What the village (silver) smithy is up to, books, cameras, a long lost hard hat reappears, and other stuff…

Gus the striper, this hat, and I go way back. To Butch days.

This hard hat saved me many a headache from Oklahoma to Minnesota to Texas and back to Nebraska. And Gus gave it some style...

The friendship was instant; we were both aspiring artists, and both hot rodders and custom car enthusiasts. Gus, Bob Gustafson, was already well-known to Omaha car culture for his striping expertise. I was working in Ashland, Nebraska, near Omaha, on a bridge for Massman Construction and we had friends in common. We were on our way to an Omaha bar for a beer or two, and Gus saw a hard hat in the back seat of my car. He picked it up and brought it into the bar, along with a striping kit he had with him. Gus striped everything.

This I.D. button was inside on the hatband. It's an antique now. Me too. If the hard hat fits, wear it...

While we BS’d and sipped cold ones, he decorated my hard hat. I was still going by “Butch” back then. It was a name given me as a child due to the low-maintenance haircut I preferred. Anyway, I thought this hat was long gone but just found it in a box moved by furnace repairmen. Funny how objects can whirl you back in time. It was a hard-partying summer and a time of big decisions. Go back to school, or take them up on a foreman position? Construction is hard work. But the foremen I’ve seen, they just walk around and tell people what to do. I must admit that had its appeal. And people would always need bridges. But art?

Hat-wise, however, I opted for the fedora of the Mad Men era, and a Borsalino at that, once the paychecks got a bit larger. But, Gus, if you’re looking down, had I gone the other route, I’d have worn your striping proudly on jobs from Taiwan to Tucumcari. The much dented and scuffed hard hat will always remind me of you from a prominent spot in my office. R.I.P. sir.

Converting a Nikon to pure infrared was not a snap decision.

The Nikon J5 is a small but powerful ebay find and I'm itching to discover what it'll do as an infrared conversion...

I wouldn’t do it to my Canon T7, which I’m slowly learning as my go-to camera, but I did try some IR filters without much success. I researched various infrared methods and watched a few hours of turorial advice (all good, by the way—most of the camera advice I encountered online was serious and helpful) and set out to find my perfect IR point-and-shoot. I had narrowed my search to a Nikon J5, the last of a series of small cameras they made, then discontinued.

 I won’t go into all the good stuff packed into this aptly nicknamed pocket rocket—the info is easy to find if you’re interested. On ebay I found one in Japan, camera body only, near mint, and priced well within my range. Then I sent it to Kolarivision for its IR conversion, specifying infrared on the 720mm scale, which will allow some color in the sky and foliage. I’m waiting, bated breath, for the Nikon like I used to wait for a cereal top Lone Ranger secret compartment ring from Battle Creek, Michigan. The conversion takes three weeks and it costs more than the camera did. Meantime I bought a used Nikkor wide angle lens, an extra charger and a 140 page J5 user’s manual I found on ebay.

For an explanation of what IR photography is all about, here’s a pretty good link.

I read one of these twice just to see if it said what I thought it said. It did.

Twice-read first; In Plain Sight is one of the more definitively researched books on UFOs, now UAPs, and it begins to explain just why the military/intel community has cast the vast (more vast than ever) majority of those who see things in the sky as tinfoil hat-wearers, even threatening them, illegally. Ross Coulthart’s book (link) is not wild conjecture but based on fact and improved radar surveillance and more testimony from police, physicists, Navy pilots and commercial airline employees, plus FAA reports and military whistleblowers. A rarely bipartisan Congress is even fed up with the BS mil-feed and has enacted (2023) a law targeting the situation. Hang on to your hats folks, even if they’re tinfoil. (I’m keeping my hard hat handy)

 Willy Vlautin’s The Horse, shouldn’t be confused with Horse, the Pulitzer winner by Geraldine Brooks. Vlautin’s books have never given me a feelgood afterglow, but he sure can write. Joe Hell says we need him like we needed Johnny Cash. Jess Walter called The Horse “the literary equivalent of a classic album by Tom Waits or Townes Van Zandt.” Fair enough. Warning: It’s a heartbreaker, but, again, he sure can write. Essays One, by Lydia Davis, is 500+ pages of erudite precision and essays on artists, writing and writers that is, to me, oddly absorbing; I bought it to help me explore the intricacies of true essays, but it’s making me forget that, it’s so well done. Davis’s Collected Short Stories caused Rick Moody to call her “The best prose stylist in America.” Just sayin’, I don’t think I’m wasting my time with any of these.

