Monthly Archives: May 2009

Anglesey

Anglesey

Anglesey, 1995

Despite trying to post in sequence and show development of the print making work from my 2nd year at loughborough, i find myself at a bit of a loss in terms of documentation and therefore i need to digging deeper into portfolios and perhaps even shoot some new photos of old work.

In the meantime this is a photo taken on the bleak northern coast of Anglesey. I think it was my third time to Anglesey, having been there twice while at Shelly High School. LCAD took 40 or so brave souls up there for a week of drawing from the landscape and literally being blown off the cliff faces. i think it was meant to be a sculpture trip, Paul Gent and i tagged along for the ride with a few other painters. i forget exactly when we were there but i know it was fairly nice that week in L’boro and suitably shitty on Anglesey. It’s a barren, windswept place, that the RAF seems to like using for low level practice flights. I always enjoyed trips the island and we had a whale of a time up there making drawings, hiking to kwik save for cheap wine and other such hijinks.

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Cage / Flag / Structure

cage-flag-structure

Untitled, lino cut and collage, 1996

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Don’t talk to me about class, I’ve been to Leeds!

cage / bridge / module etc

Sketchbook page, lino cut on photocopy, 1996

Wow. totaly cubist (ha ha ha, pun intended). isometric-ish on the top face of the cube. in one point perspective on the bottom face, 2 spatial realities braque would be proud, and then that’s super imposed on a photocopy of a terraced houses in Leeds from above. it’s basic mistakes like this that make me cringe sometimes and others LOL. i think in this instance a bit of both, as i only just noticed the mistake!

anyhow i digress. this image is a good segue from the “module” bridge drawings, into modular prints. this body of work got me out of the painting dept, and into the printing dept at loughborough. i say got, all i really did was cut some lino and wander into print making to see Gill or Karen and print a bunch of stuff. the faculty in print making were very laid back and very welcoming. i spent a lot of time in there. at first making small lino cuts, one color etc, then working on more complicated 3, 4, 5 color linos. why i never learnt screen printing at that time is just beyond me as it would have been so much easier to do this work and to make awesome work now. but that’s that.

this image marks a departure from the sprawling, octopus like, chaotic morass of structure, girders, supports, buttressing and so forth that characterized the early drawings, and instead takes the form of a simple cross braced building block. in retrospect this shape readily assumes the character of a cage, a cell of some kind. not entirely trapping the detainee perhaps but nonetheless it’s is there visually.

the print making was a natural progression with the work, it meant i could clone / reproduce the modules easily and in diverse fashions. working outside painting dept was awesome and interacting with a whole new bunch of artists was really enriching, and some life long friendships were established. over next few days i’ll hope fully post a few of the notable prints from that period, before we lurch back to the sculptural / installation works that followed.

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more bridges

bridge-4

Sketchbook page, pen on paper, 1996

Ok i’m starting to get a bit bored posting these, but on the flip side i want to show the progression in thinking, the structures here become more reductive, and i try to use more visual “weight” or mass to epitomise the “burden” on the dwellings. plus u got more detail and overall workedness….. these drawings led to a whole bunch of prints which i’ll start posting soon….

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Octopus Enclosure

bridge-octopus

Untitled (octupus enclosure), pen on paper, 1996

Another drawing from my sketchbook. With this piece i started thinking more about the structures as enclosing or strangling the houses / dwellings. I like the lone chimney and the wisp of smoke in the center of the composition. i also enjoy the escher-eqse convoluted collapsing of space.

