
Did
you know you can take your old running shoes (or any soft-soled sneaker
by any brand) to your local Nike Town store and they will use it to
create athletic surfaces like tracks and basketball courts and
children's playgrounds? You can learn more on their Let Me Play Reuse A Shoe website.
Or that Clif Bar,
based
in Berkeley, CA, has partnered with TerraCycle to reuse its energy bar
wrappers? Their joint initiative, called the Wrapper Brigade, is one of
many that TerraCylce has created to reuse recyclable materials and, in
the process, donate to charities.
Here's how it works:
Charities go to www.terracycle.net/brigades
and apply to become one of the recipient organizations. Once approved,
the charity receives collection bags that, once filled and returned to
terracycle free of charge, receive .02 for each item recycled. In
addition to collecting Clif Bar wrappers, TerraCycle collects Capri Sun
and Kool Aid drink pouches, 20oz plastic soda bottles and Stonyfield
Farm yogurt containers, among others.
See this video of Soyeon
Lee, pianist, wearing a dress fashioned by TerraCycle. She performed in
the recycled pink pouch dress at Carnegie Hall on 19 February in what
her site calls an Eco Concert.
TerraCycle
has limited the number of collection sites it will partner with, but
the good news is that some of the companies gladly accept their used
containers...like Stonyfield and Brown Cow who's number-5 containers
are not recyclable by most municipalities.
Unfortunately, the
organic yogurt makers, Clif, Capri Sun, TerraCycle and all the others
promoting reuse are still only offering an in-between solution to the
issue of using plastic, petroleum and other eco-unfriendly resources to
service our food needs (mine included...I love my energy bars and handy
yogurt servings). In Clif Bar's newsletter, they noted this
less-than-ideal solution as well:
"We're
not psyched about the fact that our wrappers end up in the garbage.
We've been working hard to come up with a more sustainable solution;
since we haven't found the answer just yet, we've partnered with
TerraCycle to launch the Energy Bar Wrapper Brigade. Get this:
TerraCycle will convert all of the energy bar wrappers they receive
into handy accessories and will donate two cents for every wrapper to
the charity of your choice. Sign up for free and become a shepherd for
the program."
Related to this, I came across a great blog called Fake Plastic Fish
by a woman named Beth Terry based in Oakland, CA that tackles this and
other sustainability issues. I am impressed by her knowledge and
dedication. And my friends think I'm an eco-nutso. Go, woman! Fake
Plastic Fish, "They're cute, and if we don't solve our plastic problem,
they could be the only kind we have left."
Saturday, April 05, 2008
Recycling in the Pink
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Cuba's Long Black Spring

If
you don't know them, change that today: Citizens for the Protection of
Journalists, a professional organization and non-profit I joined almost
a year ago when I first came across one of their reports on human
rights abuses.
Today's focus at their monthly luncheon was on
Cuba's policy on independent journalists. In March 2003, the government
went after and arrested 75 dissidents, 29 of whom were journalists, and
20 of whom remain behind bars in sub-human conditions five years later.
While
the Spanish government has worked to release many of them, the American
government remains mostly silent on the topic. While it is better to
get them released, the speakers at today's luncheon suggested that
neither the Spanish policy of engagement with Cuba (which on the one
hand encourages Cuba's employment of dissidents as human bargaining
chips) nor America's economic embargo serves as a model response to
Cuba's human rights violations.
For more details on what CPJ has uncovered and recommends, see their report, Cuba's Long Black Spring, available on their website, at CPJ.org.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
An Evening with Akram Zaatari
Akram Zaatari
was an adolescent, a teenager, a bored observer of the Israeli invasion
of Lebanon in 1982. Or so he tells us on March 17th as we gather at a
theater of the Museum of Modern Art for the US premiere of his latest
documentary.
Excavating his journals, audio recordings (on audio
cassettes), photos and knickknacks of that time, Zaatari (born in 1966
in Saida, Lebanon) desires to see with the eyes of other men, his peers
in age and nationality, who experienced the occupation differently. On
this night, we were treated to excerpts of four of the more than thirty
films in Zaatari's oeuvre: All Is Well on the Border (1997), This Day (2003), In This House (2005) and Nature Morte (2008).
