Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Blow Up Blog Presents: Guy Fawkes By Pavi Lee

Dear Jordan,
            Writing to a dead girl isn’t normal. Even for me. But maybe getting these words out will help. It’s been three years, but every fifth of November I think of you and wonder at all that could have been. For a while, I thought you were haunting me. I’d awake with a start—heart pounding and breathless—and search my room for a culprit only to find nothing. No Incubus. No Sandman. No Mare—only a lingering image in my head of you and me as girls playing a game on the playground. “X marks the spot, circle and a dot”.
            I’m sitting outside Haversham’s Books writing before I’m interrupted by the smokers—Trent, the cute one with Emo-black hair and tattoo sleeves, or the chubby lesbian with brown shelf bangs who has a detached Barbie head on her keychain. I never learned her name.  Sometimes, she’ll sit out here and burn the matted doll hair with her lighter. The smell makes me gag; plus it’s a little weird. Maybe she thinks its weird that I sit out here and never smoke.  I should be okay out here for a while at least. The employees here are all wrapped in Guy Fawkes Day and preparing the annual after-work bonfire. I can’t really get into the mood, and everyone keeps asking why. I could tell them the truth: this day haunts me because it’s the day someone I used to know died. But I won’t. My place among my co-workers is the mysterious, quiet one, and I’d like to keep it that way. See Jordan, I haven’t changed much since we were kids.
***
When I first heard what happened, it was Christmas 2010. Our old schoolmate, Mel, called to wish me a “Merry Christmas” and an “Oh did you hear”. I didn’t believe it at first. I went to my computer and typed your name in the Internet search bar. After scrolling through several queries, I clicked on a link to our old hometown newspaper and there it was: Jordan Sweeney, 23, student, died, Nov 5th. Services 12pm. Memorial Park. Tulsa, OK.
Your life summed up in ten words or less. I didn’t believe my friend, but I believed Google.
While I was working and celebrating some random holiday and surrounded by co-workers in Fawkes-themed apparel, you were hanging from your own noose. While I wondered why I hadn’t heard from you, your spirit had already gone and floated somewhere aloft or heaven or hell. I think of that often. What I want to say is I’m so sorry I didn’t know.
***
Trent discovered me out here a while ago. I’m glad it was him and not Barbie lighter. When he asked what I was doing, I said ‘writing to a ghost’ and he responded with ‘heavy’. He is the only co-worker to whom I’m close. We shared a cigarette once and bonded over our love of Nick Cave. While we were smoking, he asked about the scars on my right forearm but I ignored him even though I wanted so much to tell him. For some reason, I think he’d understand and not judge. But ever since then, we’ve had an ongoing flirtation that neither of us has officially acted on. I’m still a bit shy, I guess. You were never shy.
            In first grade, you tackled Chance—a cute, chubby-cheeked new boy—and kissed him. In third grade in the middle of a lesson, you announced to our entire class that you wanted to be Ren from Ren & Stimpy. In sixth grade, you showed up to school on picture day in neon green mini-skirt and white button down shirt—blatantly violating dress code. Even when we were young, you commanded attention. With my soft voice and tendency to cower when too many eyes were on me, people often forgot I was around, even my parents. 
            In high school, I moved away, but you still wrote letters to me and communicated via various social networks. You told me about the prom, the high school pranks, and the crazy graduation parties. You sent pictures of road trips and Spring break cabo-cations. I always told you I was fine and things were going great in my new life. I left out all the real issues—bad breakups, my parents divorce, and my self-inflicted scars. I didn’t think you could understand my kind of pain. Maybe you could have.
***
Trent has asked me to the makeshift bonfire every year since I started. I always say ‘no’. Wearing a Fawkes pin is as far as I take it. Our Anglophile boss, Lou, is the only reason that our store has a Guy Fawkes celebration. It’s a British holiday, and most of the customers have never heard of it. Here’s a little background: the infamous Fawkes hatched a plan to blow up the house of Parliament in 1575, but he was foiled and captured on November 5th 1542. Traditionally on the fifth, Brits make bonfires or have firework displays in commemoration. Our store staff usually dons Fawkes’ mask or t-shirts or some other accessory with his caricature on them. Lou always wears the mask and 16th century-ish apparel while talking in a mock British accent. I don’t think Lou even realizes that the holiday is a celebration of Fawkes’ capture and not the man himself. V for Vendetta has him confused. But I’ll never tell.
Everyone needs something.
A couple months after you were gone; I called some our old friends who kept up better with you than I. My pretense was that I was catching up, but I really just wanted to see if they knew something I didn’t.
Was it drugs? No, we smoked pot a few times in high school. But Jordan was no druggie, they said.  
Was it depression? She was pretty bummed after her dad died, but you remember she was. Nothing ever fazed her for long.
I remember how close you were to your dad. I’m sure that must have been heartbreaking, and the “With Sympathy” card I sent wasn’t enough; but you replied and thanked me anyway. In that letter you also wrote to me about nursing school and how you were excited about going and how you wanted to make a difference. A nurse, Jordie. Your profession would have been much nobler than mine.  I still haven’t capitalized on my history degree. Mostly, I’m full of random facts that are helpful to no one. Your life would’ve had so much more purpose than mine, but then again we all play our parts.
***
 It’s almost closing time. I took a break to go back inside for a while and pretend to work. I narrowly escaped dancing with Lou, who tried to coax me into going to the bonfire. ‘Come with us dear Amelia ‘O tan of skin ‘O dark of hair’ he sang as he waltzed around me.  It was a bit eerie staring into his masked face with the pointy-chin and squinty eyes. I laughed and avoided giving him an answer. Trent winked at me before I came back here, so I know he’ll cover for me. He always does. I wonder if he understands secret battles.
***
So here it is. I’m thinking of you, but I haven’t reached any conclusions. Just like the year before. I can only imagine that you were waging some secret inner battle that no one knew about—like me and the scars on my arm. I just wish I would’ve had the courage to tell you about mine. Perhaps, we could’ve helped each other.
I think I’ll stop writing this now. I will go inside and finally take Trent up on his offer. This letter will be my effigy to burn.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Blow-Up Gallery featured in NT Daily (Thanks Blessing Wokocha)

