The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Edible

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Argentinian artist Eduardo Navarro’s latest series of drawings, inspired by quantum physics, is entirely edible. They are displayed under red heat lamps, like chicken eggs about to hatch. He’ll be cooking three nights during the exhibition, serving up three artworks each time. Each of the images illustrates the “holographic principle,” a concept in physics postulating that “information in the universe can only be scrambled but never destroyed”.

 

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September Split Edible Ephemera (Year of the Horse Snack) (2014)
Dry-salted horse meat, bitter rowan jelly (rowan berries, water, sugar), Norwegian birch, silkscreen print, CNC engraving, vacuum sealed storage bag, jar with lid, felt garment.

 

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Artist Dimitri Tsykalov produces raw meat representations of guns, some of which come with vegetable or fungi bullets.

 

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Researchers at MIT and Brigham and Women’s Hospital have designed and demonstrated a small, ingestible voltaic cell that is sustained by the acidic fluids in the stomach. The system can generate enough power to run small sensors or drug delivery devices that can reside in the gastrointestinal tract for extended periods of time.

 

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Using individually wrapped pieces of candy and fish-shaped soy sauce packets, an anonymous trio of artists known simply as three have constructed a number of works that invite viewers to interact with them. Their installation titled Tokyo Electric displays a 3 meter-tall box designed in the scale of the Fukushima nuclear power plant. The structure deliberately includes 151,503 colorful fish-shaped soy sauce containers, which is the exact number of displaced citizens in the aftermath.

 

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ÉCAL student Erika Marthins has combined a series of different technologies with food to create an interactive dessert that moves, makes noise and refracts light. Aiming to offer interesting alternatives to the average sweet treat, Marthins used edible robotics, light-shaping technology, and digital data information in the making of the dish.

 

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Filioppo Ioco Untitled (2010)

 

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For Adrian Villar Rojas’ latest exhibition (‘Theater of Disappearance’) at the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, I created an array of experimental cake sculptures. In tandem with the natural rock formations surrounding the immersive installation, over 70 cakes were baked to create a conversation between both sedimentary forms and textures. The cakes represented a sense of nostalgia, hidden in a timeless landscape of collected, yet abandoned artifacts.

 

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Scottish artist Anya Gallaccio has created Stroke, which involves an entire room coated in chocolate which visitors are allowed to touch and taste. “The idea of a chocolate room is one thing and the reality of a chocolate room is very much something else,” says Gallaccio.

 

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No architectural model lasts forever, but Liz Hickok’s facsimiles have less time than most: hardly a week before the mold sets in. That’s because Hickok’s choice material comes not from the art room but from the lunchroom. Despite its undeniable kitsch, Hickok swears she’s not in the urban Jell-O model business for the novelty. “It’s because it’s alive and changing, just as our real cities are,” she writes in an email. “By using a medium that is perishable I can speak to the fragility and impermanence of our cities.” In her biggest Jell-O landscape, San Francisco, the buildings, only inches high, are cast in molds using regular store-bought Jell-O or straight gelatin. Hickok alters the water content of the mixture to maximize the resilience of her structures. Once assembled, she’s never sure how the landscape will evolve. For a recent model of San Francisco, Hickok says that “over the course of the installation, some of the buildings molded, some of the buildings melted, and some hardened into rocks. It is very hard to predict what it is going to do, which is one of the reasons why I love the material.”

 

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Candy maker extraordinaire and owner of sweets shop Ameshin Shinri Tezuka continues to wow Tokyo with his amazing amezaiku animals. Amezaiku is an ancient art of candy crafting. Artists create skillfully sculpted sweets that depict impressively realistic animals, from expressive koi fish to seemingly slippery octopuses. While the art form has been around since the 8th century, very few practitioners remain today. At just 27 years old, Tezuka is the youngest known amezaiku artist.

 

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Artist Jennifer Rubell created a cell padded with edible cotton candy.

 

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Gameboy Mania & Jami Behrends Super Mario Cake (2014)

 

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Sarah Lucas’ ‘Nud Cycladic 14’ reimagined as a vegan lemon sponge cake.

