Massive art involving tens of thousands of individuals and best seen, in many cases, from outer space.

Indian kids creating a humongous elephant.


Bill McKibben’s recent article in Grist, talks about the massive art coming out of the 350 initiative. The name, 350 Earth, points to the number of parts per million that most scientists agree is an acceptable upper level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Today the level is about 390 parts per million.

When I saw these images, it reminded me that more than a decade ago, I was working on a NEA grant (along with corporate sponsorships) to underwrite a series of site specific art that could not be completely seen by one person, nor could they be completely experienced in the first person. It was not about the environment, in fact most of the works were about the self delusion that comes from our deepest beliefs be they faith, passion, politics or simply intuition, the fact remains that if one approaches these beliefs rationally they simply don’t hold water.

The art works I wanted to create could only be experienced second-hand. Many observers needed to share their piece to put these jigsaw like works together and in most cases the media would need to gather those stories (and hopefully images) to piece together the complete work of art. It was a heady piece for sure.

One of the art works was to be deep under the ocean and only a few submarines and a couple divers would ever see it in person, and they would only see a small part, but they could photograph those pieces and if those were to be assembled, one would experience the work of art. Another piece was a mystery story told on billboards spread across the United States on Route 50. A few truckers or cross country drivers might actually see all of the billboards, but for the most part, multiple travelers would need to work together to piece the facts and discover how things started or how things turned out. (Depending on whether they saw the beginning, middle or end.) Another work from that series was three massive drawings created in a desert that could be glimpsed from outer space. To see the complete drawing, one would need to layer the three images one on top of another. One aspect of the series that I was particularly liked was that for it to succeed, the media had to be willing to connect the dots.

…but I digress…these works from the 350 “Art for Climate” series are born out of ….

….the site-specific environmental works from the 1970′s. Works such as Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty, Walter De Maria’s Lightening Field, Michael Heizer’s City or Trisha Brown‘s laundry piece with dancers climbing in and out of a string of clothes hanging 20 feet off the ground in an alley during the Judson movement. Then came Christo and Jeanne-Claude‘s gigantic orange-wrapping series, James Turrell‘s Roden Crater and more recently Andy Goldsworthy‘s prolific “temporary” outdoor works that we only see because they were photographed.

The elephant from India other images in this post involve tens of thousands of people and can, in many instances, only be seen from outer space.

This enormous Solar Sun was created in Cape Town, South Africa, out of 70 high powered solar “cookers”. After the event, the parabolic stoves were donated to the Khayelitsha community where many people do not have access to electricity.


What a “cool roof.” Molly Dilworth used reflective paint to create an outline of the NY and NJ coastline after a 7 meter rise in the sea level. The building is a school in the new Times Square Plaza in NYC. The solar sun and cool roof actually deliver a climate solution. Each of the solar stoves will last for 10 yrs and require no fossil fuels. The reflective paint on the roof saves the mid-town school by reducing the need for air-conditioning.

I suspect that this is a spot where windmills would work marvelously.


The image above reminds me of Katrina. It is a picture of a person standing on their house to avoid a flood. The work was created in the Dominican Republic and this is a satellite image. One can only imagine the massive scale of this one!

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Snow day or Ahhh L-I-F-E

Woke up for my morning run and look. These little dashes of fine powder are falling on Seattle.

The first snow of the year.  I have to get out there!

The air is sharp.  It’s 5:15am.  Jogging around the square, enjoying the white city, taking a round-about route to Starbucks, which doesn’t open till 5:30am.

My deaf friend, Joe Heller, is already at the counter writing a note about his brother, whom he’d like me to meet but whom doesn’t rise as early as us. Joe and his brother are living in the Morrison up the street from me. I write back as I don’t know sign language, and offer to come by the Starbucks later next weekend so I can meet his brother.

Using numerous scraps of envelopes and packaging pulled from the recycling bin, we continue the note writing for a while and he tells me that when he was 34 he fell into an elevator shaft, broke his neck, ribs, arm and hip and over three days managed to climb out. I am sure every word is true as Joe is frank, honest and open in a lovely way I am trying to emulate. He has been homeless most of his life but now he and his brother have spots in the Morrison Building up the street. I want to know how it is that he survived to share this riveting story but my window for running is tight. I need to hit the pavement so that I can get back to the house before Simone and Naomi wake up. I write, “Joe, we’ll have to pick up the thread another time. See you tomorrow morning bright and early. I’ll be waiting on pins and needles to find out how you survived?”

