Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-09-03 Thread Georg Birkner
By the way, before I forget:

... you get up every morning and it's there. Ha!

georg

 Two points if you can identify this...
 
 Life is just a bowl of Allbran
 
 The Small Faces - Happydaystoytown - Ogden's NutGone Flake
 
 I'd like to donate my two points to the buying of a good old cheese
 pasty
 pie for allen bukoff - then he'll know what a decent lunch is all about.
 (Especially if its one of those that coats the roof of your mouth with
 dubbing)
 
 Alan

-- 
Georg Birkner Dipl. Arch. ETH
Roentgenstrasse 44
CH - 8005 Zürich
fon: +41 (0)1 271 00 22
fax:  271 01 20
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Alan Bowman
 drink a pint and visit the zoo. 

bad advice in my opinion...
only A pint?

I hate zoos






RE: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Roger Stevens
Life is a zoo







Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Alan Bowman

 Life is a zoo

Oh

I thought it was a 'Cabaret' Old Chum.
 




Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread John Blower
At 11:55 29/08/2003 +0200, you wrote:
 Life is a zoo

Oh

I thought it was a 'Cabaret' Old Chum.
Or a minestrone...

John Blower
Writer/Editor/Trainer
61 Broom Park
Teddington TW11 9RR
Tel: 020 8977 0498
Mob: 07986 401490
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.feniks.com


RE: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Wojciech Dlugosz


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Alan Bowman
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2003 11:56 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FLUXLIST: London



 Life is a zoo

Oh

I thought it was a 'Cabaret' Old Chum.

Or maybe it's 'Cabaret' with animals?

something like circus for me..





RE: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Roger Stevens
Two points if you can identify this...

Life is just a bowl of Allbran







Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Bertrand Clavez
Oh, shit!
;-)
Bertrand

- Original Message - 
From: Roger Stevens [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2003 1:34 PM
Subject: RE: FLUXLIST: London


 Two points if you can identify this...
 
 Life is just a bowl of Allbran
 
 
 
 
 
 



Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Alan Bowman




 Two points if you can identify this...

 Life is just a bowl of Allbran

The Small Faces - Happydaystoytown - Ogden's NutGone Flake

I'd like to donate my two points to the buying of a good old cheese pasty
pie for allen bukoff - then he'll know what a decent lunch is all about.
(Especially if its one of those that coats the roof of your mouth with
dubbing)

Alan





Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Alan Bowman
I like 

and my time is a piece of wax fallin' on a termite who's chokin' on the
splinters

and

Ooh It's all sticky!  (although that's not from a song)





RE: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-29 Thread Roger Stevens
Two points for Allen then.

Well done!

The Poetry Zone http://www.poetryzone.co.uk
 
Danny Chaucer http://www.dannychaucer.com
 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Alan Bowman
Sent: 29 August 2003 13:06
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FLUXLIST: London





 Two points if you can identify this...

 Life is just a bowl of Allbran

The Small Faces - Happydaystoytown - Ogden's NutGone Flake

I'd like to donate my two points to the buying of a good old cheese
pasty
pie for allen bukoff - then he'll know what a decent lunch is all about.
(Especially if its one of those that coats the roof of your mouth with
dubbing)

Alan









Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-14 Thread zoe marsh
Dont know if it will still be on, but there was a great exhibition of sound, 
video and photos at the Whitechapel Gallery (right next door to Aldgate East 
tube) last time i was there. Always worth looking around that area and 
checking out the Freedom press bookshop (down the alley to the right of the 
Whitechapel). Otherwise the Tate Modern has a room full of mail art, its all 
old stuff so you may have seen some of it already, but again Bankside is a 
nice area of town.
If you want to have a night out in a pubby kind of way then i can recommend 
the Foundry on Old Street, they show art downstairs, but its a bit hit and 
miss if its any good (or even open).
Sorry i wont be in town that week, stuck in Bristol jobseeking, have fun, 
zoe