 

This silversmith/jeweller is a multifaceted gem.

On her way to work in Chiefs gear in case she got tangled up in the parade last year.

She holds down a full time, very time-consuming job as Print Production Manager of a rather large global company, overseeing print production, color management, press runs, and much more beginning with the job’s onset and following through to delivery deadlines. This can involve client brochures, company items, banners, posters, books, all manner of swag and wearables, pop-ups, mailings, boxes, custom one-of-a-kind items and a big etcetera. She’s done this since I’ve known her and was a legend in the advertising community for it even then. How long? Years. Before we got married thirty-five years ago.

Twenty or so years ago, Freddie took up silversmithing in her “spare time,” and her devotion to detail and precision, plus an artist’s mind and eye, have served her and her customers well in this profession—I won’t trivialize it by calling it a hobby. She often spends a few hours each weekend learning from award-winning silversmith Genevieve Flynn, who holds classes on all facets of the profession, from casting, repousse, mounting, joining and more. Silversmithery is a precise art and the learning curve is forever. It makes sense she would gravitate to such a challenge. I’m so freaking proud of her and that’s an understatement. She makes astonishing museum quality jewelry and art pieces using copper, gold, silver, precious and semi-precious stones, and has taken courses with Thomas Mann and other renowned designers, like Ms. Flynn, who is right here in KC, and who often flies other luminaries in for week-long workshops at her studio. Freddie attends all of those she can.

She's wearing a silver pueblo pin, one of her first works. Photo by daughter Rhonda, at an ice cream stop a couple of weeks ago.

Above is a screenshot of some random pieces I have pix of; that large one on the left is a work in progress, silver with matte finish, about six inches long,with catalin and silver “framed” in the bottom. This is to be a necklace and will have gold “wires” extending from the three tubes with rounded bead ends so it won’t catch on a sweater. I’m excited to see this in finished form.

The (wedding) ring, at bottom, is cast white gold, diamonds, with a stone supplied by the person who commissioned it. Bracelet above it is silver, diamonds, gold beads, also a commission job. Far right is a necklace/bracelet combo.

Above middle is a bracelet, silver, blued somehow, irish motif. These are just a few of many more and it makes me realize we need a record of all the pieces in one place so people can see and appreciate the range of design and materials. (I’ll get her to do that in her spare time)

 

I’ll leave you with Ry Cooder, “Prodigal Son.”

I was looking for Paris, Texas, an old favorite of mine, and came across this which is a bit more bouncy and nice weekend listening. I hope you enjoy it. Here’s the link. Happy Fall. xxo G

 

 

 

When life happens. Also, a very cool assessment of AI writing by a super writer; the chilling final acts of Hunter Thompson; “Critterland” will make you laugh (and reflect); and much more.

I’m Guinotte Wise and this is my WTF moment

Not me—it’s James Joyce’s death mask which I found, looking for a certain Irish author for the AI article below, and it spoke to me. It said, “Read Ulysses.”

Pardon my language. I am writing this from a hospital bed in a rehab facility. Broken hip. I was moved here from a modern medical trauma center after a week. It’s in an older section of town; big, once-stately homes with smaller old tract houses squeezed in between them on land that used to separate the bigger, older homes.

 And there are birds. Inside. Red-beaked little birds, four or five, with perches and places to hang out. They’re in a glass and wood cased affair about ten feet wide, six feet high and three feet deep. I don’t know what to think about that, as I regard zoos as animal jails, but these birds seem reasonably perky and active. Probably a metaphor here but I’m too drug-befuddled to pursue it.

 I won’t dwell overlong on this hip deal; slam, bam, move on. It happened after a successful delivery of sculpture to a show (if you’re around Kansas City, it’s at Tomahawk Ridge Community Center, 119th & Lowell, Overland Park, KS—it’ll be there until April 15th) at my home. I was outside, no phone, the dogs wanted to help but finally lay down near me and waited. After an hour, I was discovered. The dogs helped attract a couple from a neighboring mill by barking incessantly. Cash and Millie don’t usually bark at them and that got their attention.