An
anthropologist of sorts, Zaatari literally unearths the story of one of
his peers, Ali Hashishu, now a foreign correspondent with Agence France
Presse, who served in the resistance army; his communist ties and
experience on the front continue to serve him in his role as
journalist. "Following the Israeli withdrawal from Ain el Mir in 1985,
the village became the frontline. The Dagher family was displaced from
their home, which was occupied by a radical resistant group for seven
years. When the war ended in 1991, Ali Hashisho, a member of the
Lebanese resistance stationed in the Dagher family house, wrote a
letter to the Dagher's family justifying his occupation of their house,
and welcoming them back home. He placed the letter inside an empty case
of a B-10, 82 mm mortar, and buried it in the garden." In November
2002, Akram Zaatari headed to Ain el Mir to excavate Ali's letter and
outsprang the film, In This House.
In
another film, Neruda (a nickname given to him by another soldier
because of his romantic and poetic sensibility) learned how to
dismantle an AK47 at the age of ten. Once he could successfully make
his target in seven of ten shots, he was promoted to RPGs at the age of
13. By 16, Neruda was caught during a bombing mission and held in
detention-pseudo-jail by the Israeli army until he could legally be
tried and imprisoned at 18. Neruda spent ten years in captivity. His
story, shared primarily through the letters he exchanged with his
devoted mother, and through interviews Zaatari held with other Lebanese
prisoners in Israel, provide the context of the film, All is Well on the Border, completed in 1997.
In the artist's desire to relate his peers' experience of the invasion, Zaatari, the founder of the Arab Image Foundation,
comes to understand that, "the story of resistances is really tied to
mediation." In the attempt to tell a story of in-betweens, of
ambiguity, of individuality, forces weigh against the storyteller
leaving binaries of victim and victimizer, soldier and civilian, good
and bad. Zaatari strives to get beyond these dualities, but feels
hampered at every turn, with the characters in his stories, the
audience, the government, all pushing toward black and white
understandings and oversimplifications.
In the fourth film excerpted at MOMA, Nature Morte is a self-described, "poetic document that is not a fiction, but not documentary either." Commissioned by the Centre Georges Pomipidou
in France, the film excerpt we see at MOMA is bare bones: no dialogue,
one room, two characters who interact by mostly not interacting.
An
older man wears a black nit cap, his dark eyebrows offset by a graying
beard and few days' beard growth. Working under a kerosene lamp he
hunches over a table low to the ground, where he is sitting and
methodically assembling an explosive device. Behind him a younger man
dresses in winter outer clothing, also seated, silent and methodical.
He concentrates on sewing - mending a torn clothing article. He wears
muted colors of army green with dark mustache and beard against a
white-washed wall. After a number of minutes of this silent
preparation, the older man loads a gun, the two stand facing each
other, silent, inches apart. Who will go? Both? I assume the
younger...isn't it always the young that we send to fight our wars? We
break to the outside, flash from one man to the other, still unsure who
will leave. And one finally does begin to climb up the hillside
bordered by a low rock wall as birds chirp in the wintry low light
heralding the almost-dawn of spring.
Zaatari's exploration of
war, of objects, of experience over the decades appears to herald the
dawn of spring, as well - both for him and for the world in the grip of
wars worldwide.
From the MOMA catalogue:
An Evening with Akram Zaatari
Lebanese
artist Akram Zaatari interweaves documentary and personal narrative to
examine the complicated social, political, and cultural issues of a
country shaped by extended territorial conflict. His videos and
installations speak of the contradictions of everyday life within
regions of conflict further fragmented by media. Al Yaoum (This Day)
chronicles thirty years of Lebanon, and in How I Love You, five
Lebanese men speak about their passions and relationships. Presented in
conjunction with Asian Contemporary Art Week. 90min. Monday, March 17, 7:00pm.
Saturday, March 15, 2008
Death and Life in Jersey City
The
calling cards, homemade organic whole wheat fig bars and the journey to
and from are some of the most memorable parts of last night.
