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Felicity Fenton
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Bachelard's Panty Drawer

Tomorrow and every other Saturday from 10 am until noon (indefinitely) I'm going to be hosting my own radio show as Mammal In Crime on Freeform Portland, Portland's only freeform, community driven radio station. The show, Bachelard's Panty Drawer is 1/3 conversation with artists/writers/musicians/etc. and 2/3 music. Every show has a theme and all conversations and music are based on that theme. Tomorrow Postdomestic Cowgirl Karin Bolender will be joining me on all things ANIMAL, the animal in us, the animal outside of us, the animals we want to be, the animals who think they are us, animals far, wide and near to our homes and hearts. Please tune in if you can via the radio dial (if you are in Portland at 90.3 FM or online at freeformportland.org. 

I'll be creating an archive of the shows and popping them on this website soonish. 

tags: freeform portland, bachelard's panty drawer, freeform radio, Karin Bolender
Friday 10.07.16
Posted by felicity fenton
 

Saturday Shenanigans

I'm in the process of reading several books. Each has its designated time to be read. While riding the bus to and from work each day, I'm reading The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison. While building up my knee strength at the gym, I'm listening to Radical Acceptance by Tara Brach. During lunch, I'll pick up Possibility of Being by Rainer Maria Rilke. And before I close my eyes and nose dive into dreamland, I'm reading The Reenactments by Nick Flynn and In Praise of Messy Lives by Katie Roiphe. 

I can now bend my knee to 138 degrees. In case you didn't know, this is what 138 degrees looks like:

This morning I started working with a personal trainer to more fully rehabilitate my knee (and the rest of my body, which is a bit out of whack). My limbs are feeling wobbly and weak, flaccid and frustrated, puny and pulverized. But it's happening. Progress. 

TBA is happening right now. Though I usually like to overcommit and see too much, this year I've chosen to see Cynthia Hopkins, BodyCartography Project, Mammalian Diving Reflex, and Kim Gordon's new band, Body/Head. Because I know the melding of art and activism are vital, I'll probably check out THIS forum. 

A few friends from my former Goddard MFAIA program are gathering tonight for the first time in quite a while. There will be wine, hummus, pickles, pita and discourse on domestic choreography, ass wrangling, cyborg feminism, and juggling motherhood with art and work. 

 

 

tags: Books, Nick Flynn, katie roiphe, leslie jamison, tara brach, rainer maria rilke, lists, saturday, Karin Bolender, cyborg feminism, donna haraway, art and motherhood, cynthia hopkins, bodycartography project, mammalian diving reflex, TBA, PICA, TBA Festival, Body/Head
Saturday 09.13.14
Posted by felicity fenton
 

Q and A with Karin Bolender

The second installment of Q and A with Artists I Love is with one of my dear art heroines, the incomparable Karin Bolender. Karin’s interdisciplinary art practice engages performance, writing, installation, video, and photography to investigate the hazy seams where our human selves meet other domestic species. For over a decade, KB has lived and traveled with a special herd of American asses, exploring a sort of barnyard ontological choreography that negotiates between human logos and other embodied ways of being and knowing. Major projects include several journeys through the rural American South with two American Spotted she-Asses, Aliass and Passenger, and often in the company of other artists, mammals, and passers-by: including Little Pilgrim of Carcassonne (2002), The Dead-Car Crossing (2004), the "Can We Sleep in your Barn Tonight?" MYSTERY TOUR (2006), and the ongoing She-Haw Transhumance series. Since 2008, KB has presented solo and collaborative works in the US and abroad under the auspices of the Rural Alchemy Workshop (R.A.W.). For more of her incomparable work, check out her website and blog.

Questions by FF answered by Karin Bolender in this merry month of August 2013:

Q: What is your emotional state at this very moment?

A tiny bit grievous.

Q: How do you describe your creative process to family members who may not be super privy to the art world?

I try hard to avoid situations that require this. 

Q: What is the first thing you want to eat most mornings? 

Nuts. Sometimes, clouds.

Q: When you were a child, did you ever have a recurring dream? 

Yes, but I can’t remember it. I hope it comes back.

Q: If you were to choose one color to represent who you are as a person, what would that color be? 

This would be the color I would see when I opened my eyes underwater while I swam with my dog at an abandoned, cedar-blown quarry in upstate New York around the turn of the millennium. But the color must also include the rocks and the glowing dog and the fragmented beams of light and the little silver glints of fish in the dark below.

Q: How do you motivate yourself to make stuff? 

Coffee.

Collaboration.

Deadlines.

Mornings: I have an awesome big old wooden rolltop desk in a room, and I love being there every a.m. 

Q: How would you describe your personal scent?

Rowdy of late.

Q: What are you reading right now? 

"Modest_Witness@Second_Millennium.FemaleMan_Meets_OncoMouse: Feminism and Technoscience," by Donna Haraway; "The Others: How Animals Made Us Human," by Paul Shepherd; "Immortality," by Milan Kundera; and "Never Tease a Weasel," by Jean Condor Soule (the 1964 version, several times a day)

Q: If you were to choose a name other than the one you currently have, what name would that be?

Bull Ales.

Q: Are you experiencing any physical discomfort at the moment? 

Stiffness.

Q: Can you recommend a song for the world to listen to? 

The night trill of raccoons in the dark woods. I’m also really into the spine-tingling common call of a red fox. But if we’re talking iTunes, the most played song by far around our house and in the car these days is one we call “Baby Patience,” a lullaby version of Guns & Roses. It’s quite catchy and surprisingly soothing at the same time. All the foxes I know really dig it, too.

 

Aliass Overpass
Aliass Overpass
Aliass Shadow
Gut Sounds Lullaby
darkcakeruins.jpg
Aliass Overpass Aliass Overpass Aliass Shadow Gut Sounds Lullaby darkcakeruins.jpg
tags: artist interview series, artists I love interviews, Karin Bolender, Rural Alchemy Workshop
Monday 08.12.13
Posted by felicity fenton
 

Go outside. Good things happen outside.