Tag Archives: the mounting apocalypse and its aesthetic fallout

The Real World is Where You Take Pictures for Facebook.

I just finished reading this article about faux-vintage photos (the kind associated with Instagram or Hipstamatic applications) and authenticity/nostalgia.

Myself as a romantic Hipstamatic thumbnail.

 This whole topic hits near and dear to my heart for a few reasons. Initially, when faux-vintage instant photography first dropped into our social networking consciousness, I couldn’t help but remember the stack of photos that my mother gave to me: a 1970s road trip through the Badlands, a similar journey through the American southwest. She was saddened and disappointed because the vibrant colors had faded into browns and creams. The non-longer blue skies were something of a harsh reality. A physical manifestation of the passing of time and youth. But, man, they were cool looking! For a teenager who lacked any real camera skills, these spoiled photos were something rare and precious. I could take a photo of grass and, sure, it would be green. But, what kind of photo wizard could make that green grass brown and purple?

Many years later, I was spending one of my first nights getting to know Dave. I think we were huddled in the shark-shaped novelty tent that took up most living floor in my apartment. He told me that he was “into noise music” but quickly buffered that statement by say that such an art form was really more of a treat for those who make it and less for those who listen to it. The distinction of pleasurable creation versus pleasurable consumption is one that I try to keep close at hand.

Now, I make jewelry. I make it from old things. I make it to look old. I make it because I like to; because it is fun (sometimes!). But, I work hard to cultivate and control a reality that isn’t and a nostalgia for what never was. Maybe, like simulated vintage photographs, I also cannot help but celebrate a “nostalgia for the present”.

Myself as an actual cheap, processed photo.
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Getting Ready, Getting Set.

Packing up my goods for this Saturday’s sale.

Between the two cases and the one stand, I think I can move all of this on my bike.

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Dead Horse Bay. Real, Live Mermaids.

 Last week, I, Miss Elizabeth “Ceaseless Puritan Work Ethic” Novak, actually took a little break.

I don’t think that I really kept it much of a secret that I had been feeling less than adequate in the head-and-heart health department. At best, it was a little twinge of life not running at capacity; a glitch in the emotional matrix that would work itself out in time. At worst, it was the feelings of everything I like turning against me to highlight what a waste of everything I was (Italics for dramatic effect). Actually, at worst, it really felt like high school. Particularly, the part where you are frustrated and inarticulate and nobody likes you and you look all funny and greasy. Too loud/not loud enough at all the wrong moments. And yes, there was crying.

But this is okay because, when you are a grown-up, you can run away from your problems.

At least, I was able to run away as long as my friends in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, New York City would allow me to crash on their floor. Which was 2.5 days, roughly. And that’s the pretty nice thing about running away- if I run in a certain direction, I get to crash right into good friends who support me… even if I’ve known them for a long time… even if I just met them… and even if they first met me back when I was an angsty teen wearing a lot of black velvet.

Luckily, this scrape with sadness came at the right time: the weekend of the Coney Island Mermaid Parade! This was my fourth parade in 6 years so I felt pretty comfortable keeping my finger off of the camera’s shutter button. I could probably slip in a few photos from last year and you would be none-the-wiser (I even met up with the same friends!), but it is worth it to check out other folks photos from the 2011 edition. I missed much of the parading because train issues made us over an hour late and unable to find many good viewing spots. Those photos would have been sub-par, anyway. That aside, this year’s highlights included cool, ocean breezes, a slice of pizza, not being nearly as hot as last year, and peeping Mr. Lord Whimsy walking by the El Dorado (“Bump Yo Ass Off!” ) bumper cars. We didn’t get to go to the cosmorama- but maybe in the fall!

After we were sufficiently sunned, my friends, that is, Ed and Kate, and I went on an adventure into uncharted territory: Dead Horse Bay! Using only the directions provided by Atlas Obscura, my memory of having seen this blog post, and a half dead iPhone we were able to find our way there AND we were only yelled at once by the bus driver. Hurrah!

At this point, I started trying to take pictures, but found the bay kind of hard to capture. We neglected to aim for low tide so most of the real treasure was submerged by a foot of water. Sheer visible trash volume aside, it was truly a peculiar place: calm, unpopulated, and surrounded by old stuff. Somehow I only want to vacation in iterations of the apocalypse

We were also under prepared as far as bringing things like “bags” or “shovels”.