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bridge to nowhere…..

bridge-2

Untitled (bridge to nowhere), pen on paper, 1996

This drawing taken from my sketchbook was the 2nd of a series of drawings, prints, paintings and eventually sculpture (installations) that i produced in my second semester of my second year at loughborough. for me this work has always been pivotal in my development as an artist. by the end of semester 1 of the 2nd year i think it’s fair to say i was flailing around. working from the landscape just wasn’t working out and i really really didn’t know what i was doing. the “skills” i was looking for weren’t really being taught and it was pretty much left up to you to figure out what it was you wanted to make and why. like i said i was pretty lost and losing my way with each turn.

at some point i made a sketch / lino cut of a bridge that led nowhere sitting atop a bunch of semi detached houses. at the time i think it was more about my personal sense of being confused but rightaway it became a great metaphor for a critique of culture / society / politics etc but done in a non-didactic, not preachy, ambiguous way.

bridge-2 detail

Untitled (bridge to nowhere) detail, pen on paper, 1996

to my mind it goes something like this, the bridge represents a structure (or system) with a purpose. a bridge can cross a chasm, ford a river, link two sides, cultures etc. but a bridge and other structures like it require foundations, supports etc. the houses on the other represent people. so the bridge without foundations is held up by the people, and as such it’s as much a burden on them as it is a force for change or progress. and so i started making many images based on these ideas of structures and bridges and the like that serve a progressive agenda but can be used equally as oppressive mechanisms. like all good art students i was pretty sure i knew what was best for society in general and so to be fair these works were intended as a critique of the “normal” folk working their days jobs yadda yadda. at least to begin with anyway. so that the job is this oppresive activity that keeps us in our place and the bridge is this unattainable goal to strive for. but it turns out it goes to nowhere. pretty standard pseudo marxist student thinking. but at the time it was good for me to have a subject to work with and something i felt strongly aobut in the work once more.

rendell-st

Rendell St., Loughborough, Leicestershire.

This is the house is shared with Andy and Rob at the time. I think living down by the canal and near to the railway had a big influence on this “bridge” work. I was also reading Iain Banks stuff at the time, which is very dark and also quite critical of society, particularly his novel “The Bridge” where a car crash victim trapped in a coma imagines this whole city located on a bridge, the novel describes his struggles with trying to overcome the dream and return to reality. (clearly i borrowed a few ideas from Banks on this series.) I think later i was reading William Gibson who also used the bridge metahpor for 2 of his novels taking the Golden Gate bridge in SF as a post apocalyptic community. Anyhow Loughborough was always kind of post apocalyptic so it kinda fitted later on. Also around that time i went to Bangor in Wales and was impressed with the bridges out there.

After a while the bridge work became less and less about the critique element and more about making constructions and making formalist aesthetic decisions, which in turn led to the Studio Installation i posted here: http://tomburtonwood.com/2009/studio-installation-circa-1996/ this installation was my attempt to “get inside” the structures and create the all encompassing art experience, influenced fairly heavily by Arakawa and Madeline Gins and their concept of Reversible Destiny http://reversibledestiny.org/home.php….. anyhow so everything pretty much came full circle the bridge to nowhere became this literal bridge to new expression for me and opened my practice up to many new ways of thinking and working. sure enough i still lost the plot from time to time and have veered in many new directions since but these simple drawings were enough to devise a new trajectory for my practice which until then had been me working from life, drawing and trying to paint with little success and not really getting it!

the funny thing as i go thru all this old work and try to place it into context with each other and the new stuff is realizing the threads going thru all of it. systems, structures, representations of these things but also practical deployable infrastructure, ying and yang of adminstration, form and function.

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Studio Installation 1996/97

studio-installation

Studio Installation, mixed media, 1996 / 97

2 images, which i think are photographs of slides projected in the studio. At this time i was doing a lot of studio scale installations, building the total environment pieces, photographing them as slides, and projecting them back onto the installation in question or some other construction in the studio. So the effect was to break up the space several times and fragment it in interesting ways. these two images are i think projected onto a blank wall however. but u get the general idea. sections of the studio were painted deep strong colors and pieces of wood and other material were used to break up and section the space. sort of painting in space, this was for the me the apex of my “structural work” and from this point i veered off into making earth works.with these installations i encouraged the viewer to physically interact with the work, in order to experience the entire room it was necessary to clamber over pallets and other obstacles stacked up in the space. These items were also painted and arranged according to my taste. i think inm the end i got tired of the profound difficulty at knowing what to take from this and how to see it beyond my studio environment. i think in many ways it was more an incubatory for me to find a way of working more so than an end result. that said, this is exactly the type of large scale installation i’d like to find a way to produce. later on in carbondale the unfolding sculptures were an attempt to create an easily deployable module that unfolded could produce a level of spatial fragmentation like these pieces. i think that one recurring theme in all my work, and with holly too, has been portability. from time to time i make works that are patently impossible to move easily and these pieces are the flip side of the drive towards mobility. but i keep coming back to this MANPORT / MANPAD production. …. hmmm. (p.s. sorry about all the dust, i need ot clean the scanner).

