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12 Jun 01:56

Hopi Tribe Fights to Halt French Sales of Sacred Artifacts for Good

by Laura C. Mallonee
Villagers in Shonghopavi, Arizona wearing Katsina masks (Image via Wikimedia)

Villagers in Shonghopavi, Arizona wearing Katsina masks (Image via Wikimedia)

Wednesday morning, Paris’s Drouot auction house proceeded with a contentious sale of objects sacred to the Hopi Tribe of northern Arizona. The tribe had vocally opposed the auction of eight Kachina masks, integral to the group’s religious ceremonies. The sale came just over a week after another controversial auction of six similar artifacts by Parisian auction house Eve. Since 2013, France has hosted at least four other similar auctions.

According to the AFP, Drouot defended the sale, saying it could certify the legality of each item. It noted that during the 19th century — a time when the Hopi people suffered greatly during the United States’ westward expansion — many were known to sell Kachina masks and effigies known as Katsina Friends.

“It’s legal. It’s business. What’s the problem?” auctioneer Alain Leroy told the AP. “The tribes are shocked, yes. But to each his own morality.”

Such sales may be legal in France, but they have been outlawed in the US. The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) and the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act (many of the objects use the birds’ feathers) both prohibit selling or buying Hopi artifacts.

The Hopi Tribe has tried to use these laws as leverage with French authorities. Ahead of the June 1 auction, it cited them when asking France’s Conseil des Ventes (Board of Auction Sales) to stop it and, according to the AP, Hopi Chairman Herman Honanie and Arizona Representative Paul Gosar also appealed to US law enforcement agencies for support. An alliance of museum directors even sent a letter to French President François Hollande. They wrote:

Today, the sale of such objects violates various federal, state, and tribal statutes that protect the United States’ cultural resources and tribal property, and prohibit trafficking in stolen goods and various species of birds. In addition to these laws, US case law has clearly established that buying or selling katsina friends is a crime under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (“NAGPRA”). EVE auction house’s statements that NAGPRA 2 does not have criminal prohibitions on the trafficking in katsina friends or in other NAGPRA defined sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony are a blatant and offensive misstatement of US law.

But the French government has refused to halt the sales. After the Holocaust Art Restitution Project (HARP) asked the Conseil des Ventes (CVV) to suspend a June 2014 auction, the agency replied that the Hopi Tribe has no legal existence and is therefore unable to take action under French law. (In fact, the tribe is federally recognized, with the majority of its roughly 14,000 members occupying a reservation in northeastern Arizona).

Despite the recent setbacks, the Hopi Tribe is not backing down. In April, the tribal council, together with HARP, filed a lawsuit in France against CVV. “The CVV’s position is unsustainable: no adjudication authority can, as the CVV repeatedly did, refuse the most basic access to justice by holding that neither the Hopi tribe as a group, nor the Hopi tribe Chairman as an individual, have any standing to file any cultural claim in France,” HARP and the tribe wrote in a statement. In May, they also sent a letter to the US Attorney General Loretta Lynch and FBI Director James B. Comey, asking the Department of Justice and FBI to review the issue.

Additionally, HARP lawyer Pierre Servan Schreiber told Indian Country that the organization has prepared a Franco-US treaty “reciprocating the Native repatriation act of the United States, in French law.” It would require that all items exported after 1990 be returned to the Hopi Tribe. The document has already been sent to French Minister of Justice Christiane Taubira, who has expressed an interest in the tribe’s plight.

“It should go through Parliament, so it is not going to happen tomorrow. We are looking at one or two years, before a draft law is proposed,” Schreiber said, “but I hope that one day, people will realize that not everything can be bought or sold.”

12 Jun 01:55

Discovering the Digital in Abstract Painting

by Sarah Bay Gachot
Verena Dengler, "American Painting" (2015), Mixed media and spray paint on paper, 19 1/2 x 25 1/8 inches (50 x 64 cm) - paper size, 23 5/8 x 29 1/4 inches (60 x 74.3 cm) - frame size

Verena Dengler, “American Painting” (2015), mixed media and spray paint on paper, 19 1/2 x 25 1/8 inches (50 x 64 cm), paper size, 23 5/8 x 29 1/4 inches (60 x 74.3 cm) frame size (all images courtesy Thomas Duncan Gallery)

LOS ANGELES — “Suspicious Fugue of the Speculative Ego as pragmatic sentiment investigating the ephemeral Maelstrom in oil (Dialogue with embarrassed elegance)” (2015) is a small and intimate painting that looks like an Easter basket that’s been run over by a truck. The titles of the paintings in Viennese artist Verena Dengler’s first exhibition in the United States, at Thomas Duncan Gallery, rattle off the tongue like bad academic poetry. “Young male painter channeling Falco gazing at Keith Farquhar’s Neon Vaginas through Chanel-style Champion Logos” (2015) includes an embroidered square the size of a vinyl LP cover (as many of her paintings here do) that shows just what the title promises: a gentleman formally dressed with slicked-back hair in the style of the 1980s Austrian pop star/rapper Falco (think “Rock Me Amadeus”) wearing two Champion logos back to back, like lobster-claw sunglasses. His “gaze” is indicated by a green triangle leading beyond the frame of the embroidery toward the rest of the piece where paint and graphite marks scamper and wriggle across unprimed canvas, including three small drawings in red, yellow, and blue, based on the Scottish artist Farquhar’s neon-tubed Vagina (2005) series — fetishistic and gynophobic monuments to a future in which cloning has replaced sexual reproduction. This tangle of references in this otherwise spare work seems to pile up in absurdity. But this is Dengler’s satire: an overload of pop culture that seems to fly in from left field, but stacks up neatly into a wry and feminist critique of the young, macho art poseur.

All of Dengler’s paintings have strokes that are busy and fast, like she’s playing the role of an action painter who takes the label a little too far — all action and little consideration. The work that gives the show its name, “American Painting” (2014), is a small canvas with marks and smears that bubble inward in turd-brown, Pepto-Bismol pink, piss-yellow, and black, underneath several spray-painted outlines of rectangles. For her previous exhibition, Verena Dengler: Dengled Up in Blue, at the Galerie Meyer Kainer Wein in 2014, Dengler wrote an essay (also titled “Dengled Up in Blue”) under the guise of an imaginary alter ego, Dr. Envy Norpol, in which she writes that the artist, who was born in 1981, (aka Dengler), began her art career around the turn of the millennium. It was a time “Norpol” describes as “neither fish nor fowl,” in which other artists had “established techniques [that] included things like building networks and fishing for identities, doing art about the preparations you were making in order to someday do art, and thirdly, doing art about the fact that you were keeping a distance from tools and implements that, to outsiders, give the appearance of spontaneous creativity.” Dengler’s veiled comment here that the art world had little to do with actual art-making — one that was more, perhaps, like a Monty Python skit about art — has channeled its way into the very threads and mixed mediums of these canvases on view in American Painting.

