CHIROT ZERO ZINE--ANNOUNCING NEW BLOG

Dear Followers, Friends, fellow Workers:

I have just begun a new blog/zine called
Chirot Zero Zine A Heap of Rubble--
Anarkeyology of hand eye ear notations
---
http://chirotzerozine.blogspot.com
the blog is more exusively concerned than this one with presenting essays, reviews (inc. "bad reviews") , Visual Poetry, Sound Poetry, Event Scores, Manifestos, Manifotofestos, rantin' & raving, rock'roll, music all sorts--by myself and others--if you are interested in being a contributor, please feel free to contact me at david.chirot@gmail.com
as with this blog, the arts are investigated as a part of rather than apart from the historical, economic, political actualities of yesterday, today, & tomorrow
as with al my blogs--
contributions in any language are welcome

Free Leonard Peltier

Free Leonard Peltier
The government under pretext of security and progress, liberated us from our land, resources, culture, dignity and future. They violated every treaty they ever made with us. I use the word “liberated” loosely and sarcastically, in the same vein that I view the use of the words “collateral damage” when they kill innocent men, women and children. They describe people defending their homelands as terrorists, savages and hostiles . . . My words reach out to the non-Indian: Look now before it is too late—see what is being done to others in your name and see what destruction you sanction when you say nothing. --Leonard Peltier, Annual Message January 2004 (Leonard Peltier is now serving 31st year as an internationally recognized Political Prisoner of the United States Government)

Injustice Continues: Leonard Peltier Again Denied Parole

# Injustice continues: Leonard Peltier denied parole‎ - By Mahtowin A wave of outrage swept the progressive community worldwide at the news that Native political prisoner Leonard Peltier was denied parole on Aug. ... Workers World - 2 related articles » US denies parole to American Indian activist Leonard Peltier‎ - AFP - 312 related articles » # Free Leonard Peltier 2009 PRISON WRITINGS...My Life Is My Sun Dance Leonard Peltier © 1999. # Prison Writings: My Life Is My Sun Dance - by Leonard Peltier, Harvey Arden - 2000 - Biography & Autobiography - 272 pages Edited by Harvey Arden, with an Introduction by Chief Arvol Looking Horse, and a Preface by former Attorney General Ramsey Clark. In 1977, Leonard Peltier... books.google.com/books?isbn=0312263805... - # Leonard Peltier, American Indian Activist, Denied Parole And Won't ... Aug 21, 2009 ... BISMARCK, ND — American Indian activist Leonard Peltier, imprisoned since 1977 for the deaths of two FBI agents, has been denied parole ... www.huffingtonpost.com/.../leonard-peltier-american_n_265764.html - Cached - Similar - #

Gaza--War Crime: Collective Punishment of 1.5 Million Persons--Recognized as "The World's Largest Concentration Camp"

Number of Iraquis Killed Since USA 2003 Invasion began

Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator

US & International Personnel losses in Iraq &Afghanistan; Costs of the 2 Wars to US


Number of U.S. Military Personnel Sacrificed (Officially acknowledged) In America's War On Iraq: 4,667
icasualties.org/oif/

Number Of International Occupation Force Troops Slaughtered In Afghanistan : 1,453
http://icasualties.org/oef/


=

Cost of War in Iraq

$691,188,637,164

Cost of War in Afghanistan
$229,137,844,021

The cost in your community

www.nationalpriorities.org/index.php?option=com_wrapper&Itemid=182

flickr: DEATH FROM THIS WINDOW/DOORS OF GUANTANAMO--Essays, Links, Video-- US use of Torture

VISUAL POETRY/MAIL ART CALL Cracking World’s Walls & Codes Concrete & Virtual

Cracking World’s Walls & Codes Concrete & Virtual


VISUAL POETRY/MAIL ART CALL
No Sieges, Tortures, Starvation & Surveillance
GAZA-GUANTANAMO-ABU GHRAIB—THE GLOBE
Deadline/Fecha Limite: SinsLimite/ongoing
Size: No limit/Sin Limite
No Limit on Number of Works sent
No Limit on Number of Times New Works Are Sent
Documentation: on my blog
http://davidbaptistechirot.blogspot.com
Addresses: david.chirot@gmail.com
David Baptiste Chirot
740 N 29 #108
Milwaukee, WI 53208
USA

Miss Universe Visits Guantanamo: 'A Loooot Of Fun!'