Graduate turns blog into Dallas art gallery

0 Comment
 15 Feb 2013   Staff Writer

Studio art senior Mark O'Neal Kimberlin is one of the UNT artists featured in the show "The New Frontiers" at the Blow-Up Gallery in Dallas. For his last semester, Kimberlin is changing focus from painting and drawing to print making. Photo by Christopher G. Lewis/Intern

Blessing Wokocha
Intern
@blessingwokocha
The Shops at Park Lane in Dallas now have a taste of Denton art in its outdoor shopping center. UNT alumni Scott Tucker opened the Blow-Up Gallery on Dec. 8, 2011 and now features student artwork. From sculptors to writers, this gallery covers many artistic media.
“It’s a fine arts gallery, specializing in emerging and established artists,” Tucker said. “I’ve always been an artist. I wanted to have a cool, bohemian art gallery.”
After being open for less than two months, Tucker said it has been very successful and sold roughly half of the paintings and sculptures at the first show in December.
Before the gallery was a storefront, Tucker started a site called the Blow-Up Blog while still attending UNT.
“I have a degree in literature and a lot of my friends that were writers were quite fantastic and needed an outlet,” Tucker said.
One of them was 2009 UNT grad, James Emerson, who he met in Spanish class. Emerson said Tucker would ask him to submit short stories for his website.
“Scott’s a selfless modern day martyr for the cause,” Emerson said. “His heart is in it.”
Even now, Tucker is implementing his love of writing into the Blow-Up Gallery.
“I get new submissions every day with the gallery,” Tucker said. “In less than a month, there will be more attention for the writers.”
After the funds had arrived for the gallery, Tucker and his family members, along with his band mates from his band “The Orange,” helped make the idea a possibility.
“We don’t have that super elitist art gallery that some galleries thrive from,” Tucker said. “We are very inclusive but the artist has to be producing art for a reason.”
After a month, Tucker was able to showcase studio art seniors Britni Martinez and Mark Kimberlin in his gallery.
“There were fliers around the art building,” Kimberlin said. “I noticed a call for new artists on Jan. 21, I actually contacted Scott and sent my work and my resume and he enjoyed my work. It felt pretty good being picked.”
It’s always been Tucker’s dream to operate a gallery and is now making UNT art students’ dreams come to life.
“Scott is really passionate about art,” Martinez said. “He’s so passionate that he gives opportunities to young artists who typically wouldn’t have the opportunity to be seen in Dallas. It’s cool that he cares.”

