Friday, September 30, 2005

virtual mudpit purchasing fights...

whew! guys and gals, thanks for being such lovely customers--it's been about 2 hours since i posted the Fall Harvest Anti-Factory batch and I'm almost sold out already. As much as it's a boon for me, I feel badly for those who just happen not to be in front of their computers when the email announcement goes out. October will have much more postings, as I have more time to sew and will have put behind me a total of four (eek!) art exhibitions. It's been a crazeeeeeeeee month, believe me ;p

Um, I think I may try to do furtive item postings in the near future (as well as the big group ones), slipping in one or 2 at odd moments, unannounced, just so newbies and accidental visitors can chance upon something. I want to make things fair, really. So, with that in mind, check back, and check back *often* hee hee.

anyhoo, ya'lls rock, and I'm grateful and thankful. since i'm self-employed as an artist/teacher/sewer i have to pay for health insurance, apartment rent, studio rent, etc. (oh, not to mention food and art supplies, yeesh!), and it's really awful sometimes. you all are not only keeping me alive, but helping me feel like I don't have to sell out (creatively speaking) in order to do it!

xoxoxoxo again...

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RESTOCK: Fall Harvest!

Hooray! Finally, a new batch of fall goodies has been posted to the store website...Over 20 new Anti-Factory handmade clothes are up! I love the new acorn-patterned fabric that I've used, as well as the mustardy-brown speckled fabric. Not to mention that sweater weather is fast approaching (if not already here!). Shoot me any feedback or questions you have, of course. And thanks again for your continued support of my endeavor...

xoxoxox
-s


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Wednesday, September 28, 2005

september links


I really should be spending time right now working on the webpages for all the new (at least 22!!!) Anti-Factory items that I'll be posting in a few days, but for now, here's a selection of great handmade links for you to peruse. All are crafty and kickin' it in a good way, so please stop by and show these folks some support :)

bittersweet genevieve (wow wow wow!)
mizuthreads (lovely handspun yarn for all you knitting/crochet enthusiasts)
first date bags (satchels for all occasions)
molly mast (totes, purses, laptop bags, and more)
doll deluxe (handmade jewelry with a bit of punk rock edge)

Oh, and one great new vintage clothing site:
little pink dress (vintage items for ladies of all sizes, and modeled by real people, which is totally helpful when trying to figure out if something will fit you)

One last thing: get ready, cuz the venerable Cut+Paste is getting their fall season of goods together and will probably be posting online soon, too!

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Sunday, September 25, 2005

mucho productivity

So, unlike yesterday, when I only made a few things, today was a bonus of making and sewing...I spent ten hours listening to NPR and churning out the goods. After a while, it becomes hard to stop...it's like a drug, really. Hmmm...that color over there would look fab with that thing over there. Wait! What if I did this now with that? Lord, the options are endless! And I'm really happy with the new items--I especially love it when what I think are "mistakes" turn into delicious designs/fixes. Like plucking something from hellfire and saving its soul. Or something like that, but maybe not so dramatic, ha ha.

Now I'm wondering if tomorrow will have enough time for me to get in another fix of sewing. I need my fix, man!...I've got bunches of stuff to do in the morning and I was supposed to go out to Oakland and spend time in the California College of the Arts library gathering images for my lecture for Tuesday's class. But now I'm reconsidering and figuring out how to cram all my errands on early Tuesday before class. Argh!

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Saturday, September 24, 2005

semi-productive day

I had a semi-productive day: woke up a bit late due to sleeping in from a night out at the Makeout Room last night (no, it's not an orgy spot, it's a bar, OK?) where I saw Kurt's band Condor play as well as Experimental Dental School, which was all very great. Today was supposed to be about churning out the Anti-Factory goods in the studio, but since it was a late start it was hard to get going fast enough. That and it seems like I work better when I sew for a few days straight, as opposed to just a day here or there. It's all about getting in the groove, I guess, sort of going zen with it all. My first day back to sewing is always sort of halting and I wind up second-guessing myself with the materials and patterns, etc. So today I only made about 4 things, boo hoo. But I have more time tomorrow, plus a few items that are hanging around from not being posted before.

As I keep saying, I'm aiming to post new goods by the end of the month, so check back!

I think tonight I'm going to the Independent School of Art's Black Market Auction. Now THAT promises to be another super crowded art show with all the local scenesters coming out of the woodwork to be a part of it...do I really want to surrender myself to this? I know I'll regret it if I don't go, but the couch and TV are looking oh-so-good right now...hmmmmm....

