Where I’ll be tonight

Thursday, January 10, 2008 by

Check out this exciting trashie event listing via nonsense nyc, I’ll let you know all about it by the weekend!
The NYC Department of Sanitation and New York University present:

A free illustrated lecture, exhibition tour, and status report on the DSNY museum-in-the-making by Robin Nagle, Ph.D., DSNY Anthropologist-in-Residence, and Haidy Geismar, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology, NYU.

New York City choked on its own trash for much of its early existence. Until Gotham got serious about sanitation, foul-smelling streets, staggering infant mortality rates, and short life expectancies were normal characteristics of city life.

Using newly rediscovered photos from the DSNY’s own collection, Profs. Nagle and Geismar will recount how the Department of Street Cleaning and its successor, the Department of Sanitation, transformed New York from a public health minefield to a safe and sanitary home for millions. They will also describe their recent efforts to create a permanent NYC Department of Sanitation Museum.

The lecture will take place within the ongoing exhibition Loaded Out: Making a Museum. Profs. Nagle and Geismar will conduct a brief tour of the exhibit after their talk. On display are rare historical DSNY images and memorabilia, including a scale replica of a DSNY tugboat and barge, built by sanitation craftsmen in 1952; a sanitation worker’s uniform, customized for the 1939 World’s Fair; a pith helmet worn by one of the White Wings, NYC‘s famous white-uniformed street cleaners of the 1890s; and vintage film footage describing the varied duties of the DSNY in 1950.

136 West 20th Street, second floor, between 6th and 7th avenues, Manhattan
6pm,

Continues SUNDAY, January 13 at 6p
212 998 8065
robin.nagle[at]nyu.edu

Who knew the department of sanitation had an anthropologist in residence?!

Trash War

Wednesday, January 9, 2008 by

naples.jpg Around the world, trash news is focused on Naples this week. The crisis, which is nothing new, has taken an ugly, ugly turn.

Photos via the Telegraph Web site and credited to Getty/AFP.

In case, like me, you missed it…

Monday, January 7, 2008 by

consume.jpg  The Times published an interesting lil’ diddy on consumption last week.  Cartoon by Oliver Munday for the New York Times.  Thanks for the tip, Joya!

Mulch Fest, Brook Park Style

Monday, January 7, 2008 by

Trash Worship

Monday, January 7, 2008 by

trashpatch_2x2.jpg On this lovely Monday, a special shout-out goes to Paz for tipping me off to Garbage Worship, which led to a highly entertaining web search and the eventual stumbling upon of this killer trash Web site. There’s no better way to start a week of garblogging than to turn over a rock and discover an entire community of creative trashies! Image from trashworship.net.

Weekly Compactor

Friday, January 4, 2008 by

trashfire.jpg This week in trash news:

Photo via the AP

Lower East Side Ecology Center

Thursday, January 3, 2008 by

worm.jpg Two friends in two days have sent me links to New York City green-minded events organized or endorsed by the Lower East Side Ecology Center. This Sunday, they’re collecting electronic waste in Union Square. They also have listings for amazing-sounding workshops on worms and composting. I can’t wait to check out a work workshop and report back!

Photo via the LESEC Web site.

Makutano

Wednesday, January 2, 2008 by

makutano.jpg  Please excuse the silence of the past couple weeks, it seems that in addition to the preplanned souvenirs I brought back from my most recent trip to Africa, a wee parasite got a ride to New York as well.  It’s been a memorable holiday season, to say the least!  Anyway, anyway, I’m back, recovered, rehydrated and eager to tell you about the adorable cloth bag I bought in Tanzania for a friend.  Makutano is a Tanzanian women’s collective putting out all kinds of fun crafts, including brightly printed cloth totes.  The “one less plastic bag” bags are in response to Tanzania’s outright ban on plastic bags.  For a country with the fraction of the first world’s infrastructure, this is a most impressive move!

Photo via the Makutano Web site.

Loaded Out: Making a Museum

Thursday, December 20, 2007 by

dsny_1930s.jpg Sewell Chan at City Room reports that a new show featuring the Department of Sanitation has opened at NYU. This is high on my list of post-hiatus things to do in the city, stay tuned for a report back or let me know if you’ve been already!

Here’s what the NYU Web site has to say about the exihibition:

The DSNY and NYU have collaborated through this project to lay the foundation for the eventual brick-and-mortar DSNY Museum. The exhibition evolved from a course, “Making a Museum: Materializing Regimes of Value with the New York City Department of Sanitation,” taught by Haidy Geismar, a professor in NYU’s Museum Studies Program and in Anthropology, and Robin Nagle, director of NYU’s Draper Interdisciplinary Master’s Program and the DSNY’s anthropologist-in-residence. Nagle’s book, Picking Up, is out next year from Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

I wonder if any of the students are interested in guest blogging?

Photo via NYU

Zomba, Malawi

Friday, November 30, 2007 by

malawian-smoke.jpg  The trash hiatus continues through December 15th.  Until then, take a moment to appreciate your high speed Internet connection, a luxury not found here in Malawi.  Even though the colleague office I’m working from this week has a dedicated cable line, power or service cut out every few minutes.  I’m trying to remember how I sat still all day at my desk pre-Gchat.  My temporary office in Zomba is located in a residential neighborhood where taking out the trash means lighting small fires.  Lunch can be purchased for a few hundred kwacha from the woman cooking behind the house on the far right.  I miss you all, please continue to send in your trashy tips.  I shove off for Tanzania tomorrow and have high hopes for the Cyber Cafes in Dar!

Until then, please enjoy these vintage Malawian trash posts on elephant dung stationary and ruminations on zero waste.

Garbage Revolution

Friday, November 23, 2007 by

garbagetitle_main.jpg I gotta tell you, since starting this blog I have noticed that a disproportionate percentage of the innovative trash solutions projects on this planet originate in Toronto. Ah, Canadians. Check out the Web site to this new documentary that chronicles one family who, instead of throwing their trash away, keep it in the garage and allow it to be filmed to show the world just how much waste one family produces.

I’m headed out of town again for a few weeks (warning, posts will be few and far between until mid-December), but when I return I plan to host a screening. Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.

Carry on!

Thursday, November 22, 2007 by

brit.jpg  Check out the “Not Plastic, Fantastic” slide show of Brits NOT using plastic bags that follows the Guardian’s recent report on a rise in recycling in England.

Co-eds collect trash

Thursday, November 22, 2007 by

trashfull.jpg UCF triatheletes collect trash while they train. Now if only this were a syndicated practice!

Wired’s Luddite rails on tech trash

Thursday, November 22, 2007 by

Some of you may be untroubled by this. If so, shame on you. Your planet is slowly dying from carbon dioxide emissions and the casual dumping of toxic waste. Turning a blind eye to this fact while eagerly consuming every glittery new tech bauble dangled before you is not only pathetic, but suicidal…

Oops

Thursday, November 22, 2007 by

An abstract masterpiece by a Mexican artist that was found in the trash by a woman who knew little about modern art has been sold for more than $1 million…