Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Sarah Perry Stout


This is some work by Sarah, who is curating our East Village Comix Sampler art show at Snake Monkey Gallery, NYC, on June 5th, from the generous hours of 5pm - 11pm. There will also be a kids section launch and Moonshine will sing the theme from Planet Unicorn.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Explanation


When I'm in the LA Area, I frequently try to get to my favorite store, Back Lot Movie Memorabilia. Right next door is a wig shop with an on site wig stylist. I bought a country style wig there and had it purposely teased on site, then tipped the wig attendant, because NYC is such a tipping economy, new york socialism, that it's hard to restrain myself from ever tipping with my last dime.
I got to go with a A New York woman to the Shake Shack in Madison Square Park the other day, and she introduced me to the B Line. The A Line had about 48 people in it, the B Line, where you can order a drink, an ice tea, or ice cream for your pooch, had only one person in it. I got an ice tea, she got a poochini. She let me try the non dog food top, the dog got the rest. It was like being in a New Yorker cartoon for about 45 minutes, but actually when I asked her for her email and/or phone, which I do with practically everybody, she was startled. "I don't usually give my email to people like you," she accidentally said. What a minor social gaffe. Neither of us could make a full recovery from that one. Then she had to go because her dog was too ashamed to relieve himself with my and my friend Fu around. We made the dog too excited and self consious. Yet still I had the evening, and we walked all the way down third avenue to the Bowery Poetry Club, where we discontinued to be socially anamolous. If anything, I was one of the least exciting and stimulating people there. Its odd how ones fortune or charisma can turn on a dime. My charm didn't return until possibly Tuesday, days later.
One needn't always be compelling, however, far from it. Fu is moving to Berlin soon, and we had a few hours of our platonic palling around. "You two put out a really strong weirdo vibe when you're together!" our friend Aric once commented. Poor old Fu had to unload years worth of half hearted collecting and hoarding, dating from around the time nobody wanted albums anymore and couldn't even see a time in the future where anybody ever would, and they were all over the street, the used book stores, everybody's apartment, for a quarter, a dollar, for free if you took them away. He realized that his "Rappin' Rodney" album has no value, but maintains illusions about Red Foxxes filthy live set. I got about 10 Sandy Nelson albums, one of them was so mediocre that I donated it to the tranny who sells things in front of Love Saves the Day on 2nd Avenue and 7th Street.
That Tranny, who has a southern bum for a lackey, is still ahead of me in the stuff game because I've given her about two albums, a cd, and a literary journal I thought it would be good for her to have on her table, but I have gotten, most recently, 3 small French plates and a set of elbow covering non-gloves, black stretchy material that is glossy and dotted with rhinestones. The day I got those I put one on right away and Helen, a cabaret star, pointed out that it exactly matched my hair flower. She was right. Black with rhinestones. So in sync. I like everyone's style.

another hovercraft


Saturday, May 10, 2008

Hoovercraft Drawing by Jim Smith

I thought that in the future we would have hovercrafts, and also be wearing uniforms. Jim Smith sent me a couple of drawings he'd done of hovercrafts, because......I asked him to.

Goods

Yesterday I had three toddlers over here. Later at night, I picked through my clothing archives and found that a red suede skirt and brown fringe suede jacket I got at a swap meet for free were too wierd and/or small for me to ever wear. Then I tried on two pairs of shoes I got from Torrid, and even though I paid $5 each pair to have them stretched on 14th Street, they were narrow at the toes. I asked my roommate The Know It All if I should even wear the shoes for an hour and she said no, because if your shoes are not comfortable you cannot be extremely sparkling (to paraphrase her). I also found a men's shirt I got from someplace thinking it was a cute look, but the shoulders sagged past my shoulder line and also there was a little bit of chocolate I'd spilled, mysteriously, on the INSIDE part of the shirt. Maybe I wanted to get to the chocolate so badly that I had put the shirt on inside out. Not sure.
So I had these items, and today I gave them to this regular bum who had a small table besides him, on Avenue A, because the other guys who vend things hadn't arrived yet for the day. I told him to make sure they got it, the regular bum is way too immobilized to sell anything. I think I might give him a wooden cane to see if that helps him stand up one day.
Then I went to the fair at the Children's Workshop school, saw my friend Darryl face painting, and she gave me a drawing and some writing for my Comic Zine. In the drawing is a woman putting a blindfold on a man. The writing is desperate, she wonders if she'll ever leave the LES. I covered up the drawing and read the sharpie diary entry quickly, due to the children in line waiting for their face painting and the child whose face she was painting right then. She started out face painting badly, and by half an hour later was pretty good. I quietly gave her a thumbs up. 
I saw a little girl I babysat yesterday, her hair was messy and she was sitting in a tent. She's good natured. Her mother said Darryl was raving about my last book. I agreed that it is a good book. Babysitting for this wave of people, 10 years after my last babysitting time, will be very different from people who are more priveledged in a way that can make me accidentally scare them even though we're trying our best to get along. We're equal, this new wave and I. We're good. The old crew was goodish but it was confusing, though it helped bail me out of a bad depression and there was love there too, on both sides, sometimes being in a subservient position around people who find out that I am also a sharp tongued writer can lead to betrayal or imagined betrayal. I never set out to betray but writers are ruthless, said Victor Bruce Godsey once. I think I put 3 lines in a poem about my new neighbors and how they had good cheese in their refrigerators, how the new playground was for them. Not much but it put another nail in my employment coffin, probably at a good time. 
At the Children's Workshop I got 4 videos to show little kids, the Black Orchid and a sappy Dolly Parton cd for myself, a kind of art with black cloth and gold bamboo, and some bland rice balls I gave to pigeons in the park. I sat in the part and read the Microcosm Press manifesto while 2 sets of people sat down at a small piano and sang and played. 
On the way back to my apartment, the street vendors were using two large plastic tubs I secretly donated another day, and had all the new things I secretly donated today as part of an extremely neat and organized display. If I could cry softly at little touches, I would have cried. Lets see, so my financial tally for the day is: $11.50 I spent at the Children's Workshop, one piece of art for my zine and gallery show. Good one.