From: Walter Cianciusi [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: FLUXUS \(E-mail\) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: FLUXLIST: London
Date: Wed, 30 Jul 2003 11:01:45 +0200
Dear fluxlisters,
I'll be in London from the 7th to the 11th of August.
Can anyone suggest me something to see/do?
Anyone there at that time?
Walter

_
Use MSN Messenger to send music and pics to your friends 
http://www.msn.co.uk/messenger




Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-14 Thread Don Boyd
Zoe, I received your package of cards in the mail this week. Good job! I 
appreciate it!-Don

_
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http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail




RE: FLUXLIST: London

2003-08-14 Thread Roger Stevens

 I'll be in London from the 7th to the 11th of August.
 Can anyone suggest me something to see/do?
 Anyone there at that time?


Walter,
Here's some interesting stuff on at the Serpentine Gallery
XXX
Roger

Park Nights at the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2003 designed by Oscar
Niemeyer

Late Friday-night open-air film screenings, architecture talks, live
readings, and a licensed cafe until 10pm.

Booking: Ticketweb 08700 600100, at the Serpentine Lobby Desk, or via
http://www.serpentinegallery.org

Open Air Film Screenings

To coincide with the Serpentine Gallery's Cindy Sherman exhibition, this
series of screenings, programmed in collaboration with the British Film
Institute (bfi), presents films which explore the notion of fictional
identities.

Live Fiction Readings

Programmed by the Serpentine Gallery in collaboration with Granta. All
readings BSL interpreted.

Programme:
Friday 8 August 7pm
£3
Live Fiction Reading

Writers Andrew O'Hagan and Sarah Waters, both featured in Best of Young
British Novelists 2003 (Granta) read from their new publications,
Personality (Faber  Faber, 2003) and Fingersmith (Virago, 2003).

Open Air Film Screening Orlando 9pm
£5 (£4 concs)
Sally Potter, UK 1992, 94 mins
Introduced by the Director, Sally Potter
Tilda Swinton as Orlando, Virginia Woolf's time-travelling heroine,
restages English heritage in a gender-swapping performance.

Friday 15 August 7pm
£3
Live Fiction Reading and In Conversation
Writer Todd McEwen, in conversation with journalist Stuart Kelly  at the
London launch of McEwen's new book, Who Sleeps with Katz (Granta, 2003).

Open Air Short Film Programme 9pm
£5 (£4 concs)

Telling Tales (total running time: 76 mins)
Not suitable for people under the age of 18
The raw edges of women's public and private selves are explored and
transformed with humour and creativity in six provocative short films.
Selected and introduced by Karen Alexander, bfi


Random Acts of Intimacy
Clio Barnard, UK 1998, 15 mins

The Stain
Marjut Rimminen and Christine Roche, UK 1991, 11 mins

The Body Beautiful
Ngosi Onwurah, UK 1990, 23 mins

You Be Mother
Sarah Pucill, UK 1990, 7 mins

Asparagus
Suzan Pitt, UK 1979, 20 mins
Friday 22 August 7pm
£3
Live Fiction Reading
Internationally-renowned writer A.M. Homes reads a selection of texts in
conversation with journalist Michelle Field, to mark her publication,
Things You Should Know (Granta, 2003).

Open Air Film Screening
Silent film with live piano accompaniment by Stephen Horne
Pandora's Box 9pm
£5 (£4 concs)
G W Pabst, Germany 1928, 110 mins
Introduced by Rachel Palfreyman, University of Nottingham
Louise Brooks plays Lulu, whose sheer sexual magnetism wreaks havoc on
men and women alike. Pandora's Box revels in the complexities of gender
identity.


Friday 29 August 2003

Open Air Film Screening
The Death of Maria Malibran 9pm
£5
(£4 concs)
Werner Schroeter, Germany 1971, 104 mins, English subtitles
Introduced by Dr Ulrike Sieglohr, University of Staffordshire

This sublime film evokes the tragic life of 19th-century opera diva
Maria Malibran. Candy Darling performs to an epic sound track including
Maria Callas and Marlene Dietrich.