studio-installation01

Studio Installation, mixed media, 1996 / 97

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Column, LCAD degree show part II

column

Column, earth, wood, 1997

Sculpture from degree / thesis show at Loughborough College of Art, 1997. This piece  was made using a plywood mold in 2 sections. prior to dumping any of the dirt inside i insert the "space frame" a sol le wit ish construction. this exo skeleton was intended to help keep the piece together. however when it came time to deinstall the sculpture withstood several blows from a pick axe to even put a dent in it. in the end i had to push it over. which given that i thought in was going to fall over is pretty cool.

this general idea with this piece was to create something that was life size, by which i mean to scale with with me the artist. i was influenced by david smith at the time and his idea of a piece that one could see over, …. just…. on tip toes. the rest of the installation had a piece the was much taller than a person (the pyramid) and one that in longer than a person but on the floor and one that we can step over easily.

of the whole installation this piece became the most "representational" in the sense that it immediately resembled a core sample taken from the earth. the part about the piece i found most fascinating was how the sections of earth transcribed my moods. for instance there was a period when i was working when i was feeling very discombobulated later on i could point out that specific section so in that sense the column recorded a moment in time.

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comedy friday

"working lunch", high school art.... 1992?

Working Lunch, Ceramic and spray paint, 1992/1993

it’s friday night, so i’m uploading a comedy piece. it’s a ceramic that i did at high school i think in like 1992 maybe ’91, it has since been trashed i think (i hope), u totally cannot really tell, but it’s meant to be a sandwich with a yorkshire style mill on top of it, “working lunch” …. geddit? the pyschadelic blobby thing below the black mass is how i wrote my name at the time “tom” all crazy stylee, would be better if i had 2 separate photos one of each “Artwork”. significantly i photographed both items on top of a trash can. also it’s a nice blue that makes the whole image bearable in my opinion.

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Studio / bedroom… 1st year at L’boro

room / studio, 1st year LCAD

Studio view, 1995

My first year at LCAD i shared a room in the halls of residence with Andrew Poulter. Andy went on to do his MA at Chelsea College of Art in London then disappear off the face of the earth. His paintings were clemente-esqe and u can see one of them to the left nestled between the larger blue canvas on the right nad the tree of the left. i was utterly lost at this point in my art practice and was borrowing from Andy a bit in terms of figurative stuff, hence the blue canvas on the wall. i guess the arm is “reaching” for something… a figure that seems to be backing away. maybe i knew this figurative stuff wasn’t for me at the time and this painting tells truth. who knows… but i loved the fact we painted in there 24 hours a day all the time to the banging sounds of the KLF, 808 State and any acid house tape Andy could lay his hands on. I think for a while we had every tape, LP and bootleg CD of the KLF in all it’s various guises and would belt them out much to the chargrin of our neighbors i think. the lights we always low and the curtains drawn. Andy painted in these super bright colors but when u took his canvases outside to transport them to school for crits they were like sun beams, painfully bright….. the tree was dragged in one night, i think i wanted to draw from nature so instead of leave the studio we brought nature inside, albeit a dead tree. i think we kept it till pretty much the end of the year. when we moved out we filled the holes in the walls with cotton wool and covered them with paper and corn flakes to simulate the wall paper…. Andy if u r out there and u find this post email me: tom@tomburtonwood.com

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drawing of kitchen

kitchen

Kitchen, pencil on paper, 1994

photo i scanned in is a wee bit blurry, i will try and reshoot from original at some point. this drawing was a big fav at the time and still is when i think back to that time.