 

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Natacha Lesueur Untitled (1995)

 

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It took 56 hours to complete, was made from 4,640 chocolate sticks and 10kg of Belgian chocolate, measures 120cm by 120cm and contains 143,840 calories – but this edible labyrinth will only take a few hours to eat. The maze is the brainchild of YouTube vlogger Doug Armstrong, from London, and food artist Prudence Staite, from Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, who created their chocolate warren in homage to the Maze Runner film.

 

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Was chosen to take part in an amazing art piece done by the artist Brandon McGill titled DUALITY. Was along with seven other young guys painted from head to toe very imaginatively with edible paint. This was followed by an art auction where invited guests bid on the artworks, meaning the edible painting not us. Those with the top bids could take us into private rooms and remove the artwork, which, yes, meant licking the painting off of our bodies. I was bought by a group of five men who had me back to a sticky version of my old self in what seemed like no time at all.

 

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Architect-turned-pastry chef Dinara Kasko constructs cakes inspired by mathematics and sculpture. Pairing algorithms with her architectural background, she precisely pieces together cakes that look more like experimental works of art than ephemeral, edible confections.

 

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A lumpy mound of a black rock-like substance dominated the space during He Xiangyu’s Cola Project. The substance was boiled down cola drink, a process developed by Xiangyu in 2008. With his team of factory workers, he “cooked” thousands of litres over a span of a year to create the crystal forms resembling coal. The work focuses on the materiality of Coca-Cola rather than the pervasiveness of the corporate identity of the product.

 

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The Real Cookbook from German design agency Korefe is a delicious creation made of 100% fresh pasta. Flip it open for some inspiration, and tear out the pages to use as sheets of lasagna. For both the seasoned chef and the novice cook, just bake the book and eat!

 

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Maurizio Savini is an Italian sculptor known for making art out of chewing gum.

 

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Bob Trotman Cake Lady (2002)

 

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1. Put 5 Peeps in a microwave-safe bowl and microwave on high for 30 seconds. 2. Using a spoon, stir in about 1 teaspoon neutral oil until the mixture is stringy and combined. 3. Slowly stir in confectioners’ sugar until you’ve reached your desired consistency (we used about ¼ to ⅓ cup sugar). 4. Transfer the slime to a work surface lightly dusted with more sugar. Cover your hands with sugar to prevent sticking. Knead gently until the slime is smooth.

 

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Highlights from the Texas State Fair 2011 Butter Sculpture Show

 

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Jasmine Rae Cake (2017)

 

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A London-based patisserie is selling edible tampon, soaked in blood. Luxury macron brand, OhLaLa, are selling this one-of-a-kind ‘bloody’ delicacy for a good cause. The boutique bakers created the “world’s first Bloody Good tampon macarons to highlight a real issue for women around the world,” as stated on their website. They joined hands with Bloody Good Period (BGP), a charity organisation that aims to create a sustainable flow of sanitary protection for those who can’t afford to buy them. Thus, people who end up buying these gory tampon boxes will be contributing for the noble cause. Ten pounds from every box will be donated to “help the fight against period poverty that affects 1 in 10 women in the UK alone, with proceeds raised going toward buying period packs for asylum seekers, refugees and women with low income,” the website added. The artists made the tampon as real-looking as possible and even added a blue string, which the makers say is also edible and are made of raspberry.

 

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Artist Carl Warner’s Foodscapes series uses real food, meticulously and painstakingly arranged on large plates to resemble landscapes, both well-known and imaginary. While there is also some photo editing at play, the attention to detail is clear in each and every one.

 

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“The domestic landscape reflects our culture, our taste and our habits,” say the designers Lanzavecchia + Wai. “Ostensibly living intact through good times and also adverse ones, the domestic objects become invisible to us over time with their familiarity. How can furniture react to times of crisis? The decorative elements that were once appreciated, suddenly become superfluous and should evolve to reflect a new era of austerity; the objects become edible and offer themselves to be consumed when needed.”

 

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Plastic water bottles might soon be a thing of the past thanks to these edible water bubbles created by an innovative sustainable packaging start-up based in London, UK. The bubbles, called the Ooho!, are created by encasing a blob of drinking water within an edible membrane.

