---Probabbly why my jokes are getting rather feeble -
I need my sleep! Mind you, now its early in teh
morning and I still don't feel very funny! Maybe I
need a course of witimins ? Michael
Roger Stevens [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well, you might go up to an elk and say, may I use
your bar
S'funny you should mention trickster-heroes because
here in Cheshire we have the famous Cheshire Clams. We
celebrate every July 5th with a big parade of floats
made to look like Clams and the Cheshire Clam Queen
and King are crowned with a fetching headpeice of
clams, barnacles and whelks.
How about an assembling project of some kind where we
all send a number of pages to be compiled into a book?
Michael
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 5/26/04 6:08:36 AM,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Remembering
Patricia, project? Any other fluxkisters have
ideas for
Oh, yes. i also would like to have one postcard. in exchange i will then
send a mail art postcard to, say, the first person that says that he or she
would like to have it.
Georg Birkner
Röntgenstrasse 44
CH - 8005 Zürich
Switzerland
I inherited all petal's fluxus stuff-recently found a piece
--Well actually Roger you've hit upon a secret vice
of mine, namely, collecting trombobes and welding them
together to make central heating systems for eccentric
millionaires. I tried to interest Mr Saatchi in a
system for his new gallery but he said he would prefer
if the trombones were made
--Well, strangley enough I was I teh BArgain Booze
down the road just now and I accidentally fell into a
time portal situated in between the Cheese and onion
Crisp dispenser and the Tasmanian Champagne and ended
up in Gaul in the 9th century! As luck would have it a
nearby empty castle contained
Am writing from \tokyo--\ben has arrived by Orient \express according to
\george Maciunas` wishes for his 70th birthday--we are going to caravan to
Mt. \fuji where \ayo has organized about 30 performances of \fluxus artists
on the mountain--don:t know much else except it is an event not to be
Happy B-Day, Judy. I last saw Fujiyama around 1950...
As it happens, there's a little present headed yr way.
Onword,
John
At 06:13 AM 5/27/2004 -0400, you wrote:
Am writing from \tokyo--\ben has arrived by Orient \express according to
\george Maciunas` wishes for his 70th birthday--we are going
Yes indeed. And I hope you've seen the film of Ack's story made by Sleeze
Steele - quite amazing, they actually made the suit.
John
At 01:30 PM 5/26/2004 -0400, you wrote:
Ah...something to go with Al Ackermans Vienna sausage suit!
We could even cook up a food-based fashion show. Sure, it
Invitation to The June 30th Manifesto
YOU ARE INVITED TO SEND 1 PAGE FOR AN ANTHOLOGY FOCUSED ON THE WAR AND THE
BUSH ADMINISTRATION.
Text, poetry, visual poetry, collage, etc.
Must be reproducible in black and white.
Max size: 5 X 8 inches (12.5 X 20 cm.)
Deadline: June 30, 2004.
No returns, no
No I've not read all the debate yet (yes I've been on holiday :) but thought
I'd comment quickly about Fluxlist:
It has its ups and downs, we come and go but it works and it works really
well. We've been here as long as rhizome and the others but we've not gone
commercial and we're still true to
Peep
peep jerk ,clung stibbar breath scorn sugar gnippots eussi for yr
pencil lake yr krej breath lung ,ragus issue stopping no eht ekal
lung massif broom booth ecalp formaldehyde ruoy gnimaeb tfel ,moorb
massif plaque dust ,shaking in your plaque truss ,seeb
gninnur ,epon psar meter tsud
Hello All--
am going to ask friend who works at huge place here in Milwaukee--making salads for delis and the never ending festivals begining this weekend with Pride Fest and going all summer until Indian Summer Fest in September--they are working overtime for sure!--will ask him re the ambrosia
Last night i read an article in the Smithsonian magazine about people who
have clubs etc to explore abandoned buildings, factories, urban tunnels,
etc. sounded like big fun!
