Archives: September, 2009


September 3rd, 2009 (Thursday)

We Are Painting

Hi Everybody! I hope everybody is doing good. Some of your e-mails have been asking about what we’ve been up to since returning from our walk in the desert. Well, lots of things!

1. continue work on settler colonialism episodes
2. working with Teacup on hegemony project
3. planted a mini-garden (then we ate it)

But the biggest thing we’ve been working on is to prepare for our upcoming Pinky Show exhibition at the University of Winnipeg Art Gallery. The exhibition is going to be from November 12 to December 12, 2009 and is titled Class Treason Stories (excerpts).

The show will feature a brand new video made specially for the installation, a whole bunch of big, hand-painted banners, a viewing station to watch old PS videos, and some other stuff. Bunny and I are working super hard to make sure it will be a fun exhibition to visit, but also that it will have some brain-poking function in regards to questions of class treason - especially “what is it?”, and “what does that have to do with me?”, stuff like that.

Here are some photos of the banners taking shape.

Special thank you to HR02 & HR03 who are allowing us to use their studio to paint all these big things!

For more information about the upcoming exhibition, here is a PDF flier from the UWinnipeg Art Gallery:

<- click to get PDF.

Okay, I better get back to painting now.

Take care,
pinky

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September 17th, 2009 (Thursday)

Japanese Small Box Toys

Yesterday Pinky and I made our monthy trek to the Marukai Store, which is kind of like the mother ship of all Japanese Supermarkets here in California. Besides stocking up on Japanese snack foods the one thing that jumped out at us was their large selection of small box-toys. You know those small box-toys from Japan right? In case you don’t know here’s how they work: each toy-box shows a selection of possible toys on the back of the box, but then they don’t tell you which toy is actually inside. Which means you have to keep buying boxes and boxes of toys until you finally get the specific toy you want. Some of the toys are really cool but making you buy a bunch of toys you don’t want is not my idea of “exciting” - it’s LAME. Anyway, this is the toy-series that had my attention:

They have little cat statues inside. Most of the cat statues in this series looked pretty boring to me but two of them looked kind of like me and Pinky. And I figured out if I squeeze the box a certain way I could peek inside, so I stood there and sqeezed all the boxes and eventually I found the two toys that I wanted. So here’s what I bought - this one looks just like Pinky:

Pooping. It even has a bunch of wheat grass, which is funny because she loves wheat grass for real. She’s always saying, “Do we have any wheat grass?” even when we don’t have any wheat grass, it’s so irritating. Here is the other one, it looks like me, sort of.

Actually I’m a lot better looking than this in real life but I thought it was good that it came with a computer because I really like computers.

I’ve never been to Japan but I want to go one day because their toys and food is really good.

In other news, Pinky is still painting every day in preparation for our upcoming Winnipeg show; I’m working on everything else.

Bunny

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September 24th, 2009 (Thursday)

Have You Seen This Cat?

Somebody had this picture on Facebook and I think it is funny. Posted by Kim.

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September 25th, 2009 (Friday)

Bunny Mailbag: Stopping the Holocaust, Swimming, etc.

I haven’t done any public replying to e-mail in a while, but since Pinky is busy with painting at the moment I thought I’d answer some e-mail today. The first one is from a viewer in Germany:

dear bunny, there is something i’ve been thinking about, watching your film [Hawaii vs. U.S. Imperialism] i like how you point out and analyze american imperialism. (but) seeing germany in a list with vietnam and other countries as “colonized” is really weird for me. anti-facists, jewish people and non-fascists from all over europe were really glad the usa helped stop WWII… it finally put an end to holocaust, murder, and genocide by the germans [...] just to give you an impression from an anti-fascist post-war perspective. i’d love to see your work in an art show or in a discussion in europe somewhere. any plans in that direction? viele grüße, panda

My reply to panda:

hi panda,

if i remember correctly, including germany on the list (the long list towards the end of our hawaii vs. US imperialism video) was based on the US’s extensive military presence there, plus US military and CIA activities on german soil. we were pointing to how the US has made germany a part of its global imperial structure; it is not a “colony” in the classic sense.