(later that night)
OK, so I went to the auction. But not after driving around and around Hayes Valley looking for parking for about half an hour. It was ridiculous! The overcrowding of SF can really suck sometimes. Finally, I pull into a little alley and say to myself "if there's nothing here, I'm heading home." Just my luck, there was a tiny spot to squeeze into.

The event itself was pretty interesting, but I didn't stay long. Actually, it was really weird seeing all the "fake" artwork on the walls because not all of it was very good. Being that the items for auction were all fake great works of art, it made me distressed to see a Piet Mondrian done in what looked like acrylics (eegads!). I mean, if you're going to make a fake Mondrian, puh-leaze use oils! There were several Richard Princes (easy Marlboro man rephotographs), a Cindy Sherman, and even Nauman--yes, all the big guns were there, and going for awful cheap ($50-$100 starting bids). But I'm such an anal retentive viewer that I got hung up on any little bit that seemed shoddy to me--like inappropriate frames, bad mounting on mats, wrong material usage. The Frida Kahlo should never have been there, as goes the Meret Oppenheim teacup--not good. There were, however, 2 excellent Bruce Conner inkblot drawings, some really great Wangechi Mutu collage drawings, one good On Kawara (and a few not good ones) and a nice little Marcel Dzama. Now that I think of it I'm kicking myself for not going for one of the Mutus. Oh well.

Anyhow, I'm back home now and looking forward to ye olde couch!

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i'm a pony, too...

Wait a sec! So everyone in the crafty online community has been taking these "what cute animal are you?" quizes and it seems like everyone's ending up a pony...is it rigged? or are we all very very pony-like? hmmmmmmmmm....must ponder this...

You Are A: Pony!

ponyWho doesn't love a pony? You are one of these miniature horses, renown for your beauty and desired by many. Full of grace, you are a beautiful and very special animal, full of strength and majesty.

You were almost a: Parakeet or a Duck
You are least like a: Groundhog or a TurtleThe Cute Animals Quiz

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Happy B-day Amy Fran!

OK, so it was a while ago now (about 2 weeks?) but here's some pics from a fab little danceparty birthday that happened at friend Amy Franceschini's live/work space at Project Artaud (the artists collective building right next to Southern Exposure Gallery). It was a big surprise to her, since that night was also the big Southern Exposure show opening for "Practice Makes Perfect", which she and I were both in. She thought we were all going out to the Rite Spot down the block for drinks, but little did she know that little slips of paper were being passed around with secret instructions to meet at her place for a night of drinks and dancing...It was a veritable plethora of artists dancing around and stomping to good tunes from 60s soul, Van Halen, 80s new wave, and more. Phil Ross was especially getting down, and a giant painting by Margaret Kilgallen served as a backdrop to the entire scene. We staggered home later, sweaty and tired, with big smiles on our faces...I am always lobbying for more home-based danceparties!




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Wednesday, September 21, 2005

great review!

Ahhh, I do so love it when I get a good art review write-up. There've been many times where I've had shows or been in group exhibitions where every other artist except for me gets mentioned. This time, the Seattle weekly "The Stranger" featured a really wonderful review of my solo show "Black Market" at James Harris Gallery...Dude, the writer, really hit on it, and of that I'm so happy.

"Redacting Capital: The Post-Global Art of Stephanie Syjuco," by Charles Mudede
published in The Stranger, Seattle's alternative weekly, 9/15/05
==> read it!


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Sunday, September 18, 2005

sharing and caring...

Yep, I'm back! Eight days that were jam-packed with waaaaay too much stuff. Like, when I go on vacation it's really never about hanging out somewhere and relaxing. It's more like "gee, let's see how many places and things we can cram into our short timeframes and totally exhaust ourselves, leading to finishing with a feeling that we didn't really rest." No, I'm not despairing (I'll share the lovely details later!), it's just that wow, I'm tired.

BUT! before I retire for the night I will extoll the immense virtues of Dear Birthday, the fashion brainchild of Valerie, who I have heaped high praise on before, but now with her new fall fashion items has really warranted more heapings of praises. Please go and visit and buy her lovely items--they are meticulously well-made and lovely, and worth every cent, OK? OK! The details, the pintucks, and the lush printed fabrics she uses are truly a work of wonder. Below are some samples I stole from her website (hi Valerie!) that show off just some of el productos...



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Saturday, September 10, 2005

on the road again...

...i can't wait to get on the road again...