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Morning! ** Steve Erickson, Thank you again so much for the weekend, Steve! I’ll test out the Jamie Isaac, thanks. Good luck on the pitching. Legal versions of drugs are inevitably so bad. I remember when there was legal Ecstasy going around in the rave days. It was just herbs and a bit of legal speed mixed in, and it was very decaf. ** Alex rose, Hi, Alex! Oh, yeah, visual arts … I haven’t found a reliable central source. Here and there. I’m lucky because Paris has become a fairly big hot bed for new and old art over the past years, so I can wander around the Marais and do tons of galleries, for instance. Obviously, that really helps. Nayland’s cool. Yeah, his work is kind of almost always possessing of something delightful in some odd, interesting way. Loved the picture! And all the newer work, so, so beautiful, man! ** H, Hi. Yeah, that sounds good. A little too busy on my end too, but what else is new, I guess. Happy Monday! ** Alistair, Hi, A! I thoroughly enjoyed the new Noe. It’s definitely a return to form after the miserable (I thought) ‘Love’. The filming is wild, disorienting, riveting. Very ‘him’. The cast — all non-actor ‘krunk’ dancers — are all over the place as actors — the dialogue is all improvised — but the dancing is fantastic. The ending kind of just fuzzes out, and some of the very dramatic stuff is a little contrived, but it’s so mesmerisingly and kind of exuberantly filmed that the whole thing is very pleasurable. Definitely see it. Thank you a lot about the gif book. That’s such a good Didion quote, eh? Yeah, I think I know where you are. It sounds exciting, man. That’s great to hear! The best high ever. xo ** Paul Curran, Hi, Paul! Yay! So great to see you, my friend! Thank you so much about the gif book. That really means a lot. Hm, no, no particular existing music in mind when making them, but I have making music in mind, for sure. It’s kind of a mixture on the order of the narrative/image combo. It has to be because my source is pre-existing gifs. I have a general narrative or theme trajectory in mind when I start, and I usually start by hunting suitable images, but the narratives get distorted and reshaped sometimes wildly along the way since ‘writing ‘is based in ‘juxtaposing’. One of the really exciting things about writing gif stories is that it’s intensely generative from beginning to end. It’s not like first constructing a narrative and then editing/revising it a la writing fiction, or not very much. I always recommend trying working with gifs as fiction because it’s so concentrated and yet the fiction never really settles into a form whereby you end up spending time just refining it. It’s always thoroughly maleable, if that makes sense. And the freedom you have by not having to put the narrative the topmost level as you basically need to do in written fiction is very exciting. How’s everything with you and your work and life and with amazing Tokyo? ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. So sorry for the commenting gyrations yesterday. Seven of your comments showed up, so they all are arriving and registering even if they don’t tell you so. Fuck this ridiculous comments-related problem. I really hope someone somewhere can figure it out. It’s mindbogglingly weird. So sorry. I’ll track down the Barney Farmer book, thanks a lot! ** Jamie, Hi, J! I’m good. Weekend was kind of lazy but nice. Started planning for my long NYC trip that starts on Thursday. Saw the new Gaspar Noe film, which is a lot of fun. I’m praying to Whoever that the money that was supposedly wired to me on Friday arrives in my back today because I’m pretty fucked if it doesn’t. So I don’t know if I’ve been paid, but, even if I have been, it’s not doing me any good yet. Big secret news! Promise you’ll leak as soon as you won’t get in trouble for leaking. Ooh, I’m very intrigued. May today put flowers in your hair as a famous song of the late 1960s urged people to do when they went to San Francisco. All across the nation, such a strange sensation love, Dennis. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Generally the animal lasts for, oh, three or four performances, so I would guess we will need to have two? Just a guess. I remember when Hell’s Kitchen lived up to its name. ** Statictick, Hi, N! I’m good. Thanks about ‘ZCR’, man. A book to start? It depends on their thing, I guess. ‘God Jr.’ is a soft entry. ‘The Marbled Swarm’ is a complex entry. ‘The Sluts’ is a hard entry. Or other. Well, I’m certainly very happy to hear about your rear view mirror medical mess and that Dilantin is out of your hair and life. I need to go to a dentist so bad I can taste him or her. But … Anyway, very excellent news, pal! ToF is a super skilled draftsman, and there is a kind of obsessive aesthetic and other focus in his work that is quite impressive, but, it’s not my thing either. I do really like GB Jones’ homage-y, diverge-y series ‘Tom Girls’. Enjoy the wedding. Dressing visibly nicer than usual is all that’s required, I think? ** JM, Hey. Your first comment did show up. Yeah, yesterday seemed to be a particularly technically fucked up day for some people. The whole thing is an ugly mystery. Yeah, I kind of loved ‘Singular Pleasures’. Mathews is kind of an across the board pleasurable eyeballs and brain date. You good? Things getting intense? ** Jeff J, Hey. Thanks a lot, man. I worked on that story a bit between its original appearance and the book version, but mostly on small things. I read ‘Speedboat’ a long time ago. At the time, I couldn’t figure what the fuss was about, but my head was elsewhere, and I’ve been meaning to revisit it and her work in general. Congrats on the de-raccooning. Interesting about the gig. So will you rearrange songs to fit those needs or stick to playing songs that are already quieter/weirder. or … ? It sounds like it will be a very interesting exercise for the band’s work is nothing else. Thanks about PGL’s American dist. I think the idea at the moment is that it will get some kind of limited release in NYC and LA, minimum, and hopefully also here and there if theaters are interested. No sense of when. It’s still festival chasing time probably until the fall. But thank you a lot about the local thing. That would be fantastic! I can put you or whoever in touch with the US powers-that-be when the time comes. PGL-related: I can’t say much at all about this yet, but, if you were to find yourself in NYC in earlyish-mid-September, there’s going to be pretty great related event going on there around then, details and dates to come. ** Nik, Hey! Hm, no, I really love her stories in general. I can’t think of a particular fave off the the top of my head, but I’ll give that a think. Yeah, we’re super curious to see what ARTE thinks of what we’ve proposed. I assume TV is a really particular thing, and none of us have ever worked in that arena before, so it will be interesting and hopefully not disappointing to find out how adventurous they are. We really tried to write a TV series and not some wild three-part movie or something. Anxious to hear, I guess probably or at least initially in the next couple of weeks. Now Zac and I are trying to finalise the script for our next film so we can give it our producer to start to fundraising part. It’s close to being finished. That’s the main thing. And we want to make a short film, 15 minutes long maybe, while we’re waiting for that to be ready, so we’re talking about that and getting ready to write it. And we’re going to put together a book related to ‘PGL’, and we’re actually having our first meeting about that today. So that, plus upcoming rehearsals and performances ‘Them’ are my immediate happenings. How’s the writing going? ** Okay. Here’s a thematic post about edibility. See if it leads to anything inside you. See you tomorrow.

