Howard Zinn (1922-2010)

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Posted by Pinky.

Bunny and I were looking for old books at a bookstore today when the bookstore lady told us that Howard Zinn had just died. Although I know he was getting kind of old my heart stopped for a moment as I realized what I’d just heard.

A few years ago I was fortunate enough to have dinner with Professor Zinn in Boston. He was funny, gentle, warm, humble. Near the end of the evening I told him I was thinking of making a tv show with cats that would talk about ethics and do structural analyses of imperialism and stuff like that. I’m sure it sounded like a stupid idea but instead of making a weird face he just thought about it for a moment and then gave me some encouragement. Maybe he was just being polite but it didn’t matter to me, Howard Zinn is one of my heroes and there he was encouraging me to go do it! Wow! A little later Bunny and I started making The Pinky Show. It’s certainly not epic like A People’s History of the United States, but it’s what we can do.

I have often wondered how people find their paths. For example, as a young man studying to become a historian, I’m sure Howard Zinn wasn’t the only person with access to a secret stash of radical history books at the NYU library. Actually, I’d be willing to bet that he studied from mostly the same texts that his classmates were also studying. But somehow he managed to cultivate a perspective of history that was fairly downside-up compared to those of his peers. How did that happen? I want to know because I’d like to see maybe a million or ten million Howard Zinns coming up in this next generation.

I’m going to miss Professor Zinn. But I’m also grateful that he made so many extraordinary books for us to read and study.​

ooo x,
pinky

Howard Zinn/ The War on Terrorism and the Uses of History.

Earthquakes Are Not Simple Events

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Posted by Pinky.

Hi. Bunny & I got back from Canada on Thursday night. It was a amazing trip for us. But of course it was also impossible to fully concentrate on our own programmatic stuff because the entire trip coincided with the devastating earthquake in Haiti. We arrived in Toronto on Tuesday, January 12, the same day of the earthquake. When not setting up our exhibition or having meetings or giving talks we were reading the Canadian newspapers about the extent of the damage and also what kind of difficulties are being encountered in trying to retrieve the dead and care for survivors.

Perhaps you have heard that a lot of countries have been criticizing the U.S. for making it more difficult to help the suffering people. And a lot of U.S. Americans have reacted with anger and bewilderment at this charge. If President Obama has pledged 100 million dollars to help Haiti, why is the U.S. now being blamed for something as 'un-political', 'unavoidable', and 'natural' as an earthquake? Well, as usual, the answer is much more complicated than what the U.S. mainstream media has been showing.

Below I put together a few excerpts from various sources that you can read in less than 10 minutes. They are linked to short essays that all together will take less than an hour to read. But they contain essential information and questions that will help people (especially U.S. Americans that probably never heard this stuff before) to rethink our connection to the people of Haiti, a connection that has existed since before the United States even became the United States. Most of this won’t ever appear in the mainstream media. Please read them.

From No hope for Haiti without justice (Mark LeVine, Al Jazeera)

The roots of this collapse are as deep as they are unknown - or unappreciated - by the majority of Americans - although it is widely discussed across the globe.

Haiti, then Saint Dominigue, was among the first islands "discovered" by Columbus, and became France's - and likely Europe's - most profitable colony. Its more than 800,000 slaves produced upwards of half the sugar and coffee consumed in Europe. The discourse of freedom and equality underlying the American and French revolutions had a profound impact on the island's African slave population, who led the first successful slave revolution in the Western hemisphere, creating the first free black republic in the wake of their successful independence struggle against Napoleon's army. Far from embracing the new republic - the second independent country in the Americas - the administration of President Thomas Jefferson, under pressure from southern slave-holding politicians, refused to recognise Haiti.

Just as Communist Cuba was deemed to constitute a grave threat to capitalist America a century and a half later, a revolutionary republic of free Africans set a very bad precedent for its huge neighbour to the Northeast, where slavery was still a major component of the economy. Rather than finding an ally in the still young US, Haiti was shackled with a crushing debt by France as the price of independence.

