Thursday, 1 November 2018

Diary: October 2018

4 October 2018, Hackney 
In the studio today.
Bit rude, but never mind
which is a companion to...
Addicted to Bette Davis Eyes on Spotify Easy 80s collection
5 October 2018, Paris
It is such a long time since I last spotted a bit of rolled-up carpet in a Parisian gutter.

6 October 2018, ParisNot only do they have those hire bicycles you can just leave anywhere on the pavement, they also have a motorised scooter equivalent. The marginalisation of the pedestrian is in full swing here in Paris.
Paris has motorised scooters 
6 October 2018, Paris 
Spotted in the 15th Arrondisement.
Parisian dentists leave this stuff lying around
6 October, 2018, Paris 
Out and about in Convention.
Le Comptoir toilettes 
Le Comptoir menu 
Exotic Parisian goth reads paper 
The things you see if you look down 
Working out our winners 
7 October 2018, Paris 
A day at the races.
First drink of the day 
A spare bottle is always a good idea 
The view from the cheap seats 
Getting the Smartie-suit guy and the Peaky Blinder in one shot was not easy 
Lipstick at the race track

Behind a row of horsey hoorays 
8 October 2028, London
Just back from a weekend in Paris, where not only do they have those hire bikes (Mobike) you can leave anywhere on the pavement, but a motorised scooter equivalent. Now I read in City Matters, number 083, a story that hints at a future where the highway conflict shifts from motorist versus cyclist to motorist and cyclist and scooterist, or whatever, versus pedestrian. As the City's ‘Culture Mile’ tourism programme gains momentum, footfall will increase, but so will the march of technology and the public highways will become the province of all kinds of gadgetry. The distinction between road and pavement is breaking down and the City will become a much more dangerous place for walkers.
Clipping from City Matters 
11 October 2018, Hackney
The best thing for me at the Headway Co-Production workshop today was Rosy’s answer to the question: "Why HEL members should be involved in decision making?” Rosy is not a Day-Service member, but she did benefit from talking to day-members, which she did actively. I especially enjoyed a conversation with her and Phil Chimes during one of the breaks about being a cop (pre brain injury). We shared the experience of not being able to multi-process. We both can only do things serially, start-finish, start-finish, etc. Rosy said also that she retained some of her pre-brain injury embedded characteristics, what I frivolously referred to as “being plod”. She was still very observant, suspecting and cautious. She had not “lost it”, as she told her closest friends.

12 October 2018, London
The puppeteers did not wear gloves 
18 October 2018, Hackney
Bit of writing for Michelle about masks.
The studio's current artist-in-residence is Stephen Wright, who found fame turning his house in Dulwich, south London, into a living museum of Outsider Art. He called it his “House of Dreams”, so it was interesting to see him bring his dreamworld to Submit to Love.

One of his first projects was to get members making masks. The temptation to draw parallels between masks and dreams is strong. It could be said that both are multi-layered confessions, and Steven agreed that masks are more often about revealing than concealing.

Our members took first-base inspiration from a serious book about Mexican masks, but roamed freely with the subject thereafter. So it wouldn't be a good idea to read too much into these masks. Some of them are of real people (Michael Jackson), some are just for fun. Some are self portraits. AD's image of herself depicts a wild-headed woman with her tongue sticking out. It's a remarkable likeness, both physical and metaphorical, of the AD I know. Studio manager Michelle modelled herself on an evil crone with sunken eyes and a hooked nose. As I said, don't read too much into these things. Errol Drysdale did the mask of a lion. That's a good character fit, too.
Thankfully, I managed to dodge doing this project 
One of the fascinating things these masks all have in common is that inside them, their essence, their soul, is one day: Tuesday, October 16, 2018. This is because they all started as scrunched-up pages from that day's copy of the Metro newspaper, on top of which is layer upon layer of Modrock.

The front-page headline in the Metro on that Tuesday was “MEXIT!” followed by a story about how Prince Harry's wife, Meghan, will be enduring the pain of childbirth on the same day the UK is scheduled to leave the EU. Good luck with that, thought Sam Jevon as she turned this story into the outsized nose of a grinning idiot.

Other stories that day included one about Katya from Strictly Come Dancing trying to repair her marriage after a slip of the tongue with a long-haired comedian called Seann. There was something about Universal Credit not only being a pathway to misery for tens of thousands, especially women, but a total waste of billions for the taxpayer. But my favourite story was an interview with the artist Finn Stone (aka, the Mad Hatter), whose north-London house looks like it just came out of Stephen Wright's toilet.

It is weirdly comforting to think that the Metro newspaper's worldly wisdom is embedded in these creations. More so that each of them carries an identical tabloid voodoo and yet look so vastly different. It's both enlivening and creepy in one take.

I still can't resist mentioning that huge pink nose to Sam Jevon at every opportunity. She giggles coquettishly, but I'm pretty sure she's wishing I’d just shut up and piss off.

18 October 2018, Hackney 
In the studio today.
Oils are so messy
22 October 2018 🎥, London
The cynic in me says Bradley Cooper just wanted to cast himself in a love story with Lady Gaga.
I don't advise dissing Brad
24 October 2018, London
A sort of cross between Kids From Fame and It Ain’t Half Hot Mum.
It turned my po face into a big grin
25 October 2018, London
Children looking remotely happy are rare in this exhibition.
Maybe it's because they is posh little squirts
26 October 2018, London
Early this morning I heard on BBC Radio 4 Extra a gripping 20-minute play made in 1978 called 'The Revenge’. It was written by the actor Andrew Sachs, who is also the story's principal character. The stand-out feature of the play is that contains no spoken words. The drama is communicated purely by sound. To get the idea, think of the difference in sound between someone breathing calmly, at ease and in a relaxed manner, and someone breathing desperately during a chase.

26 October 2018, London
Another Corrie woman to go with those appearing in the print show at Could Be Good in Deptford.
Ena Sharples
Others in the series include Bet Lynch, Hilda Ogden, Vera Duckworth and Elsie Tanner

27 October 2018, London
The writing is so clever 
28 October 2018, LondonInteresting introduction from a woman who told us about Czechoslovakia's early adoption of votes for women (1918). This film cries out for a women's Monty Python-style remake.
I think some of the humour might have been lost in the mists of time 

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