To Whom It May Concern

Artwork: Elmgreen & Dragset studio, To Whom It May Concern, Place Vendôme, 2018

Artwork: Elmgreen & Dragset studio, To Whom It May Concern, Place Vendôme, 2018

Starfish are sometimes seen as the reflection of the stars in the sky in the ocean’s depths. These magical creatures navigate the world through touch, reflexes and instinct. They have an incredible ability to regenerate, even survive amputations. And like so many creatures in the sea, they are under threat from environmental pollution.

Image: Starfish/sea stars from the Galapagos Islands (photo: @perrinjames1)

Image: Starfish/sea stars from the Galapagos Islands (photo: @perrinjames1)

Elmgreen & Dragset studio have created a site-specific installation, To Whom It May Concern, currently in the Place Vendôme, Paris. It consists of 100 red bronze starfish scattered in the square, as if the ocean has flooded then ebbed to leave them stranded. The radical strangeness of their placement out of water spotlights how their survival is at peril, and the threat posed by ocean pollution such as plastics. Yet with their remarkable abilities to regenerate and survive, they are also a symbol of hope—the possibilities of new ways of living.

the little prince

Artwork: The Little Prince by @seth_globapainter

Artwork: The Little Prince by @seth_globapainter

Truly gorgeous. Wall mural by SETH (@seth-globepainter) inspired by one of my favourite books, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s The Little Prince.

For the love of books…

kin

Fabulous just completed mural in Williamsburg, Brooklyn by @sonnysundancer titled, Kin

We’re all connected and as artist Sonny wrote: “The planet belongs to all of us.”

Artwork: Kin by @sonysundancer, Williamsburg, 2018

Artwork: Kin by @sonysundancer, Williamsburg, 2018

begin again

A short video created by and featuring surfer John John Florence and friends in Oahu and Maui, Begin Again.

Mood today :)

double-quadruple-etcetera-etcetera

Image: Still from Sondra Perry's Double Quadruple Etcetera-Etcetera 2013

Image: Still from Sondra Perry's Double Quadruple Etcetera-Etcetera 2013

When I first saw American artist Sondra Perry’s video, Double-Quadruple-Etcetera-Etcetera (2013, watch versions I & II here) I was mesmerised by the frenetic energy and the thought came, “I wouldn’t mind cutting loose like that.”

But there’s a violent undercurrent that’s hard to ignore, and has nothing to do with cutting loose and expressing yourself freely. 

Perry works with digital production and performance, foregrounding the use of new technologies to explore issues of identity, subjecthood, representation and blackness. In Double-Quadruple, Perry used the content-aware function in Photoshop to mask most of the moving figure. She instructed the performer to “move around ferociously”. The program registers most of the image as background or wall-space, delegating the figure to a kind of erasure or abstraction, despite the thrashing movement signifying an actual body. Applied frame by frame, the figure becomes a mini-whirlwind, the digital masking straightjackets the figure so that they appear to be trying to escape confinement. This fighting back is almost symbolic of the performer wanting to assert their presence in the face of being completely whited out—obliterated. 

Perry currently has a solo exhibition Typhoon coming on at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery, London, until 20 May 2018. You can check out Perry's work at http://sondraperry.com.

books & time

Artwork: Street art by millo (@_millo_), Once upon a time, Milan, Italy

Artwork: Street art by millo (@_millo_), Once upon a time, Milan, Italy

Insightful quote from Carl Sagan about the magic of books:

"What an astonishing thing a book is. It's a flat object made from a tree with flexible parts on which are imprinted lots of funny dark squiggles. But one glance at it and you're inside the mind of another person, maybe somebody dead for thousands of years. Across the millennia, an author is speaking clearly and silently inside your head, directly to you. Writing is perhaps the greatest of human inventions, binding together people who never knew each other, citizens of distant epochs. Books break the shackles of time." 