…And out I head into the white wrapped city.

Suddenly it dawns on me, what if I never heard the rest of Joe’s story. It could happen.

My friend Kay Nosler, died last week. There is much I don’t know about her. She read voraciously and got out to plays, music and lectures so there was always a great deal of material for us to ponder and I miss those conversations. It was like we both had balls of yarn we would knit together between laughs. One ball of yarn was a story we heard on NPR, another was an interview on Charlie Rose and another was a story in the New York Times Sunday Magazine and together we’d weave those into a lasting discussion about our experience of life lately. Suddenly I miss her so much that I can’t swallow and the air keeps going out and not going in…but I keep running and sort of move through waves of collapsing lungs until they hit some limit and inhale so much that I feel dizzy…then it smooths out. Jogging through mourning seems to work for me. It is what I did when Keith Grinstein died, Italo Scanga, the dancers, all the way back to when my father died.

Which leads me to another reason I am writing this morning. We had a particularly marvelous dinner party at the Tower last night.   Martha Enson, Kevin Joyce and their daughter Ruby as well as Monica, David, Annabel and Sophie Stephenson came over. I loved how eager we all were to discuss and share and learn about each other …we glanced (or I should say “lanced’) the top of dozens of stories and I am eagerly awaiting the next opportunity to gather up those plots (so much was happening in each of our lives) and continue the discussion.

What a nice feeling.

Ahhh L-I-F-E.

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Are you honing in on the virtues or letting them slide? Honestly?


My good friend Valerie Tarico writes a monthly column about developing virtues. She starts each post with a note about the particular character trait including a few quotes to ponder, discuss and share and then ends with an example of how one might teach that particular “virtue” to their kids.  Here is what she said about Honesty:

CHARACTER CORNER  Honesty — musings, quotes, and parenting tips from WisdomCommons.org  by VALERIE  TARICO on June 16, 2010

Laura remembers feeling humiliated when, as a child, she was caught in a lie. But her daughter Julie, age eight, seems almost indifferent when confronted with evidence that she has been dishonest. Last week, for example, Julie went to her friend Anna’s house two doors down without permission. She turned up home an hour later, saying she had been in the back yard the whole time.

Laura knew otherwise (she had called Anna’s mom), and she asked probing questions. But Julie stuck to the lie. When finally confronted with the evidence, Julie just screamed that Laura always spied on her and didn’t let her do anything.

What is honesty?

Honesty is saying what we know or suspect to be real, even when we don’t like the consequences. It is also much more.

Because most deception is actually self deception, true honesty requires that we recognize our natural human penchant for fooling ourselves. In particular, honesty requires that we guard against self-serving biases: our tendency to seek confirmation for what we already believe while ignoring contradictory evidence; our tendency to put blame on others and take credit for ourselves; our tendency to think that what is good for us is good for the world and even to make the gods themselves in our own image.

Honesty is a lifetime process of catching ourselves in falsehood and, however reluctantly, turning away from it.

Three Quotes to contemplate, discuss and share.

I am different from Washington; I have a higher, grander standard of principle. Washington could not lie. I can lie, but I won’t.
–Mark Twain

We tell lies when we are afraid… afraid of what we don’t know, afraid of what others will think, afraid of what will be found out about us. But every time we tell a lie, the thing that we fear grows stronger.
–Tad Williams

We must all beware the very real and understandable human tendency to ignore or subvert facts, and findings of science, that discomfort us for reasons of ideology, politics, religion, or personal taste.
–William Brody, President of Johns Hopkins

Bringing it home to your kids

1. Rather than focusing on lies, focus on trust, integrity, and self awareness, the virtues you are working to build.

2. Don’t “test” your child’s honesty. When you know he or she has committed an infraction, simply state what you know to be true rather than probing for a confession. Then move on to talking about natural and logical consequences or motives and feelings. Or, if emotions are too heated, suspend the conversation till all can calm down.

3. Preschoolers frequently blend fantasy and reality. Rather than treating this as a lie, label it imagination: “Wouldn’t it be nice if that were true?” “That would be so fun!” You can turn it into a game with an even wilder story of your own.

4. All cultures sanction “white lies.” Don’t expect perfect self disclosure from your children any more than you do from yourself. If you want honesty about things that matter though, do make trust a core family value.

5. Model a balanced pragmatic approach to personal faults. Perfectionism is the enemy of honest self appraisal.

6. Acknowledge how difficult honesty can be at times. Reward honesty with respect. Partner with your child in problem solving to rebuild trust.

