FORGE: Create

For the last few months, I’ve been saying NO to a lot of stuff. Can’t do that talk, can’t do this review, can’t make it that other thing. But I did say yes to FORGE. A session on how the creative process is a process within a process. Myself, Nicolas Frederickson, and Mike and Patty Malone will offer our insights into creativity in a discussion-heavy format to a group of young design students eager to learn.

Wednesday, March 7, 2018 @ 4:30 pm
Emspace’s Outerspace

How to design a poster

Procrastinate, procrastinate, procrastinate, procrastinate, procrastinate, procrastinate, just get in there and fucking do it, done. And that, my friends, is graphic design.

Trying to see the future

Mired in this shit, it can feel hopeless. Falling back on tired ways of feeling cynical, scared, and at a loss. Beaten down, pushed aside, silenced. These American days are full of division, hate, suspicion, weakness, fear, lies, and what leads to a base level impulse to want to build a wall. A wall to keep out others. A wall to hold tight to our small view of the world. But this, at some point, has to stop. Doesn’t it? How far into the future do we have to look? How far can we see? When do we get there? When is it realized? 

Sonic Youth

“People see rock and roll as, as youth culture, and when youth culture becomes monopolised by big business, what are the youth to do? Do you, do you have any idea? I think we should destroy the bogus capitalist process that is destroying youth culture.”

– Thurston Moore, 1991: The Year Punk Broke

Bad at buggin’

I’m not good at hounding people for stuff. If someone isn’t going to get back to me, I’ll just move on to people who are more responsive.

Do we have to replicate?

Do we need to insist on doing something worthy of our time and then doing it again over and over? Maybe we can just push all our being into one explosive release of heart, emotion, and spirit and that is all. That’s it. All we need. Maybe there is no more. It came, it was realized, and then we move one.

MoAH (2013)

THEN:

The Museum of Alternative History offers a selection of the fittest explanations for the nature of the world and universe, and alternate histories contrary to … well … history.

NOW:

The Museum of Alternative History is about a fake, revised, and twisted history. It is a show about opinions supplanting facts, or using selective facts to make a disingenuous argument based on opinions. It’s about forcing personal beliefs onto others.