March 27, 2011

ESCHER, til next time!

    
It is 3:41am now in Rio de Janeiro. I am just back from a get together and I cant sleep. So, I decided to post abot my day. Today, I decided to spend the day at Center. Center is Rio's Downtown, where everyone works during the week and no one goes during the weekends. For my surprise, I met more than 300 people there, like me, trying to attend to the ESCHER's exhibition. The guard told me that I would have to wait for 1 hour and 30 minutes in line in order to go inside. Hum! Soon enough, I met some co-workers that pulled the Brazilian way, the jeitinho brasileiro as we can here. She pretented she was pregnant and he pretended he was a happy father to be. Well done! The couple skiped the huge line and I stood there with my flat belly.


I decided to buy a chocolate bread and talked to the cashier. He told I should have known it would be crowed coz "Its Escher". Ok, I am sorry! I did not kow. I gave up and take some pictures in front of the murals and have random fun, as the one below:





Maurits Cornelis Escher (17 June 1898 – 27 March 1972), usually referred to as M.C. Escher was a Dutch graphic artist. He is known for his often mathematically inspired woodcuts, lithographs, and mezzotints. These feature impossible constructions, explorations of infinity, architecture, and tessellations.



In front of the CCBB, Brazilian's Bank Cultural Center, there were some musicians making crazy stuff.
I love celo, but I could stand only for 20 minutes. No more. Too crazy, alternative, non-sense sound for me. The cool stuff was the video which had a imagetic movimentation according to the notes played.





Afterwards, I went to the Post Office Cultural Center and checked out the pictures below.
I did not think they were too good, but it is a nice moviment. The theme was "Rio through my window". The center incentivates artists to paint and expose a piece with an especific theme: 








 


4am now. I will call it a day!
Next time, ESCHER!


March 23, 2011

Rio receives Rio's Voices


There is a big VA VA VA here in Rio de Janeiro right now. Rio's actors are here to release the movie (once showed in this blog, check here!). Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg, Jamie Foxx , Will.I.AM, Rodrigo Santoro, Carlinhos Brown (Brazilian singer), Jemine.

Anne Hathaway is a charm. She tietou (gave too much attention) to Bebel Gilberto. She said she thought that the sceneries in the movies were a licenca poetica (or a figure of speech) used by Carlos Saldanha to make the movie more beautiful, but she realized Rio is THAT AWESOME! Anne had caipirinha with cachaca, mentioned she has made lots of "old friends" here and that she feels like a local. I think she is/was overwhelmed. Jamie Foxx just commented that he knew Rio from the adult website. Come one, Jamie, get clever, get worldly! There is much more about Rio than teats.

Carlinhos Brown

Rodrigo Santoro

Anne Hathaway

Bebel Gilberto & Carlos Brown

Carlos Saldanha (director)

Jesse Eisenberg, Jamie Foxx & Rodrigo Santoro.

Singer Taio Cruz, actor Jermaine Clement & rapper Will.I.Am

Sergio Mendes (composer)


This is the first trailer for Rio, a new animated feature film from Blue Sky Studios (Ice Age, Robots, Horton Hears a Who!). The movie is directed by Carlos Saldanha and will be released in April, 2011 (USA).




Set in the magnificent city of Rio de Janeiro and the lush rainforest of Brazil, the comedy-adventure centers on Blu, a rare macaw who thinks he is the last of his kind. When Blu discovers there’s another - and that she’s a she - he leaves the comforts of his cage in small town Minnesota and heads to Rio. But it’s far from love at first sight between the domesticated and flight-challenged Blu and the fiercely independent, high-flying female, Jewel. Unexpectedly thrown together, they embark on an adventure of a lifetime, where they learn about friendship, love, courage, and being open to life’s many wonders. ‘Rio’ brings together a menagerie of vivid characters, a heart-warming story, colorful backdrops, energizing Latin and contemporary music, and family-friendly song and dance,
 

Sand animation by Kseniya Simonova



Kseniya Simonova won the Ucranian Got Talent-Tens Competition by doing a sand animation of the Germany invasion during the World War II. It is worth checking out this 8 minutes video!