From democracy to dictatorship

After a century of alternating democratic and dictatorial rule, Haiti was invaded and occupied by US marines from 1915 to 1934, during which time the US overturned laws that restricted foreign ownership, allowing American corporations to gain a permanent foothold in the country's agriculturally dominated economy. The first two decades of post-occupation politics saw as many coups, until stability of a sort was attained with the election of Francois Duvalier, known as "Papa Doc", in 1957. But his rule quickly deteriorated into a brutal dictatorship, equaled in its corruption and violence only by that of his son, Jean-Claude ("Baby Doc"), who ruled from 1971 until 1986. Despite the intense brutality and corruption of the regime, the US supported Duvalier as a counterweight to neighbouring communist Cuba and because of his friendliness to US corporate interests… [edit]

Whitewashing history

Haiti's complex and, from an American point of view, largely unpleasant and unedifying history must be acknowledged if there is to be any hope that the country's internationally financed reconstruction will not merely lay the groundwork for more poverty and disasters. Sadly, Obama, who famously admitted in his 2009 Cairo speech that the US had in fact overthrown the elected government in Iran, has so far said nothing about the even more extensive US history of meddling in Haiti. Instead, writing in Newsweek, the president declared that "at long last, after decades of conflict and instability, Haiti was showing hopeful signs of political and economic progress". Needless to say, if there was any substantive progress, the state would not have utterly disappeared in the rubble of the temblor. Seemingly oblivious to the role of the US and UN in producing Haiti's current woes, Obama declared that: "The United States will be there with the Haitian government and the United Nations every step of the way." If the past is any guide, this does not augur well for the country's future. Indeed, Gerald Zarr, the former USAID Haiti director, was more honest in explaining that "Haiti's going to have to change" - which is code for being even more acquiescent to the kinds of reforms that helped produce the disastrous consequences of the earthquake in the first place… [edit]

From Haiti: An Unwelcome Katrina Redux (Cynthia McKinney, Global Research)

Haitians are not the only ones who know their importance to the struggle against hatred, imperialism, and European domination. This pesky, persistent, stubbornly non-Western, proudly African people of this piece of land that we call Haiti know their history and they know that they militarily defeated the ruling world empire of the day, Napoleon's France, and the global elite at that time who supported him. They know that they defeated the armies of England and Spain.

Haitians know that they used their status as a free state to help liberate Latin Americans from Spain, by funding and fighting alongside Simon Bolivar; their example inspired their still-enslaved African brothers and sisters on the American mainland; and before Haitians were even free, they fought against the British inside the U.S. during its war of independence and won a decisive battle in Savannah, Georgia, where I have visited the statue commemorating that victory.

Haitians know that France imposed reparations on them for being free, and Haiti paid them in full, but that President Aristide called for France to give that money back ($21 billion in 2003 dollars).

Haitians know that their "brother," then-Secretary of State Colin Powell lied to the world upon the kidnapping and second ouster of their President. (Sadly, it wouldn’t be the last time that Secretary of State Colin Powell would lie to the world.) Haitians know, all-too-well, that high-ranking blacks in the United States are capable of helping them and of betraying them.

Haitians know, too, that the United States has installed its political proxies and even its own soldiers onto Haitian soil when the U.S. felt it was necessary.  All in an effort to control the indomitable Haitian spirit that directs much-needed light to the rest of the oppressed world… [edit]

So, on this remembrance of the birth of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., I note that it was the U.S. government's own illegal Operation Lantern Spike that snuffed out the promise and light of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  Every plane of humanitarian assistance that is turned away by the U.S. military (so far from CARICOM, the Caribbean Community, Médecins Sans Frontieres, Brazil, France, Italy, and even the U.S. Red Cross)–as was done in the wake of Hurricane Katrina–and the expected arrival on this very day of up to 10,000 U.S. troops, are lasting reminders of the existential threat that now looms over the valiant, proud people and the Republic of Haiti.