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“web site”

"web site" 2001

Vinyl Sticker, 2001

my first “stickerguy” sticker, small one…. i like this graphic a lot… it’s basic and not very high tech or even that well rendered but i;ve always like the idea of the web site as a portable structure, one that is accessible anywhere on the internet, a home from home of sorts…. something that inhabits the internet…. so the dome tent fits perfectly with this notion and even expands on it somewhat, the structure of the dome is kinda de-centralized, could be interpeted as an a web, a network, nodes and pathways…. i plan to re-commission this sticker fairly soon so expect to see them around town. ;)

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First land art project

First land art

Untitled (?), dirt, 1993

This is a photograph of the first “land art” i made and the first collaboration i really made. Dated somewhere between 1993 and 1994, this piece was the result of a collaboration between Simon Hankinson and myself. For me i found the whole process of collaborating on this piece very hard. at the time i had no idea what i wanted to do with the piece, and it really did not relate directly at all to what i was doing in the studio. Simon has this idea of cutting into the landscape, and neither of us had heard of Michael Heizer at the time. So we selected a clearing, in a copse of trees, half way up a hill, on the foothills of the Pennines. It lay across the M62 from the village of Outlane. The copse was in a public area accessed by trudging thru a golf course. So for several, usually soggy, saturdays we went up to this area and bumbled about first with string and so forth to lay out a patch to cut and then spades and shovels to clear 2-3 inches of sod from the ground and expose a wide but shallow trench. Presumably it’s overgrown and gone at this point. perhaps a minor dimple still exists marking our exertions. One day maybe i’ll go back up there and take a look and see if i can find it again. Anyhow this was during my time at Dewsbury College (now Batley School of Art i think). The faculty weren’t encouraging us to do much of anything at the time, let alone collaborate with each other (god forbid) or making land art. So in that sense this was a great project for me at the time as it opened my eyes up to other ways of working that weren’t just marks on paper or daubing on canvas. But i was way too closed off in my thinking to really appreciate what we were doing or why. It’s funny how i spent most of my youth trying to be this really conventional (traditional) artist and now i’m older i really don’t care less. Shouldn’t it work the other way round, blaze a trail in your youth and get more refined with age? i guess that’s the avant garde way, so i missed that boat too… i dunno. any how i’ve totally lost touch with Simon now and i’d really like to get in touch with him, so Simon if you’ve been googling yourself and found this web page / image please email me at tburtonwood@gmail.com i’d love to catch up and see what you are working on.

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Two Carbondale constructions

carbondale-constructions01

Untitled, scrap wood, 1999(?)

Two wood constructions from Carbondale, temporarily installed at the Glove Factory These “pieces” may actually have been built for my drawing students to work from.

carbondale-constructions

Untitled (Raft of the Medusa), scrap wood, 1999(?)

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from foundation year, dewsbury college

photo from foundation year at dewsbury college

Photograph

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Studio installation circa 1996

Studio installation at LCAD

Studio installation, mixed media, 1996

This was the installation that started it all. Documentary shots don’t do it justice, but it was an exciting spatial composition, in reds, yellows and blues, sort of a three – dimensional mondrian, not quite as elegant of course, but it was super exciting for me at the time

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High School

high school art
this is old school, high school to be precise. in keeping with standard curriculum requirements i repeated an album cover in several techniques, — i think i picked a suitably adolescent image though.

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Blue and Red

Blue and Red

Blue and Red, pastel, 14.25 x 16.5 inches, 1996, Private Collection.

This piece was produced somewhere in the middle of my Loughborough experience, but is actually a product of summers spent in sunny Huddersfield. From about 1992 thru 1998 i worked on and off as a studio assistant for David Blackburn an artist based in Huddersfield, Yorkshire. A lot of the drawings i made during this period were influenced greatly by my experience working for him.

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Mobile Sculpture: drawing

lander-drawing

Sketch for lander, graphite on paper, 2000

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Tibor Kalman: Fuck Committees

tibor kalman: fuck committees

Fuck Committees, Tibor Kalman.

