Head on a stick

Ai Weiwei is a contemporary Chinese artist. He helped design the “bird’s nest” stadium for the Chinese Olympics and recently had an exhibit at the Tate Modern in London where he covered the turbine hall floor with sunflower seeds that were made from porcelain.

He is currently sitting in a jail cell in China. (No one knows exactly where.) He was snatched as he boarded a flight to Hong Kong. The government said he has committed “economic crimes.” I don’t suppose his detention has anything to do with his outspokenness, does it? China is a terrible, terrible place. They’re not our friends.

A fantastic sculpture exhibit by Mr. Ai, Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads, just opened outside of the Plaza Hotel at Central Park South and 59th Street. The exhibit was long planned and he was supposed to be there for the opening, but it’s hard to attend your opening when your legs are in shackles.

The bronze sculptures are 12 heads of the creatures of the Chinese zodiac. They’re much, much bigger than I thought they’d be. I was told by the guy selling exhibit books and tee-shirts that they weigh 800 pounds each!


There’s rat, ox, tiger…


…rabbit, dragon, snake…


…horse, goat, monkey…


…and rooster, dog, boar.


Dragon is, by far, the most beautifully rendered. Click on this and have a look.


The heads are replicas of versions that were made by European Jesuits for the Manchu emperor Qianlong. They were looted in 1860 when the Summer Palace was ransacked and burned by British and French troops during the Opium Wars. The Chinese government eventually retrieved five of them (ox, tiger, horse, monkey and boar). Two of them (rat and rabbit) are part of designer Yves Saint Laurent’s art collection. The remaining five are presumed lost forever.

Unlike Mr. Ai, the exhibit is FREE! FREE! FREE! It runs through July 15th.

Abu Ghraib, New Jersey

5-Year Old Daughter has a wild and vivid movie playing inside her head at all times. Often, I’ll hear her on her own in some corner of the house providing dialog for two inanimate objects. Not just dolls. She’ll pick up two pencils or a fork and a toy car and have them “talk” to one another. Whole conversations! It’s entertaining to watch from the shadows.

I heard her yammering upstairs in our bedroom so I crept up to see what kind of charming world she was creating this time. Was it princesses or a menagerie of friendly stuffed animals? I turned the corner and was stunned to see this scene unfolding on our bed. She had placed the cloth pouch used for game pieces over the head her doll!


Then, much to my horror, she cinched the bag closed around the doll’s neck! Oh, my God! What ghastly game is this she’s playing!? Next stop, the child psychologist.

* * *

I was walking down my driveway with 9-Year Old Daughter to get in the car. At the apron, we saw an empty, crushed pack of Marlboro’s. The wind blows all kinds of crap in from the roadway. She looked down and said the most wonderful, satisfying thing:

“Dad, what is that?”

Can you imagine! 9-years old and doesn’t recognize a pack of cigarettes! Perhaps next I’ll show her a typewriter, an 8-track cartridge and a black and white television.

* * *

Have you ever impulse purchased a CD from Amazon.com because it was really cheap and then, once it arrived and you go to tuck it into your CD rack, found that you ALREADY OWN A COPY?

No, of course you haven’t. Only someone with the attention span of a gnat would do that.

Would anybody like a free copy of Genius: Warren Zevon’s Greatest Hits? His songs are like really great short stories, mostly about broken, fucked up lives, all weaved with sometimes gentle, sometimes chugging, piano.

Well, I’m sittin’ here playing solitaire
With my pearl-handled deck
The county won’t give me no more methadone
And they cut off your welfare check.

Carmelita hold me tighter
I think I’m sinking down
And I’m all strung out on heroin
On the outskirts of town

Carmelita

Edit: The CD is gone. It’s going to Ireland! Thank you for playing.

My superhero origin

Superman had his rocket from Krypton

Batman saw his parents murdered.

Spider-man was bitten by a radioactive spider.

In this month’s column at the Undie Press, I tell the story of how I became The Unbearable Banishment and then segue to my recent trip to the annual Antiquarian Booksellers’ Association of America rare bookfair, where I swooned and salivated over some of the most beautiful and unobtainable books on the planet.

The Rebbe is coming! The Rebbe is coming! And he’s driving an RV.

Every religion has its fringe elements who have *ahem* interesting viewpoints. Here in New York, the Hasidic community has a group of followers who insist that their charismatic leader, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who died in 1994, is actually the Moshiach (Messiah), and are eagerly await his resurrection. Now, I ask you, is that any crazier than when the Apostles were selling the same special sauce 2,000 years ago?

If you’re in the right place at the right time, you’ll catch their fabulous parade of rented RVs that promote their beliefs. The RVs blast music and people hang out the windows and wave at New Yorkers, some who watch gape-mouthed. In this clip, I caught them on 6th Avenue just south of 42nd Street working their way uptown towards Rockefeller Center.

mitz

These seem to be benevolent folks whose core message, as far as I can tell, is one of promoting goodness and kindness. To me, they’re harmless nuts, unlike some other religious fringe groups who like to judge people and tell everyone how to live—or else.

:15 second reviews

I’m never going to get around to writing individual posts for these and since it’s my least-popular feature, I thought I’d lump a bunch of quick-hit reviews together. Enjoy! Or not.

* * *

highIn High, Kathleen Turner plays a foul-mouthed alcoholic nun in a rehab center. Big stretch! She was great but I thought the plot was very movie-of-the-week and the script was weak. An actual line of dialog:

“Cody is hiding something!”

Oh, you don’t say? Well, beat me over the head with a big obvious stick. The guy playing the young drug addict was AC-TING and E-MO-TING too much. But my two friends loved it, so who knows? The reviews come out Tuesday. Then I’ll know what to think.

* * *

marieMarisa Tomei is my pretend girlfriend, along with Mary Louise Parker. They, on the other hand, are unaware of my existence. The New Group’s Marie and Bruce is :90 minutes of a wife’s raging, venomous hatred of her husband. If you think that’s uncomfortable to sit through, you’re right. Both Tomei and Frank Whaley, her punching bag husband, are terrific. They leave it all on the stage, including for real tears. But if you’re feeling kind of blue and insecure about your relationship, then I’d steer clear of this one. A few years back they made this into a movie with Julianne Moore and Matthew Broderick. I can’t IMAGINE what that looks like.

* * *

daisyI was looking forward to Driving Miss Daisy with slight trepidation. I thought it might be a lot of Old Lions of the Theater-type histrionics. Well, it wasn’t. Darth Vader’s Hoke was quiet and seemed truer to the spirit of the character than Morgan Freeman’s (although Freeman originated it). And, boy, can Vanessa Redgrave act! (That’s like pointing out that water is wet.) A highlight of the season.

* * *

goodThe funniest/saddest/truest thing you can see right now is David Lindsay-Abaire’s Good People. Francis McDormand, a down and out “Southie” from the wrong side of Boston, looks up Tate Donovan, a former fling who made it out of the neighborhood and is now a doctor. She gives an utterly selfless performance, looking drab and beaten by life throughout. The entire cast of six is spectacular. I recognize some of the characters in this show from my past and it stayed with me for a long while.

* * *

timonRichard Thomas plays the bumbling idiot Timon in Shakespeare’s rarely-produced Timon of Athens. Timon gives all of his money away to his friends and then turns into a hermit and violent misanthrope when he goes broke and none of his “friends” will lend him a nickle. It didn’t get strong reviews when it opened but I really liked it a lot. And tickets were a measly $15 bucks! C’mon! A top-notch Shakespeare production at The Public Theater (one of the best venues in town) for mere pennies. You can’t go wrong, folks.