Melissa McAlpin’s
little brown envelopes with a replica in miniature of one of her
hand-drawn images tucked inside hint at the sweet sadness of her
sister's story. The lovely round coaster printed with a lemon so yellow
it makes me pucker just looking at it, once flipped over reveals Amanda
Thackray’s work described in an ancient yet futuristic language, the
piece signed and numbered; a work of art in itself – printed at Sesame Letterpress in Brooklyn. And my friend, Maya Joseph-Goteiner’s
modern interpretation of an almost obsolete item: the paper library
catalog card, printed on heavy water-color board in courier font as
though hand-typed on the Corona in her installation on war in
literature.
These give-aways accompany the artwork at last
night’s opening of WWIII: A Wonder Women Project presented by _gaia and
hosted by the Mana Fine Arts Exhibition Space* in Jersey City, NJ. Calling-card art in miniature, and yours for the taking, now through April 12th.
The
whitewashed cinderblock walls and gray cement floor of the gallery
seemed perfectly fitting to both the neighborhood immediately outside
the large steel doors as well as to the theme of the show, which
examines the artists’ understanding of and relationship to war. Ten
women were chosen to participate in a residency at _gaia
in Hoboken. Over the course of six-weeks, they talked, wrote, shared
and executed creative projects related to the theme of war. This
collection, organized and curated by Joanna White (whom I know from my
time at ICP)
and Doris Cacoilo, shows the inconsistency of its participants - for
some, it seems to be a summary of an experience, for others a work in
progress.
My journey to the show begins at the World Trade
Center site NJ PATH terminal in lower Manhattan, an appropriate
jumping-off point given that for so many in America, the war most
affecting our lives exploded here on this soil. For me, the Iraq War
started in the White House, with our dependence upon oil, and with our
arming of Saddam Hussein decades ago when the US government assisted in
hoisting him to power before toppling him after 9/11. Political beliefs
notwithstanding, I experience the symbolic depth of this place that
when peering down into the p;it it feels as though I am looking half a
mile into the core of the earth and into what has gone wrong in our
world.
The
bright white taut canvas canopy and swaying flags herald the entrance
to the terminal, in contrast with the basement-like station at the
bottom of the escalators. Cement, leaking pipes and an abundance of
harsh fluorescent lighting overhead and on booms could confuse a
visitor into believing they've walked into movie sound set where an
interrogation scene is about to take place. Surrounded by chain-linked
fencing and views of the monstrously large excavation of what was once
skyscrapers foreshadow the war-zone to come in Jersey. Like the
gallery, the WTC PATH terminal feels clean but harsh – like an
emergency room operating out of a mammoth garage. Cold, intense,
sterile -- but not in the sense that when you drop your brie and grapes
on the floor, as I will later do at the gallery, you would still want
to eat them, unless you’re in the midst of a war zone and some food off
the floor is the least of your worries.
After a less than
10-minute train ride, I exit at Grove Street in Jersey and am greeted
by a moist-wind-swept plaza (it’s only a short distance to the shore
with rear-facing views of the Statue of Liberty). Using the
Dunkin-Donuts as a marker, I am told to go left down its street, which
is Newark Avenue. Starbucks is opening on the plaza as well: a sign
that Jersey City has either arrived or has gone to hell, depending whom
you talk to.
Turning right onto Coles, walking through a
neighborhood that seems to change with each of the twelve blocks I
walk, a mix of rundown and renovated, single family clapboard and
elegant brownstones, divey bars and more upscale restaurants, clearly a
neighborhood in the process of the big bad word: gentrification. Just
as Coles seems to Dead End, a handwritten sign beckons the traveler
through a construction site under an overpass that ushers autos in and
out of the City via the Lincoln Tunnel. Oh, so this is where we are.
I’ve seen this neighborhood from a car window thinking it looked like
it was either decaying or just being built. Now that I’m on the ground,
walking through broken pavement, mounds of dirt, around piles of beams
in the almost opaque darkness of evening, I realize that both
observations are true: Jersey City is dying one death and coming to new
life simultaneously. In that way, gentrification could be thought of
like Easter for a neighborhood. Hmmm. If only we could all believe in
its promises of development as resurrection. Starbucks doesn’t feel
good in my own neighborhood of Jackson Heights, which just this morning
I noticed has opened in amidst the bodegas and Colombian, Thai,
Japanese, Chinese, El Salvadoran and Italian restaurants. But, I
digress.
