Categories
art montreal photo

More Montreal Madness

I steal all my Montreal links from the Montreal City Weblog, so you can always just go there and read more. But these are just the links I find of particular interest.

A man named Richard Florida talks about how Montreal has become a “creative center”, a “cutting-edge city that others would love to emulate.”

Over 2000 pictures indexed under “Montreal”. Woo, pictures!

A snazzy-looking journal from Montreal, with some slick film reviews.

David Carr of the New York Times talks about Montreal’s anglo-music scene, mentioning The Stills, Simple Plan, and others. One Montrealer scoffs at the attention, saying “What is going on here will continue to go on long after the attention has gone elsewhere.” Montreal is hip with or without attention from the New York Times, thank you very much.

The Hour talks about Montreal’s recent mention in Spin Magazine. More talk of music, and how the creative scene has been molded by the political background, though it sounds like Spin may have been a bit off the mark, there.

The following from Google News:

A tourist trip to Montreal,, and talk of art. Neat!

CTV offers proof that telemarketers are evil. Like we didn’t already know that. The shocker of this entire story is that people actually talk to telemarketers.

Ubisoft plans to create 1000 jobs in Montreal. Yay, video games!

And thus ends, for today, my obsession with Montreal.
À la prochaîne.

Categories
art music

You feel the urge to buy art

My other, exhaustive post pretty much catches up to the present day. I just wanted to mention, one more time, that if you buy a print from Clio Chiang before Jan 10th (one and a half days left!) the proceeds will go to the Red Cross to aid the countries suffering from the tsunami. Personally, I think her art is absolutely fantastic. I bought three prints today, and they’re really not that expensive, so I think everyone should follow suit. Go, now, run don’t walk, buy art.

Other random tidbits: Karla is back from her holiday travelings, and has about two-hundred pictures and a slew of words to peruse. Look at the words, read the pictures, or vice versa. She tends to have some fun adventures over there, in various countries.

Due to spambot attacks on his comments, Nick’s blog has moved. The new layout looks very nice, I think. Go on over and say “hi!”.

As I said previously, I’ve been vigorously adding to my music collection. Additions of note have been:

Wanda Jackson, Juana Molina, Dale Hawkins, Charlie Feathers, A Girl Called Eddy, Aqualung, Arcade Fire, Architecture in Helsinki, Damnwells, Devendra Banhart, Dogs Die in Hot Cars, Federico Aubele, Janis Martin, K-Os, Mason Jennings, McLusky, Nellie McKay, Stars, The Fiery Furnaces, The Futureheads, The Good Life, The Thermals, TV on the Radio, and Visqueen. Among other things, all across the spectrum.

Music is great. Really, super, kick-awesome great.

Go music.

Categories
art

Waiting for midnight

Want to help aid efforts for the tsunami victims? Don’t feel like you have enough moneys to spare? Buy one of these awesome prints from Clio Chiang. All moneys she gets from prints through Jan 10th go to the Red Cross. And the prints are simply beautiful. Buy eight. I will. She’s also holding an auction on an original piece, profits to go to tsunami relief. A bit more spendy, though.

Well. Happy New Year, everyone.
Party like it’s 2005! I love you all.
See ya next year.

Categories
art montreal music work

When a straight beats a flush

I came across this interesting link, somewhat circuitously today. It involves the Pacific Northwest, and this particular story is about Neah Bay and the Makah Tribe. My step-dad is Makah, and very active in Makah traditional and cultural life. He particularly does a lot of really beautiful copper-work, cut and painted to represent traditional and familial spirit and animal figures. The Makah are most known, recently, for the controversy revolving around their whaling, particularly their recent hunt in 1999. There are some beautiful pictures of Pacific coastline and local rainforest worth checking out. Washington State is chock-full of natural beauty. Go us.

Of other note, geographically, is this short article from The Boston Globe on Montreal, with focus on their pop music scene and its success in the U.S. (Whether that’s a recommendation or not, I don’t know — I’m not particularly fond of “popular” American music.) But it’s a neat, short blurb that ends in saying, “Montreal is an artist’s town.” Go them. (Still, the thought of being surrounded by three million people is a bit daunting to a country-grown boy like myself.) For further stories of Montreal interest…

The phone rang yesterday, and I, crotchety hermit that I am, let it ring through because I didn’t recognize the caller id number (that and I’m a lazy bastard; we really don’t get that many “courtesy calls” these days). It turned out to be the Public Library downtown, calling me about a “Library Aide” position for 15 hours a week. I’ve got to call them back when I get off work today, but this surely means an interview at least (because they send letters if they reject you; I’ve been collecting them), and hopefully a job of some sort for low pay and lost evenings. But hey! I can stop living off my damned credit card! Go me.