Verena Dengler, "Young male painter channelling Falco gazing at Keith Farquhar's Neon Vaginas through Chanel-style Champion Logos." (2015), Oil, acrylic, graphite and hand-stitched embroidery on canvas, 51 3/16 x 74 13/16 inches (130 x 190 cm)

Verena Dengler, “Young male painter channelling Falco gazing at Keith Farquhar’s Neon Vaginas through Chanel-style Champion Logos” (2015), oil, acrylic, graphite, and hand-stitched embroidery on canvas, 51 3/16 x 74 13/16 inches (130 x 190 cm)

Over the past decade or so, Dengler has been discovering digital qualities in what otherwise looks extremely painted, penciled on, and hand embroidered. The work is tickling and new. Her inclusion of fabric — both in the form of embroidery and, in one work, a digitally printed scarf — is meant to refer to computing technology’s origins in the early automated punch card weaving system of the Jacquard loom, invented in 1801. Dengler slips the viewer a goofy cocktail of abstract painting with crafted materials as DIY as any embroidery set one might find in a Michaels craft store. She is playing a role that is neither genius painter nor, as the press release for the show explains, the “detached technological aesthete.” She undermines the spontaneity of abstraction by embroidering marks that mimic random brush strokes while brightening and disrupting the ennui of labor-intensive embroidery with her messy style. The synergy of this is at the root of Dengler’s practice.

Verena Dengler: "American Painting" Ground Floor Installation View

Installation view of ‘Verena Dengler: American Painting’

In past exhibitions, Dengler has included three-dimensional pieces — that she is showing only paintings here is unusual. For the recently exhibited 2015 Triennial: Surround Audience at the New Museum in New York, the artist installed several of her works in a nervous layering of embroidery, drawing, painting, and sculpture — rugs, self-portraits, CD racks, appropriated advertisements, books, and other carefully calculated detritus. Like the range of references in American Painting, the New Museum installation was a fever dream of popular culture and commodity goods, and allowed one to approach Dengler’s personal objects as a voyeur.

Stripped down to just wall works, Dengler’s American Painting slips the tongue delicately into cheek and critiques the search for a contemporary language of art-making. She is positively slap happy here — delivering a feast as well as a display that troubles the viewing, and making, of abstract painting in the face of technology.

GachotSarahBay-DenglerNewMuseumInstall_0011_0013_IMG_6024

Verena Dengler’s installation at the ‘2015 Triennial: Surround Audience’ at the New Museum in New York (photo by the author for Hyperallergic)

American Painting: Verena Dengler continues at Thomas Duncan Gallery (Los Angeles) through 

12 Jun 01:55

A Woman’s Holography Museum Is Saved from Destruction

by Allison Meier
Hologram in the HoloRescue exhibition (photo by Alan Frohlichstein)

Hologram from the Museum of Holography in the ‘HoloRescue’ exhibition (all photos by Alan Frohlichstein)

Destruction or piecemeal sale seemed the ultimate fate of Chicago’s hologram museum, until the announcement on June 7 that its entire holdings were acquired by Chicago Holography Museum Rescue Mission through an anonymous benefactor.

“It took us a year of crazy negotiations, but we finally closed the deal,” Moshe Tamssot, who founded emerging technology group Monks of Innovation and led the acquisition, explained to Hyperallergic. Back in December, a pop-up HoloRescue exhibition with a few artifacts from the shuttered museum got the notice of a benefactor who pledged to both keep the collection intact and on public display in Chicago.

Hologram in the HoloRescue exhibition (photo by Alan Frohlichstein)

Hologram in the ‘HoloRescue’ exhibition (click to enlarge)

Back in 1974, Loren and Robert Billings started the Museum of Holography, Loren having developed a passion through a holography class at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. How the small museum that for over three decades delighted visitors with its laser-lit, three-dimensional images got in such peril is a sad story of mismanagement and bad bank loans. Ling Ma eloquently profiled an elderly Loren Billings in a moving 2009 piece for the Chicago Reader, chronicling how, after her husband’s death in 1998, her health and happiness declined, and in 2002 she took out a $1 million loan that swindlers convinced her would go towards the development of a holographic movie system. She lost the money, and the museum.

The museum’s building in Chicago’s West Loop changed hands, and the holograms and hologram machines remained in the basement. An August visit by Tamssot revealed a cluttered mess of machines and holograms, left to dust.

“The museum is in shambles,” Tamssot explained. “The contents were crammed into a dank basement without any care. We’re now seeking volunteers to help in any way they can. We’ve never saved a museum before.”

Everything needs to be catalogued, and many historic art pieces preserved. There’s also the question of a future home and fundraising, especially as the building is undergoing renovation into a bed and breakfast.

“We’d love to fire up a HoloLab, using the technology we’ve recovered,” Tamssot stated. “There are more lasers in the building than on the Death Star. And a lot of proprietary technology developed by the original holographers. They are an old and dying lot now. We’d like to bring them back to help with the effort.”

Visitors in the HoloRescue exhibition (photo by Alan Frohlichstein)

Visitors in the ‘HoloRescue’ exhibition

Holography is still an obscure art and feels retrotech with its lasers and trippy-colored faces that emerge like future ghosts, and maybe this is partly why their museums can almost disappear without notice. The Center for Holographic Arts in New York has faced its own troubles, losing its Long Island City Clock Tower home, and back in 1992 the Museum of Holography in Soho closed due to shortages in funding. Tamssot is still hoping to make contact with Loren Billings, who is in her 90s, and above all wants the resurrection of the museum to be a tribute to her.

“For me, it’s primarily about giving the Loren Billings story a happier ending,” Tamssot said.” Here was a female artist and technologist who, in the ’70s, amassed the world’s largest collection of holograms, and whose lab developed leading edge holographic technologies. She was a force of nature.”

Biplane hologram in the HoloRescue exhibition (photo by Alan Frohlichstein)

Biplane hologram in the ‘HoloRescue’ exhibition

A Holosseum game in the HoloRescue exhibition (photo by Alan Frohlichstein)

A Holosseum game in the ‘HoloRescue’ exhibition

Hologram in the HoloRescue exhibition (photo by Alan Frohlichstein)

Hologram in the ‘HoloRescue’ exhibition

Information on how to get involved in the Chicago Museum of Holography Rescue Mission is online

12 Jun 01:55

F*** the Myth of Motivation

by Liza Birkenmeier

One of the lowest insults we deal our own egos is “unmotivated.” I’ve noticed its infectious, self-inflicted use among artists who have worked for a long time. I’ve also heard it around “pre-work” artists—those who’ve been seized with the spark, but who have yet to make The Thing. The motivation crisis is different for each place on the path, but it is as toxic as it is ubiquitous. I think of it as a self-degrading myth of a “self-starter” culture; we have to give it up. We have to demolish the notion that we must become different people in order to do better work.