But with some practice, we perfected a little something that I like to call, “poke at it with a stick”.

One side of the bay was littered with bottles, but also with an assortment of shoes and shoe soles, horse shoe crabs (how thematic!) horse bones left from the former rendering plants and some plastic this-n-thats.

Happy thought time: the kid who wore this is probably dead by now.

The other side was like glass city, even at high tide.

I wore only a crappy pair of Converse All Stars, but thick soled shoes are a must. The beach shines brilliant with myriad points of color but little of that glass has been tossed enough by the sea to dull its edges.

The collector in me kept rolling over and dying- only to be harshly resurrected and reslayed!- every time I came across shards of restaurant-grade Fire King Jadite. Which happened a lot. Because, shit, there was TONS!

And, oh, what’s that? Ah. Just a depression glass juicer with a bite taken out of it. No big. Or, as we have progressed to saying, “NBD.”

Despite that, I was able to find this tiny, perfect, white Johnson and Johnson jar. It was hiding in a half-submerged tire.

We also found this old safe (?)… but but somebody got to it first.

The view was nothing to scoff at, either.

As the sun hung low, we decided to bust out the little sanitary wipes that Kate’s mom had foisted upon her earlier in the week and to catch a bus back to the northern part of the borough- where beer was more plentiful and as well as actively being consumed by friends. Thanks to the train detours, that trip took 2.5 hours, the same amount of time it takes to get from Providence to the Bronx. Just sayin’.

The next day, my friend. Jill, and I tried to catch a ferry to Governor’s Island but service was way backed up, making travel a big, round zero. Instead, we stood around enjoying the cool breeze while looking at this stuff:

Then we loafed around town: hanging out with friends, sipping on drinks and munching hamburgers.

I strongly dislike New York City for a bunch of reasons, some more legit than others but all of them long-winded and totally subjective. However, as the bus was curving through the elevated highways of Queens, I found myself feeling kind of sad leaving it. I felt kind of… affectionate towards it. It felt nice and warm and happy and sunny. We’ve had our differences in opinion but I’m all grown and can see past that now, right? Maybe I could learn to love New York again?

.

No.

It only took a reading of the Sunday New York Times Arts and Leisure section to remember that I don’t give a crap about the opinions of New Yorkers. If you need further convincing, read anything on the web site Two Inch Cuffs.

Anyone who self-identifies as a “tastemaker” should be trussed up and kicked. A lot.

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When I Die I’ll Go To Heaven Because I’ve Spent My Time in Hell.

All three above images via theselvedgeyard.wordpress.com

Maybe I was Vietnamese engraver in a former life. Would that account for my attraction to small phrases, two word sayings, maxims and, as they are listed in my thesaurus:  adages, aphorisms, proverbs, mottos, saws, axioms, dictums, precepts, epigrams; truisms and clichés?

Thusly, I was impressed by today’s offering from one of my favorite, favorite blogs, The Selvedge Yard, on American soldiers lighters from Vietnam. JP’s photo essays are always of the highest quality, well-sourced and credited while providing enough historical background put the images in context. Consider this post a great, big, red arrow directing your internet-time over to The Selvedge Yard. Check out this post. And then check out his other ones. Right now, it’s Saturday afternoon- cloudy with a chance of rain. What better time is there for looking at pictures on the internet?

And, if you miss it at the bottom of his post, ZippoGallery.com has a gallery of it’s Vietnam-era engraved lighters, too.

From Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon’s Preacher comic series; a perennial fave in our household.

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Sometimes, I Feel Like This.

Not right now. But sometimes.

This image, and other favorites, can be found on my WITH CARE tumblr account- recently created to broadcast my “virtual effluvia of my creative processes”.

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New Jersey Death Trip

Last Wednesday, while at the yearly “Toms River Antique and Collectible Expo” (featuring exhibits from the local antique motor enthusiasts’ club!), I came across two framed xeroxes of the wreck of the Morro Castle. Growing up so close to the crash site of the Hindenburg might instill as sort of “ho-hum” attitude towards mass transportation disasters in local youngsters but, man, those Morro Castle pictures that would inevitably turn up in any class trip to the shore area’s small, historic museums were damn haunting. Holy g-g-g-g-ghostship!

