Author Archive

Trash as Punishment

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

I don’t care if she is a felon mandated to pick up road side trash, Michelle Rodriguez will always have my fandom because Girl Fight rocked my world.

michellerodriguezAnd that cartoon of a surf movie Blue Crush might have been something if she’d been cast as the lead.  I mean seriously, which one looks like she could plausibly be a champion surfer born and raised in Hawai’i—blond twig or buff brown girl?

This shot reminds me of that entertaining week in ’07 when we asked ourselves each morning how Naomi Campbell could keep forgetting she had community service and dress for the runway instead.

Trashtastic Tuesday with Kuros Zahedi

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

I posted a week or two ago that Sustainable Dave‘s recycling materials might be made into a work of art.  It was something I’d read on 365 Days of Trash, making a mental note to follow up and find out just who the artist could be.  As luck would have it, that artist found me first.

Kuros Zahedi, self portrait in powdered alder wood and bark on paper

Kuros Zahedi, self portrait in powdered alder wood and bark on paper

His name is Kuros Zahedi and he comes with excellent credentials: experience in working with recycled materials, an ongoing project to turn Ari Derfel of Save Your Trash‘s trash into a work of art  and a kick ass Persian name (we’re partial to Iranian-Americans around here).

What better way to kick off the first Trashtastic Tuesday of the new year?

everydaytrash: How did you link up with Ari Derfel?

Zahedi: Ari was looking for an artist to turn his collection into a work of art.  He looked the monster in the eye and by doing so put the whole phenomenon of garbage under a lens for everyone.  Ari was Finding Away.  That is title of the art work.

I was involved with a project for a great group in Seattle called Sustainable Capitol Hill.  One of the organizers had a friend who was friends with Ari.  One year’s worth of trash!  What a potent collection to work with, I thought!   I emailed and shared my work.  Ari wrote back.  We talked on email.  We talked on the phone.  I liked Ari immediately.  I liked his energy, his upbeat positivity, spirituality and openness… and the next thing I knew, I was on my way to Oakland.

Ari's trash

Ari's trash

everydaytrash: What are your plans for his trash?

Zahedi: I have counted, weighed and thoroughly documented Ari’s trash and am now starting to take it apart.  It will get crushed, cut and pulped.  It will be totally transformed.

Ari Derfel’s collection brings Trash itself into unusual focus.  Looking deeply into the essence of waste reveals much more than the filth of landfills.  Trash is the precipitate of a much larger reaction.  It stands as a symbol of civilization’s disjointedness and as an emblem of our historic destructiveness and greed toward each other and the earth’s precious ecology.  Today, not only are the earth’s biological systems on the verge of breaking down, but many raw natural resources that civilization depends on are becoming increasingly rare.  EITHER there will be terrible fighting for these resources, leading to suffering on a unimaginable scale, OR there will have to be some sort of major shift in human consciousness, a general enlightenment.

The art work I am developing is a metaphoric vision of this shift.  It will depict humanity collectively rising and working together transform ugliness into beauty, the damaging into the beneficial, and the fragmented into the whole.

everydaytrash:
What other work have you done with rubbish materials?

Zahedi: I have an ongoing series called Urban Alchemy in which I pick up litter from the streets, often with the help of communities, and then transform the collected trash into art.  My fascination with using trash has a lot to do with its iconic status as the lowest of low and the powerful symbolism of turning it into a work of art.  Often, by the time a piece is finished, the place which was cleaned for it has started to become dirty again, but like an acupuncture needle, a subtle good has been done there. The gesture of cleaning a place and turning the garbage into art is tiny in relation to the enormous challenges facing humanity today, but the project is a metaphor, it is a symbolic act of healing.

"Garden of Hope," created from Seattle street litter, staples, and shellac on recycled doors

"Garden of Hope," created from Seattle street litter, staples, and shellac on recycled doors

everydaytrash: I hear you might do a similar project with Sustainable Dave‘s recycling.  Any teasers you can share about what that project might be like?

Zahedi: I am excited that Dave is planning on sending me his recycling!  His trash is going on permanent display at the Garbage Museum, but I will get his recycling.  Though I have many ideas, I don’t know what I will do with it yet…but using just recyclable materials will present an interesting conceptual challenge.

