Archive for the ‘Artistic Trash’ Category

Last Night’s Garbage

Thursday, September 4, 2008

I posted on this once before, when I first discovered this site, but let me say again that Last Night’s Garbage is a truly lovely garblog.

Posts usually consist of an ephemeral photo of New York City trash paired with a deadpan citation from a related reference source.  A photo of paper plates and clam shells spilling out of Coney Island trash bin, for example, will be accompanied by an excerpt on the history of quahogs on Long Island.  I adore specific projects and Last Night’s Garbage is a blog that does a lot without straying from its mandate.  Also, the photography is kick ass.  Case in point, this ripped image of a woman sleeping in the East Village.

Bag-making tips from a (fashionable) pro

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

In preparation for my bag-making party, I asked my friend Rachel of Lady Jane Designs for some advice on the dos and don’ts of DIY totes.  Those of you not into sewing (or just looking for hot accessories) can find and purchase beautiful bags from Lady Jane Designs on Etsy.   Anything but frumpy!


everydaytrash: How did you get into bagmaking and when do you find the time?

Lady Jane Designs: I got into bagmaking because I had a lot of scraps of fabric left over from other projects, and wanted to find something to make with them (up to that point, I had mostly made dresses).  I also liked having a sewing project that I could start and finish within a few hours, and they made great gifts for my friends when I didn’t have the time to devote to making them a whole garment.  Finding the time to sew can be difficult working full time but I manage to squeeze it into the evenings and weekends.  The most time consuming part is generally cutting the pattern (though much less time consuming than a garment) and ironing/sewing in the interfacing, which you generally want to do all in one go.  The sewing part you can do in bits whenever you have time.  In fact I am taking a break from sewing right now to write this.

everydaytrash: What kind of materials make the best tote bags, practically and fashionably speaking?  What materials should one avoid?

Lady Jane Designs: In terms of recycled materials, you want to look for heavier weight, woven materials.  Materials such as denim or upholstrey weight fabric will make the best bags.  Avoid materials that are knit, such as old t-shirts…knits make great apparel, but as a bag they’ll stretch out once you weigh them down with stuff.  Also try to avoid any materials that are loosely woven, they can tend to get snagged on things and aren’t as durable.  In terms of newer fabrics, I love all the awesome fabrics coming out of Japan, you can find some great stuff on sites like superbuzzy.com, reprodepot.com, or various sellers on etsy.com.  For the exterior of the bag, try to search for terms like “canvas” or “upholstrey weight.”



everydaytrash:
Any other tips, common novice mistakes to avoid?

Lady Jane Designs: Generally you’ll want to interface your bag, which will maintain its shape but also increase its durability.  It adds another step to the process but you’ll thank yourself in the end.  You will also want to get some good thread (not the cheap dollar store variety!) and some thick needles.  You’ll also want to invest in a good iron that gets really hot.  Thick materials can be stubborn so you’ll really want to iron the hell out of them to open your seams.

everydaytrash: Trashtastic tips, thanks!

Note to New Yorkers: Rachel will be selling her stuff this Sunday at the Artists and Fleas market in Williamsburg, sharing the table with another fabulous accessories designer, Tiny Hearts.

Photos ripped from Lady Jane Designs.

Bag Party!

Monday, September 1, 2008

I’ve been very good lately about carrying reusable bags around with me to avoid taking plastic ones.  It’s a nice feeling.  And I’d like to share it.  Thankfully, a recent post on the 365 Days of Trash garblog linked to morsbags, a do-it-yourself bag making site (with downloadble instructions).  This got me thinking.  I should have a bag-making party!

The first couple friends I leaked this idea to pointed out that as nonprofiteers we have enormous tote bag collections from conferences.  Both offered to bring their own bags to the party to decorate them.  Fair enough.  But the morsebags model also encourages us to distribute reusable bags.  The party, therefore, will have three elements: 1) collecing frumpy old conference totes we no longer want to lug around, 2) decorating old totes in need of a spruce up and 3) creating new reusable bags out of recycled materials for our own shopping, to give as gifts and distribute at local supermarkets and co-ops.

Stay tuned for more planning details including a Q&A on best practices in bag making with a very stylish professional.  Tote photo ripped from Lady Jane Designs on Etsy.

