Tuesday 10 July 2007

Blogging again

Finally: super special fun-time blogging from the roof!

Where have the last days gone? Everything feels like total crazy town, my speaking and writing skills feel ruined in some way, and Bjørn, Power, Jan and I are now all staying in the same room at the Marriot and we're flying home tomorrow. The opening on Saturday was, I think, a great success, with many of our new friends, and also a few strangers that we had not met before, coming along for the party.

Earlier in the day we did an interesting interview with Benjamin Kaplan of the Native Gaze web-site, an interview which will be very cool to read as it seemed to really follow a path that was unstructured and adventurous in much the same way as the rest of our project. I'd link to his web site, but linking on Blogger is really annoying and I can never remember the code and I'd have to cut and paste and what not. And besides I saw that Power just linked to it below, on her post, so check it out from there.

During the opening I also stood outside talking to Lina Kunimoto we noticed how, from the outside of the gallery, the show kind of looked like a Jan Christensen exihibition.

Also, during the opening, met an interesting Danish fellow who was vice president of some kind of division of some kind of company here and who wanted to buy Soo-Jung Choi’s painting because, as he said, it perfectly matched his brand new [Danish design brand here] couch. What the hell? Here I am thinking we’re doing process-based relational aesthetics, and this guy is matching our art with his furniture. That was very nice.

It's really windy up here on the roof right now. Yesterday, Power mentioned that there is a really big tropical storm on the way over from China, hopefully it won't interfer with our leaving tomorrow. Currently cyclone strenght.

Other stuff that has happened. Before Bjørn's second gig at Bar Nana last Friday (which was unfortunately cut short as a result of technical difficulties) I was finally able to go for a swim in the hotel pool, which was very nice as the diet we've been keeping here really hasn't been doing any of us any favours. Except maybe Power who seems perfectly capable of staying fit while enjoying Pringles as her main dietary component. In my case, I really need to get home to get back into some kind of running routine, and I need spelt walnutbread from Vårt daglige brød. And I need soy milk. No more fried stuff.

Yesterday I bought a bottle of Barbera d’Alba by Bruno Giacosa (my favourite everyday wine Slightly overpriced at 39 000 wons, but still worth it, and it was the 2003 which I’m not sure I’ve had before. Beautifully and one of the few reds I can imagine drinking without food) which Power, Bjørn and I enjoyed in our room before going out to dinner in Kangnam, the area that Jan has been raving about as having Blade Runner-like architecture (true) and restaurants over three floors in every building (also true). We did, however, again get somewhat burned by the fact that Koreans, for some strange reason, eat dinner very early. So when we showed up at about 23.00 most places were closed or closing. Ate some pretty average Korean stuff, and then went to an "Irish pub" called Sapporo Lion. Very uninteresting place, so we left quickly. Then went to another place, which was better, perhaps only because it served Power the whiskey she wanted and the rest of pitchers of Miller.

Other stuff:

Power loves Richard Quest, the travel correspondent for CNN. Power also likes the bad guy in the Mummy, and this Iraqi correspondent (also at CNN) who really looks like Suge Knight.

What are the socio-economic consequences (benefits/ drawbacks) of hotels providing wine openers on request instead instead of including one in every room?

A while ago, during dinner at the lovely restaurant Marrakech Nights in Itaewon, Jan introduced me to someone as very creative for a non-artistic person, to which I replied that Jan was very artistic for a non-creative person.

Frustrations at finding stuff from labels such as Alexander McQueen or Martin Margiela only to remember, time and again, that this stuff is a good 30% more expensive here than back in Europe. Then again, the stuff here can’t be found in Oslo.

In my draft that was deleted last week I also wrote a long bit on the, for me, newly discovered fact that writers for international art magazines really do not make any money. You always hear this, but I always thought that it meant that writers were poorly paid compared to everyone else. In terms of the only experience I’ve had myself, however, it’s kind of true. Except I was told that I would be getting an actually pretty decent fee which then, for the following 7 months and counting, for some reason just hasn’t shown up in my bank account. But 50 bucks for a review in Art Forum? What do they spend all their ad money on?

Highlights from AFN – Armed Forces Network
- Where to sit on planes that make it more likely to surive
- The importance, and easiness, of exercise
- How to get to Incheon airport using the special army
- Personal ads to learn playing bass guitar
- Ads for mudfest trips

2 comments:

powerekroth said...

Luv, its 35 bucks for a pick at the artforum webpage and 120 bucks for a review in the back of the magazine. I believe Flash Art is supposed to pay 50 Euros but... well... uh, you will be waiting for that paycheck a miiiighty looong time. Contemporary pays well, that is 50 Pounds for 500 words. Which of course is not good enough. There's little hope to live on writing about art all together unfortunately. But to quote a man of (inherited) wealth who decided to become a patron of the arts instead of a "real job" and was asked by his mother if he was "really able to make a living out of art!?" --- "No, mama, I cannot make a living out of art, but I sure can make a LIFE out of it!".

powerekroth said...

BTW, Aparasim Ghosh is the TIME magazine correspondent. Here is an image of the cuteness: http://im.rediff.com/news/2006/aug/18aparasim.jpg