Yep, i'm going on a roadtrip and won't be back in town until 9/19. Up to Portland and winding our way through the Western and Eastern sides of Oregon to do some much-needed vacation before the cooler weather hits!

Oh, and I'll be going online sporadically, but if anyone recommends any places to go, either in Portland itself or other parts of Oregon, please let me know! Hopefully I'll be able to make use of it during the trip...And if there are crafty stores, places, art shows, bands playing, etc, that you can recommend, DO TELL!!!! :)

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Thursday, September 08, 2005

celebrity gushfest


Wow, i can be such a gushing celebrity-struck person sometimes! I got a call today from Faythe at Paper Boat Boutique in Milwaukee where I just sent a batch of Anti-Factory tops last week and they've already sold two of them...to Meg White of the White Stripes! That's just so cool (as they are on my ipod rotation these days...) and it would be super awesome of course if they showed up somehow in photos or whatever...Either way, it's almost like getting a celebrity endorsement (ha ha).

Hey Meg, if you're reading this for some reason, thanks!

A once-removed brush with celebrity: The other day a friend of mine gossiped about a girl I know having a one night stand with a SUPER (stress on the SUPER) famous artist and it made me gasp--like, this un-named person has a really steady FAMOUS girlfriend and everything, and is always written about in art magazines and is up there in the pantheon cannon of contemporary art. Think *art star*. I will never tell, however, and you can't make me! :)

Another once-removed brush with celebrity: My boyfriend works as a video producer/cinemetographer for live concert DVDS. The other day he was in Miami shooting Bow Wow amid thousands of screaming teenage girls. Last week he was on a conference call with Usher about the quality of Usher's vocals on the tapes.

Ah fickle fame, why dost thou swoop down at strange moments?

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Sunday, September 04, 2005

read a first-hand account

Read an *amazing* first-hand account from "Slughunter" about her New Orleans survival experience. She couldn't get out because she lives paycheck to paycheck and couldn't afford to leave with her pets. I don't know her but Valerie from Dear Birthday posted a link on her floridfauna blog and it's so shocking. Rampagings at WalMart and weapons on the streets, not to mention trucking out 100 animals and pets...

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Emergency Action Protest this Wednesday, Sept. 7

I was wondering when this would happen! Indymedia.org has posted Wednesday, Sept 7 as a protest day organized by International A.N.S.W.E.R. for what the government's inaction has caused with Katrina. Visit Indymedia.org's website and see if they have announced an action protest in your area...I went out into the streets of SF during the first day of the Iraq war to join the protests in 2003 and it was an amazing sight. It went on for almost a week and shut down a large part of downtown. I'm hoping a dramatic action will take place to show the government that things have got to change.

Some of the protests happening Wednesday, Sept. 7:
San Francisco, 5pm, Powell and Market St.
Los Angeles, 6pm at Veterans and Wilshire
Seattle, 5pm at Pine near 4th
Washington DC, 5pm at the White House

I'm excerpting the press release below:

-------------------------------------------
What is taking place today in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama is a crisis rarely seen in this country. It has provoked an outpouring of concern for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. Millions of people across the United States and around the world are watching in horror at both the scale of suffering and the lack of response by President Bush and the U.S. government. Thousands are dead or missing; millions have been displaced or lost their jobs and homes.

The African American community in New Orleans has been especially hard hit, and on top of massive death and suffering has been the victim of vicious racist scapegoating at the hands of government officials and the corporate media. The real "looters" in this crisis are the big oil companies that are making super-profits by jacking up the price of gas and oil all over the country.

It is becoming clearer every day that this crisis goes far beyond a "natural disaster." The massive death and destruction did not have to happen as a result of the hurricane; rather it is caused by a government that prioritizes profits, war and conquest over human needs. The danger that a hurricane posed for New Orleans and the region had been known and discussed for years—with no significant preparations taken. Funds were diverted from securing the levees to pay for the war in Iraq and the protective wetlands were sold off to the developers.

Global warming is a major factor in the big increase in tropical storms, particularly Hurricane Katrina, which developed from a minimal hurricane to one of the largest and most powerful ever recorded because of the extremely high water temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico. Still, the Bush Administration continues to contemptuously turn its back on evidence of climate change and stands by its position to cancel the Kyoto Accord.

