Friday, August 26, 2011

Cochineal/ Cochinilla

Cochinilla is an insect that grows on paddle cacti. The females produce carminic acid, from which carmine is derived. This bright red dye is used to color food, makeup, and as demonstrated above, textiles! "Bug juice," indeed.
This was recorded in Chincero, Peru en la Valle Sagrada cerca de Machu Picchu.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Inca Písac

It's a lot of work-- climbing Incan ruins everyday. Okay, "everyday" so far is defined as yesterday and today. The greatest heights of this site are as much as 11,000 feet above sea level.
To give you a sense of scale, these tiny people are working on archaeological excavation and preservation of the steps, the same ones pictured above! These ruins are immense. It is so unbelievable to imagine how many people, and how much time & energy must have been spent to build and preserve this- only one of SO MANY oeuvres!
See the steps at the edges of the steps?

My foot is pictured here at the top of many stone steps. In this image I was already more than halfway down the mountain! I asked a local how many people die here each year, and she said, "Surprisingly few."
Hey Mom, I'm okay!

Monday, August 15, 2011

¡Estoy enamorada!


Yo y el Epilog con una cama que mide 36 x 24". No es una advertencia, pero me encanta.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Contrasts

Well, I didn't know about this until I got here. I'm doing okay, using the Buteyko Method to open my lungs. I haven't yet needed to use an inhaler. Today I walked about seven miles and took a few pictures along the way.
What a striking façade!
If you feel that you need to put bars on your windows, they might as well look good, no?
No, really.
Old and new
The tiny box on the left is populated by one person, who I think is trying to sell apartments in the building they plan to construct on that site. Note the banner of the fake outdoors that separates his shoebox from the palace next door.
Read every part of this image that you find legible.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

To Lima

Ahora mismo estoy en un aeropuerto en Florida, en ruta a Lima, Peru. Voy a FAB7, la conferencia internacional de fabricacion digital! Es una convergencia de la mayoria de los FAB Labs del todo el mundo. Despues de la conferencia, voy a Cusco para explorar algunos de estos sitios.

I recorded a lot of video with the new camera. Now just to get the computer to recognize it! I installed some of a Glass Rain Chandelier at 1 Capitol Hill (the State House offices across Smith Street from the Capitol in Providence.) That will be on display into September, and I finished a screenprint for the current events print exchange in Providence. Sorry, no images yet. The print is about how food affects all bodies' functions. In it, I reference and recommend this fascinating article (Is Sugar Toxic?), this documentary (Food Matters), laughter yoga, and perhaps most importantly, GERSON THERAPY.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Yes, we have no bananas.

You know what it's like to check a person's blog sometimes to see if there's new content, only to find nothing novel and you wonder what they're doing with their days that must be more fun than being on a computer? Spending time with friends and family under leafy canopies! Visiting museums in New York City and picking up supplies for orders, doing things outside and late at night, going to music shows and dance parties in mill buildings, enjoying and entertaining houseguests, reading, writing proposals, eating favorite foods every day, trying to keep plants and animals alive.

Thank you to all for birthday wishes, and thanks to Jacque for a wonderful day full of gifts! THANKS FOR THE VIDEO CAMERA!!! More videos are soon to be recorded, edited, and posted to my youtube channel!

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Years ago

I was born today. Make sure to use your life to do things you want to do!

Friday, July 22, 2011

The Birthplace of the Industrial Revolution in America

Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

In the Pennacook language Pawtucket supposedly means "place of loud noise" (referring to nearby falls), yet another resource claims that it means "at the falls in the river (tidal stream)" in Algonkian. Either way, my perception is that contemporary locals think of both the place and its name as unsexy. It's nicknamed, "The Bucket."
Pawtucket is actually an amazing place, filled with beautiful old buildings that reflect its glorious history. The first fully mechanized cotton spinning mill in the U.S. was built here in 1793 by Samuel Slater. It still stands as a fascinating museum, Slater Mill!
Evidence of the massive textile trade is still found easily all over the landscape. Did you know that Hasbro began in Pawtucket as Hassenfeld Brothers? They sold textiles, then pencil boxes & school supplies, and later toys! They incorporated as Hasbro in 1968 after the success of Mr. Potato Head and G.I.Joe.
The photo above and the photo below are of two views down intersecting streets at one corner, but there are SO MANY MORE square blocks like this. These aren't even the fancy ones!
After WWI and the Stock Market Crash of 1929, much of the textile industry around here declined. Many businesses lacked the capital or the foresight to invest in the future of textiles-- synthetics! Other businesses moved to the South.
The companies that filled the vacuums left in those vacated mill spaces were mostly focused on costume jewelry production. They didn't necessarily need to invest in massive machines like spinning and weaving equipment; much of the jewelry work at that time could simply be done by hand. Over the subsequent decades Rhode Island grew into the world capital of costume jewelry production and related processes (metal casting & plating, knife- making.) Who doesn't love a mural of an air compressor, lathe, drill press, chain- maker, engraver, and ? (One of those is a stranger I haven't met yet, but I bet their job has to do with folding and crimping.)