(source: @_nitch)

a poem

Artwork: Drawing, Poem by Pejac (@pejac_art)

Artwork: Drawing, Poem by Pejac (@pejac_art)

Wonderful words written by Robert Frost to poet, Louis Untermeyer in a letter:

“A poem...begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness. It is a reaching-out toward expression; an effort to find fulfilment. A complete poem is one where an emotion finds the thought and the thought finds the words.”

A Yoshitomo Nara Day

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Grrrrrrr...a messed up/mixed up kind of day! Two steps forward and one back. A bit of heaven & hell. 

chill

A pretty chill kind of day (and freaking cold!!!). And here's a pretty chill track by Paul West Refractions. Check it out on SoundCloud here . Also, check out the Youtube download of it (no vid, just sound).         

love sonnet

Image: Jen Szeto (@windowofimagination)

Image: Jen Szeto (@windowofimagination)

Read this today. Sublime. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's sonnet Love:

We cannot live, except thus mutually 

We alternate, aware or unaware, 

The reflex act of life: and when we bear 

Our virtue onward most impulsively, 

Most full of invocation, and to be 

Most instantly compellant, certes, there 

We live most life, whoever breathes most air 

And counts his dying years by sun and sea. 

But when a soul, by choice and conscience, doth 

Throw out her full force on another soul,

The conscience and the concentration both 

Make mere life, Love. For Life in perfect whole 

And aim consummated, is Love in sooth,

As nature’s magnet-heat rounds pole with pole.

right as rain

Here's another great short film titled Right as Rain from Finisterre (Cold Water Surfing), promoting their commitment as a business to environmentally sustainable practices. Team Manager, Matt Smith, and Finisterre ambassador, Fergal Smith, talk about their passion for surfing, the land, and sustainable organic farming at the co-operative Molly Hill Farm, Ireland.  

Enjoy!

mondo cozmo

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Sunday—mood :) Mondo Cozmo's single Sold from his album, Your Motherfucker.

Check it out (and maybe lie outside somewhere and drift with the sky...).

a new beginning

Artwork: by @deih.xlf, A New Beginning

Artwork: by @deih.xlf, A New Beginning

Something otherworldly and wonderful from artist @deih.xlf, titled A New Beginning. This mural was painted for a festival called ‘Encrucijada Sangüesa’ in Ciudad de Sangüesa, a small town in Navarra, in the North of Spain.

Deih said this about the mural: '“When you directly confront your stone, you always get an answer with a new way of shining. (The real knowledge is for brave people.) A new beginning is possible."

Swap “soul” or “heart” for “stone” and it also resonates beautifully, although a little less intergalactically!  

 

son of the sea

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Artist Ricky Lee Gordon was recently commissioned to create a work for the Paxos Contemporary Art Project in Greece. Titled: THE SON OF THE SEA CREATED AN ISLAND FOR HIS LOVER SO SHE WOULD REST HIS TIRED HEART, he had this to say about its inception, disruption, and that despite not being able to finish the work, the surrounding issues in his view, gave the work its completion:

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“Whilst nearing completion of the installation which would serve as a shrine to the story and aching love of Poseidon the Church arrived and asked me to stop. The property which the festival organizers were given and thought to belong to municipality in fact belonged to the church.
The installation consists of a portrait of Poseidon as a young boy overlooking the remaining columns and roof tiles of an abandoned house to represent self and the dismantling of self. Also in some way it was my intention to create a self portrait, reflection on and ritual for the letting go of longing.

The situation and experience of being confronted by the Church and the uncompleted installation is for me the final work. It took on a life of its own out of my control like everything in this constant ever changing flux of a universe. The other interesting link is that it was the Church who dismantled and put an end to any and all belief in the mythology and ritual for the Greek gods. 
Aphrodite hid from Poseidon’s love at the ‘end of the world’ so he created the island of Paxos to convince her that if she were to love him she would have the power to soothe his chaotic ways and bring balance to his restless heart.

The myth is also significant as it is thought to symbolize the end of the ancient world and the dawn of the Christian era.” 