Lisa Bagwell

Sunday, January 11, 2009

bubblewrap1My little speaking gig at the Princeton Environmental Film Festival led to a wealth of blogable discoveries (thank you Susan Conlon for organizing such a fantastic event).

First up, we have Lisa Bagwell, a trash artist in the audience whose “deepest intention remains to raise people’s awareness of the wasteful and destructive lifestyle lived by most Americans.”  Lisa just  since sent me links to her lovely site and wonderful Flickr pool of sculpture, lamps and mobiles.  I dig the slightly creepy mobiles and this intimidating bottle blimp.

And are those recycled pistachio shells on that lamp shade?  Iranians of the world, take note!

The Penguin

Sunday, January 11, 2009

UPDATED POST:  A while back I got a Penguin soda machine in the mail, thanks to the PR peeps representing Soda-Club.  The pitch: reduce soda can and plastic bottle waste by making your fizzy drinks at home.  The catch: SAMPLE SIZED Soda-Stream flavor syrups come in plastic pouches that can’t be recycled.

morocco-244

Penguin and shrub

Beth over at Fake Plastic Fish came to ethical terms with this dilemma by sticking to the company’s water flavorings, which come in little glass bottles instead of plastic.  Trouble is, I don’t drink much plain or flavored seltzer (unless you count vodka sodas at bars).  I tried out a couple of the sample syrups that came with my machine.  Root beer, too sweet.  Diet cola, tastes JUST like Diet Coke, which I shamefully love.   But I put off posting on the Penguin because, honestly, once I went through the diet coke samples, I only used the thing once to make some lemony water for friends.

morocco-245

flavor packs

I was all set to write just that: I guess it’s cool, but I would never have bought it if it weren’t free and I never use it.  BUT THEN, my wonderful mother gave me an extraordinary gift: a large bottle of raspberry shrub, a fruit vinegar syrup used to make my all time favorite carbonated drink.  Suddenly I’m using the Penguin all the time and sans guilt since shrub can be purchased in bulk and in glass.  SODA-CLUB ALSO SELLS BULK SIZES IN BETTER PACKAGING.

Therefore, it is with great enthusiasm and several reservations that I recommend the Penguin.  On the plus side, it’s very easy to use, a cute design—you carbonate the water by depressing the beak and the whole thing squeeks when its ready—and you can make delicious shrub whenever you want.  On the flip side, it takes up a lot of counter space and it’s expensive (starter kits begin at $200 plus shipping).  THOUGH CHEAPER, SMALLER MODELS ARE AVAILABLE.

Recommendation to Soda-Club: if you’re going for an eco-marketing campaign, DON’T SEND PLASTIC SAMPLES TO GREEN BLOGGERS.

Note to self: save money by mixing vodka sodas at home more often or—moment of genius—vodka shrubs.

DIY SUV

Saturday, January 10, 2009

AfriGadget has a lovely post up for the new year featuring photos by photographer TMS Ruge of Project Diaspora.  This is a car made out of an empty oil bottle with wheels cut from old flip flops.

toy1

Other charming evidence of resourcefulness can be found at the AfriGadget Flikr pool.

Garblogging Links

Friday, January 9, 2009

For those who did and those who did not attend trash day at the Princeton Environmental Film Festival, here are links to the other sites I mentioned in my talk on Garblogging.  All of the everydaytrash items cited can be found by searching the blog (see search box in the top, right corner) and checking out the various categories compiled in a drop-down menu to the right.

  • Visible Trash Society – Fascinating tidbits on the intersections of art and trash from Belgian-based artist and designer, Little Shiva.
  • Olympia Dumpster Divers – New work and interesting finds from trash artist Ruby Re-Usable.
  • ETSY Trashion blog – Profiles of designers and new products from ETSY, a network of independent vendors.
  • Art for Housewives – A fun and jumbled collection of links and ideas on recycling craft projects.
  • Last Night’s Garbage – Ephemeral pairings of images of New York City’s trash with related text.
  • Gutter Envy – Photos of the gutters of New York City that make them look beautiful.
  • Ecorazzi – Celebrity environmental gossip calling out the hypocrites and saluting those who keep their promises.
  • Wasted Food – A garblog about food waste.
  • 365 Days of Trash and Sustainable Dave – The chronicles of one man’s trash over the course of one year and a new site for forward-thinking solutions.
  • Fake Plastic Fish – One woman tracks her plastic use while blogging about our plastic addiction.  Includes great profiles of others out there in the anti-plastic community.
  • Bring Your Own – Ideas for getting away from our disposable culture.
  • The Temas Blog – Environmental news from Latin America.
  • Le Blog de Esther – Fun for francophones interested in trash.
  • Afrigadget – Honoring tech solutions homegrown in Africa, including incredibly creative and resourceful reuse and recycling.
  • Great Green Goods – Eco-friendly shopping ideas.
  • Carnival of the Green calendar (Hosted by Treehugger) – A roving weekly roundup of the best blog posts on environmental issues.

