Archive for November, 2009

White Walls Gallery at Aqua Art Fair

I’m sorry to miss Art Basel in Miami this year, and not just because of their exhibits; Justin Giarla’s local gallery White Walls will be showing work by some of their most interesting artists at the Aqua Art Fair, also in Miami. Greg Gossel and AJ Fosik (featured earlier this year for their strikingly colorful work) will be among those featured starting Thursday if you need something besides white sand beaches for eye candy.Picture 1

Supermarkets, Public Interest & Other Events of Note

There are two local events on December 5 that I regrettably won’t be able to attend but would encourage you to (and would love to hear how they go):

4015664489_32abe1115dSupermarket Street Sweep: Friends who have participated in past citizen cyclist scavenger hunts (“alleycats”) have had a blast riding around SF with strangers, especially when it’s for a good cause. The SF Food Bank will benefit from Saturday’s food drive, which is to feature hundreds of people riding between grocery stores to stock up on food. It may look like a logo-fest (left), but it’s great to see that so many bike-friendly organizations are participating.

The Future of the Forum: A day-long symposium hosted by UC Berkeley will explore the impact of public forums online and the ways they affect participatory democracy, media and the public interest. The tickets are pricey at $345 but the speaker list is fantastic, including NPR arts and tech correspondent Laura Sydell, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, Electronic Frontier Foundation co-founder Mitch Kapor, and LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman (a few folks who should have a bit of insight into new types of public dialogue that are emerging).

These are of course in addition to the first Ignite Bay Area | Women Innovators event (also in Berkeley at the LEED-certified David Brower Center) on Tuesday, December 8. The future of the book, all you ever needed to know about the Bible, and Ms. PacMan as feminist icon are all on the agenda of five-minute talks by developers, technology and communications experts. Do join.

KAYU: Sight Restoration + Style

Picture 1I’m glad to see that KAYU sunglasses designer Jamie Lim has expanded her line of pale yellow bamboo specs, and not just because you can now look echo Lennon or Risky Business at half the cost. As described in a post for Josh Spear:

Each pair sold pays for sight-restoring surgery in Ghana and India through Unite for Sight. Looks good, does good.

Cataracts surgeries will be performed for all sunglasses purchased (and, in keeping with the mission, the polycarbonate lenses are said to feature 100% UV protection).

The Uniform Project: Dress Designer Eliza Starbuck

As a Catholic school survivor the very word “uniform” conjures images of scratchy plaid and starched button downs, so I’m glad to see that the New York based duo of Sheena Matheiken and Eliza Starbuck are reclaiming it for The Uniform Project. Their exercise in “fashion philanthropy,” which includes ad agency creative director Matheiken wearing one of seven identical dresses that fashion consultant Starbuck stitched up for her for daily wear for a full year, solicits donations for the India-based Akanksha Foundation to educate children living in slums.

Picture 1The UP partners (Starbuck at left) both attended Parsons School of Design but met randomly on a subway platform after they’d graduated. Matheiken was seeking a creative outlet beyond her job, and in looking for a project that would give her a sense of purpose she turned to her closet full of vintage clothes. Starbuck was feeling turned off by the consumption-oriented fashion industry when she approached Matheiken about her creative sense of style.

“I liked her idea for something that wasn’t just a look-at me-project but would give back to brilliant kids,” Starbuck said. “It was a way to combine a sense of self expression, creativity, style, a greater purpose, and being inspirational through example.”

97403839-e3f7-448f-9550-a7e25af3c970_Oct_01_v1_DShe said that Matheiken and her creative wardrobe challenge—which includes creating a new ensemble of tights, layers, and jewelry for public and donator visual consumption on a daily basis—were perfect muses for her at the time. After wondering if she could even still sew, she purchased cotton from the designer overstock fabric store Mood and spent the next four months sewing the black dresses that have earned the project more than $30,000 in contributions and 5,000 Twitter followers.

While mass producing the dress was never Starbuck’s original intent, she’s been approached by people saying they’d want to take on the project for themselves to benefit causes as diverse as Ugandan youth and the March of Times. “I like the idea of spreading charitable work one person at a time,” said Starbuck, who said one of her motivations for helping spearhead the project is to encourage women to buy and repurpose one dress, not five (especially if it’s one that can be worn 365 different ways). When asked if she’d create an item for men interested in the idea, she laughed and said “most guys already have a uniform—but I’m thinking about it.”

The recent Opportunity Green conference got me thinking about the importance of considering where our clothing is sourced from, and one of Starbuck’s insights has stuck with me: “We often don’t need anything new, and when we do, it really is important to think about where it comes from.” A thrift store aficionado, she describes the Uniform Project to strangers as “wearing one dress for a year to show what fashion sustainability can look like as an art project that benefits children in India.”Picture 2

The program, which will feature Matheiken in uniform until next May 1, is being supported by eBay’s Green Team, which will be matching every dollar it raises for Akanksha (the team is the same one that supports Ecofabulous’ furniture refabing efforts). Now, for finding a partner that will underwrite the production of sustainably created uniforms for the Foundation’s school children…

Correction, 12.2: The charity that one of the Uniform Project followers wanted to take the project on for is the March of Dimes, apologies for the typo. EBay will be matching donations to the project during the month of December and the first half of January.