March 15, 2011

Delivering Happiness by Tony Hsieh

This one of my book tips to you!!
I know that sometimes I read stuff that apparently has nothign to do with art, but in my opinion it has to do with the art of being an artist or at least it is about something you should know.


The last book I read is Delivering Happiness by Tony Hsieh - the CEO od ZAPPOS.
Zappos is an e-commerce website that orginally sold only shoes and now it sells thousands of items.

The visionary CEO of Zappos explains how an emphasis on corporate culture can lead to unprecedented success. Pay new employees $2000 to quit. Make customer service the entire company, not just a department. Focus on company culture as the #1 priority. Apply research from the science of happiness to running a business. Help employees grow both personally and professionally. Seek to change the world. Oh, and make money too. Sound crazy? It's all standard operating procedure at Zappos.com, the online retailer that's doing over $1 billion in gross merchandise sales every year. In 1999, Tony Hsieh (pronounced Shay) sold LinkExchange, the company he co-founded, to Microsoft for $265 million. He then joined Zappos as an adviser and investor, and eventually became CEO. In 2009, Zappos was listed as one of Fortune magazine's top 25 companies to work for, and was acquired by Amazon later that year in a deal valued at over $1.2 billion on the day of closing. In his first book, Tony shares the different business lessons he learned in life, from a lemonade stand and pizza business through LinkExchange, Zappos, and more. Ultimately, he shows how using happiness as a framework can produce profits, passion, and purpose both in business and in life.

Company's core value:

1. Deliver WOW Through Service
2. Embrace and Drive Change
3. Create Fun and A Little Weirdness
4. Be Adventurous, Creative, and Open-Minded
5. Pursue Growth and Learning
6. Build Open and Honest Relationships With Communication
7. Build a Positive Team and Family Spirit
8. Do More With Less
9. Be Passionate and Determined
10. Be Humble

Get inspired and copy/paste some values to your own design business, you culture house, your studio, you environment and be happy!

The book was divided in the topics below

•Part One - Customer service and experience rules

•Part Two - Creating a culture and living the core values at work and play

•Part Three - Building a pipeline, hire at entry level and give them what they need to move up the chain

•Part Four - Delivering happiness to customers and employees

  Check out some videos aboiut Tony Hsieh and Zappos culture!









ZAPPOS 2010 COMMERCIAL CAMPAIGN









Ops, ARE YOU HAPPY? TONY TEACHES YOU!!!





ABOUT TONY HSIEH

In 1999, at the age of 24, Tony Hsieh (pronounced Shay) sold LinkExchange, the company he co-founded, to Microsoft for $265 million. He then joined Zappos.com as an advisor and investor, and eventually became CEO, where he helped Zappos.com grow from almost no sales to over $1 billion in gross merchandise sales annually, while simultaneously making Fortune magazine’s annual “Best Companies to Work For” list. In November 2009, Zappos.com was acquired by Amazon.com in a deal valued at $1.2 billion on the day of closing.


Tony’s first book, Delivering Happiness, was published on June 7, 2010, and outlines his path from starting a worm farm to life at Zappos.com. Tony shows how a very different kind of corporate culture is a powerful model for achieving success and happiness. Delivering Happiness debuted at #1 on the New York Times Bestseller list and remained on the list for 27 consecutive weeks.

He currently lives in Las Vegas and sort of has a cat.




The book website here!

Request a FEE Culture book here!
http://www.zapposinsights.com/main/culture-book/

Check a FUNNY video about Tony Hsieh's background!
HERE 

Zappos SlideShare Presentation!
http://jaygoldman.com/2009/03/tony-hsieh-zappos-ceo-at-sxsw09/


Get a FREE version of the TRIBAL LEADERSHIP here!
http://www.zappos.com/tribal.zhtml


This is a good choice of book for you to understand about a corporate culture, what motivates people, the happiness science and about enterpreneuship.

                                                 Good reading!



Sad times!!!

I am sorry I have not being writting a lot lately. I have a new job which does not allow access to Blogger. Sucks!!! So, I need to find another time to write my posts and prepare my readings.

