Home In Montana

I’ve been spending the holidays with my family at home in Red Lodge, Montana. It’s been a great visit and I really treasure the time here. My brother Brad, his wife Hui, and their 4-year-old son Ethan were also here for several days. Red Lodge is a small ski town and I love the community and pace here. There’s lots of snow and we’ve been taking advantage of it with several trips sledding. My brother and I also did an interview session with my dad. Mark Edwards of Audiobiography has been recording my father’s memoirs and the last session was with me and Brad. We told stories, asked questions of my dad, reflected on our lives together, laughed a lot, and cried a lot.


Breakfast at the Pollard Inn, where Brad and Hui stayed.


Three generations of Wilsons enjoying a good smoke with our gum cigarettes. The Texas sweatshirt … yes, a little baffling, but it was a gift from my dad’s stepson who lives there. Brad is a dead ringer for our late grandfather (my dad’s father) — it’s a little hard to tell with all that hair, but check it out: http://www.meganwilson.com/scrapbook/scrapbook.php?Qwd=./family%20images&Qif=94_Image.jpg&Qiv=thumbs&Qis=M


My dad with Greta, his step granddaughter, and the puppies! There are 9 of them — very cute!


Brad and Ethan sledding — Ethan named himself “little mountain goat,” which was appropriate as he was able to cruise right back up the hill faster than anyone.


Me and Ethan after a record run (was later broken by my dad)


Greta, Dad, Brad


The little mountain goat


Greta and Ethan heading out for a ride on the four wheeler


My room at the Rock Creek Resort. The owl painting was a gift from my brother — it was part of my mom’s collection that he has part of — was a very special gift! The resort has lived up to its name — it has a full sized swimming pool, jacuzzi, and sauna, which I’ve been taking advantage of daily.

Rio, Rigo, and Oscar

What a combination!!! Eliza and I couldn’t believe that we were on our way to the Museu de Arte Contemporanea de Niteroi to see an exhibition by Rigo! The Museum is one of the most amazing spaces I’ve experienced. It was designed by Oscar Niemeyer, who is from Rio and one of the best modern architects of the 20th century. The whole experience was a total treat!


On the way to the Museum we passed this complex also designed by Niemeyer.


HELP!!! The redhead is attacking me …


We got our first glimpse of Rigo’s show outside … I love these vehicles, they remind me of home in Indonesia


On the way up …


Rigo’s show looked AMAZING!!! A great retrospective of his work and in a really spectacular environment.


People were so loving it and kept posing in front of the large mural that he painted onsite.


A kindred spirit …


I had to pose too! especially since I sort of blended in to the work …


hmmm… maybe I like the redhead afterall.


Ciao for now

Solstice

Rio

We arrived! Driving into the city we realized how amazing the grafitti is there! More colorful and detailed than we saw in Sao Paulo.

We stayed in Ipanema at a guesthouse on the beach. Great for people watching!


shot from our window


Our special guests Z and Owlie, courtesy of Theresa


The restraunt of our hotel


Artwork in the hallway of our hotel — totally love this!


Sitting at the restaurant of our hotel watching an amazing performer do acrobatics


Our meal — Eliza’s having the full fish!


On our way to Niterói


On our way to Niterói


On our way to Niterói


More great grafitti


love this!


I’m a total sucker for for industrial pipework


Amazing!


Niterói

ROAD TO RIO

Back to Brazil …
After spending three days in Sao Paulo, Eliza and I headed to Rio by bus. It was a six hour trip and a great way to see the landscape — especially since we got to sit on the second level in the front seats.


At the bus station


Still in Sao Paulo


Still in Sao Paulo. Campground or shantytown…


Leaving Sao Paulo


Clearly outside of Sao Paulo … and into Global Communist Consumerism


Eliza’s feet


Beautiful!


Eliza has put on her boots …


Getting close …


We’re here!

CRAVING FOR THE EXTRODINARY

Check it out! The book ILLUSTRATION – PLAY is now available at www.victionary.com
Lots of awesome artists!!! and I’m lucky to be included! You all ROCK!!


the blotchiness is my scanner, not the book

MORE PICS FROM SAO PAULO

Going through my pictures, I realize that most of them are of architecture, design, and environment. Not sure why, but I’m generally not as interested in the fun party pics — not that we didn’t have plenty of those moments during the travels — I can’t believe I don’t have ANY pictures from the Gaby Bex show — but when I pull out the camera, it seems to be for the structural/environmental experiences.

Sao Paulo had a very seventies feel to it — I think some of that might be due to the lack of hyper visual stimuli, but I was also very aware of the attention to design elements that aren’t part of the current consumer culture. One of the moments that left both Eliza and I stunned was noticing that the McDonalds didn’t even have golden arches!!! The only complaint that we heard from residents with regard to the lack of advertising was that it’s been challenging to provide directions for people.