Simone Lahaie at the Cafe Vita’s pizza oven

If you enjoyed Valerie’s post, here are a few of others I liked from her wisdom commons site:

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"Failure is Impossible"



My friend Roberta Riley and I have been emailing back and forth about hiring actress Debbie Dimitre or perhaps actress and playwright, Rachel Atkins to perform their profound pieces about the fight for the vote (the woman’s suffrage movement) at a gathering of some sort. I was thinking we could comb the assisted living facilities for women who would like to join us and share their stories as to where they were when it was announced that women received the right to vote.

Online I found a note and picture from a story written by Sean Dobbin about Mary Hannick. Mary is remembering that day. She was 11 years old and didn’t quite grasp the significance of the occasion, but will never forget her mother’s shouts of joy.

“You’ve never heard such exhilaration as we had in our house,” said Hannick. “My mother sang every word she said that day, and when she did go to vote, she took me and my younger sister with her so we could see what it was.”

Roberta Riley said that she thinks the suffrage movement used brilliant transformative tactics that would be inspiring to progressives in these trying times of divisive politics. Hmm… Another good reason to dig up the history of emancipation.

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A global beginning to the day

Simone said, “Mom, Is it okay if I head up to the globe to do some reading?”

Hope said, “What a great idea Simone. I’ll grab a book and join you.”
My good friend, Hope, is visiting from Maryland for the week.

A bit later, I climb up to see if they need anything.   The view is such a rush.

Simone offers to sherpa down and gather up “provisions.”
No easy feat, but she is a facile climber and returns shortly pushing a backpack to us through the port of the globe before climbing through herself.

She smooths a towel and first unpacks a bottle of bubbly water and little paper cups, then she places a few slices of bread in a circle, adding a chunk of cheddar to the center of each.

The three of us enjoy her picnic while taking in the view. It feels cinematic on this cloudless day. There is something to notice anywhere we look.

A fireboat is spewing a practice fountain in the middle of the Sound.

The shipping port is heavy with goods. Forklifts are bustling about with their wobbly loads, stacking containers. Quite a few are four high.

A regatta is happening, and we watch as the colorful bulging spinnakers switch sides when the sailboats tack.

Two ferries cross paths.

 

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Naomi’s KOMO tour of the Tower or “What was on the cutting room floor?”


This KOMO news piece turned out well.

In the hopes of championing ACT Theatre, which I love, I mentioned them dozens of times. I tried to weave ACT into whatever they asked about. “Yes, I DO love living downtown, especially because I can, spur of the moment, catch innovative theatre at ACT with my cool ACT Pass.”

The play Lieutenant of Inishmore came up (of course) as well as the Pinter Fortnightly series and Lady with All the Answers (Ann Landers) and Caught in the ACT (readings).

Was I too obvious? Somehow, all those mentions ended up on the digital version of the cutting room floor.  A friend of mine had a great suggestion; he said, “Next time, write ACT Theatre across your forehead. They are bound to have to explain that?”

By the way, the ACT Pass is a monthly program. You pay $20 or $25 per month depending upon your age, and you can go to as many plays as you want and bring guests for greatly reduced rates (often 10 bucks).  ACT Theatre is the first theater in the country to present such an option partly due to having four stages active in the building.  You can catch a Mainstage play, an InterACTions lectures, the Caught in the ACT series of screenplay readings from the Film School, New Works for the America Stage, Pinter Fortnightly, a dance performance, The Central Heating Lab productions, the Moisture Festival (burlesque), the RAWStock short film festival and of course…music.

You can visit the art pieces I left for you by visiting the old Eagles Safe on the lower level and opening a few drawers.

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Art is never chaste.

“Art is never chaste. It ought to be forbidden to ignorant innocents, never allowed into contact with those not sufficiently prepared. Yes, art is dangerous. Where it is chaste, it is not art.”
Pablo Picasso

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115 "area ways" below the streets of Pioneer Square

After school the girls like to play in front of the building for a while. It’s our “porch”and on sunny days it is a fun place to hang out.

Naomi showing her latest breakdancing moves on the sidewalk. Note the little glass squares.


Typically we get out the bikes, chalk and a few toys and hang for awhile. Today we had the giant poly pocket airplane out. We use the colored chalk to draw flowers in and around the checkerboard of glass squares.
The glass squares are skylights. There is a lower level that we call the “Area Ways.” After the huge fire of 1889, Seattle was rebuilt. The city decided that the new buildings and sidewalks should be raised 10 to 40 feet higher to make space for modern plumbing and to get folks up out of the mud. This solved the waterfront neighborhood’s drainage problems.