It is 9:22pm now in Rio de Janeiro. I was checking some news about Japan's disasater. It is really sad!
I have a friend in Nagoya. she communicated by Facebook. I guess lots of people are using networking midias to contact eachother and send informations!

While looking at the pictures below from THE HUFFINGTON POST, please, send positive thoughts to the japanese people! They deserve. They are so brave.




















Peace & Bravery



March 11, 2011

WASTE LAND with Vik Muniz



Synopsis (as per the official site)
Filmed over nearly three years, WASTE LAND follows renowned artist Vik Muniz as he journeys from his home base in Brooklyn to his native Brazil and the world's largest garbage dump, Jardim Gramacho, located on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. There he photographs an eclectic band of “catadores”—self-designated pickers of recyclable materials. Muniz’s initial objective was to “paint” the catadores with garbage. However, his collaboration with these inspiring characters as they recreate photographic images of themselves out of garbage reveals both the dignity and despair of the catadores as they begin to re-imagine their lives. Director Lucy Walker (DEVIL’S PLAYGROUND, BLINDSIGHT and COUNTDOWN TO ZERO) and co-directors João Jardim and Karen Harley have great access to the entire process and, in the end, offer stirring evidence of the transformative power of art and the alchemy of the human spirit.

Vik Muniz
Vik Muniz was born into a working-class family in Sao Paulo, Brazil in 1961. As a young man he was shot in the leg whilst trying to break up a fight. He received compensation for his injuries and used this money to fund a trip to New York City, where he has lived and worked since the late 1980s. He began his career as a sculptor but gradually became more interested in photographic reproductions of his work, eventually turning his attention exclusively to photography. He incorporates a multiplicity of unlikely materials into this photographic process. Often working in series, Vik has used dirt, diamonds, sugar, string, chocolate syrup and garbage to create bold, witty and often deceiving images drawn from the pages of photojournalism and art history. His work has been met with both commercial success and critical acclaim, and has been exhibited worldwide. His solo show at MAM in Rio de Janeiro was second only to Picasso in attendance records; it was here that Vik first exhibited his “Pictures of Garbage Series” in Brazil.



I was sad that the WASTE LAND did not win the Oscars. I guess that Inside Job, about the 2008-2009 global crisis, was more pertinent to Americans at this moment, but Waste Land is definitly a better doc and more moving.

I will write about Vik Muniz's garbage art shorlty, beleive it!!! He is great. A little while ago I had the opportunity to visit his exhibition at Casa de Cultura Laura Alvim in Ipanema beach. It was amazing to see his non-garbage art like a bed with an erection, haha!


March 10, 2011

Portable Samba by Carlos Machado



Hi readers, as you know I am in the middle of the Colombian Artists Series and also the Brazilian Carnaval Series, which I hope you are enjoying. But I could not forget to mention Carlos Machado's portable samba songs.

1. um coração só não faz canção
2. palavra escrita
3. samba portátil
4. oração
5. borboletar
6. às vezes
7. desculpas
8. parei aqui
9. as pessoas são você
10. por que haveria?
11. pensei em te trazer flores

12. abatimento cardíaco
13. canção de amor
14. canção triste
15. violência



Immediate download of 15-track album of your choice of 320k mp3, FLAC, or just about any other format you could possibly desire HERE!


March 8, 2011

Carnaval in Rio - Brazil (#1)


Photo by Alan Betensley

As a carioca, I am obliged to provide you some interesting and true inside tips for Carnaval. If you are coming to the lovely city of Rio de Janeiro (Cidade Maravilhosa) during Carnaval, please, prepare yourself mentally. This is a forever changing experience. I am warning you!

***

So, let me know a little bit more about Carnaval. Rhythm, participation, and costumes vary from one region of Brazil to another. In the southeastern cities of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, huge organized parades are led by samba schools. Those official parades are meant to be watched by the public, while minor parades ("blocos") allowing public participation can be found in other cities. The northeastern cities of Salvador, Porto Seguro and Recife have organized groups parading through streets, and public interacts directly with them. This carnival is heavily influenced by African-Brazilian culture. Crowds follow the trio elétricos floats through the city streets. Also in northeast, Olinda carnival features unique characteristics, part influenced by Venice Carnival mixed with cultural depictions of local folklore.


