Friday, November 13, 2009
POEM: Intensive care (from Inverse Origami, 1998)
Intensive Care
It's you, there, under the sickish lights
the mint walls, the turquoise bedpans.
Strangers with syringes interrupt
your feverish sleep.
your pale familiar face and matted hair,
your tubes and tethers.
Come home. Just come home.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Bent Pin: The familiar discomfort - Foster Trecost & MarkMcGuire-Schwartz
The incomplete Bent Pin Archive can now be found at http://benpinquarterly.blogspot.com Unfortunately this page is not online as yet.
-- MM Walker
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
What art can reveal
Writing prompt: If you joined the circus, what act would you most want to perform?
If I joined the circus I would certainly not want to be the fire-eater. I already have enough heart-burn for two or three people. The trapeze is too far off the ground, the fat-lady and the bearded lady are both unjustly reviled by many. The face painters have to listen to bratty kids , the knife thrower can never get enough insurance and the bareback riders wear little tutus that ride up their behinds. Putting your head inside the lion's mouth is fool-hardy at any age.
If I could join the circus today, I would be the snake charmer. So many things are hidden, uncoiling their motives only when poised to strike. Like a skillful snake charmer, I would use a little music, a metaphor or two, a little color maybe, to coax a smooth, indifferent reptile out into the light so its true nature can be examined.
If I joined the circus I would certainly not want to be the fire-eater. I already have enough heart-burn for two or three people. The trapeze is too far off the ground, the fat-lady and the bearded lady are both unjustly reviled by many. The face painters have to listen to bratty kids , the knife thrower can never get enough insurance and the bareback riders wear little tutus that ride up their behinds. Putting your head inside the lion's mouth is fool-hardy at any age.
If I could join the circus today, I would be the snake charmer. So many things are hidden, uncoiling their motives only when poised to strike. Like a skillful snake charmer, I would use a little music, a metaphor or two, a little color maybe, to coax a smooth, indifferent reptile out into the light so its true nature can be examined.
-- Mar Walker
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Dog and Cat Kiss: Interpretations differ - what's your take?
We often find it necessary to anthropomorphize or romanticize animals, especially when describing them to children, but they have their own agenda and motivations which differ greatly from our own. This is the cause of a lot of injury. A child assumes this is their beautiful stuffed toy to hug and drag about by an ear or a limb. The cat, dog, rabbit, hamster responds with teeth to this attack, ends up euthanized, not beause they were evil or dangerous -- but because their owners were irresponsibly ignorant of their needs and nature. When any dog is left alone with a small child and injury results it is most usually the fault of the supervising human being. If you own a gun and your toddler shoots someone with it, you are negligent and you get a fine. If you own a dog, and someone is injured, you might pay damages, but in the final tally its the poor dog that pays the price for your lack of objective knowledge about nature.
-- Mar Walker
Sunday, November 8, 2009
iPhone App Art with a homecooked sound track
Yes, is true that I like to fiddle around with materials and with technology. This is a video slide show of art made on an iPhone. Click on the photo to watch the video.
ARTWORK: The slides were created in SpinArt a $1.99 cent IPhone app.
MUSIC: The sound track is made in three distinct tracks each recorded driectly into iMoive HD (the old iMovie) For one track I used "mouth percussion" on another I smacked the TV remote against a lamp, on a third I improvised a tune (me singing). Then I manipulated each track using IMovie's audio editor applying pitch changes, delay and reverb i varying proportions and doing a little graphic equalization until the three tracks together had a sound I liked. It's short so give a little listen.... I kind of like the effect even though it's different from both my acoustic songs and from the classical music I used to do.
-- Mar Walker
Poem: Wannamakers Rising - from Inverse Origami
This is a poem from my first chapbook, Inverse Origami - the art of unfolding. (Puzzled Dragon Press 1998) It's about the progress of personal growth. Wannamakers is or was a big department store in downtown Philadelphia.
Wannamakers Rising
We'd like to rise
on the gliding stair
of effortless progression
a smooth escalator ascent
over a receding panorama of display.
More often we grope blindly
up sweaty
closed stairwells
steep and demanding concrete
followed by
emergence.
/
Wannamakers Rising
We'd like to rise
on the gliding stair
of effortless progression
a smooth escalator ascent
over a receding panorama of display.
More often we grope blindly
up sweaty
closed stairwells
steep and demanding concrete
followed by
emergence.
/
Friday, November 6, 2009
Repackaging the familiar for a novel view
As I was writing the graph above - I saw a very clever TV ad by American Express that uses this 'reframing' idea. In it, more than a dozen or so common scenes and/or objects were reframed as smilie faces or smilie frowns. The audio featured a gorgeous cello line, no shouting or flashing, and many of the changing pseudo faces required watching the screen intently.
The process was oddly involving, surprising, delightful - intriguing even, more than most shows these days. I have a better impression of the advertiser for mounting such a clever ad campaign. Reframing is a neat trick. Well done.
-- Mar Walker
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