Oi!
As in Oi Vei! (not “Hi” in Portuguese, one of the most complex languages to grasp)


(hi eliza, i meowiss you!)

I think the past year (and then some) has caught up to me — I’ve been sick for the past week with a bad case of the flu (miserable for me, great for The Kitten) … lots of activity and travel over the last 12 months, which has been exciting, but also challenging given other things — most prominently the stress that’s amassed from the harassment by my landlord. Among other things, we haven’t had access to our power breakers for over a year and our garbage bin was moved from a locked room to our entry way on the street so that we constantly have people rifling through our trash. I could go on and on … but I’ll leave it to karma…

Instead will redirect to more pics from the trip to South America:


view from Eliza’s flat in Buenos Aires


so love these road signs!


cool building


walking


am loving the queer window designers! you GO boys!


this is for you Miss CC


snack after a literary reading in San Telmo


lounging … happy b-day ebx!


x marks the spot


supposedly Jenna Bush’s new digs in San Telmo


there’s NO Escape from these hideous hearts!!!!!!!!! we got to know the Buenos Aires airport really well after we missed our scheduled flight to Sao Paulo (it was printed wrong on our tickets!!)


we thought of you, Dr. Arcega …


and here we are in the taxi from the Sao Paulo airport to the hotel. we LOVE Sao Paulo — it feels a little like a ghost city without the advertising — will write more about the experience when I’m feeling better.

BED, BACK, & BEYOND …

Yes, I’m back from my adventures in Buenos Aires, Sao Paulo, and Rio with Ms. EBX. Great trip with many serendipitous surprises!!!

I loved each city and have many stories, but am still a little too jet-lagged to share more than some of the pics from the first couple of days in BsAs. More to come soon …


Couldn’t resist, it’s always nice to get a little slice of home on foreign soil.


Wacky — more reminders of Big Sky Country — this is Eliza’s money changer


Girls … we love shoes.


Happy Birthday to me — the best b-day (thank you EBX!!!)

PLATTER

That’s right, my plate has become so full that I’ve upgraded to a platter!!!

When I returned from Manila, I hit the ground running and it feels as though it’s become a sprint. So what have I been up to?

1. I’ve been working a lot for Family Connections and The Luggage Store. I love both of these organizations and the people I work with, which makes it very enjoyable — even when it can get a little stressful and down to the wire with deadlines.


Family Connections


The Green Lab on Cohen Alley (Luggage Store)

2. I’ve been embroiled in a lawsuit, which I can’t say anything about … because it’s a lawsuit.

3. I finished a new drawing, to be included as part of Traywick Contemporary’s 10th Anniversary from October 20 – December 21. The main show during that time will be Ken Fandell’s Of Ignorance and or Mystery.


This is the drawing after I finished it — unframed and photographed from a weird angle, but once I get it back from the framers, I’ll get better images taken.

4. I’ve been working on the Home 1996 – 2008 installation. You can check out the latest images here.


Home 1996-2008 (Bedroom)

5. Found out that Sundance might be interested in having me do an installation during the Film Festival in conjunction with Lise Swenson’s short Mr. Gary and the Feedback Show. So I had to put together a bunch of stuff for that.

6. Getting ready to leave for Buenos Aires in a week. I’ll be doing several projects — a writing and video collaboration and an installation. Also will be in Brazil to do some research for a future project. Not many folks are aware of this — the mayor of Sao Paulo has banned all advertising!!! There can still be storefronts, however there are limitations on the size. Read more here.

So what have I been doing for fun? ……

1. EBX correspondences (looking sooooooo forward to seeing you!)



2. Went to see Jim Goldberg’s show The New EuropeansMUST SEE!!!

3. Watching movies: Fata Morgana and Imelda (for the 2nd time).


Fata Morgana

GINA OSTERLOH AT 2nd FLOOR PROJECTS


Untitled (Turquoise Room #1)
Lightjet, 48.5 x 60.5 inches

Awesome Show!!! Must See!!

2nd floor projects presents new work by GINA OSTERLOH

September 22 – October 28, 2007
Reception Saturday September 22, 7-10pm

[ 2nd floor projects ]
3740 25th street, no.205
san francisco CA 94110
415 824 2644

sunday 12-5pm + by appointment


Me and Woff — we both love Manila more than NYC!

pics from the afterparty:



It was Gina and Eamon’s anniversary too!


Joe, Eamon, and Gina


Carlos & Moriah


Goofballs!