18 Comments

  1. _Black_Acrylic

    Was that Sarah Lucas Nud cake an official product of the artist? Ooh so it was, and at the great Leeds Edible Art Show no less. After a meal out I’ll often skip dessert and just go straight to an espresso but the big UK food news of late has been the full spectrum dominance of Patisserie Valerie which offers an array of towering cakes and has now set up on the High Street in Dundee too. There seems to be a big craving for cake right now for some reason.

    Sorry about all the comments untidiness yesterday, what a weird situation. Tomorrow I’m getting an AC adaptor for my old computer and that machine always seems to show the blog and related comments without any problems.

    As you’re no doubt aware, the Yuck ‘n Yum Compendium is now available from our website and it collects together every YNY issue and more besides into one 600+ page volume. International shipping can be arranged if anyone wants to get in touch via info@yucknyum.org we’ll work something out. I’m putting together that Welcome to the World post for the blog and that will be with you in the next couple of days. Oh and @ DC I’ve just sent you an email.

  2. David Ehrenstein

    They may be edible but they sure don’t look delicious.

    Renata Adler is a mystery to me. She is/was close to a number of people I admire such as Richard Avedon. None of her fiction has grabbed me. Plus she was the worst film critic ever employed by the NYT. She had no clue of how to write a review and didn’t seem to care for film in any way.

  3. Steve Erickson

    Thanks to you and everyone else for the praise on my day. I also tried “legal Ecstasy” *way* back when. I’m not really sure what was in it, but it made me really jittery, it was no fun and it never seemed to wear off, even when I wanted to go to sleep hours ago.

    Best wishes on the bank transfer. That situation seems really messed up, and I hope it’s finally fixed today.

