DAILY MAGPIE – January 22nd – 29th – ROULETTE

SHINKOYO CIRCUS/CIRCUS JERKUS is a week-long musical circus curated in parts by Doron Sadja of SHINKOYO and Matt Mehlan of SKELETONS: “Circus Jerkus runs the gamut from improvised solo/ensemble performances and simultaneous overlapping projects to live film projections, light shows, ventriloquism and surveillance monitoring.” The show runs roughly 2 hours each evening and includes a cornucopia of musicians, including band members of Zs, Extra Life, Talibam and many more.

For more info go here

Date & Time: January 22nd – 29th 8:30PM
Venue: ROULETTE (N.Y.)
Location: 20 Greene St. between Canal and Grand in SoHo
Price: $15 regular entrance / $10 for people under 30 and students

Visit http://www.roulette.org to purchase tickets in advance

DAILY MAGPIE – January 21-23 MOSHEH – Yoav Gal

moses

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

DAILY MAGPIE – Jan. 30th – Apr. 19th – The Guggenheim

august-moonv490

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 20 – the Market Hotel

snn0702an_682_465087a

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

New photographs from contributing editor Chamberlin

Light Pollution 1

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.

‘You should not do this because it is having effects even you might not like,’

the process of weeding out

Natural selection is being run, more or less, by the gentleman hunter we have up top there with the classy antique deer rifle. He does not believe in evolution, yet he and his ilk are currently sort of in charge of it because they are the ones culling the herds of bighorn sheep, clearing the hills of ginseng and emptying the rivers of salmon. The findings of this horrific new study — “Human predators outpace other agents of trait change in the wild” — more or less clarify that traditional conservation efforts and hunting/fishing regulations encourage the killing of the largest, healthiest adults, leaving the weakest members of the community to breed. This, of course, fucks things up on an evolutionary scale. From the New York Times:

The new findings are more sweeping. Based on an analysis of earlier studies of 29 species — mostly fish, but also a few animals and plants like bighorn sheep and ginseng — researchers from several Canadian and American universities found that rates of evolutionary change were three times higher in species subject to “harvest selection” than in other species. Writing in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers say the data they analyzed suggested that size at reproductive maturity in the species under pressure had shrunk in 30 years or so by 20 percent, and that organisms were reaching reproductive age about 25 percent sooner.

In Alberta, Canada, for example, where regulations limit hunters of bighorn sheep to large animals, average horn length and body mass have dropped, said Paul Paquet, a biologist at the University of Calgary who participated in the research. And as people collect ginseng in the wild, “the robustness and size of the plant is declining,” he said.

The researchers said that reproducing at a younger age and smaller size allowed organisms to leave offspring before they were caught or killed. But some evidence suggests that they may not reproduce as well, said Chris Darimont, a postdoctoral fellow in environmental studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who led the work. The fish they studied that are reproducing earlier “on average have far, far, far fewer eggs than those who wait an additional year and grow a few more centimeters,” he said in an interview.

Dr. Darimont said it was unknown whether traits would change back if harvesting were reduced, or how long that might take.

The researchers also noted that the pattern of loss to human predation like hunting or harvesting is opposite to what occurs in nature or even in agriculture.

Predators typically take “the newly born or the nearly dead,” Dr. Darimont said. For predators, targeting healthy adults can be dangerous, and some predator fish cannot even open their mouths wide enough to eat adult prey. Animals raised as livestock are typically slaughtered relatively young, he said, and farmers and breeders retain the most robust and fertile adults to grow their herds or flocks.

“Targeting large, reproducing adults and taking so many of them in a population in a given year — that creates this ideal recipe for rapid trait change,” Dr. Darimont said.

Some fisheries scientists have said their studies of fish stock had not shown a correlation between fishing intensity and growth rates. And some wildlife conservationists question the idea that hunting can have harmful effects on species.

Dr. Paquet said that although he had confidence in the new findings, he knew there would be questions about the analytical methods he and his fellow researchers used. “That’s expected,” he said. “That’s how science proceeds.”

He said he had anticipated that the work would be “contentious” among trophy hunters. “Essentially, we are saying, ‘You should not do this because it is having effects even you might not like,’ ” he said.

(via Reeves).

DAILY MAGPIE – January 19th – GLASSLANDS

LIGHTS

PATRICK CLEANDENIM

AND SPECIAL GUEST

Lights have been holding down the airy ladies-on-the-moores-of-ancient-England vibe in a totally genuine-sounding way for a while now, and they seem to be honing it in to a more and more refined place as time goes by – come to see how they’ve grown after their travels to the U.K.

Date & Time: January 19th, 2009 – 9PM

Venue: GLASSLANDS (BROOKLYN)

Address: 289 Kent Avenue between S. 1st and S. 2nd / Brooklyn, NY 11211

Directions:

L to Bedford

JMZ to Marcy

G to Metropolitan

Price: $TBA – Go to http://www.glasslands.com for details

DAILY MAGPIE – January 18th – ZEBULON

AMI DANG

UNICORNICOPIA

ILYA MONOSOV

Ami Dang melds classical Sitar with haunting vocals and an array of electronic vibrations to produce an unearthly sound that is truly her own. Unicornicopia complements the night with bizarre orchestral arrangements, synthesized plips and plops, and bubble-gum lyrics that bite you before you realize what’s coming. Ilya Monosov tops it off with wintry strings and synths, and maybe even a hurdy-gurdy if we’re lucky…

Date & Time: January 18th, 2009 – 10PM

Venue: ZEBULON (BROOKLYN)

Address: 258 Wythe Avenue / Brooklyn, NY 11211

Directions:

L to Bedford

JMZ to Marcy

G to Metropolitan

Price: F-R-E-E!

DAILY MAGPIE – EVERYDAY – Snow day at NYPL

Sometimes during a big, fat, slushy snowstorm it seems like nothing in this world could draw you out of hibernation and onto the streets – but even the most hardened winter hermit could be coaxed into warming up in a giant, ornate high-ceilinged hall filled with oil paintings and beautiful old editions of books, or in an archive filled with thousands of videos or illustrations. Here are a few branches worth spending an afternoon in:

New York Picture Library: Look up and scan images of anything from Accidents to Burma, Cartoons, Quails, Rainbows or Sunsets.
Location: Picture Collection, Third Floor / 455 5th Avenue at 40th St.

Art & Architecture Room: You can’t take out any of the books, but you can xerox them. Write down the titles and the staff will bring you a stack. Look up anything from Outsider Art to Mati Klarwein to one of many titles on how to construct a tent in the wild.
Location: Room 300 / 42nd St. & 5th Avenue Branch of The New York Public Library

Film/Video Collection: This branch holds many thousands of videocassettes and DVDs of anything you can think of, including documentaries, world cinema, educational videos and video art, all to be watched for free at any time. Also at this branch: Music & recorded sound collections, including world music and whacked-out experimental recordings. Go crazy.
Location: Donnell Media Center / 40 Lincoln Plaza between 5th ave & 6th ave

For more info and hours, visit http://www.nypl.org

Price: F-R-E-E