I am not the first to recognize that “motivation” in its most basic sense is a faulty concept when applied to our prerogative to get things done. One can already read articles and studies about why “motivation” will not help you change your exercise or eating habits. But the concept also has a caustic effect on our artistic brains. It worms into our consciousness so insidiously that we carry it like heartbreak. We convince ourselves that our uncompleted projects are due to an innate paucity of ethics, or at least of willpower. We are sure we are deeply flawed.

We already possess motivation. If you’ve been struck with the idea, been in front of the canvas, tried and re-tried chord progressions, or rushed to jot a storyline on a notecard, you’ve been motivated. Inspiration, the elegant cousin of motivation, grants rare visits like an angel. We spontaneously balloon with potential, take that first step with the paintbrush or flute—we are motivated—and then? The indeterminate and sometimes extreme pause after the motivation is the era or place in which artists (pros and amateurs alike) flounder.

It is in this perceived dearth that we fall victim to two injurious misconceptions: One, that motivation is a nameable “personality trait;” and two, that we must have it to complete our work.

When we look at other people’s successes, we spuriously believe that they are inexplicably endowed with motivation. How is it that every day they go to the gym, write two new drafts, compose for six hours,Motivation1 and make five prints, all while cooking vegan-colorful Instagram-able meals? They must be motivated. They must possess a quality that we mysteriously lack. But they do not. What we witness in these other people is not motivation; it’s most likely our own fantastical projection or momentum.

People do not come out of the womb motivated. A barrage of genetic, social, and chance factors collage behavioral and belief systems for each of us, and for some it is simple to build a routine that includes things that appear to require motivation. For others, we catch ourselves identifying with misguided characterizations like “works best under pressure.” This is a kind of defeatist claim of physical principle as personality trait—it’s almost like saying, “cooks best when hot.”

My own work method seems deleterious to pace and sanity; I usually start from page one when I revise a play. This is not graceful or fun, but starting over and over again is my only familiar escape route from a hazardous draft. I was recently rewriting a piece I’d been commissioned to do years ago, and someone asked me why I’d start with a blank slate after so much work. He said, “I don’t know how you could still be so motivated.” I wasn’t motivated. I do not possess an inherent hard-worker personality trait. I am not a self-starter, a multi-tasker, or anything else that might be listed in a job description for a position that pays money. I am not even (usually) a perfectionist. Maybe what I am has nothing to do with the fact that what I was working on wasn’t quite right, and there was no reason for me not to fix it. I was simply stepping out of my own way. Far from a state of awe, I trusted a comfortable habit to let The Thing be the best it could be, even if it wasn’t the best Thing that was made in all of history, or all of late March 2015.

Even if I were to wear a “motivated” disguise while I did my creative work, I would still be deeply lacking in other regions of being. I do not wash dishes in a timely manner or update my devices. Whatever power cleans my kitchen does not pay my bills. Whatever strength finally fixes my bookshelf does not respond to my voicemails. “Motivation” is not one trait, not one thing. We can feel free to stop searching for it.

And when it does strike? Use it—but don’t trust its flashbulbs to light the way. As William Somerset Maugham famously said, “I write only when inspiration strikes. Fortunately it strikes every morning at nine o’clock sharp.”

Many hitch motivation to outcomes: reward or punishment, carrot or stick, health or death. We believe and even proselytize that by thinking about the benefits or risks we can motivate ourselves to act (or to not act), when in reality this almost never works. If it did, none of us would drink, smoke, date a person who was unkind to us, go for several weeks without exercise, or eat low-quality meat. Science can show the smoker the cigarette’s carcinogens, but the smoker can still smoke. The teacher can tell the student that her art is immaculate and promising, but the student can still watch Netflix and eat leftovers in bed. We can’t motivate ourselves to eat only greens by looking at magazine models. We can’t motivate ourselves out of our patterns.

We do not, it seems, inherently behave in our own best self-interest. Our brain chemistry betrays our rationality with feelings. We might know that the painting is stellar, that the story is fascinating, or even that our Pulitzer is imminent, but we can still escape making Motivation2The Thing. Because our imprecise emotional leanings make most of our choices, we do not always use our rational brains to act in accordance with our grandest plans. I know I usually don’t.

So what’s the trick? How do we align our big dreams with our daily efforts?

What we can and must find is an unassailable methodology, airtight and repeatable—a this-reality approach to our other-worldly ideas. I’m not sure how to do that, but it is somewhere in the step-by-step; it is in an updated belief system, a set of priorities. It is probably the opposite of the illusory feeling of being motivated.

There is no sermon or book or Upworthy video that can give us this sustained motivation or instantaneously establish an enlightened routine. We have to relinquish that notion. These things may tempt the touch of the Angel Inspiration, but they are not vaccinations for our “laziness.” We will continue to choose to not do the things we must do—over and over again.

Think of something that you’ve put off—something agonizing to you: making a medical appointment? Re-arranging a payment plan? Calling your boss with an upcoming conflict? The moment that you decide to rip off the powerfully sticky Band-Aid is often not a motivated one. Most likely, you did that harrowing task because it was in front of you and you didn’t take the common pause to wince. Did you pick up the bill while waiting for your tea to steep? Did you banish the dirty clothes from the floor and look for the next step toward clarity? For whatever reason, plain or invisible, you got out of your own way. It wasn’t the exigent cause or tormenting consequence that did the heavy lifting. Maybe it wasn’t even on purpose; maybe it wasn’t even heavy lifting.

This un-functionality is recognizable in the ways we work (or don’t) on The Thing we actually care to make. We can stand in our own way forever. We don’t put ourselves in the right place at the right time or become accountable in immediate ways; there are meals to eat and toilets to clean. As Annie Dillard writes in The Writing Life, “No one needs your manuscript; everyone needs shoes more…why not shoot yourself, actually, rather than finish one more excellent manuscript on which to gag the world?”

The grim truth of the matter is that there always will be—and should be, I think—something quite technically more important than your creative work. Your work saves no one but you. At least not yet. There will always be a million more reasons not to sit down.

And how to sit? Not by hunting motivation. Not by waking up with a vague sense that you’ve become a person who does not procrastinate.

