Mock Retro Soup

It’s Christmas time yet again. If you couldn’t tell by the growing appearance of ‘What to Buy’ lists appearing in newspapers or by various shops now displaying a glut of festive tat and unsubtly changing their jarringly bland muzak to some saccharine festive anthems. If it by some bizarre chance you haven’t yet noticed, it doesn’t matter anyway, the calendar would inevitably catch up as would the intensity of Xmas media saturation ensuring you’ll be pretty much unable to escape it bar going into an early mince-pie induced coma. But of course I’m not telling you anything new here, and I’m not now going to go on a pointless Christmas rant saying how Xmas is perhaps a capitalist conspiracy to get us all to spend what we don’t have.

As it happens I don’t actually fester with bah-humbugism, I do actually embrace Christmas, but doing so in a stiff upper lip manner, that is to say I don’t get childishly excited; I have an appreciation for the general good feeling that swills about while playing down the Christian/Captialist aspects. One reason I particularly like the festival, that being said, is that it gives me a reason, as if I really needed one anyway, to purchase books for people.

I must confess here that it’s not often that I actually visit major high-street bookshops; I make heavy use of second-hand stores (Readers World in Birmingham is great, don’t let the poor reviews in the link here put you off), libraries and yes, Amazon.

But it was when visiting a bricks and mortar store recently, with the intention of gift purchasing, that I once again encountered a phenomena which I’m calling ‘Designer Covers’. This new breed of books are typically hardback although special paperback editions have seemingly now got in on the game, presumably because the iconised hardbacks have been doing so well. I can of course easily understand from a marketing point of view as to why publishers would create such books, eBooks are forever on the up, or so we are told, and the USP actual books retain over their digital rivals is that they exist in the physical world, (you know, the world of matter, you know, where things actually exist) so it’s obvious even to the most brain-dead marketeer to play this up and fetishize this aspect. But sod marketing and their evil scheming ways. Especially because my first instinct on seeing those books is, but never said, “Oh wow, how cool” Damn them for making me feel like that!

This feeling very quickly dissipates when I actually think about it for a few seconds, leaving me with a quandary. I do, as I can tell from from my initial reaction, like the effort that has gone into re-designing the various book covers, which, I believe, can be an interesting art-form in its own right. But then, with perhaps a smidge of Hipster syndrome at play, I can’t help but think why would I pay for this mock retro when there are are surely plenty of actual old books waiting to be found. But does the genuine matter? In a society of signs surely the synthetic image of old is much more appealing than actual oldness, isn’t it? It’s pastiche of oldness feels more real than the ‘actual’ real article. Well capitalism is certainly banking on it anyway. Eventually the argument at hand here can become tautological. The whole thing ultimately boils down to image, which the marketeers behind this new retro are of course all too aware. The choice is then, do you want to appropriate neo-retro and remain modern in your oldness or acquire ’real’ retro and fool yourself into thinking that the age of the item actually makes a difference to how genuine your delusion of living in a past utopia is.

But ultimately what needs to be questioned is why is this interest in the old even around in the first place? Why despite myself occasionally being critical of it, do I still find myself attracted to such propositions. Is it perhaps that with ever-increasing digitalisation of the world, in which the firm borders of time and space are collapsing, whereby not only does the digital bleed into the physical but whereby the physical, with technology such as RFID, is increasingly, via “The Intertnet of Things, bleeding into the Wired. In such circumstances perhaps we feel the need to grab onto something stable, something physical, something with a defined sense of time, even if that something is essentially nothing, a token relic of times when metanarrative gave us structure and stability.

Rather than being a case of Luddism, I’d suggest the people most susceptible to such purchasing are in fact amongst some of those most integrated in the digital world such as myself. Like reality, there is no real binary, or neither is there pro-tech or anti-tech camps as such, there is space in-between. Hipsters are the classic example actually. They live there life in a digital world, but they taint it with sepia hues and pseudo lens flare, they listen to MP3s but do so with a cassette iPhone cover. Rather than creating new futures, they are creating new pasts.

So where does this leave me? Are these new ‘designer books’ to be scorned or embraced? Essentially, there is no absolute answer; how can there be when we’ve allowed, for better or worse, our main pillars of stability of time and space to corrode? I may end up purchasing one or two of the books, they are nice objects in themselves, but while books can furnish a home that certainly isn’t the point of them. But seeing as they take up space in ones decreasingly lived-in physical environment why not purchase books that serve as art as well as content? As the marketeers have noted and as hipsters like to indulge, the physical item is more than just content, it has an essence of its own. I’m still no clearer as to where my position on ‘the issue’ stands, and to be honest, I glad that’s the case.

