The Story of Stuff Project

March 23rd, 2010

I’ve seen Annie Leonard on Christiane Amanpour’s show (have I ever mentioned I want to b Christiane Amanpour when I grow up?)  and her cartoon won me over. Sweet, charming, amusing and eye-opening. Her project is called “The Story of Stuff” and it is consisting of a book, the cartoon (20 minutes, you can watch it on the website) and the website (including interesting articles, links and ideas for action):

www.storyofstuff.com

A very charming critical analysis of and warning against consumerism and its effects on our planet, health and well-being.

Yes, American, cartoonish and simplified but a great idea in a great direction!

Yes, you can!

March 22nd, 2010

Congratulations on the change, USA. Yes, you can!

Yes for the Health Care Reform!

March 19th, 2010

Wishing the health care reform:

lots of success

happy birthday

break a leg

all the best

congratulations

welcome

Time for (all) people in USA to have a well functioning heath care system. Time to stop private insurances from blackmailing with what we’re most vulnerable about and making profits with human suffering.

And time to say “thank you” to our excellent European systems!

Love = 0 (?)

March 18th, 2010

Have you ever thought about “love” in tennis? I must admit I haven’t.

And now I have CNN running in the background. A tennis show called “Open Court” is on.  And they gave an explanation which made my romantic heart break:

“Love means nothing. It comes from the idea of playing just for the love of it, playing for nothing.”

Love means nothing?????

4 year olds & truths of life

March 17th, 2010

Last night, I had dinner at my friend’s house. We (Michelle, her daughter Ava (2) and her son Rex (4)) are eating salad and grilled chicken.

At one point, Rex turns to me, holding the greasy chicken leg in front of his face which is totally smeared with brown sauce.

Rex: “Ana, do you have one baby or two?”

Ana: “I don’t have babies”

Rex: “Why?”

Ana: “Because I haven’t found the papa yet”

Michelle: “Rex, will we find a papa for Ana?”

Rex (in a very serious, deep tone): “You need a MAN.”

Little smart ass! (As his mum called him, bitte schön.)

The Punsihment

March 14th, 2010

We’ve lost punishment somewhere along the way.

We’ve lost it together with many other things we keep on losing in this scary process called “social change”. All those things, good and bad, that slowly, or suddenly, changed their form and meaning or completely disappeared from our culture.

Yes, we’ve lost punishment. Or rather, the idea of punishment.  Even when we do punish, the punishment is actually very mild. Murderers and child rapists simply dissipater from our eyes and get locked in institutions with warm showers, few meals a day, visiting rights, walks in the yard, workshops and exercise facilities. Punishment? A lesson not to do it again? And most of all, a warning to others with similar intentions? Am not sure about that.

What I am sure about is that that for the chosen few, we have completely lost the idea of punishment.

Is punishment good? Is it bad? Who has the right to punish whom? And for what? I don’t know. As a kid, I’ve never been punished. But then, it wasn’t necessary. I was an extraordinary good kid. A nerd by nature, just pretending to be cool. So I can’t tell if punishment really works. What I know that definitely doesn’t work is double morale.

But kids we’re not and there are some dreadful crimes happening in front of our eyes (thank you, globalisation and mass media!), shocking us, some having major impact on our lives, just to end up with the ones responsible leaving without any corrective action being taken. People guilty for those injustices are known to us, and so is their undoubtful guilt, but out of some reason, we are not punishing them. We are not even considering punishing them. Why? What makes bankers, catholic priests, consulting companies (and other conglomerates), and American/British presidents untouchable?

Why should they be treated differently than you and I? Because you and I would, in contrary to them, end up in a prison (enjoying all those nice features described above) if we:

  • Conducted some major financial fraud in which we would financially ruin a few (and not billions) people
  • Raped, tortured and beaten children
  • Helped someone to falsify their account books with the result of a few (and not millions) people ending in debt they cannot possibly ever pay back
  • Broke in into someone’s home, destroyed their belongings and killed their family (especially if we did this with absolutely no reason)

Is this democracy? I don’t know. If “those up there” can do whatever they want to the people they should be serving and not get punished, isn’t that called something else? What effect does this have on our perception of morale? Of fairness? Of responsibility?

And why the hell do we not speak out????

What does Tajder mean when she says “Bimbo”

March 5th, 2010

Because it is now being discussed about what I meant when I said “Bimbo” during the discussion on Club 2, here a definition from Wikipedia, just to avoid any misunderstandings:

“Bimbo is a term that emerged in popular English language usage in the early 20th century to describe a physically attractive but unintelligent woman.”

Bimbo got stuck with me as the name for the over-sexualised, unnaturally perfect (or über-perfect) image of women that we have been bombarded with by the media in recent years. I got the name from the game called Miss Bimbo, which was launched two years ago and made a huge furore because it was targeted to 9-16 years old girls while the task was to “make your Bimbo (avatar) the sexiest, richest and most famous Miss Bimbo in the world”. This was to be done via shopping, beauty treatments, diets and plastic surgery. To do this, Bimbo needed money, which she gets, among other, from her boyfriend “Your boyfriend will (hopefully) give you some money every day. Because he loves you.”

