28.9.08

Cliptomania Comics

Hello friends!
Even tho this started at the beginning of the semester, I thought I should promote the webcomic I have started with my roommate. It's called CLIPTOMANIA, and follows the theme of Married to the Sea and Wondermark, which captions old clipart.
The site is updated Mondays and Fridays at http://www.cliptomaniacomics.com/
The comics are also published in NAU's weekly newspaper, the Lumberjack, which I also write OP/ED for. They are censored there, so it is best to read them online.
Here are three to get you started. Bookmark the site or do that RSS thing, whatever.
I hope you enjoy this small side project of mine.

25.9.08

Warless

Albert Einstein:
"The pioneers of a warless world are the youth that refuse military service."

I find it fascinating that the most noble and moral people throughout history were also anti-war. Einstein, Gandhi, Mother Theresa, Buddha, Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoy, Lysander Spooner, and of course, Jesus.
They weren't just anti-this war. They were anti-ALL war.

On the other hand, those that most supported war were crooked, wretched men such as Hitler, Stalin, FDR, Bush (senior and junior), Nixon, LBJ, Mao, Castro, Saddam Hussein, Caesar, etc.

Am I missing anyone who was a moral person who supported violence by the state? Anyone who hugged the bomb as well as un-aborted babies? Probably, but they aren't the norm. People who think war is a solution to their nation's problems are evil, evil people.

Now, my point is this: Obama supports war in Pakistan, Darfur and Afghanistan. McCain supports war everywhere.

You really think voting is going to make a difference?

22.9.08

Climbing up the Walls




I dream graffiti. I envision its spectacular array of colors and hues that shape into words and artwork. Each composition seems to speak a message to me that I can never translate into consciousness. Emotions, perceptions and memories of both the past and future meld with sensations that open eyelids cannot recreate.
In my visions, I take it, I taste it, I breathe it, I create it. Sometimes I get caught, sometimes I am free. Sometimes I am the wall itself.
Words, gibberish, like AKEP and KUK or BLIND and GIRL appear to me, but I can’t decipher their meaning.
I awake with a sense of emptiness, the soul exhaustion of an artistic wet dream.
Nothing as good as you imagine it.

*

When I started doing graffiti, less than a year ago, my stencils covered my neighborhood. For weeks, everywhere I looked made me smile. I feel I made my community a more vibrant and interesting place.
Since I’ve returned from the east coast, I noticed a lot of sticker vandalism and tagging scrawls all over my neighborhood, much more than usual. My artwork was long painted over. Now it is replaced with the scraggly handwriting of several self-indulged teenagers.
Behind Krupa’s sausages is one of my stencils of a pig, captioned “eat me”. It used to be the only graffiti on the entire wall. Now it is covered with names and aliases of a handwriting test gone wrong. I wonder, did I start this trend? Was I the can opener for this cylinder of vermin?
My first reaction is to despise it, to see it as an eyesore, just like cops or senior citizens would. The uncreative people who seek to uniform my city and keep it grey.
I always say that tagging is better than nothing. Better some awful John Hancock than a boring, blank electrical box. But my reaction contradicts this.
I wonder if I’m being socially conditioned or what. I want to appreciate it somehow, because it represents a scene I stand for, but I’m not sure I can.

*

I traveled to east Flag to visit a thrift store to buy some clothes. The store was cramped with incredibly worthless crap, even for Salvation Army. Most of the furniture was in a lot behind back. It had recently rained and all their wares were soaked or worse, looked like they’d been there for a few seasons. I was disappointed that the only appeal of the store was that is was incredibly mismanaged.
I soon felt like Flagstaff was lacking something. I saw it everywhere and I couldn’t shake the feeling. I needed to leave.
I went to Phoenix the following day, more escaping the Mountains than visiting the Valley. But the feeling didn’t leave. I found decay in everything I laid eyes on. I had changed the filter, but not the view.
I couldn’t take it and so I took comfort in the small things I could find. Or I tried.
However, I still can’t describe what I was searching for, or better yet, what was missing.