Lisa Le Feuvre
Parknights Co-ordinator
Serpentine Gallery
t: 020 7298 1519
m: 07970 034 223
e: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]





Re: FLUXLIST: London

2003-07-30 Thread Alan Bowman


 I'll be in London from the 7th to the 11th of August.
 Can anyone suggest me something to see/do?
 Anyone there at that time?


Walter,

Go to Brick Lane for a Curry!
Go to Camden Market to get bewildered.
Try to work out just which side if the Circle Line you need to be on.
Take a Big Bus Tour - see all of London in 2 hours, leaving lots of time
for other, more important things.
Ask a policeman for the time.

Apart from that I suppose there's only the museums and galleries! The
Science Museum is groovy as is the Natural History Museum..

You could go on a search of all the Italian art treasures 'acquired' by the
British over the past 1000 years

Play real life Monopoly

a





Re: FLUXLIST: London March

2003-02-19 Thread 6digit
add another 1.2 million in Madrid, and over 1.5 million in Barcelona... 





wow

when was the last time i witnessed such a democratic consensus? the beatles? elvis?


best

Kamen
---
http://sixdigit.swiki.net

On Tue, 18 Feb 2003 09:14:29  
 Ann Klefstad wrote:
On 2/15/03 12:29 PM, John Blower [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Still high on the exhilaration of being amongst a crowd of about 1.5 million!
 
 I shot off a couple of rolls of film which I'll post at my site in the next
 few days.
 
 
 
 We have marched here as well. Minneapolis, many thousands, and Duluth, small
 city, 2,000 people. It was below zero (fahrenheit) but people marched anyway.
 It was exhilarating as well, and I won¹t miss those toes anyway.
 
 AK




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Re: FLUXLIST: London March

2003-02-18 Thread Ann Klefstad
Title: Re: FLUXLIST: London March



On 2/15/03 12:29 PM, John Blower [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Still high on the exhilaration of being amongst a crowd of about 1.5 million!

I shot off a couple of rolls of film which I'll post at my site in the next few days.



We have marched here as well. Minneapolis, many thousands, and Duluth, small city, 2,000 people. It was below zero (fahrenheit) but people marched anyway. It was exhilarating as well, and I wont miss those toes anyway.

AK





Re: FLUXLIST: London March

2003-02-18 Thread allen bukoff


On 2/15/03 12:29 PM, John Blower [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Still high on the exhilaration of being amongst a crowd of about 1.5 million!

I shot off a couple of rolls of film which I'll post at my site in the 
next few days.

We have marched here as well. Minneapolis, many thousands, and Duluth, 
small city, 2,000 people. It was below zero (fahrenheit) but people 
marched anyway. It was exhilarating as well, and I wont miss those toes anyway.

AK

From yesterday's New York Times.  I like the idea of World Public Opinion 
being a Superpower.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 16  The fracturing of the Western alliance over Iraq and 
the huge antiwar demonstrations around the world this weekend are reminders 
that there may still be two superpowers on the planet: the United States 
and world public opinion.

In his campaign to disarm Iraq, by war if necessary, President Bush appears 
to be eyeball to eyeball with a tenacious new adversary: millions of people 
who flooded the streets of New York and dozens of other world cities to say 
they are against war based on the evidence at hand.



RE: FLUXLIST: London March

2003-02-17 Thread craiggell
Yeah I was there too ... got some digital shots and video,
look forward to seeing your pictures, I'll try and do the same with mine.

-- Original Message --
Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2003 18:29:39 +
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: John Blower [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: FLUXLIST: London March
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Still high on the exhilaration of being amongst a crowd of about 1.5 million!

I shot off a couple of rolls of film which I'll post at my site in the
next

few days.



