Saturday, February 17, 2007

Why "marbling" is the perfect image for Presidental candidate Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico.

When Jessie Jackson called his politics "a quilt" or a "rainbow" he was giving us a visual picture of his beliefs.
What really does "marbling" represents? In terms of an image for a political ideology that is.
Firstly, marbling encompasses a infinite variety of colors and shapes. Beauty emerges from chaos. A harmony is created. Marbling has developed in many contries at different times independent of each other.







The Governor Richardson World Collection of Marbled Papers:
Marbling is the art of painting on water and transferring that image to another surface.
“Marbleized” papers have been around for hundreds of year with difference names for it in different languages. From “Ebru” (cloud art) to “Suminagashi” (floating inks), no matter if you call it marbling or “aqueous mono printing” it is the same ancient craft.
The State of New Mexico was the site of the “First International Marblers’ Gathering” and the State currently has a traveling exhibition about marbling called “Rebirth of a Craft.” Governor Richardson has lent his name and support to the establishment of a “permanent collection of marbled paper from around the world” to be housed here in New Mexico. Already people from many different countries have donated marbleized art to this emerging collection.




Like many arts and crafts, marbling done by both men and women. Above, Alexis America watches as Cove 'teases' the colors to make a pattern on the surface of a water bath (thickened with carrageenan).



Cove hangs his "Hippie Marbling" on the Street of Berkeley, California during the 70's.









Chapter Two: Dollar Bill Richardson "My hands are clean."



Tagging someone with a name says more about the person than just addressing them by their 'real' name. Check the comment section of the free on line version of Presidental candidate Governor Bill Richardson's home town paper the Santa Fe New Mexican.

Eli Chavez, Eric Scott (Edge), Donado Coviello (Cove) and others frame their arguements about "Richardson for President" by the name they call him.

David Lopez starts by calling Governor Bill Richardson "$Bill." Then Eli, a former CIA employee, calls him "Gov. Lopez Richardson" and Cove, of course calls him "Fat Bill." It doesn't matter what Eric "Edge" Scott said because his post were delete by the Wed Ed.

The 25 word link "story" generated many heated comments and yet the fund raising story produced few comments at all.





And finally ... just because Democratic Presidental candidate Gov. Bill Richardson landed a role on TV's "Law and Order," Republican Presidental candidate John McCain demanded "Equal time." The producers of the polular show gave McCain a small role as a "Gay TV gameshow host."