 

 

Beer Festival with Arts and Folk.

Well, here goes a second attempt at a blogpost. Yesterday I wrote a quite long entry about what I’d got upto this weekend, however I lost what I wrote, as well as several hours more trying to recover it. The upshot of the error was that I wrote it via my iPhone using an outdated app, I accidentally saved the entry to local drafts, which in effect doesn’t actually exist, thus deleting what I’d just written. So here, still angry at my loss, is an attempted abridged version of what I originally wrote:

Most weekends I find myself working in a low paid McJob which I idly maintain while I continue to study for an MA at university. However this weekend was different. I had originally wanted to have time off a few weekends ago to visit some breweries in Chester, having recently become a member of CAMRA, but it just so happend that the day that trip was due to take place my employer had a no-holiday bar in place due to a promotional launch. So, as a replacement for this I decided I was to attend a local beer festival I had recently seen advertised.

The Beer festival was taking place at a small pub in Wolverhampton called The Combermere Arms, however this did not turn out to be a normal straight-forward beer festival, the kind of which I’ve attended numerous times now. No, this one coincided with an arts festival that was also taking place, and this overlap did not just take place temporally but also physically, with the pub being used as one of various venues displaying and hosting local artists. It should be said that we didn’t just stumble on the art event accidentally, I had been following its process online for sometime, but the clashing dates and the use of the Combermere Arms as a venue was only brought to my attention a few weeks previous.

As we entered the pub, which was converted into such an establishment from dwellings in 1860, we were instantly charmed; it was both cosy and quaint and possessed all the typical signs of alehouse quiddity that one would expect. The pub had exhibits from artists scattered throughout its three rooms as well as in the gents whereby the locally famed ‘Tree in the Toilet” was decorated. The main event taking place at the pub when we entered, besides the beer festival, was a folk band in damp but well attended beer garden. Not long after taking some seats the band tried to get patrons to take part in a folk dance, a splattering of people duly obliged. It was very charming to see and hear, and combind with the setting of a pub with genuine age, with scattered signs of oldness, it made the occasion feel phantasmagoric. This led us to question wether we’d stepped into some sort of LARPing situation, of course we hadn’t but it was the quickest shorthand we could use to share to each other the shared surreal-like feeling we were all feeling. It was a great experience and I would love to go back the pub again, but without the folk band making the pub seem like a portal to another world I feel that I could potentially be somewhat underwhelmed on my next visit.

After this we went round to a few of the other exhibits being displayed in various building and it was genuinely great to see. It was very nice to know, despite the City of Wolverhampton crumbling further into a wasteland, that there’s a thriving subculture of artists of all kinds based in the area, in fact it could be argued that living in such an area, which in many ways isn’t really that bad, could in fact be helping them in their aim of creating good art. Having viewed many of the works I have been really inspired to finish off the long awaited zine I’ve been working on with a good friend, as well as to get on with numerous other creative ideas I have planned and noted but just keep finding the time to put off, which is of course infinitely easier to do than actually make something. It was a great day out and I do look forward to hopefully attending other such events in the future and I’m very pleased, perhaps more importantly, that I now possess a greater passionate impetus to get on and actually make the various things that I wish to make.

(the video included below isn’t great because I was mostly trying to record the sound briefly, not intending to blog it)

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Zine Front Cover.

I’ve talked quite a lot in passing on this blog, and more so on twitter, about a zine I’m working on. It’s been quite a long process due to many obstacles such as work commitments and the like that have got in the way of myself and fellow creator, as well as some laziness. Anyway, here is the front cover for it as it stands, I must say I quite like it, but then I would, a few changes are going to be made from this version, but the core is there.

Typography Videos

My friends have got me interested in typography videos of late, many of them really are impressive; in my mind the videos really do demonstrate the power of words. I actually think it gives greater strength to the quotes seeing the words almost come to life, and move about in the manner they do, rather than just seeing a person or actor say them. Here are a couple I particularly like.

Totem Destroyer

I’m not a person for flash games, in fact, i actively detest them on the whole. That’s not to say however that there can’t be an exception to the rule.

I’ve recently come across a game on the website NotDoppler called Totem Destroyer. The game is simple, you have to remove blocks from a tower one at a time until the amount required are removed, however you have to ensure that little humanoid creature does not touch the floor. The concept is simple and the design is simple, but that takes nothing away from this gem, in fact, it’s what makes it such a nice little game.

I know it’s only a game, but design wise i’d have to say it’s almost artistic. Go have a look at it, I sure enjoyed and I’m sure you will too