Tibor Kalman was a big influence on my thesis show work in Carbondale. This text is from “Tibor Kalman, Perverse Optimist” edited by Peter Hall and Michael Bierut, pub. Princeton Architectural Press (September 1, 2000). Upon reading this text i knoew i had to convene my own committees to decide on my projects for me. ;)

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Mobile Sculpture: Lander

postcard

Lander, Cardboard and mixed media, 2000

Lander was the next generation of mobile sculptures i produced at SIUC. The Lander was a in military speak a MANP (Man Portable) sculpture. Drawing inspiration from the Apollo Eagle Lunar Lander the piece folded into a compact rectangle that could be carried as a backpack. A standard camera tripod provided legs to raise the Lander off the ground. The sections were intended to resemble solar panels or some kind of sensor array. Once again i painted it a bright yellow for maximum disruption when set up in public.

bluff300

Apart from creating some kind of absurd intervention, this piece was the first system sculpture. Traveling first from Carbondale via Amtrak to Chicago, then by air from Chicago to Minneapolis (via Kansas City) and back again this piece was an early stab at developing an administrative art work. Lander was a super important work for me as it focused in on a range of themes and practices that would shape my development both at Carbondale and later here in Chicago.

post300

First and foremost it got the work out there. In a real physical sense. Not only was the work shipped around the Midwest but at each location it was installed on the street for 10 – 15 minutes and passed out information to passersby. Each intervention was documented with photographs and later in the gallery these images were combined with maps showing each site. Apart from the simple act of getting visibility this project cemented the DIY ethos that would define pretty much everything i have done since as an artist and arts professional. In a wider sense this piece symbolized the transportation of ideas, creating networks, developing “integrated systems.” All concepts that again would prove key to my thesis show and later to my practice. And oddly enough for me this piece was pre-internet, sure i was using email, and thinking about web sites and so forth but it was still dot com bubble land, ie it wasn’t utterly ubitquitous. For me this piece was about tracking an object of intellectual curiousity through physcial space, as one might track a package via fed ex.

UPDATE 08/29/09

APS filmstrip for Lander project, 2000

APS Filmstrip showing different installations in MPLS, 2000

Digging thru boxes tidying the studio and found this image, of showing various installations of Lander in and around Uptown in Minneapolis during the Thanksgiving break in the fall of 2000. I love the format of this APS filmstrip, a sort of pre-digital image, or at least a transitional technology that if anything was a signal of the eventual demise of 35mm (135) camera film. Anyhow i love how this image shows all the different states, with a numerical designation in the bottom left corner and so forth. At some point i’ll upload further documentation of the project and possibly build a small sub-website to tell the story completely.

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Mobile Sculpture, Carbondale, IL, 2000

shoesnstuff

This is one of my first experiments with mobile sculpture / art that can be deployed easily (in public, or elsewhere). This piece was constructed using cardboard boxes hoarded from the local liquor store, embedded around a garment rack and painted bright yellow. the intention at best was to create something utterly jarring to the every day, something completely absurd and drag it around the strip in carbondale for a photo opportunity. i guess i wasn’t really concerned with getting reaction / feedback from the public, as we did the “deployment” early one morning when the sky was blue but everyone else was still sleeping. gorilla suit assistance from David Lohman who helped in many significant and diverse ways thru carbondale experience 1998 – 2001 and onwards.

looking back and forwards i think the intention behind this piece is just fine, and again like a lot of my carbondale era work there’s a lot of humor in it, the materials- recyced cardboard and glue, are still staples of my diet here in chicago, so i can see more of these sculptures on the horizon, i’d like to cut the garment rack out and just make these lumpy balls, make maybe 10-15 different sizes, different colors and roll them around my neighborhood, i think that would be a lot of fun…..

gorilla lookin puzzled

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Loughborough College of Art thesis show

Installation view of thesis show, Loughborough College of Art/Design, June 1997

Installation view, June 1997

This photograph shows the second room of two that comprised my thesis show for Loughborough College of Art and Design (now Loughborough University) which i attended from 1994 – 97. Although it might not be immediately apparent i graduated with a BA Hons in Painting. This image shows the three key sculptural contributions to the exhibit. I’m ont entirely clear on the titles for the pieces anymore, but as i dig thru the “archive” i’l ltry and remedy that.