From Seven Questions About Haiti (Toby O’Ryan, Revolution: Voice of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA):

Question One: If you are so concerned about the catastrophe in Haiti, and feel so sympathetic to the terrible plight of the Haitian people, then why has President Obama promised a mere $100 million in aid, which is barely 1/10 of 1% of what this country spends on its military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq each year? Why has it taken so long for the most powerful country on earth, a mere few hundred miles from Haiti, to deliver the badly needed teams and technology which can remove people from rubble, the fresh water which people so desperately need, the food and medicine and medical personnel so urgently required? And why does the U.S. Coast Guard still insist on turning back any Haitian attempting to seek refuge in the U.S.?

I realize a blog is not the best place to have a serious conversation about the relationship between colonization, neoliberalism, and earthquakes. But the news coverage we've been reading and watching since coming back from Canada has been absolutely mindblowing in its lack of critical perspective or historical consciousness. If this blog entry has been useful in raising a few questions in your own mind about how maybe we can really help the people of Haiti beyond more guns, more containment, and more outside control exerted over of their political and economic futures, please send the links to these articles around to your friends. Thank you.

~pinky

Pinky Show events schedule for Toronto & Sherbrooke

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​Posted by Pinky.

Happy New Year everybody!

Well the new year started out with all kinds of bumps (everybody sick, big fight with Bunny, my computer broke down, our electricity got turned off, no hot water - brrrr!!!) - I can only hope that the rest of the year goes smoother. Not likely though, as this is a Tiger Year (Chinese animals calendar), and as you know, a Tiger is nothing but a huge, temperamental cat with very sharp claws and big teeth. So I'm pretty sure this is going to be a wild year. Anyway, after lots of talking and soul-searching, Bunny and I decided that we need to make this year a time for new directions for us. Last year was very difficult for us and in some ways even kinda depressing, but I'd much rather be excited and hopeful, so that’s what I'm going to be. Anyway, I'll write about some of our decisions and intentions a bit later, right now I want to fill you in on our upcoming schedule for the next few weeks:

SHERBROOKE: Jan 4 - Jan 27: Video screenings of various Pinky Show episodes at Foreman Art Gallery, Bishop's University.

Monday, Jan 11: Bunny & I set off for Toronto.

TORONTO: Thursday, Jan 14 @ 8pm: Opening of our Class Treason Stories exhibition at Toronto Free Gallery. Also the winter issue of Fuse magazine (featuring Pinky Show cover story!) launches at the same event!

TORONTO: Saturday, Jan 16 @ 4pm: Artist talk at Toronto Free Gallery. We're going to bring t-shirts and fine art prints just in case the TFG folks let us do a little fundraising on the side…

Monday, Jan 18: We leave Toronto to go to Montreal, then Sherbrooke.

SHERBROOKE: Tuesday, Jan 19 @ 7pm: Public presentation with the Pinky Show, "Structure / Power / Agency". Boquébière  (50, Wellington Nord Street, Sherbrooke)

Wednesday, Jan 20: Bunny & I leave Sherbrooke > Montreal > Toronto.

Thursday, Jan 21: Bunny & I leave Canada to return home… unless we have to go to Belgrade. We probably won’t know if that's going to happen or not until the last moment…

Okay, it's almost 3am and I have to get up early tomorrow morning so I'm going to bed now. So... goodnight!

ooo (hugs),
pinky

The Pinky Show in FUSE Magazine

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Posted by Pinky.

Nice news! The Pinky Show is going to be the cover story in the Winter issue of FUSE magazine (website at www.fusemagazine.org)! FUSE is an art/culture/politics magazine published out of Toronto, Canada, and Bunny and I were interviewed by Canadian art curator Milena Placentile for the magazine a few weeks ago. I remember it was fun (talking with Milena is always fun) but unfortunately I don't remember anything we talked about - hopefully we didn't say anything too ridiculous. Anyway, today we got to see a preview of the cover:

fusemagazine_cover.jpg

Pretty neat, huh? As you can imagine Bunny is real happy with the cover!

The launch party for the winter issue is actually going to be held in conjunction with the opening of our Class Treason Stories exhibition at Toronto Free Gallery: Thursday, January 14, 2010, at 8pm. The exhibition runs till February 21 - everybody who can get to Toronto by February 21 please come see our show! But make sure you wear something warm - Toronto can get really cold in the winter!