First launched in France, the game reached 1,2 million users within few weeks. I wrote about this phenomenon in my article “Happiness is Just a Makeover Away” which was published in The Vienna Review in August 2008. Due to bad publicity and raging parents, the game has been somehow changed. Now, for instance, the task is to „Become the hottest, coolest most intelligent and talented bimbo the world has ever known!”  But Miss Bimbo is still a bimbo…..

For more information, go to www.missbimbo.com

Discussing in Club2 on 3.3. at 23h, ORF2

March 1st, 2010

Johanna Dohnal, Austrian star figther for women’s rights and the first “Frauenministerin” has died on 20 February.

Although I am one of those women saying “I’m not a feminist but…”, there was a strange connection between Dohnal and me. She has lived in Laudonplace (my apartement building) for few years. I have had my first appearance in Austrian newspapers last year, as she was celebrating her 70th birthday and “Furche” invited me to join a debate about feminism today. Few days later, I was sitting in Café Sperl or Ritter, giving an interview, and she was sitting at the table next to me, also giving an interview. And today, I have been invited by ORF (Austrian National Broadcast) to join Club 2, a live discussion on Wednesdays 23h on ORF2. The topic is, of course, feminism and what has become of it.

So yes, I’m not a feminist but….

Our Money. Or our Souls?

February 25th, 2010

Sexcession scandal continues. The discussion goes on. Debates on TV, newspapers full of articles asking “How can it be possible that a swingers club is sponsored by taxpayers’ money???”

Wrong discussion! Wrong question!

The money doesn’t matter. Whether this “art” project was paid by taxpayers’ money or private sponsors, it is all same: the money comes from us. Either in the form of taxes we pay or products & services we buy.

No, the discussion should be turned back from the money to a more important issue: Our souls.

Why is crap like this being sold to us as art?

What is art?

What is the purpose of art?

What position does it have in our society?

Does is still exist?

Why?

No, this time, money really doesn’t matter….

Art is dead. Or fucked up.

February 24th, 2010

If I tell you that art is dead, you’ll tell me “Nothing new”. I know, I know. But I still get excited about it. It makes me sad. Our values are in rapid extinction, right in front of our eyes. Family is dead, altruism is dead, relationships are dead, nature is dead. Art is dead…

Last week, I had the honour and the privilege to open my best friend’s exhibition. She’s a painter. A real painter. She paints paintings you can hang on your wall. Beautiful paintings, full of structures, patterns, colours. Paintings that take weeks to make. With her own hands. In my speech, I talked about how our society lost this patience for creating stuff (art and products, even relationships) with our own hands and through this process projecting our energy into them. I compared this to Japanese masters of sword making. They create their swords, Katanas, all by themselves, and they dedicate months to only one sword.  As a dancer, it fascinates me that they also use their whole bodies in this process. Made in this way, Katana has thousands of layers, each bursting with its creator’s energy. That is what makes it so unique and powerful. This Zen-like concentrated projection of energy used to be part of our western culture as well. But we’ve lost it. Our lives are virtualised. Our energy wasted. Our jobs are virtual (we don’t produce, we sit in meetings, talk on the phone and write e-mails), our music, films and newspapers are virtual. Our photos are virtual, our memories are virtual, our friendships are virtual. We use products made by someone else, somewhere else. And we don’t care about them. We buy them, use them, throw them away. They are exchangeable. They are not made to last. Just like everything else in our lives.

Same happened to art. Art became trickery, a collection of ideas or constructs created quickly or by someone else. Videos, performances, installations. If they are good, they will  tickle our brains for a few seconds. And be forgotten. And if they’re not….. Here the newest example, a huge scandal in Vienna. Swiss artist Christoph Bückel turned the basement of Secession (Vienna’s legendary art space bearing Klimt’s frescos) into a swinger club. That’s Büchel’s art: he already created a sun bed in Kassel and a supermarket and a betting office in Fridericianum. Pardon me! I come from a family of artist and I am really open for everything. But why should re-creating every day spaces somewhere outside of their normal context be called art? It is cheap (actually not, the Secession project costs  €90,000), it is not creative, it doesn’t really have a message, doesn’t involve artistry. It is just…an offence. Art is not dead. It is deader than dead.

Maybe the whole project would be a bit less scandalous if it wasn’t really operating as a sex club. Yes, someone got a licence for it. So people can come and look at it as art (why?) during the day and at night they can pay whatever entrance and have promiscuous sex in front of Klimt’s paintings. Art?

After we’ve broke all boundaries and lost all respect and fell on our knees in front of mediocrity and trickery, what will be left of our culture?