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

A Great Review of Last Weekend's Opening From CraveDFW.com

Blow-Up Gallery’s New Frontiers Show

Wenli Liu
by Erica Guajardo
As an artist who is emerging in Dallas, I know how hard it is to break out and let your art be shown to the public.  Regardless of personality traits, you have to be someone who is willing to open up and allow themselves to be judged. On Saturday, February 2, 2013, I had the pleasure of attending an art show at Blow-Up Gallery, which presented pieces from emerging and veteran artists residing in Dallas.   
The artists included were Kevin McCartney, Wenli Liu, Scott Tucker, Melissa Tucker, Lindsey Strehlow, Carter Herrington, Britni Martinez, Vikki Diamos, Wayne Brinkman, Mark Kimberlin, Vadim Dozmoro, Frank Campagna, and Russ Connell.

Wayne Brinkman

Scott Tucker, the curator, has shown his eclectic style by presenting such a wide variety of artists together in one show.  Genres of art included realistic, architectural, and street art allowing the show to connect to the majority of viewers.  One characteristic that merged all the artists together was the “out-of-the-box” style and quality of craftsmanship.
As someone who attends many shows around the Metroplex, it is always nice to see a young curator understand technique and give opportunity to those who deserve it. I’m sure that we will be seeing much more from this new gallery.

Kevin McCarthy

To learn more about where to find local art events around Dallas, join the group “Dallas Art Openings” on Facebook and make sure to follow CraveDFW Facebook Page to get the latest information on what we are doing around town.

Friday, January 11, 2013

The White Clothed Oarsmen, By James Emerson (2012)



From the journal of Elliott Limb, a bashful prognosticator…
The White Clothed Oarsmen