John
At 09:18 AM 5/27/2004 -0500, you wrote:
Hello All--
am going to ask friend who works at huge place here in
hi all,
the 'joy of cooking' gives ambrosia:
6 navel oranges
3 bananas
half pinapple
half cup miniature marshmallows
half cup sweetened coconut
3 tablespoons orange liqueur(optional
cut everything up, mix, refrigerate, serve.
so there you have it . though i doubt the deli version is the same.
---Hey, those two large threatening men could have
been the eccentric millionaire Saatchi Bros. creeping
up to offer you thousands of dollars to replicate your
art in their asbestos penthouse! You could have blown
your chance for the BIG TIME! Quel horreur!
Michael
David-Baptiste Chirot [EMAIL
Erasmus has this to say about Ambrosia:
Now this gain in happiness costs very little, whereas real facts
often take a lot of trouble to acquire, even when they are quite
unimportant, like grammar. An Opinion, on the other hand, is
Ominous, I would say. Although, some days I'm just really easy to invoke. Other
days, well, less so.
BG
That's twice I've thought of you in the last week. Weird, eh?
-Roger
-Original Message-
From: Roger Stevens [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: May 24, 2004 4:12 PM
To:
In a message dated 5/26/04 10:01:58 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Should Fluxlist have an official trickster-hero?
the raccoon?
.and now I'm going to show you all how to crochet
a doily.
--- Carol Starr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: hi
all,
the 'joy of cooking' gives ambrosia:
6 navel oranges
3 bananas
half pinapple
half cup miniature marshmallows
half cup sweetened coconut
3 tablespoons orange
Nonsense! Wolverines are just bigger than badgers. Wolverines are simply
bad-tempered, while badgers are bad-tempered and cunning (and, being closer to the
ground, more cthonic). Of course, there is the honey badger kills for sport, just
like people do.
Badger also pops up as a trickster
a mongoose
i'd like to get drunk
and run around re-arranging lawn
animals/gnomes/ornaments on lawns
WHen i was at school i used to roll up freshly laid lawns during the night,
or i'd re-lay them in a different direction/format
i got caught but tehy couldn't believe that i'd actually spend time doing
in italian the word for badger is the same for that as tax
bum doo de dum dum do,
bum doo de dum dum do,
bum doo de dum dum do,
cos i'm teh badgerman, yeah he,
the badgermaa-aa-n
we found a badger in a tree once in Alpago - it's true!
---I can think of no better training for a would-be
fluxus type artist.
Which reminds me of the badger who did Marlene
Dietrich impersonations and when asked if she was
coming to the party at Ratty's house she replied, I
want to be a lawn.
Michael
Alan Bowman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Have a look at The Gallery of Regrettable Food by James Lileks (you can find a scaled
down version at his web site www.lileks.com under the Institute of Official Cheer
banner).
if i can find some images of ambrosia will send --i found recently a 1952
Borden's Eagle Brand Recipe Book--the
Why Mr. Bowman! Are you suggesting that I am taxing? (Honestly, you wouldn't be
the firstOr the last, I dare say.)
Mmmwah!
Badgergoil
From: Alan Bowman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 2004/05/27 Thu PM 02:02:46 EDT
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: FLUXLIST: badgers!.
in italian the word
CONGRATULATIONS TO JUDITH AND BEN! I was 70 in February this year! love to
all, -Don Boyd
_
Best Restaurant Giveaway Ever! Vote for your favorites for a chance to win
$1 million! http://local.msn.com/special/giveaway.asp
There's a kangaroo who lives in a tree
That's a pretty tricky thing
XXX
oh good! i've never made a doily or ambrosia either.
have you been making doilys for a long time? don't you think doily is a
funny sounding word?
there are 12 quail eggs in a nest near my studio, can they be mascots
when they hatch?
bests, carol
xx
michael leigh wrote:
.and now I'm
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