The three pieces were conceived of as a suite of sculptural works each complimenting and playing off the others. I was really influenced by artists like David Smith and Robert Morris at the time. I designed the installation around ideas related to  my body (and the human form in general), working process and to a lesser degree physical exertion. I excavated all the material used in this installation, apart from a wee bit of wood. My mine head was in the parking lot behind the studio buildings and i could be seen digging and moving with my wheel barrow most days and weekends.

The long piece on the ground was meant to be something that we could have “power” over, in the sense that u could walk over it easily / trample on and destroy it easily. Behind this piece which i think was titles “fulcrum” or “pivot” or something along those lines, is the mud ball pyramid.This was intended to “Activate” the room, being both taller than any person at approx 8 feet and have a significant prtesence on the floor 4 feet square, so that it formed a bridge of sorts between the floor and the ceiling. to the right of both the floor and pyramid pieces is a column of earth. This piece was a play on the idea David Smith coined of creating something that is close to the same height of a person, so that on tip toes one can see over it, but standing normally it’s perhaps a little intimidating. in this fashion the installation as a whole was intended to engage the viewer physically from above, below and around.

The pyramid piece was, i think, titled “A Process of Repetition,” a good solid student-y title….. but i dunno that’s what it was. i’ll talk about this piece in more detail another time. There are several aspects about it that i still enjoy to this day, mostly quirks of the process of making that later would result in imperfections in the form, these variances are represented in the form and i have always considered them a vital part of the final piece. i’ll post about this specifically as soon as i can find a stand alone image of this piece.

to the right of the mudball pyramid is a rectangular piece that in many ways looks like a core sample extracted from the earth. for this piece i also plan to post an image and a detailed analysis, but suffice to say this piece was probably my fav from the show, tho’ the mud balls are a close close second. i designed the “core sample,” title forgotten for now, much the same way concrete is poured into a form. Plywood box, in two parts, filled with successive layers of dirt. a “sol le wit” type space frame was inserted into the mold first, it’s dimensions such that it fit exactly in side, flush to the walls of the form. i thought i would need this in order to keeep it upright but later when i deinstalled the piece it became apparent that the piece did a fine job of standing up by itself. even so, i still enjoy the addition of the wood, and how it sections the earth sections.

the plan is to post about each piece in more detail and so i’ll do that later.

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fragments / on a white background

DSCN5199.JPG

Untitled, 09/06/2009. This sequence of frames is taken from the roof of the Cultural Center here in Chicago using my now kaput Nikon Coolpix Camera. THe funny thing about this image for me is it harkens back to a series of “formalist” pieces i made back at SIUC in 1998. This series was also derived from images shot in Chicago, back then i had no idea i’d end up living here. I was visiting friends and awestruck by the city and the architecture. back in carbondale i guess it made sense to reduce these buildings into small fragments, and create rythmns and patterns with these smaller chunks. what i like about this image is that the fragmentation is entirely arbitary, decided pretty much by the shutter speed and the camera itself, and my pointing it in a given direction.  i’ll attempt a better analysis of this work l8r as i think this vein was / is pretty rich for me and is something i want to explore more comprehensively thru this forum. but for now here is a taster of things to come.

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new project

tom-at-next

in an effort to record and archive my various art world activities, history and practices more effectively i’ve started this blog / web site. over the next few months i plan to dig out photos of friends (current and past), long lost buddies who still abstain from facebook, art works that until now exist mostly on slide or negative, writings that never saw it past student dom, and other miscellany plus ideally current ramblings, new online art works, and day to day observations. i’m not sure facebook is really the place for all this stuff, so i’m putting it up here instead. ok, well here goes. historically i’ve been a super loust diary writer and almost as bad a blogger, so there’s no promise anything of any substance will make it up here, but we’ll see amybe i’ll surprise myself and make this half decent and not half assed.

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Hello world!

Welcome to WordPress.com. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!

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