(http://rickyleegordon.com, @rickyleegordon) 

beautiful things

Image: Saul Bass quote featured here on 5preview's naoko silk dress

Image: Saul Bass quote featured here on 5preview's naoko silk dress

This hit home—a quote from graphic designer Saul Bass:

“I want to make beautiful things even if nobody cares.”

carolina's pony

Artwork: LET (@l.e.t._les.enfants.terribles), Carolina's Pony

Artwork: LET (@l.e.t._les.enfants.terribles), Carolina's Pony

Latest terrific and edgy stencil in Berlin by LET (@l.e.t._les.enfants.terribles), Carolina's Pony.

sergei x rankin

I love dance, especially contemporary, but once in a while a classical ballet dancer comes on the scene who defies categorisation, is so out there, unique and adventurous, that you just have to take notice. Ukrainian Sergei Polunin is that dancer. Here's a short film collaboration with photographer Rankin, soundtrack by Husky Loops, for Hunger magazine that showcases his incredible talent. I mean—wow! Just wow.

our world of plastics

Image: National Geographic June 2018 front cover: Planet or Plastic?

Image: National Geographic June 2018 front cover: Planet or Plastic?

Plastic pollution is an epic problem. I don't want to focus too much on the negatives, instead I'd like to showcase a few projects that are innovatively tackling the issue by thinking outside the box, while also acknowledging it's through our collective and daily efforts to deal with the mammoth task of cleaning up our environment, so that its safer, healthier and plastic-free.

Because the fact is plastic doesn't disappear once it's made. It also degrades into smaller pieces to become microplastics which are in our water systems, and even if you can't see it it's now been proven that microplastics are in the water you bathe in, the water you drink, and in the food you eat that's sourced from the ocean and streams. 

Plastic isn't a problem that's “out there”, it's very much become a problem that impacts on human health and well being. 

So, here are some wonderful projects that are dealing with the problem head-on:

1. The Seabin Project

Developed by two Western Australian surfers and ocean lovers, Andrew Turtin and Peter Ceglinski, the Seabin Project began its life as a Kickstarter campaign that's become a small business operating globally. The Seabin is what's termed as a “floating debris intervention device”, and is installed at marinas, yacht clubs or in areas of calm water. It's basically a bin construction that collects and sifts pollution debris from the water. The company also focuses on education and scientific development with a simple aim: pollution free oceans for future generations. Check out this wonderful invention here: www.seabinproject.com

2. The Ocean Cleanup

This major project and organisation is the brainchild of Boyan Slat (CEO), and was developed to create technologies to extract plastic pollution from the oceans and to prevent further plastic entering the oceans. One of its major aims is to tackle the Great Pacific Garbage Patch located between Hawaii and California, which is roughly double the size of Texas. It's a floating island of debris, mostly plastics. The Ocean Cleanup technology is described as “a passive system” that aims to close the source and clean it up through a pipe and net system that isolates the garbage so it can be removed from the ocean, taken to land, and then sorted for recycling. The first clean-up system is scheduled to be deployed mid-2018, and you can check out this amazing project here:  www.theoceancleanup.com

3. Endangered Waves App

Surfers and ocean lovers have long been environmentalists. Basically, their playground is the water and beaches and coastal environments, and any pollution becomes obvious when you're walking, swimming and surfing in it. I became aware of this app through big wave surfer Greg Long who promoted it through his IG account. It's a simple and brilliant solution to turn that horrible feeling of seeing pollution, yet not knowing how to fix the problem, into action. The app was developed by the Save the Waves Coalition in California (@savethewavescoalition & https://www.savethewaves.org) and it basically lets you take a picture of the problem, select the type of threat, geo-tag the location, and upload the information. It will then be sent to the organisations that can best deal with the issue. You can download the app on IOS or Android or visit the Save the Waves website.

4. Finisterre

Cold water surf company Finisterre has just put out a range of surf gear and leisure wear made from microplastics. The campaign's motto of 'Stand Together. Take Action.' is to highlight the issue of microplastic pollution through education and working with scientists and conservationists to find innovative ways to clean it up and upcycle it so that it has another life, one that's sustainable. Check out the video, Beneath The Surface about the project, or visit the website: www.finisterre.com