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Upcycled Meta Bag

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

My friend Laurel came into Seattle proper over the weekend to view the art show, and with her she brought a simply ingenious craft project.

She was in the process of crocheting a tote bag out of upcycled grocery sacks and newspaper sleeves (middle stripe). Here’s the finished piece:

The “yarn” for the bag was made from slices of plastic looped end to end and tucked into a ball. The finished piece is incredibly sturdy, waterproof, and cost nothing to create. I think it’s a super clever idea that could be used to make a variety of useful items, and all from something that would have otherwise been tossed into the garbage or recycling. This bag-of-bags is SO meta.

For more details on how Laurel made this, see Birds Before The Storm’s coverage of the project. She also has an Etsy store–check out her other handmades there!

Pickle Punk

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

In honor of the last few days of summer, and because I’ve had an insatiable craving for pickles (though I’m not pregnant; no worries!), I decided to try my hand at creating my own. Nathan and I bought peppers, onions, garlic, and cucumbers at the Pike Place Market on Saturday.

pickles

The wee cukes were grown in Puyallup, WA, which is spitting distance from our homes in Seattle. So cute and fat and green!

These guys are lacto-fermented pickles, made using a recipe found here. The Machine Project folks say:

In lacto-fermentation, salt is added to vegetables, either by covering them in salty water or by mixing them with salt to draw out their own juices…The result is a pickled food that will keep without canning or refrigeration.

These veggies don’t contain any vinegar, and are about the simplest preserved food you can create. They’re full of organisms and nutrients that are good for your tummy! I put up five jars of food within a half hour, and only used a few simple ingredients, most of which came from the market, though I got the powdered wasabi at World Spice.

Post-Pickles

From left to right: mustard onion chips, onion and pickled peppers (hee!), wasabi garlic spears, dill garlic spears, black pepper and salt simple pickle spears. We should be able to sample the pickles within the week, and they should be perfect to munch and refrigerate within a month.

Fleur De Sel Caramel Brittle

Monday, September 15th, 2008

The art opening is over and the gig was quite a success. Everyone who came to Seattle to assist or gawk has vacated, and I fend off the inevitable post-art show depression with another happy accident brought to you by my tiny kitchen and a tub of $13 salt.

I decided to create fleur de sel caramels this evening as an alternative to cooking healthy dinner foods. I followed this recipe pretty exactly until the crucial moments in which I should have been watching my temperature, and instead elected to answer three text messages. Oh, and not owning a candy thermometer was an integral part of it all, too. :P

So, instead of gooey, greasy, salted, addictive caramels…I ended up with fleur de sel brittle. It’s slightly more portable and definitely less likely to coerce me into eating half the batch in a single sitting. Some supposed kitchen failures are indeed mad science. Mad tasty science.

And…thanks to everyone who made it to the gallery opening Friday evening. <3

Tonight: ANACHROTECHNOFETISHISM

Friday, September 12th, 2008

After six weeks of Oregon Trail-style grueling, dysentery-ridden assbustin’, I’m pleased to finally present the first all-American steampunk, post-civ, and retrotech group gallery show, opening tonight in Seattle, WA at Suite 100. Custom chocolates will be provided by Naftali.

anachrotechnofetishism

For those of you who cannot attend the event or would like to get a head-start on the art action, we’re preselling the show online. I expect most of the items will sell out quickly due to the caliber of artists involved and all the attention the show’s had, so if there’s something you really desire, please grab it up ASAP.

I am incredibly proud of the backbreaking work that the entire artist collective and crew put into this gig. While steampunk’s popularity generally emanates from its captivating and palatable visual aesthetic, I think the true reason why it has appealed to me so relentlessly is because of the meticulous, loving labor involved in creating its artifacts and culture. This has been difficult, and as David’s shadowbox states, “This won’t go on forever”, ‘this’ being a lot of things. But the notion of impermanence, something I feel acutely, clashes with steampunk’s ability to be perpetually outside time. Thus we press on, we work hard, and we hope together for a better future filtered through the triumphs and shortcomings of an altered past.

I could not have managed this endeavor without the assistance and reassurance of the twelve other artists involved, my co-curator Molly Friedrich, and even more so, the folks who stepped up to load in, run errands, produce group meals, and soothe stressful moments out of stalwart friendship alone. This is anarchism at work. An epic thank-you to Willow Bl00 for taking time off of her day job to hang the show, delivering tequila, and being a rock. I owe you one.

Thank you to everyone, and see you at the gallery opening tonight!

Bacon Chocolate Peanut Butter Cups

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

This was an experiment in epic meat products, because I have so many important projects going on right now…thus, I needed a simple, silly, delicious distraction. Bacon solves all problems.