You can still find dumpsters and warehouses all around here filled with jewelry molds, buckles, beads, buttons, blades, and findings. This place is surely a heaven on earth.
Lots of these buildings continue to house working factories and businesses.
Unfortunately, many spaces are being razed, but some are also being preserved or re-developed. This is what is left of the Union Wadding Company on Goff Street. It was partially developed into lofts and studios, but an unusual arson last October destroyed more than half of the 450,000 square- foot complex. Noone lived in the parts where the fire started and I don't think anyone was injured, but all of the residents were displaced. From firsthand experience I can tell you that being forced out of your home is one of the worst feelings in the world.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Some childhood favorite painters & printmakers

I was very lucky to see so many art museums, books, magazines, and prints as I was growing up. The books were mostly from the 1950s- 1970s; almost all of these folks are male and almost all of them are European.
Ivan Albright

Ivan Albright was perhaps my favorite painter. This portrait of Ida Rogers was begun when she was a teenager, and Albright spent about two years on it. He had such extreme attention for exaggerating details. I bet Joe Coleman loves him.
Double click above for legibility
This is a detail of an 8-foot-tall painting of a door. He worked on this painting for ten years.

Tamara de Lempicka

Modern and almost timeless, always gorgeous
Her nudes are somewhat Cubist- Art Deco!

Friedensreich Hundertwasser
He was a painter as well as an architect
and his buildings look like his paintings!

Alex Katz

Max Beckmann



Aubrey Beardsley
I love his prints, especially these boudoir/ toilette scenes.

Egon Schiele

I'm a fan of his drawings much more than his paintings. Can you read his hand in these blind contour lines!? What skill!

Edvard Munch
I also prefer his prints to his paintings. Go see them in person if you find or make an opportunity.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Pelican Bay

at least 6,600 people in California are on hunger strike until core demands of prisoners are met.
Basically, end abuses, torture, unreasonable treatments, and feed them adequate quantities of sanitary food. The hunger strike BEGAN on JULY 1st!
(Follow the link and scroll down to the bottom.)

My friends in the Mysterious Rabbit Puppet Army are on tour with a beautiful puppet show about a concise history of prisons and slavery in the United Stated. Go see their show if they come to your town!

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Haystack Scenes in Scents


In Woods

Citrusy pine oils from living trees (and thick carpets of fallen needles)
Spongy, mossy humus (not to be confused with hummus)
Ferns unfurling
Footsteps on the forest floor sound like
walking on a cork surface
that's hollow underneath

Sunlight on a sawdust path




Hot shop

Sweat
from the armpits of women
and the armpits men
Melting beeswax,
wet newspapers burning dry,
soaked cherry wood steaming sweetly,
The dusty smell of fire brick




A picnic on the rocks or a dinner in the hot shop

Molten butter
and the salty sea



Thursday, July 7, 2011

Re-run!

Thanks to Cody for telling me this aired again. (Check out her unbelievable photos of the Springfield tornado!)
When I do demos I pass these eyeglasses around for the audience to see how the didymium lenses filter out the sodium flare in the flame. I love telling people, "Martha Stewart wore those!"

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Ring of Fire

I and Lindsay MiŚ with Christopher McElroy's Ring of Fire
Jar Schepers models Ring of Fire
Mister McElroy and his marvelous ring--
I am at Haystack, surrounded by geniuses. Follow those links!

Saturday, July 2, 2011

At Haystack

This is what I can see from where I am. I am on a tiny island called Sunshine in Deer Isle, Maine. Sherry Lassiter from MIT invited me to come to the new digital fabrication laboratory at the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts.
I get to stay in one of these cabins, designed by Edward Larabee Barnes. This year is Haystack's fiftieth at this location! The school was previously at Haystack Mountain in Montville, Maine. That site is now a campground called, "Cozy Pines."
It is such a special privilege to be here, surrounded by so many forms of wonderous life, (especially the people!)
This is the Fab Lab at Haystack! It's really strange to be in a Fab Lab without the internet. The only web access on campus is at the library.
Elliot Clapp and Anna Kaziunas-France in the beautiful new lab

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Hairrings

My hair has been very long three times in my life. Each time I cut it, I braided it and saved it. I recently made earrings from one of the batches. These are the simplest hair extensions, but it is my own natural hair.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Bigger Glass Chains


I've been flameworking larger glass chains. I plan to do some Pyrex padlocks for the thickest chains.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

new pants


I sewed pants from a heavy canvas. The fabric is printed with Japanese logos.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

You can

Ballpoint pen face studies. I have spent thousands of hours of my life drawing. You could, too. Maybe you already have.

Everyone can make things.

If you can talk, you can sing. If you can write, you can draw. Actually, you don't even need to be able to write to draw, and some people can sing but not talk! Making is certainly not about "talent"--
I don't believe in it.

If you can consistently do something well and with skill, it will be because you've practiced. It is possible to have a natural aptitude for something, but I think claiming talent is to rest on one's laurels and one who complements "talent" often indirectly implies, "I couldn't do that."
I believe that to be untrue.

Friday, June 17, 2011

News

I'm lucky to say that I've become an aunt to fraternal twins, one of each category of a gender binary system. In Tagalog "tita" means aunt, and Filipino nicknames are often based on the second syllable of a name, not the first. I hope to be called Tita Nini.
Time always feels like it's accelerating, and being busy doesn't help to counter my perception. For now I'm in New York, and tomorrow I go to Pennsylvania for an engagement party. Two weddings, an engagement party, and twin babies all in less than 6 weeks! It is that time of year!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

A few more pictures from Portland


Portland, Oregon is the bike- friendliest city I've ever been to in The States. It was unusual and surprising to happen upon this at the end of a quiet residential street.
This tree appeared to be looking around.
Some nice signs on one street



This adorable sign was hard to photograph at night with a light glaring on it, but it's still legible and endearing.