Trash love, a two way street

Monday, September 1, 2008

The incomparable Little Shiva over at The Visible Trash Society made my day with a digital collage and glowing post dedicated to….everydaytrash.com!  What an honor, especially coming from a respected colleague.  Little Shiva is an artist, trashie and graphic designer who lives in Belgium but has her virtual finger on the pulse on the broader art and garbage world.  It’s via Visible Trash that I’ve discovered things like the Santa Cruz Trash Orchestra, Joshual Allen’s air bear (of which, you may have noticed, I became a huge fan) and the fantasticly eccentric Friesno Boning (who I then hit up for  Trashtastic Tuesday Q & A).  But my favorite aspect of The Visible Trash Society is that Little Shiva practices what she preaches and makes stuff out of trash.  Go puruse!

Trashtastic Tuesday with Bryant Holsenbeck

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

My friend Lydia recently tipped me off to the work of artist Bryant Holsenbeck and was kind enough to put me in touch with the creative environmentalist for a little Q and A on the motivations behind her whimsical works creating bright and lively installations out of trash.

everydaytrash: Do you see your work as political?

Holsenbeck: Yes–I see my work as from the gut, personal, political. People do not want to see their trash. The quantity component of my work is very important. We just have so much (use it once or 20 times for that matter) stuff. Use it and then trow it “Away” Where is Away? In the US, most people are not concerned with this.

everydaytrash: I love the idea of wildlife made from trash, what brought about your Wildlife installation and what other birds and beasts have you created from discarded materials since?

Holsenbeck: Wild life–because we are taking up the space for wild animals. We like to see deer, but not in our gardens. What animals will be able to survive as we take over all of the wild and natural habitats. I feel very fortunate when I see birds soaring in the sky. Wild. Where do they live? As developers bulldoze and we stamp on all insects because they are “in our way” We are ruining our habitat as well. I am lucky to live in a neighbor hood where I see rabbits and chipmunks–and yesterday close to town–I saw a fawn running for the woods–white tail up. Our worlds are getting closer and closer–I hope we can live with wild animals–They do not have a voice. “WILD” is about watching for wild animals–being glad when I see them. Keeping my eyes open for what is there.

everydaytrash: Your bottlecap pieces are so intricate: how long do they take to create and what’s your process for collecting materials?

Holsenbeck: I have collected bottle caps for about 10 years. I have reached current maximum storage capacity of about 100,000 caps. The collection was mostly easy–It was continual. Certain friends family and neighbors designated themselves as collectors. For some people, it just became part of their recycling process. I am used to arriving home to a bag of “stuff” on my front porch. I am grateful to all of these people for collecting. Each cap is a record of something consumed–and we are doing this all of the time. The hard part for me has been keeping the caps sorted by color and making sure they are clean.
Here is what is important–not that many families collected for me–but over time, it mounts up. How many jars of apple sauce did you and your family eat last year–then multiply times 10–any product over time–we eat to survive and the caps are the non-biodegradable record

Photos ripped from the artist’s site.

DIY end table

Sunday, August 24, 2008

I came to this little how-to post from Apartment Therapy via a Lifehacker link and thought it was pretty slick.  I may just try it out.  After inheriting a bunch of stuff from our grandmother, my sister and my apartment is looking put together but a little stuffy.  Or, as the last boy I brought home put it, more like the home of a yuppy family or solitary old lady than of two twenty-somethings.  I feel a few upcycled acccent pieces could mitigate that effect.

Photo via Apartment Therapy

Baaaahd ass trash art

Monday, August 18, 2008

[Forgive the post title. It was created late at night during a tedious search for trash news.] Keith R. over at The Temas Blog turned me on to these amazing telephone sheep. I guess I missed it when TreeHugger and others posted on these in June. Better late than never. These funky and adorable hunks of trash art are part of a Jean Luc Cornec installation at the Frankfurt Museum of Communications in Germany. These things are just plain amazing. For a more intellectualized analysis, check out this GreenUpgrader post.

Photo ripped from Flikr

Polka dotted trash

Monday, August 11, 2008

Check out this post over at Olympia Dumpster Divers where the fabulous Ruby Reusable has collected some neat links on fancy trash bags migrating about NYC this summer. 

The project, TRASH: Any color you like, uses 100% biodegradable bags naturally scented with peppermint and bugglegum to repel vermin.  Reminds me of how my grandmother used to use stale Juicy Fruit to kill moles, but that’s a story for another day.