Carnival is the most famous holiday in Brazil and has become an event of huge proportions. The country stops completely for almost a week and festivities are intense, day and night, mainly in coastal cities. The consumption of beer accounts for 80% of annual consumption and tourism receives 70% of annual visitors, more than a million visitors. The government distributes condoms and launches awareness campaigns at this time to prevent the spread of AIDS.

Samba schools are very large groups of performers, financed by respected organizations (as well as illegal gambling groups), who work year round in preparation for Carnival. Samba Schools perform in the Sambadrome, which runs four entire nights. They are part of an official competition, divided into seven divisions, in which a single school is declared the winner, according to costume, flow, theme, and band music quality and performance. Some samba schools also hold street parties in their neighborhoods, through which they parade along with their followers.

Hum, ok, when is it? To put it short, Carnaval is 47 days before Easter.



Tip # = If it rains, it sucks badly! Pray for the days to be shiny and yellow!

Tip # = If you have never being to the official parade at Sapucai, you should! This is one of those items listed in those books: 100 things would should do before you die! Contact your travel agent and make it happen! I found this interesting slide show with some pictures deom Carnaval 2010. Hope you get an idea of it:



What is the name of those things that parade at Sapucai? They are called Samba Schools or Escolas de Samba.

How much time is each Samba School allowed to dance on the Sapucai runway? Well, there are parades on Sunday and Monday from 65 to 82 minutes. Nothing more, nothing less or they lose points. You will just run or samba in the same place if you have to in order for that time to be accomplished.

How many judges are there? About 50 trained judges.
What the hell do they judge? Organization, discipline, technic, samba-enredo (the song), harmony, costumes, ensemble, percursion, allegory are among the items judged.


Samba School Unidos da Tijuca

How many schools are there? Well, you know I am talking only about Rio de Janeiro, dont you? So, the special group (which are the bigger samba schools WHERE YOU SHOULD PARADE IF YOU CONSIDER IT) has 12 schools and the access group has 11 schools.

Special Group:
> Sao Clemente
Site: www.saoclemente.com.br
> Imperatriz Leopoldinense
Site: imperatrizleopoldinense.com.br
> Portela
Site: www.gresportela.com.br
>Unidos da Tijuca
Site: unidosdatijuca.com.br
> Unidos de Vila Isabel
Site: www.gresunidosdevilaisabel.com.br
> Mangueira
Site: www.mangueira.com.br
> Uniao da Ilha do Governador
Site: www.gresuniaodailha.com.br
> Salgueiro
Site: www.salgueiro.com.br
> Mocidade
Site: www.gresmocidade.com.br
> Grande Rio
Site: academicosdogranderio.com.br
> Porto da Pedra
Site: www.unidosdoportodapedra.com.br
> Beija-Flor
Site: www.beija-flor.com.br

Access Group
Alegria da Zona Sul
Renascer de Jacarepaguá
Unidos do Viradouro
Acadêmicos de Santa Cruz
Império da Tijuca
Inocentes de Belford Roxo
Acadêmicos do Cubango
Estácio de Sá
Império Serrano
Acadêmicos da Rocinha
Caprichosos de Pilares

What are the times of the parades? 9pm; 10:05pm; 11:10pm; 12:15pm; 1:20am and 2:25am.

Wow, those are late hours for us, lazy foreigners. Are you Brazilians crazy? Oh, hum, yes, we are. Just drink tons of water, use shoes (no sandals, pls), rest a lot before and after and sleep during your beach tan!

So, do you have any tips on how I do it? Of course, we are here for this, dude! In my opinion, you should parade in the first school of the day and then pay to sit in the vip area, a balcony or a numbered chair in Sapucai in order for you to watch the other schools after you parade . It's worth it!

The map below shows the samba runway (Sapucai) and the sectors. The parade starts on the left and it finishes on the right side of the picture (next to the 13 sector). I have bought numbered chairs in this sector before and it was great. It is just in front of the mass area, the bleachers, so you get their vibrations, screams, claps, but you enjoy a safe, organized (WITH BATHROOMS AND FOOD) in a "calm" area. I would not buy tickets on the sector 3, as the samba schools are preparing to enter at this point, you might not see the best parts of the parade.