The story is a common one: it’s 10 a.m. on a morning I’ve promised myself to start working at 6. My partner asks if I want to get breakfast. I have to eat, don’t I? A client emails me. I must respond, right? After several hours and no good sentences, I start hearing that common bully of self-consciousness: all this criminal procrastination! How can I be so unmotivated? Artist friends, this is not a lack of motivation. This is not procrastination or laziness; the toxicity of these labels clots the already shadowed road. (Of course I can be lazy, but this day is not that day). This is the trial of prioritization, and it is infinite. The art that you’re making usually won’t hold you accountable; everything else you have to do will.

I get the choice over and over again to work on my project or to do something else. Sometimes I choose to work on my money-paying endeavors. Sometimes I choose to spend time with a friend in need or on the phone with my mom. Sometimes I choose to get drunk at 3 p.m. and nap before dinner. We make something like thirty-five thousand choices per day. A lot of those choices are arbitrary ones that take us away from our work. It does not benefit us to insult ourselves when we make them. What we can do is limit them.

My writer friend Elissa Bassist, another determined pupil in the school of Getting Out of Your Own Way, enlightened me with her lessons in choice-reduction. If I wake up in my apartment and turn on the coffeemaker and sit down at my drafting table, something will happen. I mustn’t waste choices on what to wear, what time to sit, which project to do.Motivation3 We can expedite our artistic pause by simply sitting in front of a computer or with our instrument. Limit the choices that surround the ritual to clear the path for sitting; this stillness does the strange trick of precipitating momentum. You don’t have to have a spiritual makeover or a visit from the Angel Inspiration to sit down to work. We must stop waiting for the time when the relatives won’t call, that the day job is less stressful, that the shower curtain isn’t moldy to establish this basic invocation. Eventually (long-term eventually), we incorporate that ritual into our belief system. We learn that this ritual, this habit, this work can be a priority. We know for certain that we can make the Thing. We don’t need a special October or a vacation to do it. We give ourselves the opportunity to create right now, and strangely, the impulse—the very thing we were waiting for—follows. We have to sit (or stand) still for this opportunity, and this simple, unmotivated act is how we get out of our own way.

By limiting our choices around the ritual of our work, or establishing a ritual of work, we choose to be accountable to the habit, not to the art. The habit is the repeated opportunity for muses and whimsy. (We tend to think it goes the other way).

It is not about believing in the project; it is about believing that we can wind the making of the Thing into real-world complete-able tasks. We are free to excuse ourselves from the belief that we must depend on a feeling of deliriousness, euphoria, or motivation in order to be mystically steered to our creative state.

Once we know that we can make the Thing, we do make it. The twenty minutes between coffee and departure or the thirty minutes at the airport gate seem more like chances for work when we are in the habit of making opportunities. We recognize when it’s possible to do our work, and it’s not in a far-off valley void of obligation. We are not different people with new outfits and limitless time; we are simply able to see the hour as bountiful.

We live in an era where self-actualization is in vogue. Companies frequently require that their prospective employees identify as “proactive self-starters.” Individualistic dreaming and brazen pursuit of personal goals stand in the front lines of a contemporary vision of success. But I think the fashionable go-getter quality so lauded in offices looks different on artists. We cannot quite exist in a result-oriented pattern of thought. “Getting the job done” does not serve a company or a product. We are in a field where out-loud, tangible, or financial reward comes only after long effort, if it comes at all. For us, there is no use in dwelling on the self-importance of a particular achievement. This is contrary to so much of our cultural imagery and assessment, but it is the only way we can rid ourselves of the burden of searching for motivation. Self-starter ideology encourages us to get to the top, to be the best, to win the prize. But these are the same thoughts that prevent us from doing what comes first: being still. These are the principles that haunt us when we’re waiting for genius to strike; they keep us busy when we need quiet; they keep us looking for answers (like motivation) when we already have them.

We don’t have to change ourselves or focus on some bigger, brighter, more successful future. We have to simply step out of our own way by sitting down. We have to learn how to not stop ourselves from working on the Things we care to create. By reducing the choices around our rituals and focusing on the habit instead of the product, we can’t help but make stuff.

Motivation to do your work can follow the opportunities you grant yourself, but you don’t even need it. Invite it in for a cup of tea, sure, but know it’s going to leave the way it came in—through the door you left open.

***

Rumpus original art by Liam Golden.

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12 Jun 01:54

End of Light #8An interactive music video collaboration by...











End of Light #8

An interactive music video collaboration by Cassie McQuarter with sounds from Jónó Mí Ló is put together using the Unity game engine, a surreal moving painting of many net art ideas - here is an example of what it can look like:

Toggle btwn two glitched views of a weirdo landscape. Take yr time and play around, there is no end destination – only colors & shapes for you to make on the screen while you explore. 

You can download the experience for Mac and PC here

12 Jun 01:53

The Muppets & ODB

by Liz Wood

If you’re anywhere near Generation X, The Muppets constitute a heavy portion of your childhood’s reference points—possibly they even contributed heavily to your value system as you put in time watching Jim Henson’s puppets during those hours out of school. Or, maybe you just recognize them as that goofy retro children’s schtick that people get so nostalgic for in dorm rooms and over after-work drinks. Whatever the case, Mylo the Cat keeps putting out mash-ups of the puppets and contemporary songs, and we’re happy about it. The latest has Dr. Teeth lip syncing to Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s “Shimmy Shimmy Ya,” and it’s the kind of thing that Internet browsing at the office is made for. Watch the video after the jump.

https://youtu.be/4rigqVF_Fsg&w=580

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12 Jun 01:52

A Memo to Exclusionary Feminists

by Phillip Garcia

Feminists should accept and embrace Caitlyn and all trans and gender non-conforming people and see them wherever they define themselves on a broad gender spectrum.  The project of ending misogyny and patriarchy is one that not only inextricably includes them, but should center around trans women, because the violence and rejection society throws at them is not for being a man, but for being an othered woman.

For Salon, Anna March argues the importance of centering feminism on gender-nonconforming people and trans women like Caitlyn Jenner.

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12 Jun 01:52

Why Israel spied on Iran talks 'is not the question we should be asking'

by Natasha Bertrand

kaspersky

The global cybersecurity firm that uncovered sophisticated spyware in the computers of European hotels hosting the Iran nuclear talks has reported on the powerful Israeli-linked virus before.  

Interestingly, however, Kaspersky Lab — a Moscow-based firm — has only ever traced spyware with similar espionage capabilities as the "Duqu" code detailed to The Wall Street Journal.