Random … Yet, Not So Much …

Home At Night

GALLEON TRADE I: DIALOGUE FOLLOWING THE PROJECT IN MANILA

Megan Wilson responds to Claire Light’s “all eyes on the artists”




Learn more about the background of the Galleon Trade project here >
Learn more about the artists’ work exhibited in Manila here >
Learn more about the artists’ cultural backgrounds here >


photo by Juan Caguicla


Claire Light, image: Stephanie Syjuco

During Galleon Trade I: Manila, we were honored and lucky to have arts writer, Claire Light accompany the project as our “embedded journalist.” Claire has been covering Galleon Trade on her Website: http://clairelight.typepad.com/atlast_galleon_trade/ since July when the project was launched in Manila. Claire attended all of the events, talks, exhibitions, and perhaps more importantly, she was a member of our day-to-day activities.


Opening at Green Papaya, image: Stephanie Syjuco

As an art critic myself, one of the participating Galleon Trade artists, and someone who has been the initiator, curator, fundraiser, and primary coordinator of an international exchange project (Sama-sama/Together), I feel compelled to join in the dialogue and respond to Claire’s most recent post all eyes on the artists.” I hope to broaden and add to the discussion from the experience as a participant/artist.


Galleon Trade Studio Visit, image: Stephanie Syjuco

First, a few clarifications:

CL: All of the Fil Am Galleon Trade artists had only ever visited the Philippines with their families before–as children, or as adults still stuck in a child’s role. This trip was their introduction to their, or their family’s, country of origin, not only in an adult role, but in their chosen profession as artists.

Reanne Estrada traveled to Manila to participate in the project/exhibition Sino Ka? Ano Ka? curated by Trisha Lagaso (Jenifer Wofford and Terry Acebo-Davis also traveled to the show in Manila). Gina Osterloh visited the Philippines for the first time in 2006 and met a thriving contingent of artists based in Manila – from video, performance, painting, all disciplines and everything in between. Johanna Poethig went back to the Philippines in the early 80′s for about 3 weeks after she did her first mural about the Filipino community – “Ang Lipi ni Lapu Lapu” (History of Filipino Immigration to the US) and was sponsored by a Filipino American group that was part of the Senior Center she did the mural on (Dimasalang House in Yerba Buena neighborhood).

Also, almost all of the Fil Am artists had traveled to the Philippines as adults without their families: Eliza Barrios, and Stephanie Syjuco (in addition to Reanne, Gina, and Johanna).


Reanne Estrada, Stephanie Syjuco, Christine Wong Yap and Mike Arcega installing at Green Papaya, image: Stephanie Syjuco

CL: Before I went to Manila, I did stop to consider if the work the artists were bringing was going to be big enough. Most of the Galleon Trade artists work relatively small in any case, and had deliberately chosen cheaply transportable work–Christine Wong Yap even going so far as to make her work out of standard sized shipping boxes.

Size was never really an issue with regard to the work to be presented. Galleon Trade organizer, curator, Jenifer Wofford didn’t put any limits on the work we would exhibit. In fact, she was very clear about providing deadlines for shipping if any of the artists would be incapable of transporting their work with them on their flight to Manila. Also, almost all of the Galleon Trade artists’ work is generally presented on a relatively large scale, not small.


After-party at Mag:net Katipunan, image: Stephanie Syjuco

The following is my repsonse as one of the participating artists to Claire’s post “all eyes on the artists:”

CL: I somehow had it in my head that expanding horizons meant BIG galleries. That turned out not to be the case. The galleries were, if anything, smaller even than typical storefront community spaces in the real-estate-starved Yay Area.

Despite all of that, the work was still too small. By this, I don’t mean that I hold it in any disdain, or that, after moving into an international context, I suddenly saw the poverty of the artists’ point of view. It was rather that the work was made by artists who hadn’t been on the Galleon Trade trip yet. The work wasn’t triangulated to three points. It worked in its context, and out of its context it became … well, not trivial, but almost beside the point. (Two possible exceptions are Megan Wilson and Mike Arcega because they made their work while in Manila, but I’ll talk about that in other posts.)


Green Papaya Art Space, image: Stephanie Syjuco

MW: It was interesting for me to read Claire’s perspective on the size of the Manila galleries that hosted the Galleon Trade exhibitions. I found the galleries to be fairly comparable in size to many of San Francisco’s past and present alternative arts spaces (Galeria de la Raza, Intersection for the Arts, Ampersand, Traywick Contemporary, The Luggage Store, Chinatown Community Gallery, Gallery 16, a.o.v., Four Walls, ESP, Scene/Escena). However, more perplexing to me was the perception of the work itself being “still too small” and “the poverty of the artists’ point of view.”