But I’m glad to be reminded of this event as a slightly strange, slightly disaster-tripping adult. The photos still make my blood feel a little funny in my veins, but now I can’t stop looking for new and different shots. I’ve compiled a small selection over the past few days and I apologize in advance for being meager with the photo credits.

For those unfamiliar with the history of the wreck, asburyparklibrary.org has a nice summation taken from wikipedia:

“The SS Morro Castle was a luxury cruise ship of the 1930s that was built for the Ward Line for runs between New York City and Havana, Cuba. The Morro Castle was named for the Morro Castle fortress that guards the entrance to Havana Bay.”

“In the early morning hours of Saturday, September 8, 1934, en route from Havana to New York, the ship caught fire and burned, killing a total of 137 passengers and crew members. The ship eventually beached herself near Asbury Park, New Jersey and remained there for several months until she was eventually towed away and sold for scrap.”

“The devastating fire aboard the SS Morro Castle served to improve fire safety for future ships. Today, the use of fire retardant materials, automatic fire doors, ship-wide fire alarms, and greater attention to fire drills and procedures resulted directly from the Morro Castle disaster.”

The wreck became a tourist attraction during its time at the foot of the Convention Center. It made it on to post cards and I was even able to find a family photo taken with it as the back drop.

The best photos that I was able to find came from a flickr.com page and were scans from a lot of photos purchased from ebay.

Definitely check out Christian Montone’s collection for more photos and shore ephemera.

And, in case you are wondering, yes! there is a historic marker to commemorate the wreck and yes, it is accessible via the Historical Marker Database!

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Pittsburgh, PA Party Palace

Remember my passing mention of having been to Pittsburgh, PA, USA for a week? Well, I was! And what a fine time it was.

Part of the success of vacationing in a dying industrial hot-spot is to have like-minded travel mates who also want to spend a goodly amount of time riding bicycles up hills as well as be surrounded by abandon buildings, lots of brickwork, the oxidized colors of industrial decay, and loud, sometimes sudden clanging noises. Luckily my buds Meg and Jean are exactly those type of people. And we were doubly lucky to be housed by our New England ex-pat friends Miriam and Jeffery.

Rooflines

Boris, our feline host.

MoGlo Coffee Housing it

Days were spent exploring the area, alone or in groups, and in the evenings we made some real delish meals, played cards, caught lightening bugs, and listened to John Tesh’s AM radio show. A real adult summer camp.

View across the Allegheny River from the front of the house

Serious public stairways everywhere.

Forgive me. I have fallen for painted brick.

We also took a nice bike trip out of the city and down to Braddock, PA. I have every intention of keeping this post to mostly pretty pictures, so I’ll just briefly note that the experience really gave me a good deal to think about regarding historic preservation, city planning, the good/bad influence of accepting corporate hand outs and “what would jane jacobs do”?

Image stolen big time from Tricia Royal/bitsandbobbins.com

I’m also bummed that my camera battery was ready to kick the bucket, so I was only able to take a few photos while I was there. But! searching the vast world of the internet will provide you with tons of other pictures that are probably way nicer than mine. Like this one:

And here, the first Google image search is free.

I stole this from Jean. I do love this shot.

Note that this is the only building in the whole field. Surreal!

More of those great industrial colors.

And just to make it extra long, a few other images of industry from around the area where we stayed.

Turning big pieces of metal into little pieces of metal.

Sign pile

It was such a good trip, I wish that I had allotted more than 6 days. I’ve been there before many, many times, but this was the first time that I was there with the intention of just hanging around and going with the flow. I didn’t even make it downtown. Now that I am map-packing PGH bike and bus wizard, I can’t wait to have more rust belt adventures!

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Two Thousand and…when?

I spent New Year’s 1999 to 2000 on a bridge in the middle of town with y best friend. I spent New Year’s 2009 to 2010 in a “secret” bar. Like we didn’t see that evolution coming.

The holidays, when not busy being irritating and stressful, are a pretty wonderful time for me. Particularly, they come accompanied by a nice one to two week vacation and the older I get, the more the idea of gainful employ seems like it’s for suckers. While sleeping in until 2pm every day might not be the way to lead anything resembling a life, I just can’t help but give in. But! Dave and the pup seem content to laze for as long as they can, so who am I to upset their comfort?