Tip # = Copacabana just has the international fame. If you want to see a clean (or cleaner) place and beautiful people go to Ipanema or Leblon. You won't regret this advise, principally, this time of the year. Copacabana is known to have a great mixture of people: poor, middle class, gay, transvestite, black, white, yellow, every kind of ideology, which is really good in a normal basis.






Tip # = There is a new rule going on. You are not allowed to pee in public on the streets. There were already 500 people arrested this year. So, my tip to you is to pay R$3,00 for a beer and pee in a bar peacefully. There are public bathrooms (aka Johnny on the spots) - as above - but as you can imagine they can get quite stinky and dirty.


Tip # = You should to go Lapa. There some cool places to visit there like Rio Scenaruim and Lapa 40 Graus.

Tip # = If you are one of those lucky people with money and want to meet the rich Brazilians, dont waste your time and just go to the Copacabana Palace Carnaval Ball! You will not regret it!

To be continued...


** post written by the "Nega Maluca"


March 7, 2011

Guillaume Nery base jumping at Dean's Blue Hole, filmed on breath hold by Julie Gautier


FREE FALL: World champion freediver Guillaume Nery special dive at Dean's Blue Hole, the deepest blue hole in the world filmed entirely on breath hold by the french champion Julie Gautier. This video is a FICTION and an ARTISTIC PROJECT. Edited by BLUENERY (c). Music: ARCHIVE - you make me feel.


Other two interesting videos with Guillaume:


March 5, 2011

30 Seconds to Mars' interview

30 Seconds to Mars is coming soon to Brazil.
It is worth watching this interview with the yummy Jared Leto!

The Thirty Seconds to Mars singer talks about dressing in drag, and getting banned for being too racy. Plus, Jared gives George a gift that's inappropriate for television.


March 3, 2011

Stranger Than Fiction: The Fantastic Worlds of Marcel Dzama by The Huffington Post



Marcel Dzama is the most renowned draftsman of his generation. But that distinction is not enough: he also makes sculptures and dioramas, directs music videos and short films. Behind Every Curtain, his current show at David Zwirner, features his longest work yet, A Game of Chess, a 14-minute film involving ballet, chess, and a sniper. It's typical Dzama: mysterious, seductive, punctuated with violence and the occasional girl in knee socks. A founder of the Winnipeg collective, The Royal Art Lodge, and a designer of dynamic artist's books, Dzama possesses an indispensable inventiveness, at once fascinating and virtuosic.


Check The Huffington Post's interview with him:

There's a lot of ballet in the film. Where did you come up with the idea of using dance?

I first worked with dance during a music video for The Department of Eagles video. No One Does It Like You. Working with the dancers was so refreshing. It was also a way of showing off costumes because you don't need much of a story. I'd also seen Oskar Schlemmer's Triadic Ballet, which was a huge influence on this entire show.

What appealed to you about that work?
The costumes worked with the movement of the dancers, and that was what I wanted to do. The costumes, at the beginning of this, were supposed to limit the movements of the ballet dancers to what the chessboard pieces were originally supposed to do, I was going to make it so the costume would be so the knight dancer could only dance in an 'L' shaped pattern, and the bishop diagonally. In the end that all changed, more for the dancer's sake than anything.

Your drawings express so much movement, even though the line is so clean, they're incredibly expressive. Recently, the drawings have kind of begun to be like a climactic ending of a giant dance, like a grandiose Busby Berkeley scene. Duchamp was a great chess player, I haven't asked you the significance of chess. Do you like to play chess? Do you enjoy the possibilities?
I'm not a strong player, but I enjoy it. My attention span was so short that I wanted to move at a slower pace. It was something that I went back to, because I used to play as a kid. A friend of mine in Guadalajara was a chess champion in California when he was thirteen, so he was re-teaching me.

Chess engages a certain part of your mind, because there are so many possibilities, as opposed to something that's very culturally specific, like a crossword puzzle.
Yeah because you can go in other directions. It's interesting to see Duchamp's patterns, he's actually an aggressive chess player.

