Thursday, December 18, 2008

Contact jams in Italia!

This is a photo of me working on a sculpture at Louise's house (at night).  I'll keep you all in the proverbial dark until it's finished.
And this is what happens when you dont keep your WWOOFers busy.  We started to do some Contact Improvisation one day at Dino's.  The trend continued whenever we had some free time.  Above is Andrea about to jump onto my shoulders.  Below is Andrea (under a tablecloth) swinging Victoria around.
Since I probably won't post again soon, I wish you all a very merry xmas!  Ciao!

Friday, December 5, 2008

Another farm heard from...

Hello all! Last week I finally packed up all my bags and left Dino's farm. It had been great and I know that I wil return someday, but it was time to move on. I went to another farm near Cortona, at the house of Louise. The house here is so warm! Its not that winters here are very bad, but it does rain all the time...

At Louise's I've been caring for their horses (2 bigguns and a little colt) and generally helping around the house. Louise lives here with her 2 little daughters and her mom lives up the road. Right now there is another WWOOFer from the states here as well. As it turns out I am the only guy, so I think they are glad to have me around for big stupid jobs.

But really, the work is nice and the house is very cozy. Louise is encouraging me to make a big sculpture for her garden, so I've started that. I think it will be a centaur or something equally large and horshish. (Her daughters are as obsessed with horses as Flynn!) Louise has lots of wonderful tools, including a few power tools that I had been missing. I'm very excited to start work on this sculpture. I'll send photos as it develops.

I have also been teaching art lessons to Louise's girls and other kids from around the area. The best part about this job is that it pay$. I don't have much need for money right now, but it is nice to stock up for the next long travel. I really love working with the kids, but it makes me miss Chelsea even more. Its really fun but it can get a bit overwhelming. Mom, I don't know how you ever handled all those daycare kids! And Grandma, 5 boys? You all are crazy!

I also had my first succesful Italian art show. This took place on my last night at Dino's. That night there was a performance, feast, and dance party (like the parties I helped with the last time I was there, in the summer). I posted a bunch of drawings and paintings on the walls along with some prices and my website info. I sold almost a third of them! That was a nice little bonus, and it put a few more euros in my pocket. After everyone left that night we residents kept on dancing until a huge thunderstorm cut the music. Luckily we had Andrea, another American WWOOFer, who started playing the paino. Victoria (a frenchie WWOOFer) and I started a great improvised dance which went on until 3 in the morning. Dino told us that we were 'complete WWOOFers'. I think that's one of the best compliments I've ever received.

Next time- photos of all these wonderful things, I swear!
love, chris

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Olives olives olives

I thought I would bring you all up to speed on the work that I've been doing since I am supposedly volunteering on a farm.  Picking olives is pretty easy work, but it gets a bit tiring day after day after day.  Basically the system is this:  we spread large nets around the trees to catch the olives and then we just pull the olives off of the branches, either by hand or with small rakes.  Some people use a machine that looks like a spider on a stick to shake the higher branches and knock the olives down.  We don't use one here, which is nice, since they are loud and obnoxious. Instead we use ladders or just climb the trees to get at the high branches.  Olive wood is incredibly flexible. Most of the branches can be pulled down to ground level.
Once a tree is harvested we dump the olives into a crate and store them in the house until we have enough crates to go the the mill.
The mill is called Il Frantoio, which comes from the verb 'to smash up.' I like that.  The building is very old.  It has been a mill for hundreds of years, and used to be powered by water which was directed to the machines through a small system of canals and dams. Now all the machines are electric.  Not quite as romantic, but effective.
Anyway, when we arrive at the mill we carry the olives upstairs where they are weighed and then dumped into a big cermaic bin. Once the machine starts the olives fall through a hole and into the 'olive oil assembly line.'  

Here's Dino, il padrone, encouraging the olives to go and become oil.  After this step the olives fall past a vacuum which sucks out (most of) the leaves and other junk.  Then they are washed and passed over a conveyor belt.  This is a good oppurtunity for 'quality control,' and Louise, our English neighbor and partner-in-oil, provides this service.
The olives then enter a series of grinders, much like big horizontal concrete mixers.  After this the mashed up pulp is directed into a large centrifuge, and the solid material is carried outside of the mill and dumped into a large pile of odorless, brown... stuff.  Then the oil is seperated from the other liquids.  Finally it arrives, in all of its glorious color!
Now for the fun part.  We all go into the next room, make a big fire in the hearth, cook bruschetta, sausages, and whatever else we have, and try everything with the most virgin oil you can get!  The taste is peppery, a touch bitter, and 100% olive.  Oh yes, and of course there is plenty of wine.  Even the dogs try some.
Well, there you have it: olive oil from harvest to taste.  I hope that all of you are well, and I wish you a happy Thanksgiving!  I have been invited to an American's house for a Thanksgiving meal this Sunday, so I will get my fill of the usual fare.  In fact, that's her up above, sitting next to the crazy South American painter who is giving the dog a taste of wine.  I love this place...

