Saturday, January 03, 2009

TVA - Coal Ash update

TVA: Pond had problems for decades

Report shows agency opted not to pay for long-term solution


Leaks, seepage and water-logged walls plagued the fly ash retention pond at the Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston Fossil Plant for years before the structure's Dec. 22 catastrophic failure, according to the agency's February 2008 inspection report.

While TVA hasn't ended its official probe into the cause of the failure, the report indicates the agency knew about leaks at the site for more than two decades and opted not to pay for long-term solutions to the problem.


Read on here.

Gaza - Action

amnesty page for action letter to administration, click here.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Mission 17 cont'd


piece at Mission 17 Dream On...more to follow.



Thursday, December 04, 2008

Mission 17: Dream On!

The 5th Annual Juried Exhibition
Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Saturday, 1-6pm or by appointment

CURRENT EXHIBITION Dream On!

The 5th Annual Juried Exhibition12/05/08-1/31/09





Jason Hanasik, Steven in a bed of flowers (2008)


Opening Reception: Friday, December 5th, 6-9pm


Marisa Aragona, David Cicerone, Mikael Gaspay, Jason Gowans, Jason Hanasik,Dmitriy Kustov, Amy Wing Fong Lee, Liz Maher, John K Melvin, Piero Passacantando,Laura Plageman, Jessica Rosen, Gareth Spor, James Tantum, Chris Thorson,Izumi Yokoyama and collaborative works by Teresa Cunniff & Gary R. Weisberg,and Skye Thorstenson & Travis Mathews


Juried by:

Clark Buckner (Director/Curator, MISSION 17)

Joseph del Pesco (Curator-at-large, Artists Space, New York)

Laura Mott (Assistant Director/Curator, MISSION 17)

Susan O'Malley (Assistant Curator, The San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art)


Dreams have long been celebrated as sources of inspiration and analogues for artworks. In dreams we see that the world might be otherwise, that oppressive forces might be overcome, and that our wishes might be fulfilled. But the dreams that have driven the development of the modern world have resulted, to the contrary, in previously unimaginable nightmares. We live in a world where genocide has become commonplace, where the necessary conditions for life on earth are threatened by our own actions, and where there seems to be no limit to our exploitation of one another.Is it naïve now to dream--a disavowal of the conflicts that in fact define our condition? Or has the need to dream become more urgent than ever?For MISSION 17's 5th Annual Juried Exhibition titled Dream On!--with both the sarcasm and sincerity implied by the phrase--we invited artists to submit work in response to the imperative.

Monday, November 24, 2008

recent work fall 2008




something to chew on.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

reading

check out http://flexiblestructures.blogspot.com/ it will be a site for my more serious writings in the coming weeks. for now put up a piece from last spring. enjoy.