Reblog: Wallpapered Dumpsters

Tuesday, March 10, 2009 by

Check out C. Finley’s clever and trashy street art, wall papered dumpsters.

C. Finley

C. Finley

Via Wooster Collective

On a mostly unrelated note, I saw a racoon (at least I hope it was a racoon, it could have been a very large possum or a big freaky rat on steroids) at the corner of Smith and Bergen last night. It looked like it was about to walk down the steps to the F train platform, but some people walked by (without noticing it) so it ran under a car instead. I imagine it was checking out curbside dining options from all the restaurant trash bags on that block. I’ve seen racoons in Brooklyn before, but never one that looked like it might get on the Subway.

Found on Vimeo

Sunday, March 8, 2009 by

Check it, a trashy Donky Kong-esque game some guy made for a school project on the environment. I hope he got an A.

Vodpod videos no longer available.

more about "Found on Vimeo", posted with vodpod

Trash Mountain

Friday, March 6, 2009 by

To demonstrate the huge amount of recylclables that end up in the garbage at the University of Missouri, a group called Sustain Mizzou had a forklift drop four tons of trash bails in the center of campus and stood on top of it. They called the project trash mountain. This clever group has a host of ongoing awareness projects, including an initiative to offer recycling at tailgating events. Even their Sustain Mizzou t-shirts are recycled, a great idea for any trashie team. Rock on kids. And seriously, get some help with your Web site. All these neat projets should be better showcased online!

Al-Azhar Park

Tuesday, March 3, 2009 by

Where there was once a dump, there is now green space. Al-Azhar Park in Cairo, Egypt grew out of a project of the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, aimed at revitalizing the Darb al-Ahmar neighborhood and restoring and showcasing the area’s historic art and architecture.

Al-Azhar Park in Cairo, once a rubble dump

Al-Azhar Park in Cairo, once a rubble dump

For the full story of this transformation, check out this fantastic post from City Parks Blog, complete with links to a PBS video. One estimate cited in the project overview found that the amount of green space per resident of Cairo was about a footprint before Al-Azhar. I hope it’s a little better now.

Photo via Tines Egyptian

Trash Into Treasure: SMART Art Competition

Tuesday, March 3, 2009 by

Calling all trash arstists!

Enter the Adventure Ecology and Sculpt the Future Foundation’s SMART ART ‘TRASH INTO TREASURE’ competition.

Show the world how discarded items can be redesigned, reused and re thought by turning every day waste into works of art and everyday functional items.

Via MAKE

Ghana tra$h shore – the pix

Monday, March 2, 2009 by

Over a couple of very depressing pages in Sunday’s edition of my morning paper, SvD, I could again follow Mattias Hagberg (read our previous interview with him!) to Ghana. Today, I am “happy” to be able to tell you that the pictures from the piece, taken by Karl Melander, can be viewed in a slideshow at the web edition of the paper. Not the  “Atlantic coast beach” most of us are used to.

Weekly Compactor

Monday, March 2, 2009 by

recycled felt ring by The Garbologist's Wife

recycled felt ring by The Garbologist's Wife

This week in trash news:

America’s soft toilet paper addiction

Friday, February 27, 2009 by

toiletpaperEco-Libris (the company you can pay a modest fee to plant a tree for every book you read) is trying to get a conversation going around the latest installment of Greenpeace’s Recycled Tissue and Toilet Paper Guide.  Check out the debate on the Eco-Libris blog.

The Independent

Friday, February 27, 2009 by

…has a very troublesome map over the plastic soup melange in the Pacific. Note that there are 100 million tonnes of trash floating around, dubbed “Eastern Garbage Patch” and “Western Garbage Patch”.

The Economist …

Thursday, February 26, 2009 by

…has a special report on the American waste industry this week.

Home Dome

Thursday, February 26, 2009 by

Check out 12-year old Max Wallack’s winning invention from Design Squad’s Trash to Treasure competition. It’s a homeless shelter made from trash (specifically shipping pallets and packing peanuts).