Following more hand-written signs “this way, don’t be
scared!” illuminated by the blue light of my mobile phone, I stumble
over one last bit of debris (or was that the start of a sidewalk?) into
the exhibition space. It’s large enough to comfortably hold the ten
installations as well as at least one hundred people without feeling
cramped or hot. There’s none of that standing on tiptoes or brushing
past and subtly nudging others to get closer to a display card to read
what the work is about. And this is one of those shows where you want
to read what the artist intends if, like me, you like to know those
sorts of things. I’ll take a first impression, stand back (which there
was also room to do) get up close, think about it, feel it, but,
ultimately I don’t want to walk away scratching my head, which would
have been the case with a number of these less-than-straightforward
pieces.
Take the lemon-coaster woman’s work, as example. Amanda
Thackray set-up plywood boards with a tree’s worth of lemons attached
by electrical wire that then connects to a pulley running though a
yellow-painted bicycle suspended from the ceiling and from which hangs
a cinder block over a plate with more lemons. Next to the plate of
lemons, on a table lined with a delicately embroidered cloth and above
which hangs more old school looking needle-point works of lemons as
though you've just entered your grandmother’s kitchen in Europe,
limoncello-spiked lemonade is being served out of a glass decanter.
Huh? I don’t get it. After reading Thackray’s statement – the one in
English, not the one in Esperanto, the constructed “universal language”
meant to foster peace and understanding across cultures – I understand
that her intention is for me to consider the power of the lemon: its
acidity can, in this fantastic creation, manufacture sufficient power
to crush other lemons so that I can drink the lemon nectar. Come the
apocalypse, lemons can kill themselves to nourish me. Oh, okay. I get
it now. I think.
Another artist hung a traditional wood medicine
cabinet on the wall and on the rung below an army-green hand towel that
reads “look inside.” Swinging the door open, which is lined on the
inside with a mirror, shows a video projection of a green hill, the
number 3009 on a large
sign and row upon row of white crosses. Above the video stands a shelf
filled with prescription pill bottles, face creams and toiletries. The
common, everyday items we see and use juxtaposed with the death of
soldiers that has become all too-common in our lives and the lives of
people around the world. On the day in January when the film was shot
in Lafayette, CA, 3009 Americans had lost their lives in Iraq. Today on
public radio I heard that as we approach the five-year anniversary of
this war we’ve lost over 3,700 American lives and anywhere from 40,000
to 100.000 Iraqis.
The exhibition also includes a video
accompanied by sand spread on the floor (I didn’t read the description
on that one…), portraits of Protestant and Catholic women organizing
for peace in Northern Island accompanied by the artist’s journal of the
same; a discombobulated map hand drawn and mis-assembled; homage to the
water crisis fueled, in part, by the unnecessary dependence in first
world countries on plastic bottled water, 1/5th of which does not get
recycled; a wedding dress fashioned out of 400 used dryer sheets; and a
woman promoting a candidate for the presidency who doesn’t exist except
in her imagination. Or, at least, I think that’s her shtick. I have to
admit, I’m already so sick of the presidential campaign that I couldn’t
bring myself to get close enough to her table of leaflets and buttons
and “Die Harder,” a play on the Bruce Willis movie, posters to really
understand. Fortunately, the food table beckoned only a few steps away
so I bee-lined in that direction.
One of the more impressive, elegant yet profound works is Melissa McCalpin’s Phone Call,
in which she relates the story of how her sister, a marine serving in
Iraq, lost a close friend when his helicopter was shot down. In a quilt
of three-dimensional boxes on the wall laid out in a 9 by 4 grid,
McCalpin succinctly tells her sister’s story in word and drawing. Each
group of sentences is framed and flush with the wall; on either side,
the accompanying squares further frame the sentences raised just an
inch or so from the wall. Pinned only at the top, McCalpin's
transparent tracing paper sketches flutter as if a feather falling from
the sky – or a man rappelling from a helicopter. She has carefully
tinted the drawings wiithin a palette of perhaps three colors. McCalpin
is, perhaps, making order out of the chaos of her sister’s experience,
juxtaposing the solidity of the facts of the story, "In scarves and
hats they mingle learning how to smoke cigarettes" with the tragic
whimsy of the illustrated details like the image of the soldier's arms
or the naive teenager's boom box - a young man who today plays Man on
the street corner and could be recruited a year or two from now to
serve and die on the streets of Baghdad. The work provides a powerful
juxtaposition both in content and mood.
