Cause n’ Effect

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Sometimes it’s overwhelming to think how potentially, as well as literally, that every move we make effects others. Some in ways we are aware of, but in so many more that we’re oblivious of. Catching a glimpse of ellen allien’s 2011 Summer collection yesterday, I was struck by this particular t-shirt, along with what she said about her collection’s concept:

…A life without effects? Whether you’re modifying a sound, altering an image or changing your life, effects help to shape who we are.

The spring summer collection 2011 from ellen allien fashion is inspired by the potency of effects: the echoes of a printed image; the trail left by the silhouette of a dancing hand; a vision through a curtain of smoke; the transportive power of an unfettered mind – does every effect have an OFF switch?

Craftivism may not be so much about fashion per se, but it is about consciousness. It’s about being aware of the world around you and your place in it. And that’s not always easy to do when you’re zipping through your errands or running late to work or on the treadmill. How much do we really think about the effects that we cause?

How do our causes effect others? Does what we say to others matter? Does it matter if we get a visible reaction, or are we really okay with just knowing that we shared our views? Do we need validation? Understanding? A hug? Ok, yes. It IS really nice to know that something you made/did/wrote effected others, not because you feel well chuffed with yourself, but because you know you might just be on the right track. But when you get all the squeeing out of your system what are left with? You and your thoughts, creation, writing. Again.

But does your “effect have an OFF switch?” No. Like ripples in a pond once you throw a stone in, it reverberates farther than you ever imagined. Not because of your strength, but because you dared to throw the stone. And it’s in this way that I best envision craft and craftivism… make the stitch, type the word, share the lecture, but remember that there is no “off switch” to your actions. They may stop and stand still and go no further, but they may also spread, grow and change.


Also: Inspired to make something of your very own this weekend? Go learn how to fashion these sweet needlepoint pumps over at Dollar Store Crafts.

Waste Land… Discovering the Wild World of Trash with Vik Muniz and Lucy Walker

I am constantly amazed by the possibilities of trash. How can we use it to make our world a better place? How do others use it earn a living? How much do we take our own separation from trash for granted?

And I’m by far from being the only one asking these types of questions! From a PR release from PBS today, if you’re free tomorrow you could do worse than go join the live chat with filmmaker Lucy Walker over on the Independent Lens blog tomorrow (Wednesday, February 9) at 1pm PST.

Filmmaker Lucy Walker will be joining us for a live chat on Wednesday, February 9 at 1 PM (Pacific) to talk about her film Waste Land. The documentary, which airs April 19 on Independent Lens has been nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

The film follows Brazilian artist Vik Muniz, who travels to his native Rio de Janiero to embark on an ambitious mission to create portraits of the local trash pickers out of the garbage they collect the world’s largest landfill.

Don’t have time to join the chat tomorrow?

Go check out the Waste Land’s website here. Learn more about the catadores profiled in the film here. Read the New York Times review of the film here.

 

[Portrait of a catadore by Vik Muniz]
I especially love this quote from the film that starts out the NYT review from, Tiao, one of Waste Land’s profiled catadores, “We are not pickers of garbage; we are pickers of recyclable materials.” I think this simple quote perfectly elucidates trash’s ever revolving status and notes that instead of simply refuse, it’s also full of reusable materials. Instead of what we throw away being the end of the line, it can also be the beginning of someone else’s livelihood, project or dream.

Want to learn more about trash around the world? Go check out another amazing Independent Lens documentary, Garbage Dreams here. Here’s a preview of the film, about Cairo residents who work in one of the world’s largest trash dumps.

And before you chuck that next thing in the trash? Do you know where it’s going? Can it be recycled? Can it be upcycled? Where will it go after the trash bag leaves your house?

I still think that the possibilities of trash are endless, but in learning more from the stories of trash around the world, I begin to think more about the status of trash and of those working with it, the notion that “one (wo)man’s trash is another (wo)man’s treasure,” and how easily so much waste passes through my own hands each day. Should we be doing more to use our trash in creative ways? Should we be doing more to help those in other countries reuse their trash in more creative ways… especially when their country infrastructure lacks recycling and sanitation programs?

And like what happens whenever you start asking questions… the bottom opens up and suddenly your ideas and the possibilities continue to build and build and build until new solutions form and new projects unfold and shiny new collaborations take hold. And, like magic, from what previously seemed to be nothing, a whole new world shows itself to you.

Not totally unlike what happens when you start to take a real look at the trash in front of you.

There is No Myth of the Tortured Crafter.

When I was younger, I fell full into the myth of the tortured artist. I inhaled the work of Kerouac and Pollock and Thompson. I worshiped at the altar of Arbus and Ginsberg and Warhol. I cried in solidarity with the lives of Basquiat and Haring.