Time is short. Looking at the moment; it passes.
A quote to encourage ye, adventurers.

Make your choice, adventurous Stranger;
Strike the bell, and bide the danger,
Or wonder, till it drives you mad,
What would have followed if you had.

The Magician’s Nephew, C.S. Lewis

Categories
art book personal poetic webcomics

Seize the day and throttle it!

Carpe diem. That’s the short, latin version. I like the american version by Bill Watterson, too.

Calvin: ‘My elbows are grass-stained, I’ve got sticks in my hair, I’m
covered with bug bites and cuts and scratches…
I’ve got sand in my socks and leaves in my shirt. My hands are
sticky with sap, and my shoes are soaked! I’m hot, dirty, sweaty,
itchy and tired.’

Hobbes: ‘I say consider this day seized!’

Calvin: ‘Tomorrow we’ll seize the day and throttle it!’

Well, my day was not precisely throttled. I’m sorry to say I spend it feeling unwell, physically, and very reflective, mentally (not so sorry about that part). Reading back on old writing, some dating back to 1995, always reminds me of how foolish a creature the human is … or if nothing of so broad a scope, how foolish I am, particularly. On the bad days, this gets me down. On the good days, I revel in it. After all, the implication of looking back on your life and not feeling foolish is that you have not grown, not changed, and can’t blush at your own naivety because you have not yet realized and overcome it. This victory, of course, only heralds in new battles, more naivety … of a heightened kind, maybe so and maybe not, but new. Every day IS a new day, and we awaken as new people not only every morning, but every hour and every minute. What I am now is not what I was even 30 seconds ago, where I was only beginning to formulate a thought that the present me has already had and the future me will one day have long since forgotten.

Today, I work in a library, and it is, in many ways, a standard 9-5 type of job. Tomorrow I may be in my car driving to New York to make my living as a street poet. That there is only a tiny fraction of a percent of a whisper of a chance that that might in fact come to pass does not really lessen the idea as a possibility.

And the point is, we have choices. Not just little choices like: “What tie shall I wear today?”, or “What shall I have for dinner this evening?”. And not only big choices like, “What will I do for a living?” or “Should I ask her to marry me?” In every second of every day there are a million (literally) and more choices waiting to be made, turned down, ignored, hesitated upon, and overlooked. Every positive choice I make is a million negative choices at the same time. That I choose to type this also means I’m choosing not to get a drink of water, not to write something else, not to watch TV or read a book, get more firewood, build a swimming pool, go for a walk, move to New York, call a friend, learn to speak Polish, buy a gun, kill someone, overthrow the political system, streak the town or go out dancing. If you think about it, the amount of “no” you say everytime you say “yes” is staggering.

The point of all this is that maybe some of the “no” should become “yes”. I think a lot of people make decisions because they don’t realize that there are other, valid choices out there. I feel secure in my choices because I am willing to recognize the other possibilities. I am happy doing what I do because I choose to do it, out of a million other things I could be doing. Most of the time, saying “no” to a choice is subconscious, an automatic response that accompanies saying “yes” to another choice you may have grown so accustomed to making that you have, in your own mind, raised it from beyond being a choice to now just being “how things are”.

“How things are” is a lie. It’s a comfort we want to use because we are afraid, as Mandela says, not of our weakness but of our great strength. It’s not scary to have no choices. What’s frightening is having countless choices. Each of us is nothing less than a god, with complete dominion over the most essential: ourselves.

You are responsible for every minute detail of your life. You can change, and you can stay the same, and either involves making one or numerous choices. There is ABSOLUTELY no such thing as being powerless, especially not concerning who you are.

In twenty years, I’ll look back on writing this, and I’ll surely feel foolish for sounding like a damned fortune cookie. But I chose to write this, instead of a million other things I could have done, and I’ll not regret that.

“Action is choice; choice is free commitment to this or that way of behaving, living, and so on; the possibilities are never fewer than two: to do or not to do; be or not be.” -Isaiah Berlin, From Hope and Fear Set Free

In the end, all it is: carpe diem.