Monday, November 17, 2008

Va bene...

Ciao ciao
Well, I am still here at Dino's farm.  I'm tired from picking olives all day every day, but otherwise I am content.  The work days have been long but the weather is still beautiful.  I've been working on my paintings when I have the time but I don't have much to show for it.  Here is one photo for now to prove that I have still been painting.  More to come when the internet isn't so lazy.


Friday, October 24, 2008

Ciao a tutti!

Well, its been a while, but I'm still alive and well.  I'm in Cortona Italy, helping with the olive harvest, painting, meeting people, and enjoying life.  Here are some pictures of my little apartment/studio.  It used to be a rabbit house, but now I'm the only animal that sleeps there.
This is my outdoor studio space, complete with a wonderful view of the Cortona hillside and the valley below.
The vines have completely taken over the walls.  Its nice to be surrounded by this much greenery and sunlight so late into Autumn!

Well, there are olives to pick and dishes to wash, so I must be off for now. Ciao!

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Oktoberfest!

We left for Munich at 6:45 last Friday. To ease in to a day of heavy drinking we bought a 6 pack of Beck's and cracked our first beers on the train at 8 AM. Gotta love it.

This was the tent where we had reservations and spent most of our time. And money.

The beer was all Spaten and it came in wonderfully huge glass mugs. The barmaids would carry about 10 at a time. I don't know how they did it, but we tipped them well.


I love how cluelessly happy I look in this picture. I clearly had no idea that I was about to take a beer shower. Seabass was the culprit of this photo. His excessive "Prost!" culminated in most of that beer finding my lap and shirt. Oh well. Everyone smelled like beer and cigarettes anyway.
From here on out there aren't really any pictures. Needless to say it was a day of reckless partying and cheering. The environment was just incredible. Everyone was so happy, so friendly. I will certainly go back some day.





Monday, September 29, 2008

Italia, Hooo! wait, first Prague

So after touring Hamburg, Berlin, and Munich's Oktoberfest I left Sebastian's apartment and boarded a train with all my gear for Italy. I had to run with my backpack and briefcase to catch the bus but I made it in time, barely.
Anyway, after boarding the train I got a call from my dear friend Ulana, a fellow Alfredian. She is currently living in Prague and she was gracious enough to invite me to stay. Well, that changed my plans. I hopped off the train in Munich and headed to the Czech Republic.
Now I'm here in her dorm preparing to go out and celebrate her 21st birthday at midnight. Hurrah!
Pictures to come soon, I swear...

Saturday, September 13, 2008



A partial self portrait.

Well, its been a little while, and I have been busy.  From here on out I am going to transcribe what I have written in my journal.

The other day Seabass and I went back to Tubingen.  The ESB Sprachkurs was there taking a tour. Seabass and I did our own tour, through the old castle, the Markplatz, and back to the river.  The river is beautiful and full of 'Stokerkann' (or something like that- they are small punting boats).  There is also a thin island with a path framed by towering sycamore trees.  I sat down on the embankment wall and drew some of the buildings.  
It started to rain so Seabass and I took the train back to Reutlingen instead of joining the students on the boats.  By the time we got back to Reutlingen it was absolutely pouring.  We ducked into the Irish Bar and grabbed a pint while the rain let up.  Later that night we returned to the Irish Bar for Karaoke Night after partying in Lit-haus (one of the student dorms).  I sang (or tried to sing) Jailhouse Rock.  I also gave a hand with 'Ace of Base' and some others that I don't remember.  Funny how that happens...
I had brought my little sketchbook so I did a few quick drawings of people.  A girl from Canada (Marita?) asked me to draw her but I'm sure that I didn't do a very good job since I could barely sign my name on it.  She said the drawing looked like a 60 yr. old woman.  I told her to keep it until then and see how the likeness is.  I wonder if she will.  The drawing was done in one of the little books that I took from Aunt Nancy's house when Jacquie, Grandma, Grandpa and I cleaned it out.  I wonder how old the paper is, and how old the drawing will be if Marita keeps it until it looks like her.