I made a lot of mistakes. I mistook pain for authenticity and thought that to create was to also destroy. That there was no one without the other. And, as a direct result, I’m lucky to be writing this. I could bore you with tales of close calls or of loved ones that didn’t fare so well and lost, or details half-remembered or eulogized in partial memory by people that claimed to be “Artists.” With a capital “A.” It’s neither romantic nor exciting nor even interesting. It’s boring in that it mistook destructivity as the ultimate catalyst and origin of creativity. Those days, those years, are nothing to be proud of, even though I have scores of friends and colleagues who have the same tales. It’s just wasted time, wasted promises, wasted breath.

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But it was craft, that saved me.

You see, there is no myth of the tortured crafter. Its roots in utilitarianism, need and progress had little time for chaos. Little time for upper middle-class time wasting in the pursuit of the perfectly executed cocktail or party or hazy work. While we were all destroying ourselves and claiming to be authentic, the real authenticity was covering our beds, in our kitchen cupboards, hidden in dusty trunks. The real authenticity, the real creativity, was craft.

I often joke that my life didn’t start until I was 26, when I started knitting. Well, it’s not such much a joke as it is the whole and honest truth.

Those nights of wrapping wool around a needle to create something with my own two hands sutured me together more than all the reams of paper I had written in haste trying to recall what had happened the night before thinking that I was onto something. That I was really living. Those holey crooked scarves were not just creations that kept me warm, they were reaffirmations that creativity was real, true and honest. As I watched the fabric grow in my lap, the scarves getting longer and longer, I was pushing away false myths and idols, and embracing something more stronger and powerful.

And with each night of knitting, I moved more and more into the sacred space of creativity. I joined the women of Gee’s Bend and the arpilleristas of Chile and a long line of my own female ancestors as my fingers created and bled and made items that weren’t called art and were deemed a lesser creation. In time, as I began to learn more about myself and about craft I began to see the truth in craft, even though it’s not always aesthetically pleasing for galleries and white walls.

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[photo via Flickr user life of pei]

The creative work of soldiers and warriors, Afghan war rugs, the Just Work Economic Initiative, Emerge, Fine Cell Work, Vollis Simpson along with others taught me the true power, potential and gift that is craft.

They taught me that true creativity begets joy not pain, and is born out of hope, not destruction. They obliterated the myth of the tortured artist and allowed me to see craft for what it is. A gift. Positivity. Enjoyment. Fulfillment. Love. Life.

While I’ll always love the former list of creatives in this post, I’ll always draw strength and the spirit of life from the latter. Because craft is not about destruction or pain, it’s a gift to be invited in, savored and celebrated. And in that celebration, thankfully, there is no space for negativity and false hopes.

There’s nothing but love and creating and laughing and living, in full, in beauty and in the light.

Linda Behar’s Photorealist Embroidery

One of the greatest things about craft is that it lets you explore freely without fear of failure. You can follow your whims just to see where they go, and they just might take you somewhere magical.

Now, while there isn’t an inherent activist bent to Behar’s work (that I know of?), it has us do a doubletake, rethink what we thought was one thing but what is really another and fall in love with craft all over again.

Photo via Daily Art Muse and text via Bioephermera.


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I defy you to look at Linda Behar’s embroidered marshlands and not be fooled into thinking they’re photographs. To achieve this unusual level of textile realism, she prints photos taken on-site onto cloth, then improvises over them with embroidery.

Want more? Go check out more of Behar’s embroideries on Flickr and on her website.

Also, you might like:
*A USER’S GUIDE TO (DEMANDING) THE IMPOSSIBLE
*Wee Wonderful’s Kitchen Gnomes embroidery patterns
*Dermatologica Brings Kivas Microloans into the Retail World
*As Egypt Shuts Off the Net: Seven Theses on Dictator’s Dilemma
*The first 3-D molecular model made out of wool and knitting needles!!!

Too Busy.

Lately I’ve found the word “busy” escaping my mouth. Too busy? Seriously? When did too busy become a synonym for I just don’t want to?

A long time ago, when I was still in love with Walter Benjamin and The Arcades Project I wrote the text below:


April 21, 2006:

“In 1839 it was considered elegant to take a tortoise out walking. This gives us an idea of the tempo of the flânerie in the arcades.” -Walter Benjamin, The Arcades Project

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I’ve picked up The Arcades Project again, and have been reminded of how much I adore Benjamin’s views on the importance of the flaneur.

Walking around town never fails to incur a wealth of inspiration and tiny joys. I wonder if walking around town with me must, at times, seem like walking around with a tortoise, as I walk with wide eyes and frequently stop to further investigate my surroundings, taking my time as I wander down the path.


I’m thinking that maybe every time I hear myself say the word “busy,” I should replace it with the mental image of Benjamin’s tortoise. When should I ever be too busy to get inspired and find joy? Heck, when should you be too busy for these things, too?

How did we slip into being so busy that joy is quick to fall off the map?