My dear friend, Maya
Joseph-Goteiner, prepared a room whose walls are books with war in
their title, perhaps two hundred of the more than 20,000 titles ever
published in English. You will find the classics like Tolstoy's War and Peace as well as little known titles translated from other languages at the turn of the 20th Century.
War Library
is lit by brass lamps that remind me of the New York Public Library,
with over-sized and plush green pillows for sitting in the center,
Joseph-Goteiner invites us into the space to reflect in silence or in
discussion on our understanding of war. Stacks of blank manila card
catologue index cards call for reflection; clothespins hang longingly
on invisible wire suspended from the ceiling, waiting for cards to fill
in as wall paper and, as the wires are decorated with cards, the
library’s walls increase in height.
Nine o’clock arrives
quickly, and the host switches the lights on and off to signal that
opening night is coming to a close. Eight friends head out into the
soft drizzle to brave the war zone underpass as a battalion looking for
a dry, warm place and a cold beer. After a quick stop at Maya and
Mike’s apartment on fourth, we slip past a few drunk, heavyset men into
one of those dive bars just blocks from where Starbucks is due to open.
After paprika fries and Guinness, shouting over and singing with Ozzie,
Thoroughgood and AC/DC blasting from the juke box, I feel resurrected
and grateful to be able to push thoughts of war to the back of my
psyche for another night.
* Artist Talk and Closing– April 12th 4-9pm
Gallery Hours M-F 10-6 pm or by appointment
Mana Fine Arts Exhibition Space, 227 Coles Street, Jersey City, NJ 07310 (800) 330-9659White
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Improvising with McCoy Tyner and Savion Glover: Bring it On!
At times whimsical, alive, thoughtful, competitive, paternal and prayerful, tonight's performance by the McCoy Tyner Trio and Savion Glover at Peekskill's historic Paramount Center for the Arts* sent me spinning and dancing.
The
audience leapt from our seats begging for an encore (which was
granted). Rarely have I heard four musicians more connected with each
other or so enjoying making music together. Never before have I heard a
man's feet become an instrument quite like Glover's did tonight.
The
floorboards and the keyboards were ablaze with the blues of Tyner's
West Phillie upbringing, the jazz of Coltrane and Savion's Newark
funk-i-fied feet. As a wannabe disciple of the church of John Coltrane,
I know the Spirit moving when I see, hear and feel it.
Glover's
sheer joy shone through his almost ever-present smile, poured out of
his lanky, agile, ever-moving frame as he tapped on his toes, his
heels, the sides of his shoes, sliding, stepping, shuffling across the
stage on risers just inches above the other guys. Dreads tossed into a
loose bunch on the lower part of his head, a few raucous strands
jutting out in various directions, dancing along with his skinny legs
and gangly fingers, Glover played his feet like a second percussionist
to drummer Eric Kamau Gravatt.
Most of the night he faced Tyner
who was stage right, like a son looking to his father for direction,
for acceptance, for partnership. Occasionally Tyner glanced up from the
keyboard, all the while tappin' his left heel on the floor while his
right toes pressed the pads of the Steinway, and a satisfied smile
would cross his face immediately reinvigorating Glover like a child
who's parent had just given him a "nice dive, son" and thumbs up
poolside. As the musicians took turns soloing, Glover would begin to
hear the subtle shift either to his left and engage the drummer, or
behind, and engage bassist Gerald Cannon. No matter the musician,
Glover's feet could accompany.
The 30-something year-old woman
beside me, who has been taking tap classes for many years including
recently studying with a student of Savion's, remarked that it's not
just his speed that is impressive, or that he never stops moving. It is
the clarity of each and every ba bah BAH bah BAH swish, ba bah bah BAH
of metal on wood like the precision of a violinist's fingers on strings
or a skater's double somersault landing on ice. There is nothing more
impressive or inspiring than that kind of precision, especially when
offered with such joy, such elegance and such apparent ease.