John Blower
Writer/Editor/Trainer
61 Broom Park
Teddington TW11 9RR
United Kingdom
Tel: (44) (0)7986 401490Fax: (001) 707 220 7490
http://www.feniks.com/  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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Re: FLUXLIST: London March

2003-02-17 Thread Philip Kane
Maybe you could both post your website details so we can take a look at the
pictures?  Especially as I didn't get to take any - I was too busy
stewarding!  Hope all the fluxlist people who were on the demo had a good
time.

Philip

- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, February 17, 2003 4:25 PM
Subject: RE: FLUXLIST: London March


 Yeah I was there too ... got some digital shots and video,
 look forward to seeing your pictures, I'll try and do the same with mine.

 -- Original Message --
 Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2003 18:29:39 +
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 From: John Blower [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: FLUXLIST: London March
 Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 Still high on the exhilaration of being amongst a crowd of about 1.5
million!
 
 I shot off a couple of rolls of film which I'll post at my site in the
 next
 
 few days.
 
 
 
 John Blower
 Writer/Editor/Trainer
 61 Broom Park
 Teddington TW11 9RR
 United Kingdom
 Tel: (44) (0)7986 401490Fax: (001) 707 220 7490
 http://www.feniks.com/  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 ---
 Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
 Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
 Version: 6.0.449 / Virus Database: 251 - Release Date: 27/01/2003







Re: FLUXLIST: London March

2003-02-17 Thread John Blower


http://www.feniks.com/londonmarch/


John Blower
Writer/Editor/Trainer
61 Broom Park
Teddington TW11 9RR
United Kingdom
Tel: (44) (0)7986 401490Fax: (001) 707 220 7490
http://www.feniks.com/  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.449 / Virus Database: 251 - Release Date: 27/01/2003



Re: FLUXLIST: London March

2003-02-17 Thread Carol Starr
hi john,

great photos!!! thanks for sharing.

hopefully the powers that want this war will see that it is not going to be
accepted by  people everywhere.

bests, carol
xx

John Blower wrote:

 http://www.feniks.com/londonmarch/

 John Blower
 Writer/Editor/Trainer
 61 Broom Park
 Teddington TW11 9RR
 United Kingdom
 Tel: (44) (0)7986 401490Fax: (001) 707 220 7490
 http://www.feniks.com/  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

   

 ---
 Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
 Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
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Re: FLUXLIST: London Fun

2001-06-25 Thread Sol Nte

Roger wrote:

My contribution to the afternoon was an event called Lost.
The party were looking at a map of America from which all the place names
except those containing the word lost had been removed.
I thought that the partry were heading for the Beuys exhibits
and so I made my way there ahead of them - unaware that they had changed
their minds. They, of course, had no idea where I was - and so, from their
viewpoint, I was lost.

This was indeed a nice event by Roger. We were in fact viewing Kathy
Prendergast's Lost Map.

A particularly nice feature of the event was the genuine concern shown by
Roger's family at his disappearance..and how they set out to search for
himwonderful method work ;-)

Roger, I don't suppose you could post the score for this event to the list?

cheers,

Sol.








Re: FLUXLIST: London Fun

2001-06-25 Thread Roger Stevens


A particularly nice feature of the event was the genuine concern shown by
Roger's family at his disappearance..and how they set out to search for
himwonderful method work ;-)


This is true - my family did try to find me - and succeeded
It must be said that the approach of the other party members was to sit
in one place and wait.

Home IS where the art is.






Re: FLUXLIST: London Fun

2001-06-24 Thread Roger Stevens

My contribution to the afternoon was an event called Lost.
The party were looking at a map of America from which all the place names
except those containing the word lost had been removed.
I thought that the partry were heading for the Beuys exhibits
and so I made my way there ahead of them - unaware that they had changed
their minds. They, of course, had no idea where I was - and so, from their
viewpoint, I was lost.

The Mailart Family had a great time. It was great to meet some other
Fluxsouls in the fluxflesh.