I've been to a few parties at Lit-haus at this point.  They are an odd mix of American college drinking games, European (mostly French) chanting, and general international conversation.  Its always fun to head out from Lit-haus with the whole pack.  Picture a group of guys from all over the world wandering drunkenly down the streets of a quiet southern German town.  Add Faxe 1-liter cans of beer to the equation and you've got one hell of a good time...

A few days ago Seabass and I snuck on to the Sprachkurs bus headed for Heidelburg.  We left the students to their tour and took our own tour of the huge wrecked castle.  It had been effectively blown to tower-sized bits in some old war and now it sits like a burnt out shell above the old town of Heidelburg.  The rain was picking up so Seabass and I ducked into a quarter-spherical alcove and ate our standard mozz/tomato sandwhiches washed down with cold water.  Nothing like budget meals.
We walked down into town once the rain started to let up, past a trio of 'knights' talking to some tourists, and down into the old town.  We listened to a huge old man reading poetry in German.  He sat under a pop-up yard tent, sitting on a folding chair that almost disappeared under his massive body.  His voice reminded me of heavy whipping cream.  He had grand grey mutton chops and a brilliant red scarf.  Both of his chins were clean-shaven.
Seabass and I got some 1 euro coffee and savored it as we wandered through the Markplatz where a jazzy band was playing for the daily market.  We saw the old bridge that Heidelburg had saved by petitioning the Allies not to bomb it during the war (according to Seabass).
The rain was on/off drizzle so we wandered down the main road until we transitioned into the newer part of town.  This was a big plaza with trams, buses, banks, steel, etc.  We met up with Martina (ex-rugby player from Northeastern) and the Mexican contingent.  It still cracks me up to hang out with a bunch of Mexicans in southern Germany.  We got some lunch and Martina showed us around the parts of town she remembers from her childhood (she lived nearby when she was younger).  
Finally we hopped on our free bus and took off for home.
After a nap, dinner and a shower it was time as usual for more drinking.  I am in Germany, after all.  We bought some more cheap export beers (plastic bottles) and headed over to Lit-haus.  We finished our brews and secured a rowdy crew to walk in to town with.  We reached the Farberei and coughed up the abominable- and unexpected- 10 euro cover charge.  I must say though, it was very nearly worth it.  I've never been to a dance club before and certainly not a European one.  This place was nuts.  At least 3 huge bars, private rooms, and 2 dance rooms complete with DJ's, stages, smoke machines, lights, strobes, and nonstop pounding beats.  I danced blisters into my feet and still didn't stop until 5 AM.  By then almost everyone had left.  Martina, Seabass and I headed across town to the only bar still open: Billy Bob's.  We split a pitcher of Hefeweizen and some fries.  On the walk home I had to carry my shoes and socks because my blisters were so bad.  An old lady who was out walking her dog saw us coming, picked up her little dog, and scurried behind her fence to slam the gate on us.  I can't say that I blame her.  3 kids approaching you before dawn, one carrying his shoes, another with a wine-stained tie hanging loosely from his collar, and the third a girl who could probably kick my or Sebastian's ass if she had a mind to.
Anyway we got home just after dawn broke, ate the rest of our 'aubergine-schnitzel-creation' out of the pan, drew the blinds and passed the fuck out.  I woke up around noon and worked on the drawing of my hand that I had started the other day.  I hung it on the wall just as Seabass awoke from his beauty sleep.  Martina came over and we made pancakes- or flatcakes, since we were out of baking powder.  We ate them with good ole New England maple syrup from Seabass's priceless store (a gallon jug carried over from the states).  To combat our activities from the previous night we sat around all day, watched the Big Lebowski, ate pizza, read, and went to bed early.  

The next morning Seabass and I boarded a train to Hamburg.  Without seat reservations we found ourselves sitting next to the door, munching on sandwiches and chocolate and sharing a bottle of wine.  We played Spades to pass the time.  La vita e bella.

