A day on the bridge

My vision to spin records consisted of my wearing a custom made T-shirt, of showing a locally produced landmark stencil and involved my being inundated by hoardes of the world’s creatively repressed and suitably impressed. In short, I felt the work was going to be easy and profitable in a very short time, (somewhere along the lines of ‘immediately’) and, that I was going to change the World by liberating creativity from it’s prison of denial.

Bridge over the Seine

My work was going to be THAT easy? Ha! How reality is so different from imagining!

In preparation for my highly anticipated day’s work, I bought a large postcard of the Eiffel tower and spent around eight hours cutting a nicely detailed stencil for application to a finished record.

Eiffel tower stencil cut from postcard

At last, five PM and wearing custom designed promotional T-shirt, I felt I was ready.

The crowds I drew were nothing short of spectacular. I received applause, cheering, and a single customer after over four hours… Whom proved to be my only one at that! People were shy, afraid, timid and some appeared to be bordering on violence in their efforts to get away from my offer to share the creative experience.

Paris crowd

Even the CHILDREN tried crawling under a rock; and their reaction surprised me most of all. Out of all of my audiences, only one loud American woman appeared to get the message that my purpose on the street was not aimed at self gratification and glory. To the rest, I was but a showman selling objects of no regard. Thus, in hindsight, I realize my message was lost in transmission; festival is NOT street presentation and as I folded down my kit, I remembered the street performers I had met and talked shop with. I definitely need a street guise.

Record paintings

Some years ago I was caught up in the flow of street traders, gansters and con-merchants and to me, it appears that world is still alive and strong. Ethics run high amongst these people, until or unless the lines are crossed! A great example of this lies in the experience of Maria. She felt convinced she was seeing the shell game clearly – and risked 40 Euro on it and lost immediately. A short time afterwards, the hustler – having seen she was with me working on the street – returned her money to her. Good on him. Lucky Maria! We also witness what appeared to be a turf battle between rival gangs of trinket sellers; individual sellers establish a pitch within their own distribution network, paying 10 Euros per day for the rights to stand on one spot. When another distribution network overlaps the first one.. well… you should have seen them run! Gangs of sellers running after others – all clutching armloads of jingling stock… well it was funny to say the least. Then the police arrive and the streets are miraculously cleared of all sellers, hustlers and card sharks… for several minutes more – until it starts again. There’s never a dull moment, I must say!

Zz22 Spin painting by the Eiffel Tower

Thus, Sunday came and went and our free parking will expire at 9am. I will move on from Paris then, far richer from the experience and resolved to completely redesign my public street presentation – which is going to be interesting and perhaps a bit of a shame for, I never wanted to sensationalize the creative experience for anyone; with polite and informal invitation, I did always strive to humanize creative quality and shine a light onto it’s spontaneous universality. :/ The world is not so. People need someone to look up to, to aspire to or to follow. :/

Roll on, roll on.

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By Eiffel’s tower

It’s been a long road since failing to inspire the kickstarter community to back this project;  I’ve lived through a loss of purpose that grew into a knowing determination to take this dream to task, lest I be an overturned turtle spinning between the lanes of a road to nowhere.

Moving right along… and I’m pouring over meagre resources, sidestepping the wallow of hopelessness, and refusing to entertain any thought but those of blessing. May the winds blow.

I’ve a (very) small trailer filled (half) with records, paint cans and stencils… my family set ourselves upon the road to discover what could be done on the streets, performing along our way to visit elderly relatives in Italy’s south.

Car and trailer

With both time and money having been in relatively short supply, only the most urgent tasks were taken to hand prior to departure; leaving many creative efforts to be undertaken en-route.

The first item on our creative agenda was to work out where we were going and on which direction we were going to travel. We already knew the end result was to be Puglia, south Italy, tho’ the largest question in mind was whether to go via Amsterdam and the Germanic countries, or go thru France and perhaps Rome.

After a good part of our first day on the outskirts of Calais – reading forums and attending to matters such as food and – believe it or not – preparing stencil for cutting – right in the public carpark of the local Auchan hypermarket. We eventually instructed the GPS navigator to avoid toll and motorway routes and set us upon a meander towards Paris.

Preparing stencils in the carpark at Calais

‘Plan was to arrive in Paris at sometime during mid morning and thus, our first stop in Precy, some 45 km northish of Paris, was ideally located for sleep before our timely arrival. Map (GPS), said there was a park nearby, which ended up being a train station carpark! Thank goodness for Saturday! We awoke to an empty car park and used the plywood lid of the trailer to produce the t-shirt designs I had prepared back in Calais; with name and website all over to avoidance the ‘some guy I saw’ reference. A passerby suggested we would be more comfortable at a local park by a river, and by grass, we were!

Stencil cutting in Precy by the river

With music blaring and stencils cutting, the kids played games on a rug. A few local boys passed by, and later introduced themselves with a bottle of whiskey and an invitation to jump off a bridge. YES!!!!

Before time came to go, the fellows asked me for a stencil print souvenir, so we did have some fun indeed!

In the middle of all that, I still did complete the planned Tshirt on that day – two of them, actually.

Zz22 Teeshirt rear

Zz22 Teeshirt right

Zz22 Teeshirt left

Zz22 Teeshirt front

We finally, finally left for Paris and… would you believe it? We found free parking not two blocks from the Eiffel tower! For two nights we slept there! Tourism doesn’t come any better than that!

Eiffel tower

I can hardly wait for tomorrow! Bring it on!!!

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