Miss Universe Visits Guantanamo: 'A Loooot Of Fun!'


The current 'Miss Universe' Dayana Mendoza (formerly Miss Venezuela) and 'Miss America' Crystal Stewart visited US troops stationed in Guantanamo Bay on March 20th, the New York Times reports. Here's Mendoza's account of the visit from her pageant blog last Friday. She says the trip "was a loooot of fun!"

This week, Guantánamo!!! It was an incredible experience...All the guys from the Army were amazing with us. We visited the Detainees camps and we saw the jails, where they shower, how the recreate themselves with movies, classes of art, books. It was very interesting. We took a ride with the Marines around the land to see the division of Gitmo and Cuba while they were informed us with a little bit of history.


The water in Guantánamo Bay is soooo beautiful! It was unbelievable, we were able to enjoy it for at least an hour. We went to the glass beach, and realized the name of it comes from the little pieces of broken glass from hundred of years ago. It is pretty to see all the colors shining with the sun. That day we met a beautiful lady named Rebeca who does wonders with the glasses from the beach. She creates jewelry with it and of course I bought a necklace from her that will remind me of Guantánamo Bay :)

I didn't want to leave, it was such a relaxing place, so calm and beautiful.

Monday, February 02, 2009

February 2009 in Artforum







February 2, 2009
















February 2009 in Artforum

http://www.artforum.com



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This month in Artforum: "Out of Position." By the time he died in 1997, Martin Kippenberger had generated one of the most significant, and prescient, bodies of work from the postwar era—one whose diversity was matched only by its elusiveness and complicity in its own misprision. For this issue, George Baker considers this larger-than-life artist's multifarious oeuvre as seen in "Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Prospective," which opened this past fall at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and travels next month to the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

"Kippenberger's only position, in fact, was the endless shuttling through every other available position." —George Baker

Also: "A Hidden Reserve." How was painting ever forced to relinquish its claim to the articulation of subjective and historical experience? How could advanced art criticism ever have declared painting dead while the philosophers it cited had frequently focused on the medium in their own writings? Achim Hochdörfer looks back on a crucial transitional period for painting during the late 1950s and early '60s, before the ascendance of Minimalism and the "banishment" of painting by critical theory: an interval of deeply experimental and provocative strategies that are now being revisited by artists from Jutta Koether to Josh Smith, from Amy Sillman to Christopher Wool.

And: Artforum's Michelle Kuo talks with artist Josh Smith about the layered abstractions of his continuing project titled Currents.

"Picasso, I know, said he abhorred abstraction—to him, it represented the absolute stupidity of art—but I think he seemed confused and a little jealous in saying so." —Josh Smith

Also in February: Artist Carroll Dunham assesses the Whitney Museum of American Art's current survey of Alexander Calder's seven-year stay in Paris, when he leaped from working in the two-dimensional to his abstract, signature sculptures; curator Catherine Wood muses on the "ecology of disintegration" in the videos of Cyprien Gaillard; Jeffrey Weiss gives the final word on artist Mel Bochner's collected writings on art; and Matthew Brannon reviews Lynn Sigel's book about art on TV in the '50s and '60s.

"If you want to 'talk' to the public, you can't wait for tourists to pay twenty dollars and walk by your art in a museum. You have to bring it into their living rooms by working in television, or film, or (gulp) advertising." —Matthew Brannon

And: Maggie Nelson samples "Oranges and Sardines: Conversations on Abstract Painting" at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles; Blake Stimson looks twice at documentary photography in the Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona's "Universal Archive"; Matt Saunders delights in the muddled heterogeneity of the Akademie der Künste's "Notation" in Berlin; Pulitzer-winning journalist Alexander Stille finds gritty realism in Matteo Garrone's film Gomorrah; Damon Krukowski becomes the Terry Riley of the iPhone with Brian Eno's Bloom; and artist Erika Vogt names her Top Ten.

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Visit artguide—Artforum's free directory of the international art world, listing art fairs, auctions, and current gallery and museum shows in more than four hundred cities—at http://www.artforum.com/guide










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