Slippery mud played an important role in the history of Pioneer Square as it was the viscosity of the street clay that made it possible to slide logs down Skid Row to the docks for exporting. The term Skid Row (now Yesler Way) originated in Seattle and was an important part of its livelihood.
There are 115 “area ways” below the sidewalks in Pioneer Square. They were originally passageways and stores from before the fire stayed open on the lower level. But over time, businesses moved up and in 1907 the area ways were condemned by the city for fear of pneumonic plague.
They are usable spaces, as after the Nisqually earthquake in February of 2001, they were repaired and updated a bit. You can take the Underground tour and wander through them. You’ll see the remains of gambling halls and speakeasies…even opium dens.
Today businesses use the bright spaces for storage. When I was building-out the Smith Tower Penthouse, I went down into them and found pieces of Chinese antiques, thick white marble slabs with blue veins running across them and rows upon rows of little enamel sinks. I used the marble for the kitchen counter and the antiques for doors and various built-in supports.

Purse and wings and we are ready to go visit our friends in the neighborhood.


Sometimes my friends ask me if we miss having a backyard. Of course we do! A chicken coop would be fun but we don’t have a place for it. Nor do we have a spot for a swing set or jungle gym. That said, Simone and Naomi seem to find lots of things to climb on (EVERWHERE!) and we make do by growing a surprisingly prolific potted vegetable garden on the office rooftop. When we want to run around or cycle, we head to the Olympic Sculpture Park, Myrtle Edwards, Seattle Center or Occidental Square.

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Hillary does Pier 30

Hillary Clinton does Pier 30. So nice to have her in town.

“There isn’t anything we can’t do!”

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First time

Naomi’s first time climbing into the globe.

Naomi gulping milk with the view. How small the cars look.

I didn’t know there were so many roofs.

Naomi’s adventure came about when KOMO news asked to do a story on the apartment. Heather Reese and photographer Ben Barnett arrived when Naomi and I were chalking up the sidewalk outside the Tower. The crew let Naomi lead the way up in the elevator with Alfredo, into the Penthouse, quick stop to see her room, and then up to the tippy top.

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"Please Vote!" or Clinton’s in Town

Clinton comes to Washington to personally ask that Washingtonians get out and vote!



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Mieraye, Obama and Murray or the President comes to town.

Official White House Photo by Pete Souz


Simone’s school mate, Mieraye Redmond, had an exciting day yesterday. She met President Barack Obama in front of her own house. Mieraye is incredibly well spoken and very much beats to her own drum. Just last week at the Evergreen school math and science night, she spontaneously stood up in front of a packed stadium and read a story she had written that morning. She was loud, clear and made us laugh heartily.

For the President, Mieraye wrote a letter and attached a colorful paper bouquet. Sen. Patty Murray and the President were on a walk through the Wedgewood neighborhood on their recent trip to the city.

Mieraye and Simone take violin and choir together at Evergreen School which means I get the pleasure of hanging out with Mieraye’s mom, Toni Redmond, a couple times a week. Toni is a syrupy-rich jazz singer. She jammed at Russ and Gemma’s anniversary party last year and ever since then I have been encouraging her to get a group together. (How is that coming my dear friend!)

Get in close!

Do you prefer a backyard chat or stadium performance?

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Java with Senator Patty Murray and President Obama

Brainstorming over Java.

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Making a Home in a Pyramid, 462 Feet Above Seattle

Michael Tortorello wrote a nice piece about our place for The New York Times called “Making a Home in the Pyramid, 462 Feet Above Seattle.” It came out today and the photographer Stuart Isett said I could use his extraordinary images on the blog.

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Ending nuclear proliferation

Was reading an email from Mark Anderson this morning. It was about his upcoming Future In Review conference. He was opening the floor for speaker nominations. The first that came to my mind was John Gilleland with Terra Power. It would not be an understatement to say that John is solving the big problems of today’s world!


This type of nuclear power ends nuclear proliferation as it runs on depleted uranium. There is nothing leftover to make bombs. Isn’t that remarkable? As Izhar Armony puts it, “the Terra Power reactor transforms nuclear waste liabilities into assets.” June 2010

Terra Power provides the safest nuclear power known as the plants themselves run enclosed for hundreds of years without refueling and “based on the amount of depleted uranium sitting around the U.S. right now, you could power at least this continent for about a thousand years at current rates of consumption.” –Jan 2010 Eben Frankenberg. Jaw dropping, no?

