Skip to main content

Where I'll be tomorrow...

Tomorrow I’ll be at the Right Window Gallery in ATA (Artists Television Access) building, 992 Valencia Street at 21st, San Francisco.



In fact I will be IN the right window gallery… as part of a live performance series entitled "Looking but Not Touching," curated
by Cassie Riger [rightwindow.blogspot.com]. The performances will be staged inside the window space, and the audience will watch from the sidewalk.

I will be part of Moira Roth's performance "Pt. 1, 'Rachel Marker, Franz Kafka and the Golem, Prague 1924-1939" – this Sunday, May 11, 5:00-5:15 p.m.

I’ll be the Golem -- mute and strong -- very me...

Really not sure how I got this gig...admire Moira to pieces, thrilled to be there and looking forward to writing "golem" in Hebrew backwards on my forehead with my son's washable markers. It'll be my costume.

Oh, and I did shave my head, completely...I've been wanting to do that for years.

I’ll post more on this after it’s done.

Comments

Unknown said…
You shaved your head?? That's huge!! (I clicked on the picture to see you better and got a photo of a bunch of young women in their underwear...um, what's up with that?)
loveitallabove said…
I shaved my head to play a Golem.

You click the picture and you see members of the band Golem...well, the female members modeling underwear.

I call my haircut Anthony.
Anonymous said…
Dude, that's some freaky bald head-ed shit you got going on. Whassup wid dat? (see, I still speak American-ese !)
loveitallabove said…
you're still my favourite, billy.

Popular posts from this blog

Why Go to A Conference Anyways?

@lidja @lyndakelly61 @futureofmuseums @creativemerc @museum_flavor pLz look http://tinyurl.com/qxlja4 &here http://bit.ly/q1mhV assoc./conf. grpthink @RichardMcCoy @DanielCull very import.

Review: Macbeth

Macbeth by William Shakespeare My rating: 4 of 5 stars Four and a half stars, with one major flaw: the producers chose to do this funny little trick of overlaying Cumming's voices when he was multiple characters, namely three weird sisters when they spoke at once. The result was echo-y and distracting. Otherwise, the whole thing felt like the smartest guy in the neighborhood inviting you over to listen to him read, and you cared: knew the story and really wanted to hear how he delivered. It was intimate and rewarding. It also made me think about how it is a story of Scots and English. View all my reviews

Review: King Henry VI, Part 2

King Henry VI, Part 2 by William Shakespeare My rating: 5 of 5 stars I have just now gotten to part 2 of the Henry VI plays. the first had amazing speeches and frickin' Joan of Arc and I thought it couldn't get any better. THAN this one's got conjurors who evoke prophetic specters, multiple beheadings, and a mad rebel named Cade who just starts to try to take over the whole country, no Empire for like no good reason then gets killed after hiding ten days without food in a hedgegrove. The language is extraordinary from the get go where pious Henry says, "O Lord, that lends me life, Lend me a heart replete with thankfulness!" I am going to make that my motto! View all my reviews