"The use of Duqu by Israel against Iran is not the question we should be asking," Jeff Bardin, chief intelligence officer of Treadstone 71, told Business Insider. "The question should be why Kaspersky only finds code of this type by nation-states it does not consider friendly to Russia or those aligned to the West."

Kaspersky Lab is a leading cybersecurity firm that helps millions of people worldwide, including Americans, protect their data from cyber criminals. While the firm is often aggressive in its pursuit of foreign hackers, however, it tends to turn a blind eye to hackers operating inside Russia.

"Is it because there is no code of this type [Duqu] coming out of Russia?" Bardin asks, "Or is it because disclosing code of this type that is Russian made and in use against target nation-states would place Eugene Kaspersky at risk of countering his country's cyber espionage efforts and, at risk of incurring the wrath of Putin?"

The firm's billionaire founder and CEO, Eugene Kaspersky, used to work for the KGB and reportedly maintains relationships with former and current Russian intelligence officials. 

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (R) and Yevgeny Kaspersky

"Kaspersky releases this information as a political tool," Bardin said. "The absence of any photos of Kaspersky with Putin on the internet is itself evidence of direct alignment. Can you be a billionaire in Russia today without the direct scrutiny of Vladimir Putin?"

A Bloomberg analysis of Kapersky's work generally supports Bardin's suspicions: "While Kaspersky Lab has published a series of reports that examined alleged electronic espionage by the U.S., Israel, and the U.K., the company hasn’t pursued alleged Russian operations with the same vigor."

If anything, it appears that Kaspersky is at least partially aligned ideologically with the Kremlin — he has claimed in the past that some social networks have "too much freedom," hinting that government regulation might not be such a bad thing.

"Freedom is good," Wired quotes him as saying, referring to sites like Facebook. "But the bad guys — they can abuse this freedom to manipulate public opinion."

Join the conversation about this story »

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12 Jun 01:45

New Book Spanning Wayne Thiebaud’s Career Gives a Peek Into His Slanted and Heavily Shadowed Landscapes

by Kate Sierzputowski

thiebaud-1

Bright, thick, and severe, Wayne Thiebaud‘s landscapes veer far from his well-known paintings of common objects and sweets. These works feature steep inclines and long shadows, providing a dramatic new perspective to seemingly banal landscapes and cityscapes.

Thiebaud was born in Mesa, Arizona in 1920 and during his early career spent time in the animation department of Walt Disney Studios and the Special Service Department as an artist and cartoonist in the Air Force. Thiebaud studied at both San Jose State University and California State University in Sacramento, and had his very first solo exhibition at the Crocker Art Gallery in Sacramento.

Although Thiebaud is often associated with the Pop art movement, many of his early works pre-date classic pop pieces and he personally rejects the association. “I don’t care for pop art at all,” Thiebaud told The Wall Street Journal last year.  “Pop artists just appropriate. They steal too much for me.”

A new book scheduled for publication this fall by Rizzoli will span the length of Thiebaud’s career, covering his work from the 1950s until today. The 94-year-old artist selected all the works in the monograph and also wrote a reflective introduction. The book will include his dessert, candy, and common object still lifes while also taking a look at as his landscape and cityscape paintings that tend to focus on the Sacramento River valley and San Francisco. You can pre-order the book “Wayne Thiebaud” on Amazon now, and see more of his work on Artsy. (via B-sides)

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12 Jun 01:40

you-want-this-url-huh: nickxdee: THIS IS NEVER NOT FUNNY i...











you-want-this-url-huh:

nickxdee:

THIS IS NEVER NOT FUNNY

i really thought they were talking about colons at first

12 Jun 01:39

trebled-negrita-princess: howtobeafuckinglady: Cher and Willow...





trebled-negrita-princess:

howtobeafuckinglady:

Cher and Willow Smith photographed by David Sims, Marc Jacobs Fall/Winter 2015

I HAVE SEEN THE GREATEST PHOTOSET OF ALL TIME TODAY

12 Jun 01:39

spillintoflower: Dress on show in the Biba and Beyond...



spillintoflower:

Dress on show in the Biba and Beyond exhibition,The Royal Pavilion Art Gallery Brighton

12 Jun 01:37

Birth Control May Soon Be Way More Accessible in California

by Emma Niles

3642632735_cc9dce801f_zSlowly but surely, California is taking steps to improve women’s access to contraception. Back in 2013, the state passed a bill that greatly expanded the role of pharmacists, allowing them to provide women with birth control. The bill is now finally nearing implementation.

Last week, according to NPR, the California Board of Pharmacy met to review the law, which should come into effect later this year. Considering Gov. Jerry Brown (D) approved the bill in October 2013, this latest development is a big step forward.

California’s Board of Pharmacy says it has been working out the details of the legislation—for example, reviewing the “screening protocols” behind contraceptive access, which has delayed the implementation process. To receive birth control from their pharmacy under the law, women will need to fill out a form, consult with the pharmacist and have their blood pressure taken. Those praising the legislation say that women will simply be able to go to their regular pharmacy and walk out with birth control prescribed and filled. Similar legislation already exists in Washington and Oregon.

The Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate has been bringing attention to women’s lack of contraceptive access. All FDA-approved forms of birth control are supposed to be covered under the ACA, but reports highlight how often insurance companies ignore the law and unfairly charge women for contraception.

Recently, the Department of Health and Human Services issued stricter guidelines to make it clear that insurance companies cannot deny women contraception. Laws like California’s SB 493—the pharmacist bill—will hugely increase women’s access to certain forms of birth control as both cost and accessibility are improved. Studies have shown that, for low-income women, access to over-the-counter oral contraceptives significantly reduces risk of pregnancy.

As it stands, SB 493 is a complement to the ACA. It works in tandem with the ACA’s requirement that insurance companies cover birth control by broadening the scope of who can prescribe contraception.

There are two pieces of federal legislation before Congress that could also expand or contract access to birth control. One bill, proposed by Sens. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) and Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), “offers incentives to drug companies to gain FDA approval to sell contraception over the counter,” but doesn’t provide insurance coverage for the OTC birth control, likely making it unattainable for many women. Just this Tuesday, Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) responded with a bill of her own that would provide OTC birth control and ensure that it’s covered by insurance companies.

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Photo courtesy of Flickr user Allen licensed under Creative Commons 2.0

Emma Niles headshot

Emma Niles is a recent graduate of the University of California, Santa Cruz and an editorial intern at Ms. Follow Emma on Twitter @emmalorinda.

 

12 Jun 01:37

sablerabbit: violetimpudence:Since we all knew that Death was too scared of Christopher Lee for Lee...

sablerabbit:

violetimpudence:

Since we all knew that Death was too scared of Christopher Lee for Lee to ever actually die, the consensus on Twitter is that Death is actually stepping down and Sir Christopher is assuming the post.

