time to say goodbye

Tony, brilliant sweetheart that he is, was determined to get me a corset before he left for home back in May. In that entirely endearing way that only he ever managed, his first two tries were not-quite-disasters. The first one was an over-priced off-the-rack from one of those little gothy shops in Gastown, and didn’t fit even a tiny bit. They couldn’t even pretend it could be altered, so with after a bit of genteel kicking and screaming, the shop-girl took it back.

The second one was wicked, a black satin Vollers. Wonderful, delicious, but too tiny, bought in a rush as a store was closing, as we were running out of time, (we only had three days before he was due back in L.A.), not the way to buy anything so unique, permanent or expensive, especially from a store with a No Returns policy.

The third one was the money shot. It fit absolutely fairy-tale perfect. Not only was it 50% on sale, it was everything I’d always wished for, even purple, my hoped for, and black velvet, his.

So here, after it’s lived months carefully rolled in a bag on my bookshelf, is the black satin Voller’s corset. I’ve put it up on eBay for $100 less than he paid for it.

what’ll it be, doll? (damn unsupported formats)

I came up with a new movement yesterday while over at Duncan’s, Woodcut exploitation. Line-art tramps in skirts like tiered bandages and hands full of guns. Seventies trash with Edwardian aesthetics. Wondermark meets Grindhouse. Lowbrow graphic poster art as intricately executed as comics from the turn-of-the-century Strand Magazine.

I’m wondering if I’m really the first to think of it. Currently, the hip uchronia is Steampunk, (Jules Verne punk-tech, the appealing, ironic union of Industrial Revolution and Victorian-era engineering re-mixed with post-internet technology), with the occasional dash of Raygun Gothic, (think Metropolis meets Buck Rogers, meals as pills, flying cars), or Space Cowboy, (Farscape, Firefly) – I haven’t been seeing much else making the rounds.

Is there already a Woodcut Exploitation movement out there? Have I just been spending time in all the wrong places?

Actually – while I’m at it, I desperately want to know the name of the current design movement that’s all wickedly baroque curlique in elaborately juxtoposed layers with vines, text, skulls, and absurd machinery. It’s been all over clothing for almost a year and a half and yet I still haven’t found anyone able to tell me what it’s called.

Here’s a good example – The music video Jonas Odell created for The Hours, (download here):

My Days of Awe: Pt III – the girl with the vagina made of glass

pt I, II.

Skip ahead twenty minutes. Stephanie and I have rocked our Moment to sleep, the natives are getting restless, standing outside is the hippest new thing. So suddenly we’re tumbling down the stairs, we’re an interlude between one venue and the next, out front the Railway, trying to manufacture some sort of plan. Shane stands at the centre of our group, a gentle figure of authority, trying to convince us to taxi-pool to the Brickhouse, the semi-hidden pub on the south edge of Cracktown where all the writers quietly go to drink. People are agreeing, asking directions. I want to wait for Mike, who’d already taken to touching my arm when he speaks, so I don’t speak up. I know if they leave, I will girlishly stay, a supplicant curled on the stained sidewalk next to the van, head bent into a book, waiting for him to finish upstairs and find me.

And so I turned every time the doors opened and smiled at the way he eventually spilled from them, concerned, anxiously scanning for my unfamiliar face. (Obviously, I was lost, I had left, never to be found again!) Gratifying, how his worry split gladly into relief as soon as I was located. It punctured something inside my chest, right there, like sunlight. Before I could react, Shane interrupted, scooping him into an enthusiastic hug. (They’d worked together at the Winnipeg Folk Festival). The exodus had gone critical. “Come with us!” An open, easy grin beneath his clumsy black hat. “Yeah, alright.” Quickly, I volunteered to navigate. The van was crammed with stuff, an entire life trapped in four metal walls, it made me smile down to my toes. He seemed nervous, but not overly so. Though I felt presumptuous, I felt okay.

Turn right here, right again again. The same way Vegas is bat country, this is where our junkies congregate. There’s architecture here, under the violence and grime. That used to be a theatre, that’s the crazy studio where some of us used to live. It’s a safe injection site now, maybe.

As some of you know, I’m a regular little history guide, full of odd knowledge knick-knacks, but that night I was only using it as punctuation. Instead, I was explaining as little as possible about my dead boyfriend while still attempting to accurately outline what the rest of my evening had been like. Sometimes it’s hard to be tactful, but I’d like to think I still managed. “Wow, that’s intense.” I had him agree to sit between me and the mystery woman with the socially devastating entrance. Do you ever see a precipice coming, but instead of thinking, deciding to tread carefully, just break out running? I find it borderline precious to waking up after you thought you already had your eyes open.

Worried we might part ways at the bar, I gave him my card as we pulled into the camera-protected parking space out back. Little things. Ink on paper. Another moment of good impression, of making sure we had contact. He reverently cradled them in his hands, red hair and angel wings, delicately painted lips, a cathedral framed against a skyscraper, sincerely thankful. I tried not to feel too delighted, I didn’t want to press my luck. Already, I liked him. I could taste the edges of it. I thought of all my poetry I wear as scars, of a heart made of plastic, how slowly it might beat. I thought, “I am rinsed of my worn places, I am free to do this. Really, it’s about time.”

END OF PART THREE

I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked

cruising left due east

Fifty years ago, a judge ruled that Ginsberg’s Howl was not obscene (and ergo, could be read by children in classrooms) but now?

Now it won’t be read on the air at a NY public radio broadcasting station for fear the FCC will fine them $325,000 for every ‘bad’ word.

I’m not actually in it this year, but come anyway

Also! Heathens! Theatre Under the Gun is this weekend! Tonight and tomorrow night!

Come be educated in the glory that is 48 hour theatre! Teams are given inspiration packages containing a prop, a sound bite, a line donated from a famous playwright, and a picture. Overnight, these elements must be tightly woven together into a performance, because the very next day? They perform!

It sounds a little flaky, but honestly, it’s terrific. Some of the shows Theatre Under the Gun has produced have been some of the best performances I’ve ever seen. I still, quite badly, want the surreal birthday short to be teased out into an entire production. It had a depressed french clown, a box full of “dead” kittens, and a woman who used a whip to crack the candle on her chocolate cake. I would go every night. It even beat out John Murphy having sex with a plant.

It’s $12 tickets or $20 for both nights.

!! mercy me, it’s the only show I ever watch !!

from Mike‘s mailing-list, links mine:

Do you enjoy the Showtime original program “Weeds“? Well guess what? This week’s episode will feature the song Buttmachine. Episode airs this Monday, October 8th. We all win!”

More tour dates have been added! Check if he’s playing near you!

EDIT: alright, naughty pirate that I am, that made me embarassingly happy.