Thanks to Sol for arranging it.


Just to let you all know that those of us who met in London yesterday
had a grand day out. Photos were taken, art was made
documentation on the web coming soonto find out what connects
Captain Firestar, a ping-pong ball and Tate Modern watch this space.

Can I just say thank you to everyone who was there yesterday and that I had
a wonderful time and hope you all did too, thanks for coming.



cheers,

Sol.






Re: FLUXLIST: london calling

2000-05-10 Thread Roger Stevens

well, the Tate Modern, obviously

and the audio exhibition at... hmmm forgotten -
is it The Hayward Gallery?

I'll definitely be going when I next visit London
perhaps you could go and tell Fluxlisters all about it ?








Re: FLUXLIST: london calling

2000-05-09 Thread Gerald O'Connell

In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], // - - \ bern-o-matic
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
hey all,

relocating to london monday... any suggestions on stuff 'bout town? 


ps. owen still no box in the mail... 

later:b
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Visto.com. Life on the Dot.



try the Polish bar at Holborn
 
Gerald O'Connell

http://www.wonderport.com



Re: FLUXLIST: London Mayday Demo

2000-05-02 Thread Patricia

I think that third exposure wiped out some Rogerbraincells.  Oh, those
I-Zones.  Now you're thrice removed from realcapitalist time.

I think the peppermint geraniums, please,

; )
PK

Roger Stevens wrote:

 Hi, all

 just got back from London
 and the anti-capitalist demonstrations

 Hopeless! No demonstrators, no rioters
 and no more policeman than usual. Just people at work and a few tourists.

 Of course, when I got home about half an hour ago
 and turned on my computer I soon realised
 that it's May 2nd today.

 I got the date wrong.

 Is my face red.

 I'll have to plant these geraniums in the garden instead.

 -Roger




Re: FLUXLIST: London Mayday Demo

2000-05-02 Thread Roger Stevens

Hi, all

just got back from London
and the anti-capitalist demonstrations

Hopeless! No demonstrators, no rioters
and no more policeman than usual. Just people at work and a few tourists.

Of course, when I got home about half an hour ago
and turned on my computer I soon realised
that it's May 2nd today.

I got the date wrong.

Is my face red.

I'll have to plant these geraniums in the garden instead.


-Roger





Re: FLUXLIST: London Mayday Demo

2000-05-02 Thread Sol Nte

Heiko wrote:

Well, this is fun, so what ?

on the TV and they had a whole afternoon. Well what did they do..graffiti
on
a statue of Churchill and the Cenotaph (a memorial to those who died in
wwI/wwII). The slogan on the cenotaph was okay.."Why glorify war?". Other

I agree that the graffiti stuff is fun..check out the grass mohican on the
statue of Winston Churchill at the BBC's site
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/newsid_732000/732791.stm

The thing is that these protests are supposed to be dealing with serious
issues and a lot of the activities just make a mockery of the serious points
being made.  Also the graffiti was pretty badly done too, people seemed to
have just drawn over each other's stuff so you couldn't make out the
slogans. I would like to have seen more high quality graffiti if they're
going to do it at all..the grass mohican is the most fun thing...that I do
like but really what has any of that got to do with protesting about
capitalism and greed. Now smashing a McDonalds would have been okay as well
but they then smash the shop next door which is not a symbol of anything
unlike McDonald's. Apparently later in the day they also smashed Rymans on
the strand which sells mainly envelopes, paper, files, pens etc. So after
attacking symbols of capitalism they attack stationery?

On looking at the BBC site apparently some paving slabs were lifted and
flowers planted..a shame there's no good pictures of that. Although check
this link
quite low on the page for a nice shot of a young man planting a small pansy
or viola on a statue:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/newsid_732000/732568.stm

To be honest if yesterday's protest is a sign of anything it's a sign that
capitalism has nothing to worry about...for now ;-)

cheers,

Sol.