Congratulations on your promotion, Sir Christopher. An excellent capstone to a life well-lived.

HEADCANNON ACCEPTED!

This? This I can accept.

12 Jun 01:36

OMG LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL

by Melissa McEwan
[Content Note: Misogyny; gender essentialism.]

This is just a real thing in the world: "Women Are Not Capable of Understanding Goodfellas."

Here is an actual thing that an actual adult human being named Kyle Smith wrote in this actual column:
[Goodfellas] takes place in a world guys dream about. Way down deep in the reptile brain, Henry Hill (Ray Liotta), Jimmy the Gent (Robert De Niro) and Tommy (Joe Pesci) are exactly what guys want to be: lazy but powerful, deadly but funny, tough, unsentimental and devoted above all to their brothers — a small group of guys who will always have your back. Women sense that they are irrelevant to this fantasy, and it bothers them.
OMG STOPPPPPPPPPPPP LOLOLOLOLOLOL. What are you even writing in the year of our lord Jesus Jones two thousand and fifteen, fool?

But the real reason women are not capable of understanding Goodfellas is because women just don't appreciate all the ball-busting. And there is SO MUCH BALL-BUSTING, according to Kyle Smith:
The wiseguys never have to work...which frees them up to spend the days and nights doing what guys love above all else: sitting around with the gang, busting each other's balls.

Ball-busting means cheerfully insulting one another, preferably in the presence of lots of drinks and cigars and card games.

...Women (except silent floozies) cannot be present for ball-busting because women are the sensitivity police...

...What [guys hanging out together would] much rather do than discuss problems and "be supportive" is to keep the laughs coming — to endlessly bust each other's balls.

At its core, "GoodFellas" is a story of ball-busting etiquette...

...Henry saves the day by returning the ball-busting: "Get the f - - k outta here."

...Billy Batts...breaks ball-busting etiquette in two ways. One, he's not really one of the guys (he belongs to another crime family), and two, in the guise of breaking Tommy's balls, he brings up something serious...

...Later, Morrie, the wig merchant, must also die for improper ball-busting.

Even Karen's (Lorraine Bracco) relationship with, and eventual marriage to, Henry is based on ball-busting.

...Karen doesn't realize it, but she has successfully broken Henry's balls.
"Hey, Kyle, can you please fit the words 'balls,' 'busting,' and 'ball-busting' into this piece at least 100 more times?"—No one.

Remember how just earlier today, I was saying that men tend to dismiss female critics by saying they don't understand something, instead of accepting that maybe those female critics simply came to a different conclusion?

Yeah.

Like what you like, bros. If I don't share your opinion, it doesn't mean that I don't understand it. (Would that I could navigate the world without proficient fluency in the dominant white hetero cis male culture!) Sometimes it just means I think it's crap.

As it happens, I actually enjoy the movie Goodfellas. I don't, however, view it as aspirational tale of peak humanity.

I understand why a lot of dudes do, though.

I stay away from those dudes. As much as possible. Which is a mutually beneficial policy. Women are irrelevant to this fantasy, after all.
12 Jun 01:28

Note to Comedians: Stop Whining About Political Correctness at Colleges

by Rude One
This week, in a course the Rude Pundit is teaching this summer on Italian radical playwrights Dario Fo and Franca Rame, we read a short play titled "The Rape." It is a monologue told in present tense from the perspective of a woman who is kidnapped, raped, and tortured before being left on the side of a road. A harrowing piece, "The Rape" is all the more so because Rame herself, who performed it, was the very victim whose torment she is narrating. We discussed the monologue openly and sensitively, all appalled at the vivid descriptions, all admiring of the courage it took for Rame to perform it.

The Rude Pundit constantly teaches things that might upset students. He regularly teaches the play Blasted by Sarah Kane, which might be called "artsy torture porn." He does this because the plays shake the students out of their complacency. They have to confront something that is not just words on a page but also bodies on a stage. He talks about religion, gender, race, and more. He doesn't fear his students; he didn't before he was tenured. He admires, supports, and appreciates them. Well, most of them. (By the way, he also teaches Shakespeare.)

The only time he can remember a class discussion actually becoming something disturbing had nothing to do with these more graphic plays. Several years back, at another university, we were talking about A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, specifically the scene where Stanley rapes Blanche. A contingent of students believed that Blanche was "asking for it." A significant group of men and women said that, because she was flirting with Stanley and flaunting her (performed) femininity, she deserved to be raped. Some students vocally disagreed, but the pro-Stanley group held firm.

What can you do in that situation if you're the professor? Dr. Rude Pundit could have shut the whole thing down, told the asking-for-it students that they were wrong and that such thoughts had no place in a classroom. He could have jumped into the fray, taken the side of the anti-rape students, and crushed the other side. Who learns shit in either of those cases? All students get from those approaches is that politically correct professors will silence you.

Instead, this professor attempted to understand where they were coming from, not to validate their point of view (his aghast face probably had betrayed any attempt to pretend he was being objective), but to really figure out why they would say that. It came down to their limited comprehension of gender dynamics, of how Blanche was asserting power from her powerlessness, of how Stanley used the most brutal way possible to strip her power. The conversation was fascinating, and, while they could have been lying to please the teacher, more than a few had changed their minds by the end. (Let's not even get into a discussion here about how disturbed he was that several women in class were fine with Blanche being raped.)

Students could have complained. They could have said that they felt unsafe. They could have said that the Rude Pundit had no business even entertaining the appalling opinion of part of the class.

But they didn't. And you know why? Because the vast majority of students at the vast majority of campuses aren't concerned with political correctness, a term that seems to have come to mean, "Wait, you mean I can't do black voice, flit my hands gayly, and slap a female's ass?" for straight white men. Most students the Rude Pundit has taught, most students the Rude Pundits friends and colleagues have taught, most students period, across the nation, coast to coast, don't go to places where political correctness is considered beyond "Everyone is equal, and that actually means something. Now get over it."

Jerry Seinfeld, whose Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee is a damn funny online show, has become a conservative hero this week for complaining about "creepy" political correctness on college campuses. Like Chris Rock before him, he refuses to perform at colleges because, as he told ESPN radio, kids on campuses "just want to use these words.‘That’s racist;’ ‘That’s sexist;’ ‘That’s prejudice.’ They don’t know what they’re talking about."

Even if we accept this as true, that college students (and faculty) have knee-jerk reactions and are too ready to organize a protest through Facebook and march on a Seinfeld show, so what? Seinfeld and Rock and, yes, even Larry the Cable Guy are comedians, people who supposedly want to push the edge of what is acceptable. How about, instead of whining about it, you confront it? How about you bravely go into the campuses that might most have a problem with your "gay French king" joke (which, c'mon, a little easy) and you fuckin' put it out there?