What a masterful solution to climate change.

As if that isn’t enough reason to rewrite nuclear regulation right now and put everything we have behind this…Bill Gates spoke at TED this year about how this solution is the tool he wants to use against global poverty.


Terra Power is one of MIT’s 10 Emerging technologies that can change the way we live.

So you are probably wondering who is behind this. Funded by Vinod Klosla, Bill Gates, Charles River and incubated within Nathan Myrvold‘s Intellectual Ventures.

Could any one technology do more for Extreme Poverty, Global Warming, Energy Independence and Nuclear Proliferation?

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Making body parts and firing madly!

The sign read “The Lieutenant of Inshmore contains strong language, adult themes, fog, gunshots, violence, torture, mayhem, and a lot of laughs.” I can handle a little fog but torture? Is the audience in danger?


Can you tell what is real and what is the mold? I’m working on our “optical illusion” halloween costumes and stumbled on these creepy creations for the Lieutenant of Inishmore.


Saw the movie RED last night and at certain moments I was able to see the crazed shooting as a color, just as comedy is a color, or romance, or lust…used to tell a story, share an idea or simply entertain. I’m getting there. Can’t wait to see Inishmore. Opens Thursday!

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Brunch with Margit, Ben, Sarah, Rob and Pascal or Hot Lava

Margit, Simone, David, Pascal, Ben and Naomi


The morning started in the backyard with Margit creating crowns from the giant leaves. Ben and Naomi were doing an improvisation about a family of animals. We seem to descend on Ben and Margit fairly frequently on Sunday mornings.

Sarah, Rob and Simone work on the crossword puzzle. Sarah and Rob are Pascal’s parents.

Ben and Margit are both Naomi and Pascal’s godparents.

Margit and Pascal making crowns.

Do you like my robes? I’m a King and these are my royal garments. – Ben Naomi is mesmerized.


Naomi and I take a walk down the street to a playground while Ben plays violin for Simone.

Lets play Hot Lava mom.

I’m stepping over a scary monster here.

I’m climbing up the mountain.

I made it. I’m thirsty!


We head back to the brunch.

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Simone’s laptop

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Why are you smilin’ like a rabbit in a briarpatch?

Kevin, Simone, Elias, Liam, Simone, Drew


We are fairly frequent visitors to the CLAMS house. Cora is 4, Liam is 5, Annie is the mom, Miela is a dog and Scott is the dad. Like their other parties, this one was wildly fun! The horse theme was in celebration of Cora’s 4th and Lola’s 5th birthdays. Lola is another part of our clan…i.e. the youngest daughter of Kevin Flick and Melissa Hartley. Presents and a cake did happen but the dominant event was horsing around in the best way. Why with straw, mud, ice cubes and bubbly water… Right?

Scott, Kevin, Liam, Simone


As we got out of the car, Scott (Cora’s dad) zoomed by with a dozen kids on his heels trying to lasso him and put him in the jail out back.

Naomi with a funnel, an upside-down filter and a strainer.


Seattle was built on the gold rush and the kids fell for it too or I could just say that the girls had fun panning for gold (beads, that is) in the mucky kiddie pool and stringing up necklaces for their horse’s manes. Okay…maybe there were no real horses…so us parents had to ante up and wear the muddy things.

Scott, Kevin, Drew, Liam


So a hay fight erupted. It was tons of fun but it didn’t stop there. Ice cubes were great to drop down pants but that too got old. I’d say the mud was probably a bad idea but the seltzer bottles….now those were genius as, with a little shaking, they could get someone from a yard. Oh that reminds me of that old saying…don’t judge till you’ve walked a mile in their shoes. Pretty good advice really as you are a mile away by the time they get wind of your words and YOU have their shoes. Back to the fight…and the discovery of a projectile seltzer.

Julie, Naomi, Gwen


Not everybody joined in the chaotic rough-housing. There were safe spots one could take turns swinging or (below) …their were moms to nestle up with like Catherine and Francesca below.

Catherine, Francesa, Julian

Kim, Elias, Simone, Liam, Drew, Simone


Here is a clip with some of the action.

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You’re just jealous cause the voices only talk to me or "Pumpkin Head"

Outside of the grocery store was a monster pumpkin with three heads carved into it. Here are two of them.



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