You've had a very private drawing practice for a long time, filmmaking is very different--do you like that collaborative process?

Yes, very much. I like switching it up. At some point if I'm just drawing all the time it becomes mundane, and then I'll work on some project like the film, and then when I go back to drawing it feels exciting again. It has an instant gratification compared to making a large film. But then the film itself has new challenges, and working with other people--the newness of it--makes it exciting.



When you're drawing you have total control of your universe, and here you've got an idea that you thought was clever and then somebody says it can't happen.
That happens a lot, especially budget-wise, it eliminates a lot of things.

Have you done animation?
I've done a few animations, like flipbook animation, and then I also did quite a few drawings that someone else filled in, they move the animation on a computer. That was really interesting to see. Other than that, I don't know if I'd want to do it, the flipbook was so exhausting, and the end result wasn't as exciting as I'd hoped.

Do you think your films are going to get longer and longer?
I was thinking about making a longer piece, maybe more of a plot and a story, instead of the more dyslexic direction in this film.

Sometimes artists say the viewer is thinking too hard and reading into the work too much. But in your case symbols have quite specific meaning.

That's right. For this show, most things relate to the chess game, and a rebellion, a rising up taking over whatever power was in place. There are two warring factors, and at the end none of them exist anymore, and the main character that was kidnapped is freed and she's the only survivor.

Looking at older work of yours, there's often a reaction against an unnamed power, or a masked figure. There's a conflict in a lot of your work.
There's an anti-authority thing going on, I'm not really sure what it is.

I was interested, because in an interview you talked about different faces asking the same question. You can look at different sets of characters in your work, but there's still a friction between something that's innocent and something that isn't.
In some of the drawings, some of the characters represent a fascist or repressive regime and others represent an underground movement. I don't know why they come in to play, sometimes I'll just start drawing and they develop as they go along. After I do enough of them I feel like there is a theme, and I'll play around with that, but I also leave enough clues unanswered so the viewer can add their own take to what's going on.

When you go back to the studio, do you just start and see what happens? Or do you usually have a very specific idea and say, ok, I'm in my nurse phase? How do you realize you've got your next theme?

I don't know, with this show I was starting to draw more modern, almost industrial looking shapes, almost like a mechanical play on a figure. But it would also interact with more figurative characters.

I read that you said you started drawing as therapy. Can you talk about how your drawing practices changed over the years, or if it's always just like keeping a diary, something you can always come back to?
When I was young, it was more like a sketchbook, it was very loose, but more about creating characters. At that age it was highly influenced by comic books--I'd make my own little comics, but also sketches of friends and it was really loose. I was also a songwriter, so I put lyrics in there.

And now as you're more in control, how have things changed?
In some ways it hasn't changed that much, because I still keep that style of sketchbook, but less time is spent on it, and the regular drawings have taken over. That was my schooling, learning how to draw, what was interesting to me, and keeping a recording of it.

You mentioned songwriting, and you've worked with Department of Eagles, what role does music play for you now?
Every now and then I like to take a break from the visual arts, and play a few songs on guitar. I don't play them for anyone. But when I was younger that was very interesting for me, because it was the very early nineties, the whole punk scene was coming up again in Canada, so that felt very interesting to just pick up an instrument and play it.

And as far as collaborating in general, that seems like something you're disposed to, since the days of Royal Art Lodge.
Yeah, I used to play music with all of them, we all had rotating bands and we all played in each others' bands.

And a certain way of making work with other people.

I still get together with friends, and we'll collaborate on drawings together. I'm going to do a show in Stockholm with Jockum Nordström, we're going to collaborate on drawings together.

He's great. How do you respond to an artist like Jockum--do you see things and try to figure out how he did it?
I'm always interested in seeing how other artists work. I want to know what their working patterns are, I even like to know if they listen to music when they draw, or what time of day they draw, even materials they use, what they research, if they use photographs.