TORONTO FREE GALLERY
1277 Bloor Street West
Toronto, ON M6H 1N7
tel. 416-913-0461

For more information, please read this.

Take care,
pinky

COP15 Happening Now; New PS Voice Over Project

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Posted by Bunny.

The United Nations Climate Change Conference is going on right now (December 7 - December 18, 2009). You can follow its progress here: http://en.cop15.dk/

A couple of weeks ago the folks at WeForest (WeForest.org) asked Pinky if she would be willing to do a guest voice over for a video they'll be using at COP15. The video is supposed to help them focus attention on reforestation using permaculture techniques as a strategy to fight climate change. Unlike some people who think that climate change is just part of an elaborate conspiracy to usher in a New World Order (hello YouTube people?), we think that human activity really does drive climate change and, if done properly, reforesting previously destroyed forest-lands seems like a pretty reasonable step in the right direction.

Anyway, here's the video, as it came out. Just to be clear, we didn't make the video. We just did the voice over.​

Oh hey, if you want to see a good case study presentation of how this would actually work, please watch this TED video by Willie Smits. It's only 20 minutes long but I think you will be pretty amazed, and not just by how he can seemingly talk without ever using commas and periods.

Bye. Bunny.​

Afghanistan, continued.

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Posted by Kim.

This is kind of like a continuation of Bunny's post from Wednesday about the war in Afghanistan.

Phyllis Bennis (the same Phyllis Bennis that explained the Iran thing to us last year) is really fantastic at making complicated foreign policy issues easy to understand. So I was happy to find an article at the Institute for Policy Studies website where she breaks down the speech President Obama gave the other day on Afghanistan. Please read it!

[ Go here to read the whole article! ]

For those of you who are too lazy to click a link, here is an excerpt:

"What Was Left Out [from President Obama's escalation speech]:

• The 18-month timeline references only the “beginning” of transferring U.S. troops out of Afghanistan; there was no reference to finishing transfer of all troops out of Afghanistan and ending the occupation. The words “exit” or “exit strategy” do not appear in the speech, and the word “withdraw” appears only in a reference to what the U.S. will NOT do.

• There was absolutely no explanation of how this year’s $30 billion additional costs for the 30,000 more troops, on top of the billions more already in the pipeline, would be paid for...

• The speech assumed Afghan support for the U.S. occupation, ignoring the massive evidence to the contrary...

• Obama paid no attention to the increasingly visible opposition to the Karzai government and the U.S. occupation from the majority Pashtun population — whose southern and eastern Afghanistan territory will be the operations center for the new troop escalation...

• There was no reference to the U.S.-paid mercenaries (both local and internationals, all paid through U.S. contractor corporations) in Afghanistan, whose numbers rose by 40% just between June and September, now totaling 104,101, and already outnumbering U.S. troops...

...Obama also did not acknowledge that about 30% of all U.S. casualties in the 8-year war in Afghanistan have occurred during the 11 months of his presidency. He did not remind us that the cost of this war, with the new escalation, will be about $100 billion a year, or $2 billion every week, or more than $11 million every hour. He didn’t tell us that the same one-year amount, $100 billion, could cover the cost of ALL of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals: clean water, health care, primary education and vaccinations for the people of every one of the poorest 21 countries in the world..."

The article's very good, I hope you all read it. It's rare for someone to carefully go point-by-point over an important speech and show exactly what is being said, and also what is not being said. Studying the difference between the two is an effective way to learn how politicians are very crafty at taking advantage of what the public doesn't know or understand in order to accomplish dishonesty, often even without lying! They practice this constantly and the public doesn't counter this with learning anything meaningful so of course the politicians win all the time.

In other news, I have been working on my own comic strip. It is called The Adventures of Super Bunny and Kim. The first one is about how Bunny and I were at a store and I couldn't reach something on a shelf but Bunny's a lot bigger than me so she got it for me. The hardest part is drawing the pictures.