what you say about US fighting in WWII is true - if the US did not fight germany, i would guess that probably even more atrocities against jews and other marginalized people would have occurred. we are definitely NOT suggesting that anything like genocide should ever be unchallenged. what we ARE saying that it is important to examine the inconsistencies and contradictions of US interventionism. for example, if the reasons the US gave as a moral justification for fighting germany were true (”we must enter into this war to stop genocide” or “we must fight fascism/support democracy”), then why have these reasons not also required the US to intervene in parallel circumstances? even a quick look at history shows that the US intervenes in some cases but not others. in fact, there are many examples where the US goes to a foreign country and destroys their democratic government, or supports or commits genocide. why is this? does the US just not know what it’s doing? (unlikely) or are there other factors besides moral imperatives that make the US leaders commit violent actions with their military and/or economic weapons? (i think so) this is why we say a situation like WWII cannot be analyzed only according to ‘moral justifications’ (”we have to stop genocide & fascism”). if we confine ourselves to this kind of logic we will not be able to understand why the US also engages in anti-democratic or even genocidal actions in other situations. however, when we do an analysis that takes into consideration ‘imperialism’ (what it is, how it works, what it needs to continue, and so on) - well, then suddenly a lot of things that at first seem like contradictions can be explained. so there are many forces at work!

regarding pinky show in europe, we are going to have a small thing in a group show in belgrade in january. but besides that right now we have no invitations from anybody in europe. europe is very exciting to us, we have only been there one time, for a short trip to slovenia last year. we get a lot of emails from germany though, so maybe one day something will happen and we will be able to go. we want to learn more about situations outside the US - our analysis is from a US perspective and often doesn’t directly translate to other political & social contexts very well, so we are always trying to learn more.

peace,
bunny

Here’s another e-mail from Valerie:

Hello Pinky and Bunny… I just watched the 13 Things I Learned at Kahoolawe episode and I really liked it alot. It has a sweet, gentle feel to it while sharing very valuable lessons and insights. You are amazing. Thank you. Valerie P.S…I think cats CAN actually swim, they just don’t like to (except Tigers, I think)

My reply:

Hi Valerie. I’m happy you liked the video. We would be super happy if it moved even one person to start fighting against the widespread abuse of this planet. Even if we just started with a tiny sub-category of the broader problem, like, for example, challenging the military to stop destroying native people’s most sacred places - we still would have TONS of work to do. Kahoolawe needs lots of help, and there are many other Kahoolawes too, not just in Hawaii but all over the world. Oh, regarding the other thing, yeah, I assumed I could swim too (I’ve seen videos of swimming cats before) but when I got into the water I found out that actually I can’t swim and almost died. So I won’t be doing that again. Tigers, yeah, I think they have huge feet. Take care, Bunny

Okay, last one, from a guy named Mark:

I watched the episode on illegal immigration. Weren’t native American Indians settlers too? Nothing is fair and people have been taking other peoples stuff since human existence. That’s just the way it is…

My reply:

First thing: “Weren’t native American Indians settlers too?” Good question. The answer is NO. Please study settler colonialism. I recommend Patrick Wolfe. It’s not “easy reading” but it’ll take you far. Do a search for Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology - it’s on Google Books.

Second thing: “Nothing is fair and people have been taking other peoples stuff since human existence. That’s just the way it is.” This is a good example of using (arguably) true statements in order to justify moral weakness. Yes, human beings have been jerks througout history - so what? Surrendering to the inevitability of abuse just makes it far easier to continue. - Bunny

About a month ago Pinky and I were hanging out with a friend, and we were just talking about social justice or whatever, when he asked Pinky why she is so obssessed with learning about and fighting against all the bad stuff in this world. I work with Pinky day in and day out and we talk about these kinds of things all the time, but her answer surprised me. She said something like, “In the future, I don’t want our descendents to look back and know that we were cowards.”

So that’s the end of today’s Bunny Mailbag, cuz now it’s my turn to cook lunch.

Bunny

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