Saturday, November 20, 2004

Gargoyles, Weddings, & Bill Hicks

Newsbits from the Land o' Tif: I'll be away for a while and it's unlikely I'll post. Instead, I should be lighting candles and floating them down Thai rivers during the Loi Krathong festival in Sawankhalok and being part of my friends' wedding in Chennai, India.

Writing: Gargoyle editor Richard Peabody claims he's going to publish my story "Mary's Egg" this winter. Hurrah! I know it's fashionable for writers to pretend to hate their work, but I actually love this odd little slip of a thing and I'm delighted she'll be out there in print soon.

And: our friends at the Stare network have partnered with Soft Skull Press on a new project about the amazing comedian Bill Hicks. Perhaps you'll be contributor? Read more at whatwouldbillhickssay.com.

Tuesday, November 16, 2004

Event Photos - Exquisite Language

Among our performers were:
Haiku Inferno
Sarah Dougher
Linda Austin; also below, with WW review
Nora McCrea, pictured left

Our delightful patrons included a cute baby, a balcony full of splendid people, raffle winners & raff-MCs, and that cute baby & friends again. Plus we created and read aloud Magnetic Poetry.

Our crew included the charming Tamara reprising her duties as 2GQ's official Raffle Elf, 2 Gyrlz Quarterly consulting art director Josh Berger, Andrew Hansen on sound with Technical Director Jonathan Wright, and Magnetic MC Miss Tif Eye.

Performance Review: "Exquisite Language"

Dominic Luxford reviewed our show in the 11/10/2004 issue of Willamette Week. Here it is, along with photographs taken by our own Steve Fritz.

Performance Review: "Exquisite Language"

Artistic boundaries were effectively overrun during last Thursday evening's "Exquisite Corpse" event, part of the monthlong Enteractive Language Festival put on by Portland's 2 Gyrlz Performative Arts. The term "exquisite corpse" refers to a project in which a group of artists collaborate to form a single piece of art—a poem, for instance—knowing only part, if anything of what the other artists are contributing. It's been called an attempt to reveal the "unconscious reality in the personality of the group," and is apt not only as a title for the event that occurred last Thursday, but a metaphor for the entire artistic genre-blurring EL-fest.

The event (performance? party?), which took place at the Heathman Hotel's exquisitely decorated Tea Room, was organized in part to celebrate the work of dozens of artists from around the world, who participated in the creation of exquisite corpse poems. On hand was a motley crew of artists and musicians and around 100 exquisitely dressed attendee-participants (peacock feathers, knee-high leather boots and oversized plastic pearl necklaces amid a small sea of black).

As we downed martinis and created art on magnetic poetry sets (one per table), we witnessed a steady stream of artistic ventures inspired by the concept of an exquisite corpse. Among them were Miss Murgatroid on accordion, Haiku Inferno providing crowd-pleasers such as "Fell in love with a ham sandwich/ Lord didn't say it's wrong!", and Linda Austin dancing with a Medusa head extended from her waist (for hair: phone cords attached to bells and plastic eyeballs). The evening was probably what philistines talk about when they talk about art, but maybe also what New York's art elite talks about. As much as anything else, the art was the event itself. (Dominic Luxford)

Saturday, November 13, 2004

Thanks, everyone!

Our Exquisite Language event at the Heathman was lovely. Thanks to all participants, performers, guests, and kind donors! We got a nice review in Willamette Week's current issue, too. I'm glad y'all got something out of the exquisite madness. The new issue of 2 Gyrlz Quarterly is available at Powell's, Q is for Choir, Laughing Horse Books, Broadway Books, In Other Words, and elsewhere around Portland. Mail order is available at 2GQ.org. I'll post photos when I get back from India next month.