In her introduction to Galleon Trade Jenifer K. Wofford states:

California, Mexico, and Philippines share tremendous historical and cultural connections, but these have rarely been acknowledged in a creative setting. These post-colonial histories, contemporary transnational relationships, globalization, religious-, and commercial concerns all provide ample inspiration for creative output and dialogue across multiple communities. Statistically, Mexicans are the largest immigrant presence, and Filipinos are the largest or 2nd largest Asian immigrant presence in the USA, particularly in California. Despite these numbers, both groups have limited- to no representation in the US media, politics or the arts. Given California’s position as the primary locus of these two groups, it seems essential to open as many pathways to exchange and understanding as possible.


Fashionistas posing with Stephanie Syjuco’s couture, image: Stephanie Syjuco

Based on this framework, I believe all of the participating artists put a great deal of thought, consideration, and research into their creations and/or contributions for the Manila exhibitions, inspired by both literal/historical translations of the galleon trade and contemporary social/political constructs in a global economy. The artists who traveled to the Philippines also spent significant time onsite planning and installing our works at the galleries. The fact that we (artists) “hadn’t been on the Galleon Trade trip yet,” seems beside the point to me; one of the most interesting layers to Galleon Trade in its initial phase is just that. Each of the artists came to Galleon Trade with her/his individual experiences outside of the project as a collective; therefore the work presented in Manila had the unique position of reflecting a broad range of perceptions and approaches to the Galleon Trade concept without these already established relationships.


Eliza Barrios installing, photo by Eliza Barrios

CL: Because the trip, the exhibitions, weren’t about the artwork actually, at all. It was about the artists themselves, about their waxing, their ebb, about their arc through Manila. The artwork they brought was by way of credentials, yes. It was their gauntlet thrown down, a bit. It was their conversation piece, the thing that got the kids in the neighborhood talking to them.

But also, it was–or it will be–a growing mark on their doorposts, against which everything they make subsequent to Manila will show significant growth … significant expanse.

But hey, no pressure, right?

A concentrated gaze is to an artist like sunshine to anything vegetable. (Well, the artist has to be ready. I’ve noticed that really green artists experiencing their first public success are far more likely to be stopped in their tracks by the attention–by the combination of fear and ego–than to flourish under it. But more seasoned, yet still emerging, artists who have cut their teeth, filed them, and had some fillings put in as well, know how to use the energy-concentrate that attention offers them.)

Just as plants in a greenhouse grow faster and out of season, I’m expecting a more radical growth in Galleon Trade artists within a short period of time. Because they have just been placed in a greenhouse.


Installing at Green Papaya, image: Stephanie Syjuco

MW: Again, as an artist who put a considerable amount of time into the planning, research, and creation of the work I exhibited (as the others artists also did), it feels a little demeaning to read that the exhibitions “weren’t about the artwork actually, at all.” However I do understand what Claire is referring to here. The exhibitions and work that we presented provided the apparatus for meeting and developing relationships with the arts community in Manila. The time spent onsite planning and installing at Green Papaya and Mag:net, the openings, the events, the panel discussions, the dinners – all were invaluable. The friendships that developed, the creative sharing, the discussions on global culture, politics, and practices (especially with our hosts Carlos Celdran, Romeo Candido, and JuanCaguicla and artists/gallerists Pee Wee Roldan of Green Papaya and Rock Drilon of Mag:net Galleries) were by far the best parts of the experience, which is why cultural exchanges, such as Galleon Trade are so important. The afterlife of these projects takes on a life of its own, leading to relationships that expand beyond the initial participants, additional creative projects, and unexpected influences that deepen the connections between cultures.


Romeo Candido and Juan Caguicla, image: Stephanie Syjuco

I do believe that the experience in Manila will have a significant influence on the artists who spent time there. However, how this manifests will be different for each of us – for some it might be apparent right away in the subsequent work created. I know for myself, and others, such profound experiences evolve over time and the creative results develop subtlety.


Carlos Celdran moderating in The Living Room, image: Stephanie Syjuco

STANDARD WEEKEND

My friend Amy and I spent our weekend at The Standard Hotel in LA. Our friend Carolyn Castano had an opening in Chinatown at Kontainer Gallery, so we decided the Standard would be the perfect accompaniment to Carolyn’s show.

Carolyn’s work looked beautiful! And The Standard lived up to its standard… for the most part. It was very cool, yet also kind of cheap (not in its rates) — like a combo of Target and Ikea (looks fabulous in the photos, but the actual quality is sort of crap). I’ve also become so keen on and sensitized to design and architecture over the past several years; I was surprised by the number of design/function flaws.

The rooftop was fun and very sexy to be in such a funky environment in the midst of downtown LA.

My photo documentation ended HERE (almost):

Some security dude saw me taking pictures and ran over to me, blocked the camera (here), and told me that I’d have to stop taking pictures because “the hotel design” is copyrighted.” This didn’t really make sense to me, considering that I hadn’t actually replicated the designs; however, I’d be happy to give them some tips.

I was able to get one more pic in the elevator: