Photograph of readymade fabric art 'found' in a new school pop-up jumble sale (or Sack Sale, hipsters) on New Street now on Flickr.
Untitled
If you want to check it out for yourself it's next to Cafe Rouge near the top end of the street. There's also a more traditional vintage clothing boutique on the ground floor.
A black flower blossoms
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Friday, November 30, 2012
Snippets from the first 10,000 words - Part 4
Festival
was Al's idea back in, ah... 2025. We would have stayed just another
local gang of AR artful dodgets with a local reputation, a manifesto,
and a video-channel, but it was Festival which took it first
national, then European, then global.
It
was the Field of Dreams approach – he approached the Council about
giving him the use of a couple of blocks of practically derelict
streets in Digbeth for a “street festival and augmented reality
happening.” He claimed he had speakers – Bruce Sterling, Josh
Fielden, Ommiah Hanssen, who hadn't accepted yet, some of them didn't
even know they'd been invited yet. But that was Al – he always
acted as if he had everything or nothing to lose.
He
had the backing of the half of the city's artist community who
thought he was the new Warhol – the other half hated him, naturally
– but I think what must have swung it was the support of the
AR-techs and Fab-Labbers up at the University, who jumped at the
chance to test out their kit just down the road. They were respected,
they made money for the city, in collaboration with them we wrote 3
or 4 of the core apps that underpin what we understand as augmented
reality today.
So,
we got a green light and off we punks went went.
***
Inviting
the gamers and cosplayers? It was a no-brainer. The artists gamed,
the gamers were customising their look with AR and carrying on their
games in real life, and the cosplayers coded for a day job and were
using the new tech to spruce up their look. After all, to use the
classic example, it's hard to rock a Chun-Li look when you're a 6'5
bloke from Bournville. We'd been known to turn up to gigs and parties
en masse as characters from our favourite Final Fantasies, so,
y'know, this was our scene. Clo and Jake especially, they could go
even to the most purist back-to-nature LARPers you can possibly think
of and say, “Trust us, this is going to be awesome.”
[...]
So,
come June 2025, I was relieved – Steampunk Messiah was I – to
discover that we'd got 5,000 people (at least twice our target) to a
weekend of phantasmagorical events. We got old Man Sterling and, ah,
Neil Stephenson as the marquee speaker on Sunday night and as many
chin-stroking workshops about data and Derrida as the theorists could
wish for. For the rest of us, there was Lovecraftian suspence gaming,
Lankhmarian inn-character inns for mass-participation, and, and the
artists had just outdone themselves with the immersive spaces.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Snippets from the first 10,000 words Pt 3
Shit.
Dan tried to remember which data laws or shared reality conventions
he might have might technically infringed in the past month or so,
but through the throbbing headache he could only access not so much a
memory palace, more a memory hovel. Then, he looked them over more
closely and relaxed. These two – a rangy Sikh bloke and a smaller
bearded ferret of a man - had standard police issue tablets and
visors, which meant they were hip to the flow of crime data.
Conceptual art-crime, not so much.
***
As
a rule, the rank and file police didn't know what to make of
Festival. As with any display of public enjoyment and unorthodoxy,
they were torn between wanting to do some good old fashioned
repression and taking a low profile approach to policing the event
out of sheer incomprehension as much as anything else.
Typically,
the end result was somewhere in between the two – on the one hand a
couple of outrageous arrests of augmented LARPers or cosplayers for
illegal weaponry (“but it's rubber officer! And half of it doesn't
even exist in this reality”), on the other hand enjoying having
their photo taken with steampunk Sherlocks or slave Leias.
AR-masked
taser-happy drones assaulting superficially innocent citizens were
decidely out of their pay grade.
***
“We're
making enquries with anyone who was involved in the Malloy circle, Mr
May. Thankfully, for an apparently subversive movement you were
awfully keen on publicising who your artpunks were.”
“I
hate that term. Cyberpunk; Steampunk; Seapunk; Artpunk; ah Great
Dismal, so much to answer for. Anyway, we were inspired in so many
ways by the Surrealists, who were the most tribal, most
self-publicising moth- ah group you could possibly imagine. Issue 12
of La Revolution Surrealiste had photographs of all their members on
the front cover like a rogues gallery. We did exactly the same when
we wrote our first manifesto. Artpunk was a name the media gave us”
***
“Do
you … have any ideas who is doing this?”
“Well,
in the modern police force, Mr May, we have two main approaches. One,
we send in the forensics and data-gathering teams to the crime scenes
to search and scan everything with a fine tooth comb. We
cross-reference the information we have – drone vendors, drone
users, witness statements – and we hope the algorithms turn up
three bananas.”
“And
the second?”
“Why,
Mr May, while we wait for the backroom boys and girls to live out
their Grissom fantasies, we turn up in the wrong places and the wrong
times and ask difficult questions in an effort to find out what's
going on. And that” he added almost as an afterthought, “is where
you come in.”
***
Morris
pointed to the two of them. “You Virgil, me Dante. Right now my
best guess is that only another artist would threaten at least nine
other artists. It's not our only line of enquiry, but it's the one
I'm going to look into, with your help.”
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Video of the week: Dordeduh - Dojana
Romanian black-folk-pagan metal act in surprisingly mellow mood on a hillside. Fabulous.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Snippets from the first 10,000 words Pt 2
The
critics accused the Malloy circle of making a Romantic cult of
augmented reality and they were right, up to a point. We were
Futurists too, but it was the bunny slopes of Romanticism which got
people paying attention.
'Romantic'
was a name that each of us inner circlers at that time would have
borne with pride. To understand that, you have to remember what we
were kicking against in our everyday life. A city which had been
designed and desecrated by successive generations of incompetents –
ugly as sin, as cheap as a cheap thing, as user-friendly as a Latin
smartphone, with its fingers in its ears to the future. It needed
more than beauty, however you define beauty, but beauty was a startt.
When
Alasdair suggested that the city skyline should incorporate mountain
views from Caspar David Friedrich paintings, he was getting Shocked
of Sutton's attention to make a point. Not that the city's Great and
Good had no sense of humour – that would be shooting fish in a
barrel. But that Birmingham needed to think big in a new way, away
from corporate dumbassery or peak oil rabbit-in-the-stream fatalism
that once prevailed in these parts.
As
a blank canvass for beauty, with a surface reality of crumbling
post-war infrastructure and latter-day quick-up quick-down
cowboy-jobs overlaying neglected Victorian strata, the city needed
us. Who wouldn't want to make this more beautiful. And, lest we
forget, more meaningful.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Snippets from the first 10,000 words Pt 1
Caveat: all this is first draft, and doesn't mean I'm satisfied with it as it stands yadayadayada traditional anxiety.
***
***
***
***
***
A square
mile of assembled pirates, ninjas, pirate-ninjas, steampunk
gentlefolk, elves (always with the elves), dwarves, halflings,
furries, otaku, otherkin, cosplayers, spacemen, Kryptonians,
Trekkers, true black metallers, Vikings, eloi, elohim, sidhe,
Earthseed, Black country folk and other costumed strangenesses.
***
Flanagans
has adopted a Waitsian veneer – trouble's braids are part of the
dresscode, you can play pool with midgets at all hours until the
notional rain stops, and all the barmaids were augmented prison
tattoos.
***
Wearing
AR-visored sunglasses at night, he looked like a Reid brother trying
to impersonate the Rat Pack.
***
“And
why is Bigtrak's precocious nephew buying me drinks?” he asked, as
the barman concluded a extensive round of stirring, shaking and
mixing to deposit a dubious off-yellow concoction in front of him.
“There are,” he added, “easier ways of getting my attention.”
“No
there aren't, Danny.” the doggy drone demurred.
“That's
right”, Danny agreed cheerfully, taking a large swallow of his
cocktail with evident satisfaction.
***
I've
been tasered
A
'non-lethal' weapon for use by the monopoly of force brigade against
the fractious First World proletariat
Iii'vve
beeen tassserrred
Illegal,
of course, but an easy concealed carry for the street for when the
knife lacks that je-ne-sais-crackle of a thousand volts pumped
through the nervous system
Bottle
lightning charge
Shoot-to-stun
weapon with absolutely no side-effects. Nooo sirree.
I'vve
beeeeen tasssserrrreeeeddd
Grinning
paramilitary salespeople talk out of the side of their mouths about
exceptional cases and collateral damage
Tasssssssssssssssssssssssssrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
***
I'm not blogging because I'm writing
I'm doing the bunny slopes version of NaNoWriMo, having ground out 10,000 words in 20 days, with the aim of completing a full 50,000 word first draft by the end of 2012.
As per October's posts, the story is about augmented reality, and what it means to have ever more sophisticated technological means of escapism at a time of social disorder (and potential collapse) in the near future. What if techno-escapism + human organisation = paradigm shift social evolution? With a cast of steampunks, cosplaying zombies, elf cults, performance artists and policemen.
All of this means I need to ration all my writing energies for the story, so any actual writing here will be concise to say the least and probably consist of extracts from the work in progress.
I will pick up the (mainly) metal threads from earlier this year and start posting videos of things that interest me here, though, now that I am fully wired for sound and vision at home again after 6 months techno-fast after my laptop speakers blew.
Also - photos - I can do that!
As per October's posts, the story is about augmented reality, and what it means to have ever more sophisticated technological means of escapism at a time of social disorder (and potential collapse) in the near future. What if techno-escapism + human organisation = paradigm shift social evolution? With a cast of steampunks, cosplaying zombies, elf cults, performance artists and policemen.
All of this means I need to ration all my writing energies for the story, so any actual writing here will be concise to say the least and probably consist of extracts from the work in progress.
I will pick up the (mainly) metal threads from earlier this year and start posting videos of things that interest me here, though, now that I am fully wired for sound and vision at home again after 6 months techno-fast after my laptop speakers blew.
Also - photos - I can do that!
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