-e-magazine.com/index.html - and be ready for some fabulous David Cassidy music if you follow that link!

"I should have known I was a lesbian when I was ten years old and fell in love with David Cassidy. I mean, with his long feathered locks and pooka shell necklace, he was the prettiest girl I'd ever seen!" - Candy, Editor, GAY e-zine

There are those not happy about the new cartoon frequency reduction. See the Cartoon of the Week just posted(www.comicnurse.com)

Our Nation's Capital

Visited DC this past weekend. I hadn't been there since that horrible car trip when I was a kid (see Cartoon Archive, "Vacation Part One.") I was enchanted by the staggering number of museums and lack of skyscrapers. Having to spend part of the trip working, I decided to only seriously visit three sites: The Vietnam Memorial, The National Archive and The National Portrait Gallery/Smithsonian American Art Museum.


As Cindy said at the Vietnam Memorial, it is "very likely our most sacred ground here" (in DC.)

On our way to the National Archive, we had an interesting sighting, common to locals, I would imagine:



I must confess, I went to the National Archives not to see firsthand our nation's Charters of Freedom. No, I went for the gift shop. I got the idea in my head that there would be all kinds of great historic audio available on CD. I got this idea from iTunes, where I'd stumbled on some of it. I'm a fool for cool audio. But, as I sit here and type this, I realize it's the Library of Congress I was thinking of. The National Archive bookstore was a bust - although we did get a very funny Eleanor Roosevelt finger puppet.


Fortunately our hotel, which used to be our nation's first post office, was directly across the street from the Smithsonian Donald W. Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture - which used to be the original Patent Office. (Everything in DC seems to have been something else at one time, which makes sense, I guess.) This museum was amazing - as was it's gift shop, which did carry some of the audio I was after. Several highlights of this museum.

First were the winning selections from the National Portrait Competetion - http://www.portraitcompetition.si.edu/index.html



Second was a staggering folk art piece. It's title is "The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations' Millennium General Assembly."

It was done in secret in a rented garage over 14 years by James Hampton, who called himself "St. James, Director for Special Projects for the State of Eternity." During the day he cleaned federal buildings. At night he worked on his project. It consists of 180 pieces of full-sized furniture, adorned with gold and silver aluminum foil, Kraft paper, and plastic, paperboard, and lightbulbs. Viewing the entire collection is disarming.



He said of his project, "That is my life. I'll finish before I die." No one knew of Hampton's creation save his landlord, who took possession of it all in lieu of back rent. He also got a collection of encoded writings, kept in ring binders or on clipboards, penned by Hampton in a secret alphabet, that have yet to be deciphered. Among them is The Book of the 7 Dispensations by St. James, each page of which ends with the word "Revelation."

The third and final piece from the two-in-one museum is a more trite installation, but no less stops you in your tracks - a giant map of the USA in multi-colored neon with video monitors playing feeds relevant to each state. (For example, Kansas is showing the film "Wizard of Oz" while Illinois streams a documentary about Abraham Lincoln.) Pretty cool!