Author Archives for Jay Babcock
PETE SEEGER LEADS FULL VERSION OF WOODY GUTHRIE'S "THIS LAND WAS MADE FOR YOU AND ME" YESTERDAY IN D.C.
Vintage ELECTRIC COMPANY clip: Rita Moreno, Morgan Freeman do Tom Lehrer's "The Menu Song"
DAILY MAGPIE – Jan. 30th – Apr. 19th – The Guggenheim

The Guggenheim Museum presents The Third Mind: American Artists Contemplate Asia. Broken into 7 thematic wedges, the show compiles 100+ years and 100+ artists to express essentials of our trans-continental dialogue. Highlights include the temporary reinstallation of La Monte Young’s Dream House, live performances by Laurie Anderson and Meredith Monk, talks with Yoko Ono and Merce Cunningham, and the featured work of all the heavies: John Cage, William Burroughs, Brion Gysin, Allen Ginsberg, George Maciunas, and Adrian Piper. Wowowow. All Ages.
Date and Time: Jan. 30th – Apr. 19th, Saturday to Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.; Friday, 10 a.m. to 7:45 p.m. Closed Thursday.
Venue: The Guggenheim Museum
Address: 1071 Fifth Avenue (at 89th Street)
Directions: 4/5/6 to 86th St.
Price: Free/Donation on Fridays after 5:45, otherwise, Adults $18.00, students/seniors (65+) $15.00, members and children under 12 free. Admission includes audio guide tour.
For more info: www.guggenheim.org
DAILY MAGPIE – January 21-23 MOSHEH – Yoav Gal

Another spot from HERE’s CULTUREMART 2009, spinning Moses, opera, video art, and modern dance. No worries for the secular, this production presents Moses’ biblical story like a spiritualized dream. The story focuses on the role of four women in Moses’ life to move the plot along…
HERE Arts Center, 8:30 p.m., $15, or 3 CULTUREMART productions for $35
A song for the Capricorns by Harvey Sid Fisher
DAILY MAGPIE- January 20 – the Market Hotel

While your friends will be cramming on the Chinatown bus to the D.C. clusterfuck, attend your own clusterfuck at the Market Hotel. Fucked Up, Pissed Jeans, and the Vivian Girls will remind you, Obama or not, you got no future. Someone’s going to get their head kicked in tonight. Heads of ALL AGES will roll. $10
Sunday morning sermon: JIMMY SMITH live (BBC, 1964)
A note about Arthur Magazine's future from the editor/publisher.
Hey gang–
I am done with self-publishing Arthur, which I’ve been doing since July, 2007. It’s too much work for one person to edit, publish and manage a national magazine, month after month, year after year.
I am talking with interested parties regarding their taking over the Publisher role for Arthur Magazine.
Please stay tuned. And, subscribers: your subscriptions will be fulfilled when we resume publication. Thanks for your patience.
All love and R.I.P. Ron Asheton,
Jay Babcock
editor/publisher, Arthur Magazine
editor@arthurmag.com
New photographs from contributing editor Chamberlin
Photos from your contributing editor’s show at Art Center College of Design, “Light Pollution Series One: Artifical Night Lighting and Photosynthetic Organisms“:
Urban outdoor lighting produces enough spectral pollution to turn the city’s night sky into an orange-grey dome, smudging out all but the brightest stars. Of the myriad organisms affected by humanity’s colonization of the darkness by way of electromagnetic radiation, plants are of particular interest. Plant life cycles revolve according to their light environment: Photoreceptors tell them when to extend stems or broaden leaves; when to germinate and when to die.
These images are an examination of photosynthetic organisms as painted with the palette of artificial night lighting. The viewer’s attention is drawn away from the horizon — where the natural light has disappeared — to emphasize the industrial lighting on the organic textures. Tree limbs are framed against the night sky, nebulous clouds of leaves reflecting the glare of sodium vapor security lamps; groundcover is shot from directly above, micro-landscapes rendered in the orange halide tones of residential streetlights.
All of these images were made after civil twilight — when the sun is six degrees below the horizon — using available light with exposures from 20 to 696 seconds.
See the whole series at Into The Green.