Bye-bye for now! ~kim

Bunny Mailbag: More Death for Afghanistan?

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Posted by Bunny.

As we expected, we got a lot of e-mails today asking us if we think U.S. President Obama's announcement that he plans to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan is a good idea.

Short answer: No.

Longer answer: The U.S. needs to stop this deceptive and catastrophic "War on Terror". U.S. Americans have to be the ones to stand up against their own leaders' imperialist desires. Out of Iraq. Out of Afghanistan. Now. And the U.S. needs to take responsibility for all of the death, destruction, and suffering its caused. Also, the leaders of the political establishment and business elite most responsible for carrying out and supporting these vicious policies must be held accountable and punished. These are the most basic, concrete first steps that can be done to address the ongoing disaster we are all guilty of accepting.

Must read: this Marjorie Cohn essay we noted in 2008.

We've been reiterating similar logic over and over for years now, but somehow we still receive a lot of e-mails every day asking us things like "How can we win in Afghanistan?" or "How can we withdraw from Afghanistan and still protect our national interests in the region?" To which I have to ask: Are we really speaking a language that is so difficult to understand?

Maybe U.S. Americans need their moral and political destiny framed in terms of what they seem to understand best: Money. For your consideration, here are a couple of resources specifically relating contemporary colonial warring to $$The Bottom Line$$:​

And, just for comparison, the IPB also includes dollar estimates for achieving the following:

Shelter for every human being: $21 billion
Eliminate ALL Starvation and Malnourishment: $19 billion
Clean Safe Water for every human being: $10 billion
Eliminate ALL Nuclear Weapons: $7 billion
Eliminate ALL Landmines: $4 billion
Eliminate ALL Illiteracy: $5 billion
Relief for Refugees everywhere: $5 billion
Stabilize Human Population Growth: $10.5 billion
Prevent Soil Erosion Globally: $24 billion

[ source ]

So yes, war is bad, expensive, and, not surprisingly, also very wasteful. If Americans wanted to stop this ridiculous tragedy NOW, a decent first step would be to organize and pressure your so-called representatives to cut off war funding - the U.S. military would have to withdraw from Afghanistan near-immediately. Just shaking our tiny furry fists at it from a distance does absolutely nothing. ~Bunny.

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Posted by Pinky: Thanks Bunny. I'd like to add one more link relating to the war and money, the National Priorities Project's excellent Afghanistan Fact Sheet: The Numbers Behind the Troop Increase. ]​

Wheee! I'M ON UR LAND... Now Zoomable!

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Posted by Pinky.

I'm so excited! Okay, so I'm a total work-nerd and I've been fuzzying around with a little software contraption that makes zoomable big pictures. It's kind of hard to explain in words but easy to enjoy once you start playing around with it...

Click on the image below to start. [ Note: It's a big picture so it might take a few moments to load - depends on your internet connection speed. ]​

Instructions: [ Note: This feature is now obsolete as of PS website v3.0. ]
• Mouse your cursor onto the picture to start.
• Press the SHIFT key to zoom in.
• Press the CONTROL key to zoom out.
• Click & drag your mouse to move around in the image (only works once you're zoomed in).

Did it work? It's neat, right?

I'm going to ask Bunny to clean up the interface later but I wanted to post this today because tomorrow is Thanksgiving and... yeah, you know.

Take care,
pinky

....................................

Posted by Bunny: I also added the triptych from the On Native Land series to the archive page.

Academic Freedom Mini-Zine: I don't get it...

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Posted by Pinky.

Thank you for everyone who has sent me well-wishes. My cold is going away. I'm still coughing and sniffling but my fever is gone and I definitely feel a lot better. My voice still sounds a bit weird though - Bunny has taken to calling me "sexy Pinky" the past several days - which is a problem because I have to record a guest voice over for a reforestation project thing at the end of this week. I hope I don't mess that up.

