Saturday, February 09, 2008
Friday, January 25, 2008
in the meantime
tried unsuccessfully to upload a page, so for now here are a few low-res shots of the show that Colby, Allison, and I did at the diego.
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John K Melvin
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Friday, January 25, 2008
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Monday, January 21, 2008
Reflection(s)

opening at Diego at 5pm at 800 Chestnut, San Francisco, a collaborative installation by Colby Claycomb, John K Melvin, Allison C Taylor. don't know why the image above is so orange...whatev, will be uploading images to the site soon.
cheers,
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Monday, January 21, 2008
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Tuesday, January 08, 2008
public intellectuals
a read worth reading...
"Earlier 20th-century thinkers like Lewis Mumford and Edmund Wilson kept the university and its apparatus at arm's length. Indeed, they often disdained it. They oriented themselves toward an educated public, and, as a result, they developed a straightforward prose and gained a nonprofessional audience. As his reputation grew, Wilson printed up a postcard that he sent to those who requested his services. On it he checked the appropriate box: Edmund Wilson does not write articles or books on order; he does not write forewords or introductions, does not give interviews or appear on television, and does not participate in symposia.
Later intellectual generations, including, paradoxically, the rebellious 60s cohort, do give interviews; do write articles on demand; and most evidently do participate in symposia. They grew up in a much-expanded campus universe and never left its safety. Younger intellectuals became professors who geared their work toward their colleagues and specialized journals. If this generation — my generation! — advanced into postmodernism, post-Marxism, and postcolonialism, where the Daniel Bells and Lewis Mumfords never trod, it did so by surrendering a public profile. It neither wanted to nor, after a while, could write accessible prose. The new thinkers became academic — not public — intellectuals, with little purchase outside professional circles. While a book by Edmund Wilson could be read with pleasure by an educated citizen, a volume by an academic luminary such as Homi K. Bhabha or Fredric Jameson would give him or her a headache."
read more here
http://chronicle.com/free/v54/i18/18b00501.htm
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Tuesday, January 08, 2008
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Wednesday, October 31, 2007
a little somthing that I have been up to...
check out http://corntracking.blogspot.com/
there is a doc screening of King Corn this weekend at Red Vic if your around.
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Wednesday, October 31, 2007
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Tuesday, October 30, 2007
site up dates
have made a few changes to the site, so check it out. there are also some images of new work lying about...follow the Balloons link from the main page. also, the Merced project has changed again, you may want to tune it as the parameters have shifted a bit.
cheers,
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John K Melvin
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Tuesday, October 30, 2007
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Wednesday, September 19, 2007
funny sounds no more
helium shortage, its an old article but the situation hasn't changed much, several suppliers have it posted on their sites. below is a copy of the article if the link doesn't work. -cheers
Helium shortage grips suppliers across Texas, country
ASSOCIATED PRESS
11/06/2006
AMARILLO — The second-most abundant element in the universe is suddenly getting harder and harder to find. Party stores and florist shops grounded in the balloon business are caught in a helium shortage gripping suppliers across the country and in Texas, where one-third of the world’s helium production is overseen.
Supply of the noble gas — second only to hydrogen in the universe but rare on Earth in terms of quantity — has depleted while production from two large international sites is temporarily down.
Not helping matters is scheduled maintenance at the U.S. Bureau of Land Management’s National Helium Reserve complex in Amarillo, which will curtail production for 10 days starting Wednesday.
“We’re so close to the edge now, and every molecule counts,” said Leslie Theiss, manager of agency’s field office in Amarillo. “We’re walking the tightrope right now.”
Businesses that depend on helium have met with shortages from suppliers. In downtown Houston, American Balloon and Novelty Co. owner Deborah Muse said there have been times when she couldn’t get helium for weeks.
Mike Havard, co-owner of Havard Welding in Galena Park, said he’s kept his customers supplied but acknowledged that demand is heavy.
“There is a shortage. There is some concern of allocation,” said Havard.
Scientists and industry officials say the shortages should be resolved soon. There’s another domestic source is Exxon Mobil’s plant in Wyoming. Helium also is being captured at massive natural gas liquefaction plants being built around the world.
But in about 20 years, experts say most of the federal government’s helium reserve should be depleted.
Near Amarillo, which prides itself as the “Helium Capital of the World,” the government began using old gas fields in 1960 to create a reserve.
But after helium storage racked up $1.4 billion in intragovernmental debt, Congress passed a 1996 privatization bill that called for steady liquidation of the reserve through 2015. Theiss said it probably will take until the mid-2020s to complete the liquidation.
Helium now appears to be a finite resource that could soon disappear in Amarillo. The reserve is supposed to keep 600 million cubic feet, but workers at the facility are skeptical that will happen.
“Our equipment is designed to produce 6.1 million cubic feet per day, and we’ve been pretty successful at getting that done,” said Theiss. “But demand is outstripping the market right now.”
Helium is produced by radioactive decay of elements such as thorium or uranium.
Robert Park, a University of Maryland physics professor and officer of the American Physical Society, worries that helium will one day be scarce at a time when mankind really needs it.
“Nothing is really being done to save helium from being lost forever,” Park said.
©Laredo Morning Times 2007
ps: there is this as well
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Wednesday, September 19, 2007
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