Category Archives: Arts

The creative side of DIY focusing on the arts

Behold the Gamelatron

The Maker Faire festival is a mecca for inventions, arts and crafts in a kind-of re-imagined county fair.  Organized by the staff of the magazines Make and Craft, the Faire tries to inspire attendees to roll up their sleeves and become makers themselves.  I traveled to the recent Faire that took place in San Mateo, California.  There I found that nothing is too sacred that it can’t be tinkered with, hacked or modified by the many inventors there.

The Gamelatron at the Maker Faire

Take for example, the Gamelatron: the world’s first fully robotic gamelan orchestra.  In a radio piece produced for KUSP, I interview the invention’s creator, Taylor Kufner.

DIY in 2009

Its a bit late, but in preparation for the 1st issue of my new zine, DIY 2010, I’ve been compiling a list of notable events from 2009.  Is there something important to DIY culture that you don’t see here?  Let me know!

January

  • New device uses laser beams to project your own lane from the back of your bicycle,
  • Shooting of Oscar Grant in Oakland, California, sparks months of protests and clashes with police,
  • Canada is no longer a safe place for U.S. war resisters
  • Faythe Levine releases her documentary “Handmade Nation” alongside her book “Craft’s New Wave”,
  • FCC Free Radio begins broadcasting
  • Make Magazine begins airing a new national TV series
  • Bolivia approves of a new constitution that creates a ministry in support of indigenous autonomy

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Fashion at the Maker Faire

Half the fun at this weekend’s Maker Faire in San Mateo was checking out all the funky outfits. While the steampunk crowd was out in full force, there were many other unique styles on display – many of them handmade by the attendees.

For many makers, form and function can collide, like in the utility belt seen below.  But I didn’t find much wearable electronics – did anyone else see any?

Click below to see a slide show of more fashion or check out the set on Flickr.

Book Your Own Fuckin’ Life #1

While cataloging zines at the Independent Publishing Resource Center recently, I came along a pristine copy of Book Your Own Fuckin’ Life #1, printed in 1992.  While punk culture and the DIY movement was solidly established by this time, the founding edition of BYOFL can be seen as an achievement that sealed their prominence.  It illustrated that the ethics of a counterculture movement had been fully formed and realized.  It was no longer just responding and resisting, but creating an alternative.

The collaboration between Maximum Rock and Roll and Profane Existence would provide a resource guide for touring bands and traveling folks for a generation to come, including myself.  The zine was the first thing recommended to me when I first began to roam across the country – it was a great guide for places to crash long before I ever discovered couchsufing.com or was aware of WWOOF.

The first page (or two) should go straight into the DIY history books.

A few quotes:

Over the last decade and a half the world has witnessed the blossoming of one of the largest underground countercultural movements in history.  Born out of youth anger (and probably just bordem), which created the original 1977 punk explosion, this self motivated and self created movement has spread throughout the furthest reaches of industrial society.  People grown tired of pre-packaged consumer entertainment and everywhere punk has spread its “Do-It-Yourself” attitude.  Punk is a new folk music, where anyone can take part who has the desire for expression and freedom.  Communication and interaction on a personal level is the foremost goal, with production, packaging, and marketing coming secondary.  The DIY movement is vibrant and as more people, ideas, thoughts, and actions interconnect all the various aspects making it an ever-changing and growing movement. Over these past years the DIY movement has grown at an unprecedented rate, in some cases fueled by profit-making trends, but for the most part on a real grass-roots level.  The national and international communication within the DIY movement is what has kept it strong over the years.  Through the efforts of certain individual and fanzines, people have been able to make concrete connections between people of similar interests and have created an entire underground economy based on the spreading of our own living culture and ideal.  Bands have been able to promote themselves, book tours, put out records without bowing down to the corporate music industry.  That is the essence of DIY.  People helping other people without an eye for profit, only for creating a better world and having some fun…
…We feel that by breaking free from the established capitalist system we are creating freedom in our own lives.  We need the kind of global interconnections that this magazine presents the possibilities of creating.  When we take control of our immediate interests this will set an example for creating a better world.  We hope that the people who use this magazine will realize that DIY goes further than just a music “scene” and directly translates into the liberation of everyday life… Continue reading

Oakland’s Art Murmur

The Art Murmur is Oakland’s version of Portland’s Last Thursday. Just as DIY, 90% smaller, but a great spectacle among the grittiness of downtown Oakland. It’s on a small street, with several art galleries, a neighborhood coffee shop called Mama Buzz, a bar off to the side, and one of the best volunteer run art collectives in the area, Rock Paper Scissors- which will let you use their many different kinds of sewing machines, teach you how to worm compost, and entertain you with movie nights.

The Art Murmur, named after “Heart Murmur” is a collection of artists, cyclists, burning man folks, freaks, musicians and bystanders, who together block off the street with performances, music, and tables that sell hand screened shirts, illustrations, and vegan cupcakes. Oakland is exceptionally into industrial arts: from metal spiders that roast hot dogs, to life size hamster balls, you’ll find it at the Art Murmur.

The First Friday of every month is art night in Oakland. All over the city art galleries open up to the public, introduce their artists personally, serve wine, and sell art. The Art Murmur is the most DIY component of first Friday and happens in a very specific location- 23rd and Telegraph for those of you who are planning a trip down to the Bay.

Amy Mosley, one of the founders of the Art Murmur says “the Art Murmur grew from the grassroots organizing of the multitude of non-commercial art spaces that thrive in Oakland, with the ‘murmur’ referring to the little known secret that is the Oakland arts scene.  Of course, the murmur has only gotten louder: originally we were 8 gallery spaces, and now we are nearly 20, all inside a small geographical zone.  At the heart is Rock Paper Scissors Collective, which has worked endlessly to invite community groups to participate, and really diversify the event.  Mostly, if it’s going on in Oakland, it might be happening at Art Murmur.”

SXSW: Getting Crafty With the Geeks

Legos at SXSW

SXSW Interactive did offer one place for the DIY crowd, right as you stepped inside the front doors of the convention center: an enormous pile of Legos

There was no sign, no attendant to prompt people that they were available for use.  SXSW knew that if you just dump a bunch of these constructive toys on the floor, the geeks will know what to do.

As high-tech designers hustled in and out of the front doors, they passed by Oliver, who was selling woodcut prints on the sidewalk.

Oliver and his woodcuts

Oliver and his woodcuts

Oliver just learned how to do woodcuts five months ago. For him, it seemed a practical and cheap medium where supplies such as wood are easy to find.

He said Austin has a surprising amount of woodcut artists in town. Yet he claimed there was no low-cost resource in Austin like Portland’s Independent Publishing Resource Center.

And that’s why he said he’d like to move there. Times have been tough, he says, “with all the rich Californians moving in and taking the high-paying jobs along with the Mexicans taking all of the low-wage jobs, leaves little left for the locals.” Continue reading