GG_sm Lorna Mills and Sally McKay

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Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact

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waypoint kitty cats


Remember that GPS show I was in this summer with the secret code? No? Doesn't matter. If you want to see some more online animated art about GPS go here and click on the rocks at the bottom of the screen.

- sally mckay 10-05-2005 6:17 pm [link] [2 refs] [4 comments]


bookunicorn

Strange day in the alley: these two items each abandoned, about 250 metres apart.

- sally mckay 10-04-2005 6:41 pm [link] [6 comments]


giant

Von Bark says, "There is something compelling about this still of James Dean and Mercedes McCambridge from the movie Giant. Perhaps it is the essence of grumpiness. Mercedes McCambridge went on to do the voice of Satan in the movie The Exorcist. She sued the producers to have her name added to the credits.

- sally mckay 10-04-2005 4:02 am [link] [3 comments]


lady sasquatch
Allyson Mitchell, Squirrel Lover, 2005. fun fur on found shag , 36 x 54 inches (from Paul Petro).

If you haven't seen Allyson Mitchell's installation at Paul Petro (in Toronto, North America) with 8foot pet-able, stand-alone monster Sasquatch ladies with scary teeth, teats, and fuzzy all over... make sure you get there before October 8th. Also the wall hangings (one of which is pictured here) are hot and the campfire looks hot (but its an illusion). Mitchell's last show at PP was a knockout. This one is better.

- sally mckay 10-02-2005 3:47 am [link] [3 comments]


According to this coolhunting link on Brian Jungen's show at the New Museum of Contemporary Art in NYC:
"This is the Vancouver based artist's first show in North America..."

Does anyone else recall the NATO intervention in Vancouver in the late 90's? Their brutal civil war was threatening to destabilize all the neighbouring Balkan states.

Other than that, I got nothin', because geography is so uncool.

- L.M. 10-01-2005 11:08 pm [link] [6 comments]


Toronto Life online has an article by Robert Fulford about blogs. Once he gets through the seemingly mandatory intro phase (blog is short for Weblog) including quotation marks around words like “blogosphere” and (heh) “posts”, he gets into some interesting detail on bloggers with extra-internet writing cred.
[Terry] Teachout writes books, magazine articles and drama reviews for The Wall Street Journal, but he also adores his blog; it provides “immediacy, informality and independence that you can’t find in the print media.” Although he’s paid for his theatre criticism, he tells us for free about every concert or dance performance he attends, apparently every record he hears and even what deadlines he’s in danger of missing.

These full-time professionals have turned themselves into part-time amateurs, in the root definition of “amateur”: someone who acts out of love. Because it’s so economically independent, blogging encourages freewheeling individualism, which has affected mainstream journalism. In Foreign Policy, an influential American journal, two scholars recently noted that “What began as a hobby is evolving into a new medium that is changing the landscape for journalists and policy-makers alike.”
They also have a side feature here of local bloggers (including yours truly) picking their favourite other local bloggers.

- sally mckay 9-29-2005 8:17 pm [link] [12 comments]