In your case, how closely are you dealing with source material, and how much are you working just from your own invention?
There was one photograph that I found of a Palestinian woman who hijacked some PanAm airplane in the seventies, I based an entire character on her in the film. I was flipping through this little book that had one image of her sitting on the side of a bed, with the gun, and she looked so lonely, but also interesting. The setup was a photo op, I don't know what it was from. I look at old mechanical magazines to see how certain objects were put together and built. And then of course you kind of add your own little touch, oh I'll add an arm here.



You've been in Mexico recently--do you travel a lot?
I've been to Mexico a lot. The last two shows at Zwirner, I spent a large portion of the time in Guadalajara, working with this friend of mine who has a ceramics foundry, Jose Noe Suro. He lets me have control of part of the factory. Having that freedom lets me make some large scale works, in my own studio, I usually work far smaller.

And do you like working away from New York, or do you prefer to be in the city?

For drawing, I like to be in New York in my home, but when it comes to working on larger projects, especially there, everything is possible. He has so many connections, you come up with an idea, and he'll say, yes, I know someone who bends tin, and can weld it together, you say oh, ok, that's great!

People like that are terrific--the person who you say something you know is silly and they can make it happen.
Right, in this film, I was talking about this idea of a chess game, very loosely, and three days later, he said, I have the Guadalajara ballet department ready for you.

When people recognize your interests, and associate you with a sensibility, do you react against that?
I guess if I see things written too often, in a review, I do rebel against that. But that helps you notice things you might not notice, and you think I should move on to something else. It's also friends who tell you that you should draw more bears, or something.

Right, and then sometimes a character goes away.
I killed off a lot of characters in the last show I had here. I decided I'd had enough of those guys. A couple of them have reappeared, but not very often.


















March 2, 2011

Out of Captivity: Banksy Wins Freedom of Russia's Jailed Voina Art Anarchists



" Banksy may have lost at the Oscars last night, but he scored another less visible -- but much more important -- victory earlier in the week, when a Russian judge accepted his offer to post bail for two members of the Russian anarchist art collective Voina who have been detained under horrendous conditions in St. Petersburg. A judge had initially rejected the offer, but on February 24 he finally accepted the British street-art star's cash, which amounted to about $10,000 each for artists Oleg Vorotnikov and Leonid Nikolaev. Now they have been released from custody, though the case isn't closed and the charges still stand.


Voina artist Leonid Nikolaev, pictured in prison on January 14th, has been bailed out by Banksy along with Oleg Vorotnikov. Photo by Vladimir Telegin

The pair had been held in St. Petersburg after being picked up last year -- and reportedly brutalized -- by Russian police. Known for flamboyant and often defiant anti-authoritarian art actions, Voina saw its two artists detained after "Palace Revolution," a performance in which members overturned cop cars in protest of abusive authority. Reports on their plight had attracted international attention -- Banksy supposedly heard about them on the BBC -- as well as leading to persecution from authorities inside, according to the men. Last week, Nikolaev's lawyer had filed a case with a the European Court of Human Rights claiming that authorities had neither cited sufficient evidence against them nor justified holding them indefinitely in pre-trial detention.

Voina is nothing if not relentless. While in jail for "Palace Revolution," a separate work by the group, "Penis in FSB Captivity" -- for which group members had spray-painted the outline of a penis on a drawbridge facing the headquarters of Russia's security services so that it appeared to become erect when the bridge was raised -- was shortlisted by Russia's culture ministry for a state creativity prize. The honor would seem to have provided some leverage for the group, but Voina would have none of it. In a statement issued after the announcement, Voina's Alexei Plutser-Sarno stated: "We consider the Innovation award as a proposal of dirty money from the Mafioso-like authorities -- by giving artists a dole, they test them for conformism and loyalty to the executioners of the Russian contemporary art." (He further condemned the nominating committee for softening the title of their nominated work from "Penis in FSB Captivity" to "Member in FSB Captivity.")


In the face of this intransigence, the culture ministry has backed down, dropping the work from the prize shortlist after Voina refused to allow a picture of the work to be used on the prize's Web site, according to the Associated Press. Plutser-Sarno was quick to condemn the act, writing on his blog, "The repressive act of removing the Voina group from the award brings shame on the [organizers] and the Culture Ministry." "

Source: The Hunffington Post
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/artinfo/out-of-captivity-bansky-w_b_829398.html

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