    I have another music recommendation: rapper Tierra Whack’s 14-minute EP WHACK WORLD and her accompanying video for the entire project (which is slightly longer and up on YouTube.) Without sounding like them, it’s the hip-hop equivalent of the Minutemen’s early EPs. Every song is exactly a minute and consists of a keyboard played over a drum machine (except for the one with a guitar played instead.) But it’s amazing how satisfying her lyrics and music can be in that limited time. She is also self-consciously not “keeping it real” and actually playing around with characters – this is clear from the music alone, but totally explicit from the video, which made me think of Cindy Sherman.

    I’m seeing Bill Gunn’s GANJA & HESS tonight. I saw it on VHS years ago and really liked it, but that was probably an edited version and his cut is being re-released theatrically now. The Metroraph, which is showing it, is also selling his novel and his memoir about his negative experiences in Hollywood, but they’re extremely expensive because they’re out of print. Ishmael Reed’s publishing company originally put them out.

  4. David Ehrenstein

    Lea Lays Down The Law

  5. Steve Erickson

    Here’s my interview with Richard Peña: https://medium.com/@stevenerickson/all-these-cinemas-waiting-to-happen-5c3d69f038f7

  6. Dóra Grőber

    Hi!

    Wow, today’s collection is spectacular! There are so many pieces I love! My favorites are maybe the edible tampons and the guys with the edible body-paint.

    Great news! I’m glad you finally stumbled upon a place that serves quality sesame noodles! Favorite meals and the knowledge where to find them are important. One of my favorite foods is lasagna and it’s surprisingly hard to find places where it’s as delicious as it should be!
    I keep my fingers very, very tightly crossed for a quick and overwhelmingly positive reply from ARTE! Please let me know when you hear something!! And Jesus, I really fucking hope your producer sent you the money she owed you because the situation you described is dreadful! Did she? Fuck, I really, truly hope so! What a nonsense!

    Yes, pouring is perfectly enough and even good! In fact, I love it when a book/poem/etc. feels like it did just that: poured out of its writer, following the rhythm and twists of their thoughts and inner workings, instead of a well-constructed literary idea.
    Shit, this is not very good news about the novels following ‘Fight Club’ (which I now finished and god, it really is one of the most inspiring books I’ve ever read!). In any case, I’ll take a look!

    How was the new Gaspar Noé film? ‘Climax’, if I’m correct?
    Oh god, oh my god, I just imagined holding the book in my hands and I went a little weak in the knees. Well, theoretically, as I’m sitting, haha. I’m so damn curious about ‘PGL’ and I adore the kind of art Michael Salerno publishes and I really, really hope the book will happen!!

    My weekend involved a lot of writing and lying around and watching old Placebo concerts and new Aquaria performances and collecting ideas for 2, maybe 3 new tattoos. No free-style day this time, sadly, but I can’t complain. I’m pretty happy with how it turned out anyway.
    How was yours? What happened? Have a beautiful week, Dennis, and I’ll see you on Friday!

  7. Jamie

    Tasty post, Dennis! (boom tish!)
    It’d be funny if everyone else who’s commented today has made this exact gag and I don’t know cos I can’t see their comments. Gosh, those meat guns…love the soy sauce sculpture too, the chocolate room (and love that quote from the artist too about the difference in the idea and reality of a chocolate room!), the experimental art cakes, the painted guys, butter sculptures (that climbing frame one!), the tampons, lots to love. Those Foodscapes look very Candy Crush but I like them too. Have you featured those Jell-o landscapes before? Also lovely. Thanks for all that. I went swimming this morning, in an effort to force a return to health, and this post was perfect to slowly scroll through whilst feeling entirely knackered on the couch afterwards.
    How are you? Did the cash magically appear? My fingers are/were crossed.
    Great that you’re going to New York. Do you have plans apart from the performance?
    I might as well just blab the big news cos the only reason not to is so as not to jinx it and I don’t really believe in that. It’s looking very likely that Hannah’s being offered a position in Brussels, to work on her own academic stuff. Meaning, we’re probably moving to Brussels! Aieee. Exciting, but slightly terrifying. It’s not definite yet though. We’ll find out at the end of the month.
    So, what gives on your end? What did Monday bring?
    May Tuesday pick you up and put you in her pouch like she’s a kangaroo and you’re her joey.
    Liquid Crystal love,
    Jamie