Anyway, here's a nice e-mail we received tonight:

Dear Pinky & Bunny, I think it's awesome that you guys came to Winnipeg! You have no idea how excited me and lots of other people were to have you here. Your show in the gallery was so special. I can guarantee you it led to a lot of conversations between us students about our futures and what we will make of it. That's the best part of your show to me, you always make things that clarifies and sends me on a path of thinking about my life. Which leads me to a question! I attended the academic freedom panel (which was terrific by the way) and got a Pinky Show Zine after the talk. But this might be the first time I read the Zine over and over and I still don't get what you and Bunny were trying to say. Specifically the ending -  Can you please explain to me what you were trying to say in this Zine? I hope you write me back! Best wishes, Andrea

I'm guessing there's probably other people out there who might also be confused by the academic freedom mini-zine, so I'll respond to it now while we're still in Winnipeg-mode.

Hi Andrea. Thank you for your feedback for the show. It really makes us happy to hear that people are considering the implications of class treason. It is a theme that we hope to keep revisiting in the future, especially as Bunny and I continue to reflect upon the choices we've made as a result of our analysis in our own lives.

Regarding the mini-zine... Well, we made the mini-zine tell this little story after we saw the list of presenters for the panel. Nothing personal against any of the presenters (actually, we met three of them while we were in Winnipeg and they were all greeeat), but we DO think it's significant that all of the people on the panel work at the university. Which is another way of saying that no one on the panel is not from the university.

I'm sure lots of people might think that such an omission does't mean anything - after all, the topic is academic freedom, and of course academics that work at universities have lots to say about the subject, right? Of course they do. But we made our little zine in the hopes of raising a few questions: Why is academic freedom so often considered an 'academics-only' issue? Would non-academics have any worthwhile perspective or analysis to offer in such a conversation? Does the issue of academic freedom affect life beyond the university campus?

Universities are often thought of as being a society's centers for research, theorizing, intellectual development, and all that other good stuff. In many ways universities occupy a dominant position in relation to other kinds of social institutions, especially as it relates to bettering society (and not just the university) through courageous acts of thinking. This is why we believe non-academics should not be excluded from these kinds of conversations. Everybody needs to understand that what is encouraged or discouraged or allowed or not allowed at a university ultimately has far-reaching consequences that affects all of us. In fact, often times the most profound effects are for those who seem very, very far away from universities.

When Bunny and I were discussing what we wanted to put in the zine, one of the things that I was worried about was the idea that people might think that we are just using the zine to poke fun or criticize the people on the panel or the organizers of the event. But Bunny pointed out to me, and I think she is correct, that not having any non-academics is not a failure of one or a few individuals (Bunny: "This is not personal."). This is an institutional problem; this is a social problem. Maybe we should call it a collective failure of the imagination.

Sorry for the looong e-mail, have you fallen asleep by now? Anyway, I hope it gives a little background on how we are thinking about such things.

Take care,
pinky

Oh, another thing about Winnipeg. Although we did more or less finish organizing our materials for the post-Winnipeg report, since the report does contain quite a few photographs and detailed notes regarding the exhibition installation, Bunny and I finally decided to release the report after the exhibition shuts down in Winnipeg and re-opens in Toronto. If we release it now it'll just be so boring for people in Toronto who are planning on seeing the exhibition in January/February, right?

Anyway, we have lots of things to keep us busy till then. We are currently in the process of re-accessing everything about our project, including whether or not we should continue. Mimi, who is kind of like Director of Bookkeeping & Paperwork (not a real title), has been telling us emphatically that we can't continue like this and we need to shut the Pinky Show down. Obviously Bunny and I don't want to do that, but we also don't really know how we can turn things around either. Every night I pray for an idea that will save our work but so far I haven't come up with anything really good. Maybe I'll write about all this in more detail later.

Till next time, I wish you all peace,
pinky

COP15 Rap Battle: Lord Monckton vs. Al Gore

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Posted by Pinky.

The guys at JuiceNews have made another video and I think I've already watched it 4 times! lol

I know this sounds stupid but I just marvel at how people write such sharp, informative AND funny material that actually RHYMES. Wow...​

Maybe most importantly, it turned me onto the Indigenous Peoples' Global Summit on Climate Change, which I have to admit I hadn't even heard of before watching this video. o.O I seriously need new news sources...