Seabass and I were able to find a host through couchsurfing.com.  Two hosts, actually.  Claudia is 18, still finishing high school.  Her boyfriend Vincent is 20 or so and just finished the European equivalent of high school.  They both still live with their respective parents and they hosted us for one night each.  We met them in the evening, shared some pizza and beers and called it a night after a little stroll where they showed us Hamburg's 'occupied house.'  This was an abandoned opera that was now inhabited by politically radical leftist youths- anti-capitalist, anti-police.  Apparently the police raid the building once every few months, make some arrests, and leave.  Claudia said that this is because there are a few guys who are always provoking the police.  It sounds like there is a lot of anger, manifesting itself in these juvenile attacks on the police.  On the other hand I think it is great that these people have remained and continue to fight the police and the status quo.  It is a necessary reminder that there are alternatives to our current system.
We spent the first night at Claudia's, which was far outside of town.  Her apartment was very quaint but it was full of bookshelves, photos, stones, artwork, knick-knacks, plant and colors.  It was very comfortable and unassuming.  I immediately felt at home.  There was a note on the couch welcoming us into their home.
When we woke up Claudia prepared us a magnificent breakfast and we parted ways.  She went to school (at noon!) and we took our bags into Hamburg to meet up with Vincent.  He took us to his parents' house which was a gorgeous flat right in the center of town.  Huge rooms, white walls, tall ceilings, big paintings.  Probably the opposite of Claudia's place, but still very nice.  Vincent had lived in Lexington, MA with his family when he was younger so they all spoke very good english.  They were very friendly and hospitable.  We left our bags there and began our tour of Hamburg.
I bought an old army jacket at a 2nd hand shop- with the happy hour special it was under 30 euros.  We took a ferry through the canal and saw the freight industry at work.  I thought of Greg's senior show work and realized why he was so fascinated with this stuff.  The scale is simply enormous.  We climbed up an office building designed like a ship and got quite a view, even though it was very overcast.  We ate Doner and fries for lunch and grabbed some more 1euro coffee to go.  We strolled through the up-and-coming waterfront business district.  Construction and weird German architecture everywhere.  We walked through a bombed out old church which was full of modern sculpture.  It was left as it was after being bombed as a monument against war.  We stopped and I made a quick sketch of the tower- which had miraculously survived the bombs.  You could see where the main building once joined the tower.  Now there is only an empty courtyard.  It was a very moving site.
We also visited the Rathaus (city hall) with its incredible copper roofs.  There is so much copper on the roofs of Hamburg's old buildings.  
Eventually Vincent met up with us.  We went back to the canal to see it at night, and then we walked through the red-light district.  The Herbertstrasse was a walled-off street where only men are allowed- on one side of the windows, that is.  The street is lined with glass walls on both sides, spilling pink light onto the road.  Beautiful semi-nude women sit behind the windows and tap on the glass as you walk by, hoping to turn a trick.  Occasionally they open a window and call you closer.  Not a lot of business on a Tuesday night, I suppose.  It was a very bizarre scene.  The women were almost regal, despite their nudity.  It seemed that they had some sort of weird psychological power over the men in the street.  I guess they would need it, to maintain their dignity in this type of work.  Of course, certain taboos that we have about prostitution back in the states don't really seem to apply here.
As soon as we left the Herbertstrasse we were back in the heart of the red-light district.  Girls in winter jackets (it was cold for September), jeans, and money belts swarmed us, trying their luck.  "Ohh, English- where frommmm?"  They were quite the contrast to the stately women of the Herbertstrasse.
We walked for a bit longer, trying to find a place to eat.  A ringer outside of a strip joint tried to lure us in.  Vincent told him that we were looking for fish (we thought it an appropriate meal, being so close to the water).  I didn't need to speak German to understand the joke that the man countered with, gesturing inside.  We laughed, declined his offer, and continued our search for food.  We ended up buying a bottle of wine and returning to Vincent's family's home for his mother's leftover spaghetti bolognese.  It was delicious, followed by a carrot-nut cake and finally two very comfortable beds.  
We woke up to another excellent breakfast, thanked our hosts profusely, and caught the train for Berlin.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

The carving continues...



Well, I was able to separate this figure from the block.  Unfortunately I then had to stop to go get my hand stitched up.  I should be OK in a week or so, and a hefty Euro doctor's bill.  You win some, you lose some.  Anyway, the carving is coming along nicely.  A special thanks to Seabass and Julie for getting me to the doc and translating.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

A few new photos...

(Seabass, the mischievous mozzarella man)

Today Seabass, another American student named Chris and I went on a supposedly leisurely walk to the top of a nearby hill to climb a tower and see the view. After a few missed turns, blisters, and mobile mozzarella and salami sandwiches, we reached the tower in a few too many hours.
(Ya, it was pretty warm)


The view was spectacular, our hasty picnic was delicious, and the weather was beautiful.

When we returned 6 hours later we made a feast of stir fry and devoured it along with some cheap export beers in plastic bottles. Delicious.
I also started a carving with my new chisels. More on that to come.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Hallo von Deutschland!

