What Will I Say Next

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Doing a little reading/presentation tonight and I’m sort of racking my brain to figure out what I want to say. Infact at the moment I’m reworking an old e-book in an attempt to make it fit a sort of improvised narrative I might (given enough courage) speak. Also, now that the collectibles book is done… have to make things out of a given constraint.

Oh My Eyes, Oh MyEars

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Lat Friday I was hanging out with Ben and he threw me a pad of rice paper and started noodling on the guitar. I recorded him with the tiny mic on my still camera and eventually put it in the I Want More video. We also spent some time laughing at You Tube viral trash like the THX lemur below. We talked about scale on the internet (as I’ve been trying to make these longer documentary experiments) and wondered if these multiauthored motion jokes weren’t in some way great art. This one is like that uh huh moment of satori writ in cross species EYE get it face recognition. Anyway, it made us laugh.

Step Inside The Book

Friday, March 21, 2008, 7-9pm—New York, NY—125 Maiden Lane, 2nd Floor.

FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY: Step inside three books, drink free beer and wine, and experience the future of the book:

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Mark Batty Publisher, Hotel St. George Press, the Institute for the Future of the Book, and the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council‘s Workspace Writers Residency program offer a night of multi-media readings that invite attendees to step inside books, celebrating how new media and traditional publishing fuse to create innovative projects that are more than “just books.” On this night, authors Garth Risk Hallberg, Alex Rose, and Alex Itin demonstrate how their stories rely on more than just words.

Hallberg’s illustrated novella, A Field Guide to the North American Family, documents two fictional families through 63 entries accompanied by evocative photographs contributed by some of today’s freshest photographic talents, as culled from the book’s ongoing companion website, afieldguide.com.
Read from start to finish or in a “choose your own adventure” style, Hallberg’s attention to narrative detail makes clear why he was included in the 2008 Harcourt Best New American Voices anthology, and why Print called A Field Guide to the North American Family “a modern illuminated manuscript.” Hallberg will project photographs from the book.

The interwoven, post-modern folktales that comprise The Musical Illusionist by Alex Rose muse upon historical arcana, tethered together by music and topography. Drawing on his experience as a director whose films, videos, and animations have appeared on
HBO, MTV, Comedy Central, Showtime, and the BBC, Rose conjures, in the words of the Village Voice, “the playful parables of Jorge Luis Borges. . . exotic maps and exquisite prints further suggest a volume passed down from an epoch much more enthralled with mystery than our own.” Rose will read from the title story of his collection, accompanied by a surround-sound score composed by David Little and recorded by the Formalist Quartet.

As an artist-in-residence at Brooklyn’s Institute for the Future of the Book, Alex Itin uses text, original illustrations and animations, and music to encourage readers to reconsider the definition of a book. Take for example Itin’s Orson Whales: Melville’s Moby Dick meets Orson Welles, and Led Zeppelin. Itin’s multi-media books will be screened.

The LMCC is the leading voice for arts and culture in downtown New York City, producing cultural events and promoting the arts through grants, services, advocacy, and cultural development programs.

Cut Pages

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Coming to the end of the Time Life Encylopedia of Collectibles Beads to Boxes book. Meanwhile there’s some interesting thoughts on my recent and ongoing efforts on if book.