MP3 and Lyrics here (click on little "i" icon on the audio player thing).

~pinky

Daisy's Mini-Report from Makua Valley

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Posted by Bunny.

Pinky and I have never been beyond the secured gates to the entrance of Makua Valley, so Daisy was nice enough to snap a few photos for us while he was there this past weekend.

Pinky organized the materials into a slideshow format and put it in the Commons Gallery. See it here. (The pictures have mouse-over commentary by Daisy - don't miss it.)​

daisy_makua_003.jpg

​For those of you who never heard of Makua Valley, here is some background information from KAHEA, EarthJustice, and DMZ Hawaii/Aloha Aina.

~Bunny.

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Posted by Kim: I think I see the dog in the petroglyph. Did Hawaiian people know about cats before the European and American people showed up?

....................................

Posted by Bunny: I don't think so. I vaguely remember reading somewhere that cats first arrived in Hawaii along with the first wave of European "explorers" (late 18th century). Apparently we were employed on those ships as rat hunters. Anybody know?

....................................

Posted by Pinky: I heard that story too. I wonder how the cats got from ship to shore? Did they jump and swim? Did Captain Cook bring his cat friends to shore on those little boats? I wonder what Hawaiian people thought when they first saw cats? Did they like how soft we are? I wonder what was the first thing said after that first somebody touched that first cat?

....................................

Posted by Bunny: Damn. As always, so many unexpected questions.

Pinky Show is "Best... Canadian Art..."

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Posted by Bunny.

Excuse me for butchering words in order to generate fake-reverence but hey, all the big movie studios do it.

We just got another mention in the Canadian press - which is cool, but I don't like their description of our project:

"...a collective of politically minded artists anonymously explores the ethical and moral obligations of mainstream media through a group of cartoon-cat spokespeople..."

Cartoon-cat spokespeople?? WTF?!?

Whatevers. At least they call us "Best".​

​Thanks to Milena for sending us this press clipping!

~Bunny.

Q: Is it art? A: Who cares, etc.

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Posted by Bunny.

I think we need a press clippings area on this website. In the past I've just been depositing them here in the blog, but somehow it feels very random and disorganized and I don't like it.

Anyway, here are a couple of reviews that came out today, graciously forwarded to us by Jennifer Gibson, (art) curator at the University of Winnipeg's (art) Gallery 1C03. Thank you Jennifer for keeping an eye out for us.​

​from Uptown Magazine

​from Uptown Magazine

​from Winnipeg Free Press

​from Winnipeg Free Press

Pinky likes contemporary art more than I do. I like old art more, the didactic stuff. Especially old religious art - those guys were always telling you exactly what to do! (I like.) With contemporary art it seems to me a lot of people get all huffy and start stomping around if the work is somehow not sufficiently weird / ambiguous / deliberately-mystified enough. Which isn't to say I have a problem with any of those attributes, I just get annoyed with people who think the world is not big enough to also accommodate overtly didactic work.

Which is why I find it a little odd that neither writer criticized us for making didactic work that also happens to look very art-like. Or maybe I just have a misconception regarding what art reviewers will find acceptable nowadays? (Apparently I do.)

I hope Kim and Mimi don't get all big-headed now that their pictures were chosen to be in newspapers.

For those of you who have been asking what we've been up to since returning from Winnipeg:

1. Pinky got real sick. She's still working but also sleeping a bit extra (slightly annoying) and coughing all over the place (very annoying).

2. We've been working on making ‘fine art prints’ of some of the images in the exhibition (plus some others that we haven't had time to put on our website). Hey - no need to roll your eyes - a fine art print is just a very high quality print made on archival materials.

3. Finishing up two more videos.

4. Trying to troubleshoot our stupid water heater that finally stopped working. Can it be saved? Still don't know.

5. Running all the errands that we neglected to do before we left for Winnipeg because we were busy preparing for Winnipeg.