When speech police on the right censored Richard Pryor, he didn't bitch about it and only play to friendly audiences. He went out and became bigger than ever. When the actual police shut down Lenny Bruce, he went to his death fighting for his right to say, "Cocksucker" to adults in a club. He didn't just adjust his touring schedule.

But here's what Seinfeld, et al would find out if they'd stop listening to the poor comedians who got a few people upset at some campus: people protest things. And then those people speak. And then everyone's life goes one. They'd also discover, maybe to their chagrin, that at most campuses around the United States, most students are fine with letting you speak and moving on. They want to try to pass their classes, work their jobs, pay their bills, and live their lives.

(Note: The Rude Pundit has been reading Kirsten Powers' book The Silencing lately, and all this ludicrous alarmism needs to be separated from the cases where people are actually silenced, not merely inconvenienced by the voices of people who haven't been heard enough. No one is taking food out of the mouth of Seinfeld's kid.)

(Note to the Note: He'll review Powers' book soon.)

(Note not relating to the other Notes: This isn't about trigger warnings or other things. It's only about speech and political correctness. He'll deal with that stuff another time. Perhaps when he reviews The Silencing.)
12 Jun 01:24

An Observation

by Melissa McEwan
[Content Note: Privilege.]

Some marginalized people are entitled. Because some human beings are entitled.

But something I've noticed is that a lot of people with multiple axes of privilege tend to translate as "entitlement" what is actually better described as a really desperate yearning, a particular yearning that comes from getting close to what you want over and over, but never quite getting there.

There's a certain kind of thwarting that happens to marginalized people that doesn't happen to privileged people. And those of us with complex identities, who are privileged along some axes and marginalized along others, understand this keenly. Because we see how the marginalized parts of ourselves are used to thwart us in ways that the privileged parts of ourselves never are.

And people who never experience that particular kind of failure don't really understand the frustrated desperation it can engender.

So lots of them develop a habit of translating it as entitlement, which is something they do understand.

Some of them do this unconsciously, but some of them do it because misconstruing desperation as entitlement is one of the many ways that marginalized people are thwarted.
11 Jun 19:28

Wales to ban e-cigarettes in public places

by Matt Brian
Sophianotloren

~facepalm~

While the debate over the risks of e-cigarettes continues to rage on, some governments aren't taking any chances and have enforced new rules to limit their use. Belgium and Spain have already introduced public bans, and now Wales is planning to do th...
11 Jun 19:15

(untitled)

by Sophia, NOT Loren!

Every minute of every hour of every day there is someone around and making noise. There is not one moment that I am allowed to have to myself, not one moment that I am allowed to have a break from other people’s noise, not one moment that I have any control over my own surroundings.

The central heating has been left on all night — which isn’t even “left on” because if it were a constant sound I could at least have some chance of tuning it out, but it goes on and then goes louder and then shuts off and then a few minutes later it goes on and then goes louder and then shuts off, lather rinse repeat all night. Especially stupid when the temperature tomorrow is supposed to be near 90 again, and even more idiotic when there are windows open downstairs to get some of the overnight cool air inside the house.

I woke up because of that noise, and only moments later I was listening to a human doing an impression of a cat with a hairball, which is something she does all the time. It’s as bad as it sounds. I don’t know what her fucking issue is, just that she frequently spends minutes at a time gagging and retching and coughing and sounding pretty much like she’s got a human-sized hairball. It’s absolutely sickening.

I want out. I want control — just a little bit of control over my own environment for a change. And of course, I’m powerless to make that happen, because I’m not the one with any control.


Filed under: General
11 Jun 15:40

Reproductive Freedom, the Courts, and the Limits of Doctrine

by Scott Lemieux

Justice_Blackmun_Official

As I mentioned recently, Jill Lepore had an article in the New Yorker arguing that reproductive rights have fared less well than gay and lesbian rights because Roe rooted the former in privacy rather than equality. As longtime readers will know, I strenuously disagree with this line of argument. To summarize:

  • To the general public, how Blackmun justified the holding in Roe is irrelevant, because essentially nobody who doesn’t have a professional obligation to do so reads Supreme Court opinions.  Only a tiny fraction of the public could tell you the rationales of Roe or Casey.
  • To the audience that does read Supreme Court opinions, again, it’s irrelevant.  Nobody who believes that the Constitution protects a woman’s reproductive rights is going to change their mind because they would have written Roe differently.  Nobody who thinks that the Constitution doesn’t protect a woman’s reproductive rights would be persuaded by any rationale.  No case would have come out differently had Blackmun rooted the holding in Roe in the equal protection clause rather than the due process clause.
  • The proof of the pudding is in the eating.  On point one, Roe is at least as popular with the public as legal pre-viability abortions.  On the second point, a woman’s right to choose has in fact become much more closely linked with gender equality…but, as we saw all too vividly earlier this week, has also become much less secure. 

Lepore:

Counterfactuals are famously foolish, not to mention futile. Still, it’s hard not to ask: If the Nineteenth Amendment had been a broadway in constitutional law, instead of a dead end, and if, beginning with, say, Trubek v. Ullman, reproductive-rights cases had proceeded from arguments for equality, rather than for privacy, would Justices Scalia, Alito, Kennedy, Thomas, and Roberts still have been able to rule in favor of Hobby Lobby?

Um, yes?

As Mark Graber observes, the idea that equality is a winning argument and privacy is to pitch arguments to a Supreme Court liberals wish he have had rather than the actually existing one. To swing voters like Lewis Powell and Anthony Kennedy, privacy is more likely to be a winning argument than gender equality. I find Lepore’s argument about Hobby Lobby particularly curious given Kennedy’s concurrence. Kennedy explicitly acknowledged — as Alito’s opinion instructively refused to — that Congress had a compelling interest in protecting women’s equality, and yet found that the religious freedom of employers trumped the equality rights of female employees anyway. I’m at a loss to understand how rooting a woman’s right to choose in the equal protection clause could have changed Kennedy’s vote. And, certainly, gender equity claims would have no appeal to Samuel “Concerned Alumni of Princeton” Alito or the U.S. v. Virginia dissenter Antonin Scalia.

The regulatory scope the Supreme Court gives to states on abortion matters enormously, but how precisely the Court justifies its holdings is of trivial practical importance. Reproductive freedom is a particularly good illustration of this truth.

…Irin Carmon has a good question:

@LemieuxLGM what about Harris v McRae?

— Irin Carmon (@irin) June 11, 2015

Harris, as some of you know, was the case that upheld the Hyde Amendment.