Before the hurricane struck, the government issued a mandatory evacuation order with a "free-market approach." In other words, people were ordered to leave, but the means for evacuation were not provided. It was the poorest sectors of the working class and predominantly the African American community that did not have the means to leave and endured the greatest personal suffering. Even days after the hurricane the U.S. government has refused to commandeer all available buses and send them to transport people out. With the city awash in a sea of sewage and chemicals, the contemptible director of FEMA, Michael Brown, had the gall to then accuse those who have suffered the most: "I think the death toll may go into the thousands and, unfortunately, that's going to be attributable a lot to people who did not heed the advance warnings." (September 1, CNN)

The Bush administration has spared no resource in waging its war against Iraq, taking more than $200 billion from the people of the United States to do so. It spared no resource in destroying the entire city of Fallujah last November. But when it comes to confronting this "natural" catastrophe, the Bush administration has been criminally derelict. Bush’s relief package of $10.5 billion which equals just 7 weeks of the cost of the occupation of Iraq is completely inadequate. As people, including babies and the elderly, go without food and water, and corpses lie in the street and float in the water, Bush has presented a meager and dilatory response.

The government is preparing to bail out the oil companies, insurance companies, other big corporations and casinos. Big Oil is also using this catastrophe as an opportunity to line their pockets. Working people in the United States need to stand with the victims of this crisis and demand that the government provide both short and long-term assistance to those who have lost everything.

Stop Racist Scapegoating of the Victims
Jail the Real "Looters" the Big Oil executives
Money for People's Needs, Not for War
Stop Bush’s War Against
the Poor at Home and Abroad

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crafters for Katrina relief


I'm a bit late on the boat with this as I've been out of town for a few days and not readily near any internet access, but Craft Revolution has teamed up with many crafty entrepreneurs to launch Crafters United, a relief effort for Hurricane Katrina...Go there to buy goods that makers have donated for the cause. And yes, i know that the whole "shop to support our (fill in the blank: country/troops/economy/way of life/etc" is a bit overdone, but this is *different*! You'll be buying handmade AND knowing that the proceeds will be going to a cause--as opposed to corporate pocketbooks!

I haven't signed up yet, but I'll do so soon, plus probably set aside proceeds from the sales of my next batch of Anti-Factory clothing items, as well... :)

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Saturday, September 03, 2005

archive links are back up!

*whew*
so on a lighter and less pissed off note from last night (!) i fixed the links to my archived blog pages...I switched servers a while ago and it sort of screwed up all my previous blog posts from june to august...so there :)

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Friday, September 02, 2005

"looting" vs "finding"

Oh yeah, and if you wanna see more inequality in reporting and racist overtones, check out the comparisons made between 2 different photos of a similar situation in the aftermath of the New Orleans hurricane...In one, a black man is wading in water dragging behind grocery items and he's described as "looting" a grocery store. In the other, a white person is shown doing similar, only it's captioned that they "found" food. Of course.

After all the online outrage that's come up about this, the picture of the white person has inexplicably been removed from it's host site for reasons of controversy over captioning, while the image of the black person is still floating around with the "looting" caption.

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You should be ENRAGED

I'm not going to add to the mountain of platitudes and "our hearts are with them" sayings regarding what happened in New Orleans. Rather, I am completely livid, totally enraged, and fully appalled by the (lack of) response to what happened in the aftermath to those who were left behind. I am fully convinced that if you are poor--and especially black and poor--you are just completely *FUCKED* in this country. Do you hear me? FUCKED. I refuse to mince words. Everyone should be outraged. We spend billions upon billions of dollars on overseas wars while there are people who are too poor to have viable alternatives to evacuating a city in the path of a hurricane.

I'm ashamed that this country has its priorities in the wrong place. What we're seeing today is the result of a total systemic shutdown--poor people being "left behind" to fend for themselves, public hospitals (Charity Hospital) not being evacuated of its dying people as the private hospital across the street gets evacuated (really, isn't it apparent that it's about money?), and image upon image of poor and old black and white folks being stranded and left to fend for themselves with disorganized and anarchic scenes.

The National Black Caucus is right to be mad. The mayor of New Orleans, with his well-publicized rant against the lack of help, are completely correct in airing their frustrations. People everywhere should be ashamed and appalled. Racism and the class divide between the rich and poor has played a huge part in the inequities of this country, and what I'm hoping now is that it slaps every single person incredibly hard across the face who reads the stories and sees the images on TV and newspapers.

Tonight the music superstar Kanye West proclaimed on TV "George Bush does not care about black people". On live TV. And of course the network had to air a disclaimer afterwards saying his comments don't reflect the comments of the network. Like I said earlier, fuck platitudes.

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