Many, many more garblogs and green blogs and be found on the side bar, to the right.  Please peruse.

More to come on the other content of the day, which included a screening of Bill Kirkos’ film Trashed and a talk by Elizabeth Royte based on her books Garbage Land and Bottlemania.

Tits and Trash

Thursday, January 8, 2009

I’ve been getting an eyeful of  lingerie made of trash by keeping up with fellow garbloggers Little Shiva over at Visible Trash and Ruby Re-Usable of Olympia Dumpster Divers who each highlighted this recent Wall Street Journal article.  Thought I’d share:

pink-tab-bikini-top

This image of a fabulous  number in Tab tabs by eco-artist Ingrid Goldbloom Bloch was ripped from the WSJ article.

wonderbra-by-ruby-re-usable

And Ruby herself constructed this wonderous wonder bra.  For more on Ruby’s work,  check out the Trashtastic Tuesday Q & A she graciously granted everydaytrash back in ’07.

For more on the fun and exciting world of garblogging, come check out my talk at the Princeton Public Library at 4pm today, part of the Princeton Environmental Film Festival.   The trashy lineup includes my talk and a trashy film screening, all opening acts for that trailblazing trashie, Elizabeth Royte.  Any readers out there from Jersey?  Hope to see you at the library this afternoon.  Everyone else stay tuned for the recap.

UPDATE:  Tits and trash are in the air.  Just found this pic of a brassiere planter to raise awareness of, you guessed it, breast cancer on Esther’s blog over at Je me recycle.

bra

Organ Donor

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

My friend Flex Unger has a small recording studio in Brooklyn full of broken toys and good intentions.  A lover of to-do lists, Flex recently went around the studio taking pictures of the things he’d like to fix or convert in the coming months, which he posted on his blog along with short descriptions of the forthcoming projects.

organparts2

Organ parts

[NOTE: This post has been updated to correct gross errors in my understanding of all things technical.  Despite years of wood shop, metal shop, power shop, a class on bike repair and accelerated physics, I still don’t quite get how to take things apart or put them back together again.  Apologies if you rushed out to try these projects at home between 5 and 11pm EST.]

My favorite of these resolutions is the master plan to deconstruct and recycle an old Viscount organ (shown above, in pieces) to make a portable drum machine and build an amplifier and a mini organ.  Inspiration for extracting the organ’s drum machine came from the YouTube clip below; and from a primal calling to amass the world’s largest collection of portable beat-making devices.  The hope is to use a 1/4 inch jack from the organ’s circuitry so that the device can be output into an amp.

Project #2 is an amplifier that will serve purposes equal parts form and function.  Flex has an oven range—rescued from the trash!—attached to a wall that is supposed to reverberate for an echo effect.  If I understand correctly, by extracting the organ’s speaker and its covering, he can a) preserve the attractive vintage fabric look of the Viscount and b) use it to build a makeshift PA that will carry sound over to the oven range.

organ-fabric

Organ fabric

Project #2 has the added bonus of incorporating this rad-looking Zenith tube radio found on the streets of Brooklyn, which will serve as the amplifier.

tuberadio1

Tube radio

For the third and final project, Flex plans to collect the remaining parts and put them back together in the form of a mini-organ.

Stay tuned for progress reports.  And if, by chance, you’re in the market for a green recording studio for your next creative audio project, consider Clean and Humble, a trash and artist-friendly space.

Bottle Bike

Monday, January 5, 2009

Check it:  some kids from Appalachian State University made a bike out of used plastic bottles as part of a Google-sponsored trash challenge.  And won!

bottlebike

Here’s the YouTube of the “Green Machine” in action.  Warning, the stilted narration may flash you back to seventh grade English class.  All worth it, though.  Congrats, guys.