 Then it was EMTs. Gurney. Maybe a shot. Swaying around in traffic. Post-op. Morphine nights. Onward. I’m G. Wise and this is my WTF moment.

 

  High time for “Critterland” and a lighter mood? Not promising…

 This is now my official farm & home, Wise Acres anthem. (link) Love this Carlisle guy. The album’s title song isn’t quite as offhand or toss-away as one might think from a casual first listen; messages lurk here. Willi Carlisle is a country/folk poet for real, with eerie touches of John Prine and Ralph Stanley, Ozark hill country and dust bowl echoes. Another great album from a stone original. I chanced upon him BC (Before Critterland) with“Tulsa’s Last Magician”. Plaintive, resigned, and worth a listen; something about it impales me. Posssibly engendered by my Tulsa boyhood in that postwar boomtown. And on “What The Rocks Don’t Know” he sings, plays harmonica and…bones. All the while doing a sort of sitting flat dance. You need to see and hear this—could cause goose-skin. (link) Mesmerizing. Willi is one quietly powerful talent and I’m a fan. A Carlislist. Carlislie?.

 

AI Can’t Weld

 But many think it can write. How can it? It has no life experience. No essence. Just an algorithmic soup of a bunch of writers and it shows. It will always show. As to the headline, maybe AI will weld, but without life experience it can only copy what has been done before. Robotic welding is a staple, and it’s quite good. But art welding is inimitable to the artist and only a tool that s/he uses to stick things together. And I’m so far behind the AI dustup, I’m commenting on something I know too little about. (Surprise, surprise.)

I saw this statement weeks ago and it really stuck with me, but when I looked for it, it had disappeared. I remembered it was a highly accomplished Irish author (there are plenty of those) and while exploring that rabbit warren, I came across James Joyce’s death mask shown above, in the first article. Finally, after some digging I found the pithy statement at Sean McNulty’s Auraist (I subscribe to the Substack free version). McNulty is an accomplished writer himself and his Auraist reviews the best recent UK and US books in some depth.

I urge you to read the very substantive Doyle interview in Auraist (link) and, perhaps, subscribe. It’s well worth your time. There’s a point where Doyle shows a Martin Amis quip and how AI could never, ever compete.

Doyle’s 2014 novel, Here Are The Young Men (Bloomsbury) was selected as one of Hot Press magazine’s ‘20 Greatest Irish Novels 1916-2016’, and has been made into a film. His latest, Threshold, (also Bloomsbury) was published in 2020.

Me, I’m off to a favorite online bookstore to check out his books.

 

Gonzo, not forgotten

An artifact from his nearly successful run for sheriff of Pitkin County (Aspen, CO) in a year I remember well…

He was suffering toward the end, from pain, depression, ennui they say. Physical discomfort from various operations. There was the suicidal, if not downright suicide note, days before, titled “Football Season Is Over.” Some said his whole life was hurtling toward this moment; he, himself said, ”Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming "Wow! What a Ride!” And he frequently expressed gratitude that there was a way out anytime he felt the need. He’d given it thought. Here are a few words from FAR OUT about Hunter Thompson’s final ones. (link)





Back to the future…an electrified icon.

I never had one of these, being more of the noisy V8 jalopy persuasion, but fondness for the era includes these kitchen clock-colored VW breadboxes on spools. The complaints ran from underpowered to unheatable in winter, to rusting out in a light mist and unreliable whatever the season. They were popular in a certain segment and sported love beads hanging from the mirror, PEACE bumper stickers, and flower decals. But it’s back and it’s electric. Take a look at how an outfit named Kindred (link) has pulled this into the 21st century. But I have a feeling it’ll cost ya.

 And that’s about it for this blog edition other than the following plugs. 1. My new poetry book is out. (link) 2. My sculpture show is at Tomahawk Ridge Community Center, 119th & Lowell, Overland Park, Kansas, through April 15, for those of you in the area. XXO GW

45 pieces, including photography, “lit” sculptures, poetry, and more. Title RUST&CHROME&LIGHTS&POEMS. Through April 15th