Ignite Bay Area | Women Innovators Speakers Announced

If you’re seeking a little mental stimulation between holiday feasts, the speakers at December’s Ignite Bay Area | Women Innovators event could be just what you need. We’re couldn’t be more excited for the group, which includes:

We hope you can join us for talks to include everything from the Citizen Internet, digital book publishing, and all you ever wanted to know about the Bible, the five-minute edition. A limited number of seats will be available for $5 until December 1, and you can join the Twitter chatter by following @IgniteBayArea.

Planet Mag’s Global Photo Contest

LadyInHavanaOne of the things that’s most intriguing about locally written Planet Magazine is the rich hues of the photographs they publish, so it comes as no surprise that entries to their second global travel photo contest would draw equally intriguing images (as evidenced by those that won and placed last year, including Inger Marthe’s Lady in Havana, right). General travel and portrait shots can earn the winning photographer an around-the-world ticket for a portfolio assignment, as judged by customized portfolio website co. liveBooks founder Micahel Costouros, Planet creative director Derek Peck, and others. The contest rules don’t even read like fine print: “We’d like to ask photographers to not only capture defining images of a particular place but to also consider the people, lifestyles, and sub-cultures of the places they document; a powerful portrait or image of a gathering can equally reveal the depth and mystery of the travel experience.”HeaderGraphic

Masuelli Bikes

SanFranciscoAugust9th062I’ve seen more than my share of folding and alternative material bicycles (the life of an insomniac online is very chic), and they’re good-looking for the most part. But Masuelli Bikes’ single speeds really caught my eye at the SF Bike Expo this weekend, not because they’re made of bamboo but because they’re lovingly planned bicycles. Brothers Danilo and Nicolas Masuelli began building one-of-a-kind bamboo frames in Argentina four years before starting to construct them in Stockton earlier this year. Many of the parts are sourced in California, including seat collars and other metal parts from Nova Cycles in Rocklin and Newcastle-grown bamboo. Danilo describes the latter as “Nature’s carbon fiber” for the strength they provide the frames with–not to mention the artfulness.

We Feel Fine: An Almanac of Human Emotion

Many college pal collaborations are successful if they end in the construction of a beer bong or purchase of a couch on Craigslist, but Princeton friends Sep Kamvar and Jonathan Harris aimed higher when they started crawing blogs and collecting digital footprints including the phrases “I feel” or “I am feeling.” The result? Three years of expressions collected on WeFeelFine.org that create a database of shared human feelings, and, most recently, a hardcover book subtitled “An Almanac of Human Emotion.” An API has been introduced, and with good reason: “Since we are borrowing from the feelings of thousands of people across the world to make our piece, we find it fitting for other artists to be able to borrow from our work to make theirs.”

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The duo describe their undertaking as a “contemporary portrait of the world’s emotional landscape [that explores] the ups and downs of everyday life in all its color, chaos, and candor.” Colorful is right: bright hues are used to introduce direct quotes and research, including the observation that both women and men in their 20s say they are happy about 46 percent of the time and that online users’ self-described happiness increases with age). Intimate images are paired with user expressions that are separated by category, including everything from “Election Day” (a photo of a child with glasses under the words “I had never imained how I would feel the first time my daughter voted”) to “Alive” (“I feel so alive yet so alone.”). My favorite section, no doubt, is one with phrases including “feel” and “San Francisco,” if only for its strangeness: “I’m glad I live in San Francisco where I can express myself the way with pants or without.”

A review copy of the book was provided by Scribner. All observations are mine.

Thread + Art in Storefronts

I apologize for being a bit delayed on the culture coverage this week; planning for the Women Innovators event in early December is ramping up and we’re excited about the interest in the first @IgniteBayArea to date. That said, November events of note this week include:

AIS_ID_4CoL_V2-290x276Art in Storefronts: The final edition of temporary art installations in vacant storefront windows takes place this Friday on 24th Street between Folsom and Potrero. A reception at Triple Base Gallery will celebrate the work of local artists Abner Nolan, Kelly Ording, Jetro Martinez, and Tahiti Pehrson before an art walk. It’s an interesting pilot program by the Mayor’s Office of Economic and Workforce Development–I’d be eager to see if it’s moved the needle on move-in rates in the neighborhood’s it’s been in.

Thread102809_BootyBoutiquegoldenbunnyTHREADshow: Fort Mason, venue for craft fairs and the Social Capital Markets conference alike, will host a fashion and trend extravaganza this Saturday and Sunday. It’s to include the wares of designers including Bootie Boutique, an area creator of one-of-a-kind belt buckles. The event will have the usual trappings–silkscreening, art show, and DJs–but a bike park is a nice addition if you’re able to get all your new (used) vintage wares home via cycle.

Economica Exhibit Spurs Discussion of Women’s Global Earning Potential

In the women’s studies field, there is plenty of academic literature about female roles in the political economy. But that information rarely trickles down to the rest of us, in large part because the topic of economic woes and successes can be dry and difficult to visualize for even the most disciplined news follower.

Enter the online exhibition Economica. A project by the San Francisco-based International Museum of Women as part of its Web-based offerings examining women’s roles in public and private spheres, it includes opinion essays by development and policy leaders alongside slideshows and podcasts. Curator Dr. Masum Momaya said that one of the goals in opening the exhibit was making women’s perspectives on economic development more accessible. (More details about the exhibit can be found on the corresponding story on Huffington Post Impact.)

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