Green water lapped against the side of the canoe.  The murky, warm liquid slopped and splashed into the boat soaking the pale, smooth-shaven legs and feet of the men sitting in the worn, wooden craft.  There were seats for twelve rowers and one coxswain, but only eleven oared as the twelfth spot was reserved for a bag of provisions.   A provoking sack of food and water lauding in the faces of these uncomfortable and sunburned men, who grimaced as river water mixed with sweat and stung at open sores adorning their shinbones.  They were cuts, which appeared after endless hours of paddling down the midst of this silent, dead river in the middle of Alabama.  The gashes couldn’t be explained.  Random and numerous, they’d heal into pink scars and remain a symbol of their toil.  For now, blood dribbled and painted their toenails.
The river’s empty banks didn’t provide consolation to the paddlers.  No fishermen, no storks, no turtles basking in the sun’s warm embrace, there existed only these men and their hoarse groans.  They were eleven white-clothed oarsmen in open toed sandals driven by the preaching, the swearing and the coaxing of a man who didn’t swivel with the weight of a maple oar.  He sat and he wore white, but his oversized straw hat protected his brow from the sun and it was pulled far enough below his eyebrows to hide his dancing, uncontrollable eyes.  It couldn’t shade his mouth though.  It couldn’t conceal his pleasurable smile as he rejoiced in the oarsmen’s unrequited efforts to glide the river as they slapped at their necks once or twice every minute.
Mosquitoes buzzed and sucked at the ribcages of these driven men.  One by one, the parasites tasted the eleven’s blood and flew off dissatisfied.  It was malnourished and dehydrated.  No water, no food for the duration of the paddling event and still not one of these men was desperate enough to touch their lips to the diseased river’s water.  As the men oared, they would look to their right and to their left and see the leftovers of unfortunate creatures to have ignored their instincts.
            To the right, a half rotted white tail deer sticking headfirst into the black waters and to the left, nothing more but the same type of unpleasantness.  A catfish would plop above the surface of the stale water and disappear underneath.  The men pondered how anything could survive under this river’s surface.  They also wondered how they’d survive above it as their tormentor sat in front of them not allowing them quitting time.  His sweat wasn’t from hard work, only the heat and he slyly grinned while watching the men suffer.  Reverend Beat demanded such things from his followers.  He called them to misery.  They obliged his requirement.
            Sinister yet jovial actions from a man consumed with an uninhibited shade of evil not yet to impose its full wrath on the paddlers wearing white.  The men were skilled however.  They could paddle ten miles in forty-five minutes.  They were sleek, the men, and their canoe’s line was straight as an arrow like their morality.  It never swayed to the left or veered to the right.  It was perfect.  If the men were to have ventured into the realm of adulterous thoughts, their paddle’s stroke would coerce their boat’s path to a course treacherous to the oarsmen’s success.  They kept their actions simple and monotonous and maintained excellent Christian behavior.  Moral sons of bitch paddlers and adulating Christian cult believers, they’d have rather jumped in the river and drowned in its diseased waters than think of the devil and all the pleasure his ways provided.  They were lost.                          Reverend Beat urged his team forward by leading them in a rendition of Onward Christian Soldier or the recitation of an inspiring Horace Walpole quote.  The reverend found this to motivate his oarsmen to battle through the pain of a cramping calf muscle or stomach or shoulder blade.  Devotees, all of them: they loved Reverend Beat and believed this type of labor an exercise best for them.  The white clothed oarsmen were at perfect peace as they presided in the presence of their master pleasuring in their blind suffering.  If a man succumbed to heat exhaustion and dehydration and the smell of vomit consumed the inside of their oversized kayak, the others kept going.  They didn’t slow their pace.  Instead, they hastened it.  Only Reverend Beat could save the man’s life.  He held the power, gallons of water in the ice chest.  He wouldn’t budge.  The men would glance at him with pleading eyes to save their suffering comrade.  Nevertheless, they knew to keep going despite their unspoken moral protest.  If they were to stop, they’d never reach their goal.  Therefore, the man’s life wouldn’t be saved.
Reverend Beat taught them.  He made them know it’s best to do as he wished.  The goal wasn’t to think of others, but to think of him.  As soon as the men realized this, then he’d save the dying man’s life.  Their faith in him is the only consequential thing.  They had to believe he’d save their friend’s life.  He always did and when Rev. Beat revived a fallen oarsman and he opened his eyes and he embraced Rev. Beat with both arms as if he was rescued from the devil and his consuming fire, the men saw how Rev. Beat cared for each of them.  He would never let them die.  He was their provider.  The lives they’d led before falling into Reverend Beat’s entrancing love was meaningless and not a memory from their past mattered.  Purpose is what Rev. Beat told them it was.  In their case, it was to paddle for hours in the dead of an unbearable Alabaman summer afternoon.  Their hearts were content to slave for him and they abided with loyal adulation.
On this afternoon, it wasn’t one of them who’d need saving, it was the lifeless body of a man who’d fallen on a beautiful barmaid.  His head was cushioned between her bosoms.  He was still alive, but the poor giant breasted woman with creamy smooth skin was dead.  They’d both taken quite the tumble from thirty feet above the river.  The oarsmen and Reverend Beat could hear the drunken howling of a bar’s customers.  They could smell the alcohol on the breath of the dying man.  He was quite the sight.  Beaten beyond recognition, his shirt was torn at the shoulders.  Teeth were missing.  They had to save him.  The man needed Reverend Beat.
The Reverend was apt to saving him.  Another follower to pull from the depths, he’d wrench this imperfect man from his grim destiny.  He would try anyway.  So, the oarsmen crammed him in Rev. Beat’s canoe and went about their business.  They left the sweet golden haired angel to the elements.  She began sinking into the water.  It swallowed her head and encompassed her once life giving chest and it moved toward her stomach and it crawled over her pelvis.  It covered her thighs and concealed her toes and the once beautiful barmaid sweetheart was gone altogether.  She was the embodiment of a dishonest society.  Glow in sin and be the lust of all men’s hearts, but lose this alluring beauty with nothing left, except one foregone conclusion: a surefire disappearance into the murkiness of the devil’s waters.     

Blow-Up Gallery's "Twilight of the Idols" Closing Party Saturday, January 19th 2013

                                                       Alfredo Salazar-Caro
Blow-Up Gallery and Roma Boots want to thank everyone who attended the “Twilight of the Idols”, opening reception December 8th. We had an incredibly successful opening and want to thank both you, and the fantastic group of artists that contributed to this exhibit. To show our appreciation we are throwing a closing party Saturday January 19th at Blow-Up Gallery. 7-11PM
Artists showing include:
Frank Campagna
Alex Remington
Kevin McCartney
Melissa Tucker
Scott Tucker
Daniel Dreinsky
Kiki Ishihara
Megan Van Groll
Alfredo Salazar-Caro
Chris Morrow
Scott Tucker II
Blow-Up Gallery8060 Park Lane Blvd, Suite 126
Dallas, Tx, 75231
(817) 932 2056