Life is less exciting here than in Winnipeg but still okay. We're working. ~Bunny.

New Mini-Zine: The Academic Freedom Debate

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Posted by Pinky.

Hi. We made this new mini-zine for the Pinky Show-inspired panel discussion going on in Winnipeg tonight: Academic Freedom? A conversation about the way things are and the way things could be… Unfortunately we had to come home before the event so in lieu of attending we just made 125 of these little mini-zines and left them with Milena Placentile, the curator responsible for inviting us to Winnipeg and organizer of the academic freedom panel, and asked her to distribute the mini-zines to everyone who attended the panel.

Download the thing here. If you need instructions on how to cut & fold it, there's a little instructional video on how to do just that here.

Hope you find it interesting.

Take care,
pinky

The Pinky Show : Class Treason Stories (excerpts) @ University of Winnipeg

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Posted by Pinky.

The Class Treason Stories (excerpts) exhibition is now open at the University of Winnipeg's Gallery 1C03! The talks were all well attended and exciting and the opening was fun - with Kim, Zach and Haley right outside the gallery at the IWGS table selling Pinky Show t-shirts and books and stickers we sort of felt like rock stars! lol Here's a couple of pictures of how the installation came out.

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The exhibition runs until December 12. Then it'll be taken down and packed up and shipped off to Toronto, where it will open for a second time in January (details coming soon) at the Toronto Free Gallery.

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A big THANK YOU to everybody who made the 1C03 exhibition happen: Milena Placentile, who without her invitation and positive energy and guidance we would have never, ever, EVER been able to do this exhibition; Jennifer Gibson, art curator at UWinnipeg who was so accommodating and patient with us and just all-around helpful with helping us take care of all the little details an exhibition inevitably produces; Glen Johnson - the artist who basically single-handedly installed the show for us (we don't know how to use power tools and he's a lot taller than we are) and kept us reassured that everything would be okay with his calm temperament and deadpan hilariousness (?) even when cables were pulling out of the wall; Kim Hunter and her incredible family for showing us a deeper level of Winnipeg kindness and complexity and beauty; Zach, Haley, Tyler, Lissie, and all the folks (Hi Roewan! Hi Fiona! Next time please!) at the Institute for Women's and Gender Studies (IWGS) for their enthusiasm, institutional support, and of course, the non-stop bake sales; the people at AceArtInc, who  allowed us to use their very cool space for a public-HR03 dialogue (Liz Garlicki, can we hang out next time?); Cliff Eyland at the University of Manitoba School of Art for his graciousness and generosity (he invited us to talk with his students and he was so nice to us even though I could tell he was sick as a dog)… and of course the dozens and dozens to people we met at the talks, the opening, and behind-the-scenes meetings & get-togethers that made us feel welcome and gave us so much to think about. We were in Winnipeg for only a week and of course there are probably about 700,000 other people there we didn't get to meet but the people that we did meet were all very warm and welcoming and made us feel like there really is somebody out there who is engaging our work at a very deep level. To us, making work that is useful or helpful to others is the most important thing we can possibly do, so it's actually very difficult to put into words how important this trip was for us.

We will write more about the trip a little later (we're still getting our materials in order), probably in the blog.

Take care,
pinky

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Posted by Bunny: Glen and I ate bison burgers.

Pinky Show currently in WINNIPEG, CANADA

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Posted by Pinky.

Hi everybody. In a few hours we are getting on a Canadian airplane and flying to Vancouver, then Calgary, then Winnipeg. We'll be in Winnipeg for about a week for THIS.

According to meteorologists, it'll be about 45/30°F (7/-1°C) day/night in Winnipeg this week - brrr! Bunny and I will bring a camera and try to photo-document the installation. We'll post it on the website when we get back. Everybody in Toronto: don't look at the pictures otherwise it'll be boring when the exhibition gets to your city!

Okay, I'm going to go pack. Bye bye for now!

xoxo,
pinky

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11/15 UPDATE: We are safely back at home now. We'll post a special report of our Winnipeg Trip as soon as we finish writing it up & sort through our photos! ~p.​