  8. Steve Erickson

    Incidentally, I voted in a “Film Twitter Mock Sight & Sound Poll,” re: our favorite films. The guy conducting it has revealed the preliminary results, with VERTIGO, 2001 and MULHOLLAND DRIVE at 1, 2 and 3. (I must admit all these films were on my list.) TWIN PEAKS: THE RETURN is now #6 and TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME (I remember clearly when that was a total film audit even with Lynch cultists, although I’ve always thought it was a masterpiece) at #19. I think Lynch’s reputation has surpassed Scorsese and Eastwood’s as America’s greatest living narrative director at this point.

    • Steve Erickson

      If any director who began making films in the ’70s lands in the actual Sight & Sound poll in 2022, I think it will be Lynch and/or Kiarostami.

  9. Paul Curran

    Dennis, Yes, that makes sense re the process, narrative, and/or lack off. I like the idea of building a book or story with and around found images. I love that juxtaposing and what you said about the malleability of the gifs. Like that great line in today’s post (Great collection) “scrambled but never destroyed.” With my J-novel I’m writing the thing first but not worrying about or deliberately skewing narrative consistently so I can then pull a kind of willful amnesia and cut out passages or paragraphs so it’s about a third of the original and they’re like these found fragments maybe inconsistently translated from a possibly non-existent whole. Something like that. Things are good in Tokyo. Busy with work and stuff until mid July. But that lovely weather before it gets too hot and the rains come.

    Statictick, good to see you’re doing well. xx

  10. JM

    Doing fab. As in, I love all that I am doing. The second half of Stupid Baby elevated it to one of the best things I’ve read this year. Whilst I’m doing fab, my body is not. My shoulder is weirdly locked and my neck is sore all the time. I need either more exercise or more sleep or less food?? Things definitely getting intense. On your end? Did the producers pay actually work out ???

  11. Misanthrope

    Dennis, I love shit like this. You see this really interesting thing and then you find out it’s…edible?! That’s crazy, no? Love it.

    Okay, so the animal will last. Hmm. You think you’ll get more shit for using an animal like that today than you would’ve however many years ago? I mean, I doubt it, but who knows?

    Ha! Yes, I read up a little bit on Hell’s Kitchen. Timothee Chalamet from CMBYN grew up there. His grandmother still lives there, I think. But yes, seems to be a totally different place these days, having once been a poor and working-class neighborhood to a rather upscale area these days. Lots of actors and even young Wall Street types. Hmm.

    Isn’t the Bowery’s history kind of similar?

    • Steve Erickson

      As far as I know, Hell’s Kitchen is rivaling Chelsea as Manhattan’s “gayborhood.” I don’t get the impression you’re really into going to gay bars, but if you want to, you’ll be in the right place.

  12. Bill

    Super (ahem) tasteful gallery today, Dennis. That chocolate room, yow. And Tezuka’s incredible lollypops.

    I’ve seen the jello cityscapes. They’re wobbly and cute.

    My copy of New Juche’s Stupid Baby finally arrived! Just as disorienting, disturbing and dense, as I was hoping for.

    Bill

  13. Nik

    Hey Dennis!

    Oh, sounds like a lot of cool projects going on. That’s cool of ARTE to let artists collaborate in an unfamiliar form, hopefully the executives don’t try to butcher it too bad. How’d you guys go about structuring it specifically for television? I know David Lynch was vocal about viewing the whole “Return” thing as an 18-hour movie more than a TV show, and I have (sort of ridiculous) arguments with my friends over how to thoughtfully construct one differently than a movie. So I’d be super interested in how that worked out for this project. Also, a PGL book sounds cool, how’d the meeting go?
    Writing’s been pretty good, today has been my biggest work day in a while, and I think I’m starting to really finalize some of the stories I’ve been working on the last month. I’m considering maybe sending them out to places online if the friends I trust to give smart criticism actually think there’s something to them, but it also might be worthwhile to focus on a little more and making sure I seriously believe in the work I’m doing. I don’t know, I’m enjoying the process and excited to share with someone.

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