March 26, 2010
The Unuselessness of Chindogu
I Got Yer Ahtist Cahds Right Here
But one reason why my brane wazn't engaged in the end-of-meeting tradation process was Pam P's potential depahture from the group, as she moves back to the homestead enmired in healthcare and home repair issues, likely too busy & far away to make a special trip up and back for our frippery! We need to put our stamping caps on (the idea of a thinking cap, for me, seemed futile) and consider alternative meeting plans (reserve a room at the BC library?, meet earlier in the day?, all meet remotely on www.blackboard.com?, etc.) to make it possible to keep contact with Ms.P. Them with ideas should lemme know, and I'll filter them through some mystical decision-making process.
As far as future meetings, until/unless we come up with a useful compromise, the next meetings are:
[Tues 4 May 2010]: Game Night, with Song Lyric Recitation
(BTW: The April meeting was cast aside like a thing that was tossed over there). We will have gaming and entertainment: between rounds of some parlor game or another [Pictionary, Balderdash, Find-my-Foot, etc. - of shortish duration), members will recite (talk, NOT sing) lyrics to popular songs, a la Steve Allen (he was on TV in the 1890s) or, more recently, Christopher Walken in some YouTube thingus. There will be no wagering. On the game, either. More details as we all root through our game shelves and/or record collections (or www.lyrics.com and the like).
[Tues 1 June 2010]: The hairs on my chinny-chin- Chindogu
In a bid to keep the creative energies flowing, it was decided to bring back the idea of preparing "homework" for a meeting as long as it was for something as entertaining as Chindogu - the last Chindogu event was so popular, the result seemed to make the idea of homework worth it. A separate mailing with a reminder (or inspirational guide) about Chindogu will arrive in your emailbox right after this one. Schedulig this more than two months in advance was an attempt to spread the homework out over a longer time period, but we all know we're going to be working all night on 31 May, anyway. Points will be deducted if you injure yourself in the manufacture of your unuseless project (fingers WILL be counted).
Remember: think about ways to keep our resident carver in the loop, and get back to me, pls.
March 22, 2010
Meetin' Place
March 10, 2010
Ahtist Trading Cahds (ATCs)
Some sites to look at when you think of your artistical trading cards for the next SANE meeting (23 March 2010):
http://www.artist-trading-cards.ch/ - this is kinda a clearinghouse of info, links. One active, one inactive swap (send 20, get back 15 different)
http://www.artist-trading-cards.ch/links.html - many links to many sites w/ ATC
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=27062918329 - facebook site with lots of pictures (don't need to be a facebooker)
http://www.linesandcolors.com/2006/08/17/artist-trading-cards/ - Charley Parker gives a short history and "rules" about ATCs. I steal from him:
The general rules for Artist Trading Cards (ATC) are:I'm confident that I can make cards 2.5 x 3.5 inches, but that's about it, so there.
The card must be the size of a standard trading card: 2.5 x 3.5 inches (64 x 89 millimeters)
A card can be ether an original work or a very small edition
The back of the card should have a signature, the date and the number (if the card is part of an edition) and ideally an address for the benefit of contacting the artist for additional trading.
Techniques and materials can be almost anything: paintings, drawings, collages, photographs, rubberstamp works, mixed media, found images, assemblages, beadwork, woven, string, doctored existing trading cards, etc. The only real rule here is that the card should fit into the standard plastic album sleeves for trading cards, which leaves out anything too dramatically thick or three-dimensional.
The cards are not to be sold, only traded or given away. (This is a noble attempt to keep the practice non-commercial, but as with comic book artist convention sketches, that trust is sometimes betrayed; artist trading cards can be found on eBay.)
The cards should ideally be original, but reproductions or "editions" are permissible. There is some controversy about this, mostly centering around the failure of someone to be up front about the nature of the work when swapping.
There is also controversy about suspending judgment when swapping to avoid assigning value to the cards (the "quality" and amount of effort put into the cards varies wildly). Stirnemann himself has struggled with the issues of copies vs. originals and the suspension of critical judgment.
Look through the links on Stirnemann's site and do a Google search for "Artist Trading Cards". There are numerous forums and community sites devoted to the subject. There is a large Flickr group devoted to the subject with over 400 members and more than 2,000 images.
Community, and sharing art with others, seems to play a large part in the appeal of the practice. At the very least, it's a fascinating concept.