In
the second to last piece, Glover and the drummer took center stage
entering into a duel of cymbals depending on what they struck and how
they landed. Their boxing match of music entailed one taking lead and
the next responding - and then taking it one step further. After a good
few minutes and a few subtle, then less subtle key strokes, the
almost-70-year old Pappa Tyner would reign in his fighters to harness
their abundant energy into a cohesive ensemble again. As Turner pulled
the posse together, Glover would tap and turn himself unconsciously
back toward the father. Okay, we're all here now. We know who's in
charge. And the call and response would begin anew.
In the
finale before we called Encore!, Glover had been wiping the sweat from
his brow with a white towel when the music consumed him and next thing
he was dancing with the towel in his hand. Where his hands had been
loose and free all night, now one clenched the towel and the other
became fisted with one finger pointing. As his hands shifted, so too
his legs and arms; what had seemed to be constantly flexing and
lengthening had now become stiff like a new skier on a steep slope.
What had flown freely like his baggy pants and t-shirt became rigid
with anticipation. His tap tap tap became STOMP STOMP STOMP and his
smile disappeared as a look of squinted concentration consumed his
face, a face now turned upward as if his whole body were saying Bring
it On, YES YES YES. Or maybe it was Amen! or who knows where he was
going but he was flying and we were flying with him. We came out the
other side, drained and thrilled and on our feet, but falling over with
pleasure.
It's nights like tonight that I am reminded we each have something we are meant to be doing. What a ride. Thanks, guys.
*From the Paramount Theater press release:
Grammy Award winning jazz pianist McCoy Tyner performs a groundbreaking evening of music and dance with the critically acclaimed, world renowned tap dancer Savion Glover.
Tyner's blues-based, percussive piano playing (formulated while a key
member of John Coltrane's legendary quartet) has transcended
conventional styles to become one of the most identifiable sounds in
improvised music. Glover's phenomenal tap repertoire first exploded on
the scene with the award winning Broadway show, Bring in Da Noise, Bring in Da Funk. Since that time, he has amazed audiences through appearances in film (including his tapping in the animated film Happy Feet), other plays, and touring performances with his own group.
Friday, December 21, 2007
13.5 on the Treadmill
20 December 2007. Bronx, New York.
On
this cold and wet night before Christmas, six members of the
Westchester Track Club gathered, as they do most winter nights, at
their local Bally's Total Fitness club on West 231st Street in the
Kingsbridge section of the Bronx.
This was their second workout
of the day; earlier, they met at Central Park to run long. They were
here to run fast, and to find an alternative to pounding it out in the
snow for their daily double workout.
Genna Ketebo is preparing
for his next marathon in January in Carlsbad, California. Abiyot Endale
and Kassahun Kabiso areplanning on taking a road trip to Boston over
the next weekend to run a 5K and half-marathon, respectively.
If
you've ever been intimidated while running on a treadmill, you can
imagine how the other locals might feel when these sub-5-minute milers
are training next to them. In case you wondered, they're doing above a
grade 13 on the treadmill (as in, 13 or more miles per hour!), and they
do it for a l-o-n-g time. Remembering my spin class earlier in the day,
it dawned on me how that would be a warm-up for these guys. Let's just
say I was glad to have my photographic responsibilities to tend to when
they asked me to jump on a treadmill too.
Before
they could finish their workout, a heavyset guy in one of those latex
"fat suits" that help you sweat more came over, stared at the guys for
a few minutes, and then used his fist to hit the "stop" button on one
of the Ethiopian's treadmills, in the middle of a 4:38 mile. He
simultaneously shouted that it was his right because the African runner
hadn't signed up for the equipment...even though there were at least
ten other treadmills open. The guys, without so much as a word, simply
moved on to weights and bikes at that point. Again, good thing I had
something else to be doing or I would have pulled the plug on that guys
run in no time. Jerk.
More photos can be found on my flickr page.
Sunday, December 16, 2007
St. Joan of Arc
The
students at my father's elementary school, Saint Joan of Arc, in
Jackson Heights, Queens decorated the trees on the west side of the
church and school. I had planned to photograph the lighting of the
trees and singing of carols, but when Mass ran late and the rain
started to come down, I went home ... here are a few views, corner of
82nd Street and 35th Avenue.