One of the highlights of home-time in New Jersey was getting to go to wonderful old Cape-May-by-the-Sea and hanging out on the beach. Here I am, total bag-lady, beach-bum style: (the sun sets over the water because CM is a peninsula separating the Atlantic from the Delaware Bay. Very nice.)

Came home with some really nice whelk pieces; black and blue and gold crazy delicate and beautiful. Seashells were the first thing that I really “collected” as a kidling. Maybe they were second to toy dinosaurs. I can’t recall, but it does provide proof that I have always been interested in “things”.

Beyond family and friends and drinking scotch, I am happy to return to the Isle Rhode and march forth into a new year, hopefully one as challenging yet fruitful as the one left behind. So far I have A). made two (count ‘em: 2!) etsy sales AND B). I’ve worked on packaging.

A). I’m not sure where or why I have gone necklace crazy. Maybe it’s because stringing stuff around your neck is pretty universal and a good way to showcase small ideas while having them remain a wonderful and personal item. Maybe it’s because in college, I would fill my pockets with all sorts of found gee-gaws and now I need a way to usefully purge them. Because, without function, I am nothing. Transition! I’ve put together 3 new necklaces that I call “bowerbird”ly but secretly, Lola has influenced me to think of them as post-apocalyptic assemblages; trinkets found and horded from a past culture, hastily strung around the neck for safekeeping and admired for their vernacular beauty, both individually and together. But that’s a heckofan artist statement and a little more melodramatic than I am comfortable with being in a way more public and judgmental forum. Hey! Photos!

Not all are listed, some might end up going to the Kafe. I also whipped up a new money clip before break. I’m not sure how none of these have sold yet. Clearly, you are all stupid and don’t appreciate the spirit of mischief and adventure. Or you’re poor and a money clip would be of no use to you.

B). The idea of packaging presents me with some problems. As much as I love clever packaging and am easily swayed by it (duh. I am American.) I do realize that it’s pretty dumb and wasteful. And I hate how the unspoken, ultimate goal for handmade goods is to be a spitting replica of something factory made or commercially available. Point: RI’s own Craftland, which don’t get me wrong, has some nice stuff from some talented artists, some of whom are my very own friends. But for them, packaging is a big sell. They’ll even tell you that.
I can make you a pin. Or a set of pins. Or some coasters. And that’s really nice and hopefully you will appreciate the thought I put into this gift for you. But then I’ll put it in a little celo wrapper and add a tag. Oh! How cute! It’s like a little take on a real, live item! Maybe I’ll slap a little price tag and some copy on it! Like in a store! OMG IRONY! DIY OR DIE! TAKE THE HANDMADE CHALLENGE! Consumerism sucks. Buy this thing.

I hate this.
This is one of the many reasons that I hate the modern crafting/ “craftivism” culture at large.
And I can never articulate it well enough but boy will I try.
Why the same, old, tired paradigm? When you can re-invent everything? What a chance to squander!

Anyhow, I’m a capitalist, not an activist. Here’s my dumb packaging:

I think that this is an old-fashioned but simple and low-impact solution. My guilty, gnawing soul is calmed by idea that the majority of my paper products are recycled scraps and that even the printer was plucked from the garbage at Brown U (with 2 full inks inside!) All appropriate info can be added to the card on a need-to basis and after it’s served its purpose of brand identity, it can be recycled or composted or turned into a bookmark or shopping list. When I send stuff, I can write a small message of thanks on it. Then I usually wrap it in some of my nicer scrap, paper or fabric, tie it up with some scrap yarn or ribbon or what, and shove that puppy into a pre-used bubble mailer. A brown paper shopping bag makes for a good front label to cover over the vital info from the mailer’s last trip through the USPS. I don’t trust that the recipient will use the mailer again, but the wrapping may be saved and hopefully will then take up residence in the family craft drawer… or “gift wrapping room”.

Oh. And the unmentioned C). Making good on a drunken new years deal to do some polar swimming with a friend. Much like the time I declared that I would move to Rhode Island, USA after having downed maybe a few too many, I intend to see this one through just as well.
Adventure!
Mischief!

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