As I would look at it, Harris is a perfect illustration of Graber’s point. Three members of the Roe majority — Powell, Stewart, and Burger — flipped on the Hyde Amendment. The lesson here is that the country-club Republicans who have controlled Supreme Court outcomes since the first term of the Nixon administration find privacy arguments much more compelling than equality arguments. By 1980, after all, the doctrinal tools were there had either Powell or Stewart wanted to strike down the Hyde Amendment on equal protection grounds. Craig v. Boren, which subjected gender classifications to heightened scrutiny, had been on the books since 1976. For that matter, Eisenstadt v. Baird — the bridge between Griswold and Roe — was decided on equal protection grounds. Powell and Stewart had plenty of doctrinal justification available had they wanted to strike down the Hyde Amendment; the four dissents present numerous alternative paths rooted in Supreme Court precdent. They didn’t vote to strike the Hyde Amendment because they didn’t want to. Roe being decided on equal protection grounds wouldn’t have compelled Powell or Stewart to hold the Hyde Amendment unconstitutional any more than it required Kennedy, O’Connor and Souter to accept the trimester framework rather than the “undue burden” standard. You can always find ways to distinguish or set aside inconvenient precedent, which is one reason why the grounds of Blackmun’s opinion in Roe just don’t matter very much.

11 Jun 15:21

Ornette Coleman, RIP

by Erik Loomis

Ornette Coleman, one of the greatest jazz musicians to ever live and quite possibly the greatest jazz musician living in 2015, has died at the age of 85.

I guess I’d now give that greatest living jazz musician title to either Cecil Taylor or William Parker. Probably the latter.

….Also of course Sonny Rollins, who actually probably does take that title.

[SL]: The Coleman show I saw in 2008 was easily one of the 5 best musical experiences of my life. This a huge loss — he was a true giant of American art.

11 Jun 15:20

Alix Tichelman’s Trial By Headline

by Caty Simon
Last month in Santa Cruz, 27 year old sugar baby and fetish model Alix Tichelman pled guilty to manslaughter in the heroin overdose death of her Google executive client Forrest Hayes, and was sentenced to six years in prison. Throughout the eight months Tichelman was in custody, the media luridly painted her as “The Callgirl […]
11 Jun 14:26

From Shakespeare To Saruman

by Zandar
Legendary actor Christopher Lee has passed away at the age of 93 on Sunday after a nearly seventy year career.  Best known to my generation as Saruman the White from the Lord of the Rings movies, Lee started out as the heart and soul of the now famous Hammer Studios horror films. Sir Christopher Lee has died at the age of 93 after being hospitalised for respiratory problems and heart
11 Jun 14:01

lizclimo: for louie 



lizclimo:

for louie 

11 Jun 14:01

frog-and-toad-are-friends: the Playskool Goblin Containment...



frog-and-toad-are-friends:

the Playskool Goblin Containment Block, only $59.99

11 Jun 14:00

micdotcom: The McKinney man who called the police has inspired...



















micdotcom:

The McKinney man who called the police has inspired a brilliant satirical hashtag 

Sean Toon was one of the white McKinney residents who called the police on the group of teens at the pool last week. In honor of Toon dialing 911 when seeing black people engaging in “suspicious activity,” Twitter created a hashtag in his honor. Here’s how racists see the world.

11 Jun 13:59

178. ATENA FARGHADANI: The right to draw

by Gav

178_atena

Atena Farghadani is a 28-year-old Iranian artist. She was recently sentenced to 12 years and 9 months in prison for drawing a cartoon.

This cartoon, that she posted on her Facebook page last year, depicts members of the Iranian parliament as animals. It was drawn in protest of new legislature in Iran that will restrict access to contraception and criminalise voluntary sterilisation. Atena’s charges include ‘spreading propaganda against the system’ and ‘insulting members of parliament through paintings’.

Last August, 12 members of the elite Revolutionary Guard came to Atena’s house, blindfolded her and took her to the infamous Evin Prison in Tehran. According to Amnesty International:

“While in prison last year, Atena flattened paper cups to use them as a surface to paint on. When the prison guards realised what she had been doing, they confiscated her paintings and stopped giving her paper cups. When Atena found some cups in the bathroom, she smuggled them into her cell. Soon after, she was beaten by prison guards, when she refused to strip naked for a full body search. Atena says that they knew about her taking the cups because they had installed cameras in the toilet and bathroom facilities – cameras detainees had been told were not operating.”

She was released in November and gave media interviews and posted a video on YouTube detailing her beatings, constant interrogations and humiliating body searches. She was then rearrested possibly in retaliation for speaking out and has been imprisoned ever since. In January, Atena went on a hunger strike to protest the horrible prison conditions. Her health suffered dramatically, and after losing consciousness and suffering a heart attack in February, she was forced to eat again.

The quote used in the comic is taken from the speech Atena gave at her trial. It has been translated into English by the Free Atena Facebook page. You can read the whole thing here.

Time is now against her, she has just two weeks to lodge an appeal. Michael Cavna, comic journalist for The Washington Post, has launched a campaign appealing to artists to help bring awareness to Atena’s case by creating their own artwork in support of Atena and using the hashtag #Draw4Atena. Can a bunch of artists and a hashtag really make a difference and put pressure on the Iranian Government to release Atena? Probably not. But just remember that Atena is currently in prison enduring horrible conditions, and if her appeal isn’t successful, she will be there for another twelve years. FOR DRAWING A CARTOON AND POSTING IT ON FACEBOOK. Don’t we owe it to her to at least try?

RELATED COMICS: Malala Yousafzai. Sophie Scholl. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

11 Jun 13:58

“This image was generated by a computer on its own (from a...



This image was generated by a computer on its own (from a friend working on AI)”

R̙͢     U̼͕̬̼ ̶

       BE̯̗A͓̩͎̭̯͉C̷̜̞͖̰H̰̟          

  ̥̭͟B̠͚̳O̤̲̘̮̬̣͉͟D̷̼͔̘̺̥̤Y̵̬ READ̷̼͔̘̺̥̤Y̵̬?? ͏̥

11 Jun 13:07

Pour Out a Forty of Human Blood

by Robert Farley
Dracula 1958 c.jpg

“Dracula 1958 c” by Screenshot from “Internet Archive” of the movie Dracula (1958) – http://www.archive.org/details/HorrorOfDracula-Trailer. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Christopher Lee, RIP. I’m curious what percentage of his total career film earnings came since 2000. Well deserving of the fine, long career he enjoyed.

11 Jun 11:17

Where Did I Put That Stupid Thing?

by Jack Sjogren

JackSjogren_StupidThing2