With love and squalor

Friday, August 8, 2008

Everydaytrash received some TH blog love yesterday for hosting Carnival of the Green (thanks Tree Hugger!). This little shout out plus links back to the carnival boosted Web hits all week. Logical enough. Wanna know what else boosts web hits? Mentioning Robert Rauschenberg, Marcel DuChamp and interviewing Francophone North African trash art curators in Norway. Google searches for Rauchenberg and DuChamp bring in hits every day. In fact, the day Rauchenberg died everydaytrash.com reached an all time record in page views (Heath Leger’s death caused a spike as well as googlers seeking info on “Michelle Williams” clicked through to a post where I once mentioned that she lives in my hood). On a less morbid note, external links to the Trashtastic Tuesday Q & A featuring Samir M’kadmi feed a steady stream of readers my way. Which reminds me, I need to scan some images and post more on Jon Gundersen, a Norwegian found object artist I met in Oslo through M’kadmi.

Photo of pacifiers collected by GUndersen ripped from the Du Store Verden! site

Cool cat in hot tin boots

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

I’ve come across and refrained from posting a lot of tired trash art/found object crap lately. These hot boots (from a recent show in Baltimore) were just the innovative little idea I needed to remind me why I love this shit. It’s fun. Full stop.

So many good things in one

Friday, August 1, 2008

A recent email from the Wooster Collective highlighted this lovely post from their archives on how to make a plastic-bag eating giraffe, authored by the fabulous Mark Jenkins.  You know how I love street art, giraffes and creative ways to reuse plastic bags and promote their extinction!

Relaxing trash (found on YouTube)

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

BlackBook on trash art

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Rohin Guha has two recent posts up on good and bad trash art. I think I’ll check out the Affirmation Arts show on trash picking. Looks good. Also, appears to be free. And you know how I love pretentious use of Franglais.

Trashtastic Tuesday with Kim Holleman

Monday, July 21, 2008

For those of you, like me, who couldn’t make it to the TRASHNAMI! opening last week, here’s a trashtastic interview with artist Kim Holleman. I’m posting this early because it’s the last trash of the week. Starting tonight I’ll be offline for a whole week, relaxing in rural Minnesota where the word on the river is that cell phones don’t work, not even global Blackberries. So exciting!

everydaytrash: What is a Trashnami? How did you collect the materials for this installation?

Holleman: The TRASHNAMI! is a giant cresting wave of garbage.
For it’s previous incarnation as a FUTURE MOUNTAIN (a 360 degree rendering of a mountain range in garbage bags), I had my “community” of people collect their shopping bags normally and give me the tornado of bags that everyone normally gathers under their kitchen sink. I collected for about 7 months, including my own bags.

For TRASHNAMI!, I actually added in blues and greens that were purchased with money budgeted for the show. I also created stickers for the left over bags and handed them out as freebees.

everydaytrash: How do politics play out in your work?
Holleman: My work is political in that is places a premium on real information about our world and our lives and the true consequences of our lifestyle and culture. I use art to address issues and if not solve them, show them in their true light, so that hopefully, no one can turn away and pretend that how their singular lives are is the truth of the world as it is right now. Just because we are here and temporary unscathed does not mean we are safe, innocent, or unaffected for long. Just ask people in New Orleans. My work is political in that is places a premium on real information about our world and our lives and the true consequences of our lifestyle and culture. I use art to address issues and if not solve them, show them in their true light, so that hopefully, no one can turn away and pretend that how their singular lives are is the truth of the world as it is right now. Just because we are here and temporary unscathed does not mean we are safe, innocent, or unaffected for long. Just ask people in New Orleans.
everydaytrash: The title of your show is dated in the near future and refers to our changing world. That, coupled with the image of a “trashnami” gives the sense of impending doom. Do you see trash as an immediate threat to our way of life?
Holleman: The TRASHNAMI! isn’t a threat to our way of life, it IS our way of life. Make that distinction please. And it is dire and it is a non-negotiable fact. See this, please read about the Pacific Garbage Patch. There are now more particulates of small plankton-sized pieces of plastic in the ocean than plankton at some spots. This is coming from scientists who drag plankton nets and then count and sort particulates under microscopes. The way we handle plastic/petroleum/chemicals/poisons/refuse/trash causes global warming, which causes more extreme weather conditions, hence more earhtquakes, tornado, hurricanes and tsunami. We are doing it. WE are doing it.
Photos kindly provided by Holleman

Circa 2012

Thursday, July 17, 2008

This trashtastic art opening—6-10pm tonight in NYC—came in via The Danger List:

Artists Wanted, in collaboration with White Box, is proud to announce the opening of Kim Holleman’s Chelsea Solo Show, CIRCA 2012. This exhibition is part of the White Box 6 Feet Under summer festival. Artists Wanted’s fall open call, “This Urgent Moment” challenged artists to submit new art & design work “that has the bite and blood to match the energy of our era;” Holleman did just that with her submission Trailer Park. The July 17th opening will be a grand street party in true Artists Wanted tradition.”