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museum of nothing sign
Museum of Nothing (The Soup Annex)

Exciting follow-up of The Museum of Nothing. The Soup Annex at the NewGrit art space (811 State Street) was included in Santa Barbara's 1st Thursday art walk, September 7, 5:00-8:00. This show had a soft opening on August 2, at 3:30-6:00, and then has been open most afternoons 12:30-4:00. The show will close on September 15. The Soup Annex features what I call The Campbellarium, a wall of Campbell's soup can labels, as well as a study center to peruse binders of Progresso, generic, and "boutique soups." More than a hundred Wheaties boxes now adorn many walls and ledges. And there is a sampling of a collection of mini-collages on 3x5 cards--what I call Shuffle Art because the cards can be viewed in any order at any rate. 

Perhaps it goes without saying that there is also be a display of candy tins. 

Here is an audiovisual tour of this version of the museum:   https://youtu.be/amQmUPYkMag

This show follows the recently closed Beta Test version of The Museum of Nothing, which opened at the Red Barn Gallery at UC Santa Barbara on June 22, 2023, with the recto--A side--then Re-opened with the verso--B side--on July 7. That version of The M.o.N. closed on July 14.

Here is the coverage from Keith Hamm for UCSB.

KEYT-TV gave us some nice coverage.

Bethany Thornton did a terrific interview piece for KCBX

See images below.

I created an audiovisual tour of that show for those who missed it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Br2UnHPKPt4

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Museum of Nothing catalogue image

Can't have a museum without a glossy gift shop catalog/guide, so I created one, which is only in prototype version now. The motifs are Smithsonian + outhouse. If you might be interested in purchasing a copy (once I publish it), at a cost of approximately 30 to 40 dollars, email me. And here is some text for the Introduction to that book:

The Museum of Nothing was founded in 2022 for the study, cherishment, and frivolous display of nothing in beautiful glass cases, also on shelves and pedestals. The museum aims to be jam-packed with more or less galore than you can fathom for your exclusive viewing pleasure. Nothing—our unfathomable nothing—aches to be hung with such flagrant insignificance, such inconsequential buzztalk, and such whimpering self-hatred, that the all-seeing eye of time immemorial shall weep with joy. In practice, both eyes will most likely do so. . . .

Founded in 1776, the museum responded to the founders’s insomniac fretting over all the possessions that Americans would eventually hold and then discharge as worthless—the tawny turkey feathers, musket ball cartons, and busted quilting needles. The fundamental mind simply halts at the halter of it all around the neck of nothingness. Were we to think these no-things could claim no repository, no card catalogue, no seat in the public lavatory of entitlement? Might there not be some edifice of brick and mortar to gather the accumulated vacancy of sense in the district of study? Thereto would arise a bastion, just beyond the reach of rationality or reason to exist. This very book would vanish from your hands, if The (stately) Museum of Nothing were not. Call me verbose, but then you’re just adding words to the flux.

Down each hall go corridors, lined on every expanse with walls. Lovely arches over the void seem especially redundant. Soaring ceilings run with pus. Grab a rag! After a simple handshake transaction at the outlandish turnstile, you will be granted affordances to behold whatever you might care to guess, if you care at all or have even given it a second thought. The vastness never seems to end, which leaves it up to you to end, or not to end, as you choose. . . . A box in the lobby stands waiting for your comments, which deserve to be stored for posterity and then some. As usual, there will never be a time like now to introduce the obvious.

Hyper-Illuminated Books Click on a year to see the annual gallery

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Alone Together--anthology of Zoom plays

My one-act play: "Les Mots Justes, or Hold Your Tongue" in Alone,Together anthology

This 6+ hour festival of Zoom plague-inspired theater took place on June 6, 2020, sponsored by UCSB's play development program LAUNCHPAD--39 plays, 24 playwrights.

And I was among them with this 10-minute play "Les Mots Justes, or Hold Your Tongue"

Now an anthology of all these plays has been published by Dramatic Publishing Company, and I was happy to be the editor of this book since it gave me the opportunity to work with a great group of professional playwrights.

Here is UCSB's press release on the publication:

https://www.news.ucsb.edu/2020/020002/lasting-encore

The wonderful performance of my play can no longer be seen on the internet because all these plays are now licensed for others to produce, but contact me if you'd like to read my script. Here is a link to the festival website:

https://www.theaterdance.ucsb.edu/news/event/817

Here is the Dramatic Publishing Company's page on the book, which is not available except electronically now but will soon be in print:

https://www.dramaticpublishing.com/alone-together

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The Creative Edge of Collecting--an exhibit in the UCSB library

This exhibit finally was dismantled in December 2021 after being on display for nearly two years (most of that time with the library closed to the public due to COVID). 

But IF you did get in, you would have seen a display of my collections of nothing, co-curated by me and a UCSB undergrad Museum Studies student, Rhiannon Gonzales.

Here is a link to a video "walkthrough" tour I quickly made before the library closed:

https://spotlight.library.ucsb.edu/starlight/the-creative-edge-of-collecting

And here is a link to UCSB Library's page about the exhibit:

https://www.library.ucsb.edu/events-exhibitions/creative-edge-collecting

This is a feature story about the exhibit, written by a UCSB undergrad, Eddie Lo:

https://spotlight.library.ucsb.edu/starlight/the-creative-edge-of-collecting

And this is a wonderful interview of the curator, Rhiannon Gonzales:

https://spotlight.library.ucsb.edu/starlight/the-creative-edge-of-collecting

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tree of life catalogue collage
Tree of Life(TM) catalog

o accompany my June 2019 performance event, Tree of Life (TM), my old friend Bill Crawford suggested we create a catalogue. He co-wrote a book of breakfast cereal history, and I am a collector of cereal boxes. Seems to work.

I wrote part, and he wrote part, and we created some cereal box collages with a book designer in Mexico.

It came out pretty well, and I have copies for purchase, if you write to me.

My aspiration is to repeat the Tree of Life (TM) event in some other exhibition space, and the catalogue would apply just as well to such an exhibit.

 

Here is my exhibition proposal---in pdf.       

Cultural Deconstructions
KOLAJ International Festival, New Orleans, 2019--Disaster!

KOLAJ is an excellent quarterly journal of collage from around the world, and they have an annual festival in New Orleans, to which I was invited in 2019:

http://www.kolajmagazine.com/kolajfest/2019/kolaj-fest-new-orleans-2019-program-book.pdf

I brought many bibliolages to show there in the LeMieux Galleries, and I was going to do a presentation on bibliolagerie--hyper-illuminated books.

BUT along came Hurricane Barry, and so after one half of a day, the festival was cancelled, and most people fled for home. Wendy and I stayed around, and the hurricane turned out to be a non-event for New Orleans. It hardly even rained.

No one saw the work.

But Ric Kasini Kadour, who runs the organization, put together a book that includes a section on my work. The book is called Cultural Deconstructions, and it is available for sale through the  KOLAJ site at this link

https://shop.kasinihouseartshop.com/product/cultural-deconstructions-critical-issues-in-collage

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