The original peanut butter cup recipe came from Have Cake, Will Travel. I improved upon the ingredients by using organic, natural peanut butter, dark semi-bitter chocolate, and of course…crisp applewood-smoked bacon on top.

These cups were made with regular-sized cupcake papers, not minis. Wee bacon-chocolates would be a tease.

ARR UM NUM NUM.

Run of the Mill (!?)

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

City of the Dead, originally uploaded by exoskeletoncabaret.

The adventures continue…
Sunday, we piled 300 lbs. of camera gear, accordions, Utilikilts, and petticoats into Nathan’s and Petra’s cars and drove to/from Portland, Oregon, and then further on to a tiny logging town called Vernonia. The mill there is crumbling and abandoned and was a breathtaking location for a shoot. I owe B. Zedan my right arm and a very large vegan cookie for sourcing it.

This place was like a church–its walls bearing graffitied hymns, its choir loft made of trees. The acoustics of the place were divine–each chord banged out of Magpie’s accordion and Nathan’s violin gently collided with the stone walls of the mill, the fall-off perfect. We’ve vowed to take The Ghosts Project there in October for a recording session.

We managed to avoid ticks and poison oak but misplaced some gear and had a brief run-in with the cops. The area was littered with blackberry bushes (free snacks) and goofy bunnies and ducks. So much cute.

The goal of the trip was for Magpie and I to shoot pictures for ANACHROTECHNOFETISHISM. We have very dissimilar photographic styles, so I am anxious to see the respective dynamics captured by each of our cameras in the show.

My set is here. I was pleasantly stunned at the brilliant color saturation of some of these photos. It helps that my friends are all extra-shiny, too.

Let me know in the comments if there’s a photo you’d like printed or you’d suggest for the gallery show.

Thanks!

ANACHROTECHNOFETISHISM: artifacts by pioneers of american steampunk

Friday, August 8th, 2008

I’m pleased to announce that I am co-curating and presenting artwork as part of a 13-person group gallery show in Seattle. THIS is what I’ve been so busy scheming the last few weeks. Hope you’ll come. It is a great honor to work with so many talented individuals, all renaissance people in their own right.

~~~~~~~~~
Long before the age of the internet, and well before the cold efficiency of the assembly line, existed fantastic and terrible machines, run on hope, sweat, and steam. It was a time in which form and function lived in sin, and everyman was a revolutionary.

We are 13 American artists united by broad geography and narrow aesthetic.

Marrying narrative and nostalgia to design and technology, we imagine the triumphs of the past overriding the failures of the present to create from the ruins and detritus a dazzling future-perfect.

September 12 – October 3, 2008
Opening Reception: September 12 6:00 PM – 10:00 PM

SUITE 100 GALLERY
2222 2nd Ave Suite 100, Seattle, WA 98121 (206) 956.3900

Arm Warmers! For the Making of Warm Arms!

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

Arm Warmers 1, originally uploaded by exoskeletoncabaret.

And, well, I needed an instant-gratification sort of project.

First set of stretch jersey arm warmers, handmade. One side is chocolate, and the other is heather grey. The embroidery is olive green backed with grey. I found the fabric at a local shop called Stitches.

Machine embroidery was done freehand with a zig-zag. Who needs 800 fancy-pants computerized stitches when regular ol’ zig-zags look rad?

Here’s another shot of Willow modeling them.

Like these? Let me know and I’ll make some more pairs in the same/other colors for Etsy.

Etsy Update/Super Secret Art Show

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Despite radio silence, I’ve been keeping as busy as possible. Possibly too busy, if you ask me.

day of the dead earrings

I’ve spent several nights up late, aggravating my repetitive motion injury with Illustrator and Photoshop abuse, planted a ridiculous amount of veggies and herbs in my kitchen (!), baked 48 day-glo cupcakes, and I’ve updated my Etsy store with new jewelry. Go shopping!

On top of the aforementioned, plus job applications, plus an H+ meeting, plus organizing photo shoots, plus finishing a rush hairpiece job…I’ve been digging my sticky little fingers into the Seattle gallery scene. I’ll make the official announcement in a couple of days, but it seems that I’m co-curating and participating in a group gallery show with twelve other artists, all of whom I greatly admire and occasionally obsess about late at night. There’s a possibility I’ll be holding a solo show at another Seattle gallery early next year, as well. Details when they exist.

I’m tired! I think I need a vacation from being unemployed!

Out the Window

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Out the Window, originally uploaded by exoskeletoncabaret.

A shot of the view through my window in my Seattle apartment. There is much construction outside, but also a great and vasty pit below me, cluttered with industrial equipment. I have chosen to see this as metaphor rather than a nuisance, except for on mornings when the construction workers decide to make excessive use of the gas-powered demolition saw right below my open window. Apartments should not be decorated with smog.