Tuesday, April 30, 2019

TO  THE KINGSTON CREATIVE COMMUNITY

Beyond the great work of promotion that involves art walks, the murals, and entertainment, there needs to be historic preservation,.

The structures that have been preserved are few, grand, famous and made of masonry. Wood, which is most reflective of African sculptural excellence, and has been blended with colonial rationality, precious thought it is, has been neglected to the vanishing point.

Jamaican Escapade, who seems to go beyond documentation to actually investigating the structural situation of venerable, deteriorated structures, has identified something immensely valuable on Princess St. 20 years ago, I would have been amazed to see something like this, with all its basic features and styling intact. It is all the more remarkable that such a structure still stands.

It is well past amazing that the Art and Architecture schools can't step in to stop further deterioration of this structure, and document its materials and structure against further loss (and the loss of memory). This neglect is shameful. 

The stabilization of this building is more urgent than murals. 

The KC community runs the risk of working mightily and having their efforts serve gentrification and foreignness, when holding on to such significant and authentic Jamaican remnants could help to ward off gentrification and contribute toward "regeneration" instead.

Is there some reason why an art walk, or preparation for it, can't coincide with knocking on the door of this building, and assessing the needs and priorities of its occupants as regard preservation? Allowing this structure to languish, when help is so near, will not be forgiven or forgotten.

Stabilizing this building, in terms of the human and social, as well as the material aspect should not necessarily be onerous, I can can assure all that I am not the only person who knows how to stabilize it without the loss of any detail. (Trench Town Culture Yard is a Kingston example available to all). Stabilization (as in "arrested decay" could be virtually free of cost. 



ANIMALS AT THE GATEWAY

 I was thinking of small, cute animals--guinea pigs, bunnies, fowl--mostly to supply compost and to eat insects on rooftop gardens, and all firmly enclosed inside the building. They wouldn't be visible from the street, and would be most unlikely to escape onto it.

 And I think enough people are concerned about the environment now to support it financially. We could really be at a change moment. The key was fighting off the truck stop. So now for the environmentally benign alternative? Your idea about the animals got me thinking. If there was something like a labyrinth of enclosed spaces, they could roam all over the interior too, and always remain safe and enclosed. I suspect that would be popular with our community?
CHINOOK COLOR JARGON

The Chinook jargon — a Native American trade language from the Pacific Northwest, which I learned while I lived there — has four color words: t’kope, which is white; pil, which is red, orange, yellow, or any bright lively color; klale, which is any dark color; and spooh, which is any faded, washed-out color; a pair of blue jeans starts out klale and ends up spooh.

Sunday, April 28, 2019

RACE OR ETHNICITY?

Ecosophia

Robert, thanks for this. One of the reasons I point out that ethnic groups exist but races do not is precisely that ethnic groups exist on a scale that allows the partial overlap of language, culture, and heredity to mean something, while “races” do not.


INTEGRITY

https://www.peakprosperity.com/podcast/114985/living-integrity
GREEN MUSEUM

https://news.artnet.com/art-world/zoma-museum-opens-ethiopia-1501450?fbclid=IwAR0R_ljsGKqT_xy8RzIC-8FV8FF3FrHmYPBeCQmj35uO0VGyx9sF7OaNfTc

Friday, April 26, 2019

DOING WITH LESS
Seeing doing with less as deferring gratification doesn’t seem to explain everything. In the visual arts, very broadly speaking, less is generally more. I think it was said first by Mies van der Rohe: Less is more.
More can simply be junk that reduces effectiveness, and less can weed out the unnecessary and increase effectiveness. So doing with less can produce better, more economical form, while being pleasant and compelling to deal with. (If beauty and elegance didn’t serve some human purpose, there wouldn’t be so much of it in history.) While beauty can often require more, it seems that elegance, by definition, requires less.

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

PRINCESS STREET

Beauty in these old structures. Princess Street, Downtown Kingston. Jigsaw puzzle worthy. #oldcity #natgeotravel #experiencejamaica#downtownkingstonjamaica @jamaicanescapades
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  • Brett Ashmeade-Hawkins These are the same two 18th or Early 19th Century Houses on Princess Street. From an Oil Painting by Alexander Cooper, 1971.
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    • Trevor Burrowes Jamaican Escapades I found a surprising degree of such awareness among ordinary people back in the 60's. It
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    • Trevor Burrowes I found this awareness among similar youth back in the 60's. The people--the hurry-come-up-- in the stratus between such folks and the elite that include most people here and higher up seem to be the problem.
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Wednesday, April 17, 2019

POETIC JUSTICE

Alison Kenning Massa Ever since I arrived in Jamaica in 1994, I've been heartbroken over the loss of Falmouth's extraordinary heritage. I understand the unpleasant (to put it mildly) associations with colonial/slave era buildings but tearing them down or simply allowing them to collapse is surely adding insult to injury. Can the Mayor not see that there's poetic retribution in preserving structures that can attract extra tourist revenues, especially among the increasing number of discerning visitors who appreciate authenticity over "theme park" attractions.
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  • 3h
Poetic justice. great insight. I might borrow that phrase, if I may. :-)