Man these kids today. Remember the teen who discovered the cure for plastic?  Thanks for the tip, Joerg.

UPDATE: If you’re craving more on Max, check out the MAKE blog; and this photo set, via the MAKE flikr pool.

Trashtastic Thursday with Cynthia Korzekwa

Thursday, February 26, 2009 by

For the latest installment of our periodic Tuesday (and sometimes Thursday) series of trash talks, I caught up with artist, activist and garblogger Cynthia Korzekwa of Art for Housewives—one of the first sites to blogroll everydaytrash back in the day.  And a constant source of inspiration since.

cynthia

Cynthia Korzekwa

everydaytrash: What is bricolage?

Cynthia Korzekwa: Bricolage is taking something old and, via context, making it new. It comes from the French verb bricoler meaning “fiddle, tinker.” A person who engages in bricolage is a bricoleur. And a bricoleur has the capacity to take available materials and, using hands and imagination, give them a new identity.

The French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss used the word bricolage to explain a means of acquiring knowledge and, in particular, mythical thought. Because mythology dabbles with existing knowledge to create new meaning.

However, my interest for the term came from reading the biologist, François Jacob, and his idea that evolution is a tinkerer. Because, to evolve, nature adapts what already exists.

And it is the spirit of the bricoleur that we must have in order to transform our trash into a resource. Why make things using virgin materials when there is so much that we throw away that we can use instead. The mind of the bricoleur is not standardized. Not producing in mass, he does not use have an assembly-line approach to creating. He creates what he needs with what he has.

Bricolage makes the useless useful. In terms of trash, a bricoleur can transform vice into virtue.

Orange, Cynthia Korzekwa

Orange, Cynthia Korzekwa

everydaytrash: How many Web sites do you have ?

Korzekwa: I don’t know how many websites I have. When I first became interested in internet and websites, I signed up for all the freebie spaces available and began experimenting. Being a technological illiterate, I signed up for A Quicky Course on how to make websites and just started making them. Very primitive stuff (and basically, they still are). But the only way to evolve is to experiment. And that’s what I did. Now, of course, I have a different rapport with internet. And the yin yang of content and form has shifted its weight. Content interests me more thus I no longer feel the need to make more websites. Unless, of course, there’s not a particular need as was the case with MAKE ART, NOT TRASH.

everydaytrash: What motivated you to start Art for Housewives the blog?

Korzekwa: Several years ago, I read “1992 World Scientists’ Warning to Humanity” and literally felt sick to my stomach after reading it. Some 1,700 of the world’s leading scientists, including the majority of Nobel laureates in the sciences, felt the need to get together to declare their concern for our future. Their statement begins with:

Human beings and the natural world are on a collision course. Human activities inflict harsh and often irreversible damage on the environment and on critical resources. If not checked, many of our current practices put at serious risk the future that we wish for human society and the plant and animal kingdoms, and may so alter the living world that it will be unable to sustain life in the manner that we know. Fundamental changes are urgent if we are to avoid the collision our present course will bring about.

Very spooky stuff. My immediate concern was for Sergio and Chiara, my children. I felt the need to react. And that’s how my blog, Art For Housewives, began. And the time, I already had a blog, Obliterated, that focused on the idea that making things with your hands was a form of active meditation. So basically, I kept that idea but added a new element—that of making things from trash. My blog, Art For Housewives, is almost 6 years old now. In the beginning it was quite difficult to find on-line examples of recycling to make objects that were not only useful but beautiful as well. The only women whom seemed interested in the use of trash to make something were those of Third World countries. Women who had no money to buy “art supplies.”

