
SubGenius Kickstarter Live
The most fun I had in 2017 was working on the Kickstarter for the documentary film, J.R. “Bob” Dobbs and the Church of the SubGenius. Teamed with my friend Kelly Cash and revising our original church roles as Bob’s Nurses, we created six different 30-minute live broadcasts as content for the Kickstarter, streamed live on […]

Every SubGenius Has a Different Story
This is the first time I’ve blogged about a Kickstarter campaign (you’re welcome) because this documentary film, J.R. “Bob” Dobbs and The Church of the SubGenius, needs to happen! Watch the trailer and read about the accomplished team of Austin filmmakers, led by director Sandy K. Boone, on their highly amusing Kickstarter Page. (Update: The campaign was […]

Branding Your New Protest Group
Two days after the Women’s March on Washington 1/21/17, I find myself examining the term “intersectional feminism” and I’m pretty sure I’ve arrived at the intersection of the ridiculous and the tragic. I write to figure out what I think, so after another morning of dizzying headlines, lady patriarchs defending alternative facts and male plutocrats […]
A Call for Ageist-Free Arts in the Silicon Shire
I’d like to share a story of an experience I had in the Minneapolis airport in 2015. In my memory, I even gave it a title: Outsourced to My Decorator. It wasn’t exactly traumatic, or all that different from the usual overheard-at-the-airport experience, but for me it was a moment of ringing cultural contrast and reverberating […]

The Center for Mediocrity
The Center for Mediocrity is my invention as a homework assignment. I’m enrolled in “Art of the MOOC: Merging Public Art and Experimental Education”, a collaboration of Duke University and Creative Time New York. This week’s module is Fictions, Alternative Structures and Mock-Institutions. We were asked to make up a country, church, or organization and […]

The Virtual Cauldron
Austin Kleon wrote Steal Like an Artist. I stole from him. I like Mr. Kleon’s newsletter format, so I’m trying it out here in this blog post. His book is in its 17th printing with over 400,000 copies in print. Dwell on that for a moment; people in huge numbers are reading and thinking about creativity […]

How Artists Use Twitter (Reprint)
My article on Twitter was originally published in Professional Artist Magazine, Oct/Nov 2014. It is directed toward artists and those interested in contemporary art, who don’t “get” Twitter. In 2015, the piece won an award for best feature design, so congratulations to Art Director Kristen Schaeffer-Santoni and featured artist Marie Kazalia. (I can’t share the […]

The Collaboration of Artists Amanda Marie and X-O
On view at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art: “The Many Places We Are” is a two-artist exhibition that explores the concept of emotional travel and the bonds that are developed as you move through a physical space. Amanda Marie and X-O, artists who have traveled extensively together, explore the concept by combining their signature […]

A Taste for the Real: Kenneth Baker on a degredation of engagement
Next week I’ll attend Superscript: Arts Journalism and Criticism in a Digital Age. This three-day international conference will be held at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The event promises to raise questions about the role of the arts writer, and examine how the Web has changed the way artists tell their stories. […]

Nuclear Beauty Parlor: Herstory with Photos
The Nuclear Beauty Parlor was a group of women artists active in protest and prankster art of the Nuclear Freeze movement from 1983-1986 in San Francisco, California. Their name is synonymous with a music project they initiated, the 45-RPM 7″ single, The Nuclear Beauty Parlor…They are noted for adding humor and post-Punk style to a dedicated protest movement… Read More […]