Photo by Monte Mitchell for the Winston-Salem Journal

Speaking of the Museum of Trash…

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

…that’s where Sustainable Dave’s 365 Days of Trash trash will end up when he’s done collecting, sorting and blogging a year of his own solid waste.

Trash-o-saurus

Sunday, December 28, 2008

trashosaurus Oh no.  The economic meltdown may kill trashosaurus, the one-ton star of Stratford, Connecticut’s Garbage Museum.  In fact, the whole museum may tank.  Currently, the educational institution runs on funding from a regional recycling consortium.  But in these tough financial times, a half dozen local towns have pulled out of the consortium to send their recycling elsewhere and thus funding for the museum has been slashed.

No word on what this means for the Trash Museum in Hartford.  Here’s to hoping trashosaurus finds alternate funding/an adoptive home.  And here’s to the Constitution state.  Kudos, Connecticut for having—for the moment at least—not one but two museums dedicated to trash.

P.S. Trashosaurus weighs one ton to represent the amount of trash created by the average American.  This cracks me up.   Photo via the Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority.

Fake Plastic Fish

Saturday, December 20, 2008

profile_avatar_128x128 Your RSS reader is about to plump up for the holidays.  Beth over at Fake Plastic Fish has put together an awesome and ongoing series  called Voices of the Plastic-Free Blogosphere.  Check out parts one, two and three.

Teddy bear trash bags!

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Dear Santa…

teddy

Via Dinosaurs and Robots

Holiday roundup roundup

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

candleholder

Tips for a trash-free season from around the garblogosphere:

Candle holder photo via Curbly via Apartment Therapy

Goods for Good

Saturday, December 13, 2008
malawiorphans

Children at a school outside of Lilongwe. Photo by Soraya Darabi

I’ve had Malawi on the brain this week.  To be honest, it’s partially guilt because I couldn’t make it to the Gala 4 Good last week, a fundraiser for Goods for GoodGoods for Good is an organization with a simple mission: to connect surplus goods from the U.S. with Africans who could use them.  They get American companies to donate things like pens, pads and excess fabric that would have rotted in warehouses or been thrown away or destroyed and ship those materials to Malawi (they also work in Liberia).

What I love about G4G is their focus on sustainability.  They don’t just drop off boxes of crap in the capital city and hope that the overstretched government of Malawi figures out how to distribute them equitably (that would be more like exporting trash than helping anyone).  Instead, they set up partnerships with established community organizations and schools and take care to sort and match the goods with ongoing programs in need of support.  So the excess fabric becomes school uniforms, the pens get to teachers and students and donated clothes make it onto the backs of AIDS orphans. 

Over their tenure, G4G has rescued nearly 100 tons of goods and connected it with over 500,000 orphans and vulnerable children in Malawi and Liberia. When you consider that half of young people who leave school in Malawi say it’s because they couldn’t afford the materials to keep going, that’s more than recycling.  It’s lifesaving.

One of the reasons I get all ooey gooey about Malawi is because I’ve spent some time there and have remained in awe of Malawians’ resourcefulness under the severe constraints of limited resources.  In the poorest of poor countries, community organizations provide the services the government cannot.  Like caring for orphans (1/4 of adolescents in Malawi has lost one or both parents).

And the reason I get ooey gooey over Goods for Good is because I feel personally connected to their work through Brigitte, their program director and one of my sister Soraya’s best friends from high school.  I know Brigitte to be supersmart and  incredibly caring.  Last year she spent months in Malawi setting up and strengthening partnerships with well-run local organizations to assess the needs of Malawians and ensure the most efficient distribution of donated materials.  If you’ve ever worked in international development you know this kind of planning is not the norm.  In Malawi, it’s hard to find internaitonal interventions that aren’t a) one-off and unsustainable or b) clouded by the ugliest representation of religion.

Soraya visited Brigitte in Malawi last November and took the photo above while accompanying her on a round of visits to G4G partners.  On that day, in addition to pads of paper, the girls brought a couple jumbo  bags of lollipops for the students at this school.  What you see  are a bunch of kids who have never had a lollipop.  The reason they’re all looking in different directions is becaues they’re not quite sure what to do with them.  I so wish I had video of this cross-cultural encounter!