*

Downtown had this entire wall of graffiti, urban art, street art. Very detailed, delicate murals, everything incoherent to me. It was such a public street, I wondered if it was commissioned. There was some Dr. Suess art behind a liquor store that was obviously encouraged, and I began to lose interest. The murals I gazed upon and snapped up with my point-and-shoot camera were the material that I only dream of, but somehow, if they were done legally, for money even, they lost value to me.
I don’t really understand it. The medium versus the message once again.
But I gazed anyway. The street was quiet, even in broad daylight, so perhaps it was a genuine target for illegal art. I don’t know.
But I turned the corner and discovered some wheatpastes that were so incredibly creepy and offensive that I knew there were unauthorized. Later, I found an abandoned building that someone had tacked up some personal paintings onto the walls. And then the dumpster dripping misspelled tags. Something personal, something authentic.
They made things okay again.
I felt comfortable dreaming again, and I returned to my doors and my schedules and my assigned reading and my pillow.

13.9.08

Burn After Reading


Burn After Reading, the lovely new Coen brothers film combines the violence and mirth of Pulp Fiction with the brothers other popular flick, Fargo. There is a scene towards the end completely mimicking Fargo, but in a great way because it takes the action much further than the 1996 thriller.

Brad Pitt and George Clooney slid into character like gloves, becoming as asinine as could be. Were it not for Clooney's clumsy paranoia and Pitt's idiotic charm, the movie would barely be a comedy.

The soundtrack was intensely paranoid and dark, perhaps to make up for No Country for Old Men, the Coen Brother's previous film, which completely lacked music.

Slow at the beginning and sparse with jokes, Burn almost has confused identity. Is it thriller or dark comedy? It barely matters, because the gruesome violence fills up any remaining space, picking up pace until the strange, satirical finish that ends unclimatically (but not unsatisfying).

Burn After Reading is in the classic style of their classic creators, producing a tastefully blended piece that many fans will enjoy.

12.9.08

Brandalism


Capitalism makes everything available to everyone. You know the coke you drink is the same as the coke the president sips slouching on his fat ass, the same coke as the homeless niggers drink, the same coke as those posers in high school guzzled.
So you gotta invent brands, basically the same product, maybe even manufactured in the same sweatshops, but much, much more expensive. Then the poor kids or the hipsters can't afford or won't afford to buy your shitty five dollar bottled water and 400 dollar jeans.

Maybe there is a slight difference in taste, wear-and-tear, color, maybe you notice it, but that doesn't matter. What matter is now you can glare down your nose at those that cannot afford a logo. You've recreated the social hierarchy. Once you were equal, now you are divided again.
You are better than them again.

11.9.08

Choke trailer and interview with Chuck P.

Excited for the movie? This trailer is tame. However: pretty interesting story with Chuck. The interviewer sucked, but Chuck is a great orator and can use even boring questions to his advantage. Worth checking out.


http://bordersmedia.com/backlot/choke.asp?cmpid=SL_20080911_REW

4.9.08

Keepin' Up

I've done some things recently I thought were worth sharing. It will make this past week seem like it was non-stop fun and adventure because I'm going to leave out the parts where I slept and had a few issues with boredom and depression and those tedious classes I had to attend. Let it be.I broke into this abandoned roadside stop on the I-40 with some friends. I smashed shit up and stole some artifacts and took some nice film pictures.

I got some space on Gawker, meaning my art profile and a link to my flickr stream will appear in the place of ads on certain, generous websites. Awesome, huh? Look: http://artists.gawker.com/5044672/mene-tekel

I pushed my girlfriend, Gean, downhill in this cart. Freaked her out.
For two bucks, I bought a huge stack of stickers for this awful band that my girlfriend loathes. I stuck them all over campus, just to piss her off. She found out it was me. Now whenever Gean sees one of these, she punches me, hard. I just laugh.

It's an inside joke that's all around us. I love her.

2.9.08

Who Killed Amanda Palmer?

by Mene Tekel

Dresden Dolls frontwoman Amanda Palmer has released a solo work with Ben Folds, East Bay Ray of the Dead Kennedys and more.


With a more clever and less pretentious air, the album "Who Killed Amanda Palmer?" sounds better than the D.D. work she's done. The album's loose concept, with an introduction written by Neil Gaiman (Stardust), is that Amanda Palmer, a super celebrity in leagues with Anna Nicole Smith, died, leaving a legend bigger than her life.


Tracks like "Runs in the Family" and "Guitar Hero" prove Palmer's music is stronger and rejuvenated, giving her "death" a new life.