Cynthia Korzekwa's studio

Cynthia Korzekwa's studio

My blog had immediate success–6 to 10,000 visits per month. But what helped me a lot, visit wise, was that a kind of Neo-Domesticity began to flourish after September 11th. Women began giving value to the home and thus to crafts which had been abandoned in favour of “emancipation.” And so they began knitting like crazy and starting blogs to exchange patterns and info. Martha Stewart also animated alot of female souls. With her, it became trendy to care about your home. Related blogs began cropping up all the time. Now there are so many women out there making things and blogging about it. They are making art that is so much more exciting than that alienating conceptual stuff mainstream art caters to.

everydaytrash: I heard you are working on Art for Housewives, an illustrated essay in the style of Marjane Satrapi’s graphic novel Persepolis. How’s the project going?

Korzekwa: After a couple of years blogging Housewives, I decided to publish an illustrated essay based on the information I had collected, ARTE PER MASSAIE (“art for housewives” in Italian). The text and artwork was no problem but, living in Italy, I had to write in Italian. Never having studied it, my Italian is a bit folkloristic. Luckily, there’s a decent English translation at the end of the book.

bookcover

book cover

everydattrash: How did MAKE ART, NOT TRASH come about?

Korzekwa: Last year, I decided to try a bit of activism and this led to MAKE ART, NOT TRASH, a site with links to some of my favourite examples of how to transform trash. You know, bricolage. Then I printed 300 stickers and put them on the dumpsters in the area of my studio, San Lorenzo (Rome). The stickers had a drawing of a bunny encouraging people to think before throwing something away.

bunny sticker in the wild

bunny sticker in the wild

Critical mass is fundamental for change. Take Kerala, India, for example. Being a very poor state with a high birthrate, the local government tried convincing women to practice contrapception and men to be sterilized but with little success. Then a major emphasis was placed on education and everyone sent to school. As a result, today the citizens of Kerala are 100% literate, an anomaly in India. As a result, the birth rate has drastically dropped. Once you are educated, no one needs to convince you what is the right thing to do because you know on your own.

Awareness helps one make the right choices.

(Photos via Korzekwa’s many Web sites)

Learn Japanese: Pink Chirashi

Tuesday, February 24, 2009 by
Indecent Fliers Box

Indecent Fliers Box

That mischievous Little Shiva just posted this link to my facebook page, in which Tokyobling’s blog describes a special trash can (shown here) for “pink chirashi” or adult fliers.

If you are morally offended by the hand outs for adult shops and strip clubs, but too polite to say no to the smiling touts, feel free to use this trash can on your next visit to Tokyo.

Amazing.  Thanks Little Shiva and Tokyobling!

And speaking of the Japanese and their crazy ways, how awesome was Kunio Kato’s “Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto” reference while accepting the Oscar for best animated short?

Botas Dacca

Tuesday, February 24, 2009 by
fused plastic boots

fused plastic boots

In two-plus years of garblogging, I’ve seen my share of fused plastic craft projects.  I have to say, though, that these rockin little boots by Chilean designer Camila Labra are some of the cutest.  Her label is called Dacca and boasts a range of styles from fun polkadots to the obligatory upcycling of Target bags.  My favorites are these green two-tones—found via the spectacular Art for Housewives.

These might look hot with a customized messenger bag.

Make Art, Not Trash

Monday, February 23, 2009 by

I’m not quite sure how to describe Make Art Not Trash links.  It’s an online collage, a blog in one page and a time-sucking portal for any trashie.  Here are some things I’ve discovered via this…installation.

Made in the Philippines

Made in the Philippines

A chair made of shoes.

Untitled, plastic bottle with Bondo glue and paint, 2000

Untitled

Blob-like sculptures made of plastic bottles.

Keybag Red

Keybag Red

A keyboard turned handbag.

maison martin margiela

maison martin margiela

A halter top fashioned from vintage gloves.

Cassette Wallet

Cassette Wallet

And wallets made out of old cassette tapes. Those last two items are both via design boom, a site to bookmark for a day when the economy bounces back (or to keep an eye on now for DIY knock-off inspiration).

Here’s that Make Art Not Trash link once again.  Happy Web surfing.

UPDATE: just figured out that Make Art Not Trash links is just one page of the site Make Art Not Trash run by Cynthia Korzekwa of Art for Housewives fame.  What a Web presence!