(Sunset from Seabass's apartment... and Seabass)

So after two solid days of planes, trains and uncomfortable naps I have arrived here in Reutlingen. I'm staying in the modest luxury of Seabass's apartment, a short walk from Reutlingen's bars, train station, etc.
(A glimpse of Reutlingen through the trees)

A number of Seabass's peers live nearby in the so-called Aquarium: a huge glass building full of student housing. The students are from the US, Mexico, Europe, Russia... I've met a lot of good-natured people, and drank a lot of beer.
(The old and the new in Reutlingen)

Apparently that is the thing to do here. I arrived determined to beat my jetlag into the ground- and succeeded. We went out the first two nights into Reutlingen, imbibing liter cans of Faxe or some smaller, yet stronger, beer. We wandered through hookah bars, pubs, and apartments. We snacked on Doner Kebab- a delicious Turkish fast food. We crashed through a hedge on a mistaken shortcut. Sunday we took it easier, starting the day off with a wander along Reutlingen's picturesque pedestrian paths. We found ourselves at the local park (open for the last day of summer) where we played frisbee and volleyball with a medley of European students. That night we went with a large group of foreign students to the nearby town of Tübingen- home to the oldest university in Europe, and one of the few towns that survived the Allied bombings. We had dinner at a local restaurant where I ate pretzel-bread dumblings in a creamy mushroom sauce (I forget the German name). After that Seabass, Martina and I wandered throughout historic Tübingen. It is a beautiful town with tall houses, a hilltop castle, a manmade river island lined with sycamore trees, and awesome winding streets. Pictures to come soon.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Greg, Chris and Jake's courtyard

Here's a glimpse of the courtyard at Alfred University after Greg, Jake and myself got a hold of it.

Sculpture from my Senior Show

2x4's, rotten wood, dirt, piano, wires, copper disc, motor.

This sculpture was over 20 feet tall, and even larger in the other dimensions. Inside the wooden mass/mess was a salvaged piano, retrofitted to play according to a device that I constructed (see below).

The footage below was taken during my BFA Thesis Exhibition at Alfred University on May 10, 2008. Unfortunately, there is very little documentation of this sculpture, which was only up for one week.









This is the device which played the piano. It features a copper disc painted with a non-conductive latex paint to mimic my print 'Emblem'. The copper disc was motorized to spin like a record player. As it spun the exposed copper came into contact with various wires. When this happened electricity was passed through the copper disc and through the wires to small switches (solenoids). These solenoids were attached to a salvaged piano, which was inside the sculpture. Each solenoid (10 in total) was hooked up to different key. When electricty was passed to the solenoids, they struck their respective keys of the piano, essentially 'playing the piano according to my print'.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Recent Artwork

These images are from my BFA Thesis Exhibition, which was held at Alfred University on May 10, 2008. My portion of the show consisted of six woodblock prints and a very large sculpture.









Emblem. First Edition: 40 woodblock prints. 56 x 76 cm 2008. 'Emblem' was hugely influential for this series of woodcuts. The carving techniques that I used in all of my displayed prints stemmed from this first serendipitous print. The design is from the marks on the bottom of a friend's ceramic cup- so I owe him a debt of inspiration.




Fungus. First Edition: 20 woodblock prints. 145 x 64 cm. 2008.
After printing 'Emblem' I immediately began carving this block, which is a little less than human size. The process of carving these sinuous lines was very meditative.






Stones. First Edition: 40 woodblock prints. 56 x 76 cm. 2008. I was still searching for a direction to take this series of woodcuts, and I was looking at many different sources for inspiration. This design was drawn from a photograph of a Japanese rock garden.



Mountain. First Edition: 40 woodblock prints. 56 x 76 cm. 2008. I was amazed at the intricacy of linework that I achieved in 'Fungus'. I wanted to pursue these marks in another print, so I carved this block. The image was drawn from a small piece of partially rotten wood.

Ziggurat. First Edition: 40 woodblock prints. 76 x 56 cm. 2008. In this woodcut I attempted to use my common carving technique on a much more delicate scale. The marks are almost imperceptible on the plywood itself, but translated beautifully onto the Arches Cover paper.

Dryrot. First Edition: 22 woodblock prints. 110 x 170 cm. 2008. 'Dryrot' was the last block that I carved for my show. It is also the largest that I have ever carved. This image was derived from a small, rotten piece of wood - dry and very delicate. I think it is my most successful piece and I look forward to working more in this fashion.

Here goes...

Next Thursday I will be flying to Europe. I will carry a backpack of clothes, a briefcase of art supplies and a camera.
This blog has been created to document my experiences, thoughts, and artworks as I travel throughout the world. If nothing else, this blog is a tool for me to record all of these items before my memory loses them.
I hope that friends, family and strangers alike will enjoy my musings and will perhaps even learn something.
If not, I'm going to have fun anyway!

Cheers,
chris