There

Posts that focus on and link to the doings of others.

525 Posts

RIP Aloï Pilioko

Today, I read a fascinating long-form piece in White Fungus: Modern Marco Polos — The Global Travels of Nicolaï Michoutouchkine and Aloï Pilioko.

For decades, the two men were lovers and travelers. They shared their own and collected Oceanic Art in galleries and "pop-ups" in over 40 countries. The scrapbooks and journals of their adventures, highlighted in the article, look like fascinating pieces. I wish I had known of them before my visit. I'd have inquired about seeing them...

Anecdote Alert

In early 2020, before returning to Toronto and the Covid lockdown, I visited Esnaar, the South Pacific home of the artists on Efate island. The house was in severe disrepair due to the advanced age of its caretaker, Pilioko (Michoutouchkine passed in 2010).

Near the property entrance, visitors had left their details scrawled on pieces of wood instead of a traditional guestbook. It was a striking first impression that didn't prepare me for what lay beyond the front gate.

Inside, I found Pilioki napping. But he quickly rose to welcome me and my companions and let us explore the property, happily answering our questions. He seemed energized by our presence.

The property was covered in art. The walls, doors, grounds, rooftops... Pilioko seemed to recently become fascinated with one particular shade of yellow, and many items I saw that day were that color.

Various art pieces at Esnaar, Feb 2020
Detail, The Water Drummers by Aloï Pilioko, photo by me, February, 2020

I was taken with one painting in particular — of female Ni-Vans water drumming. If you're not familiar with the artform, see it demonstrated here:

I regret not buying the piece, though it would have stood out in my place, where most paintings are abstract.

After reading the White Fungus piece, I searched and found that Pilioko died in October 2020. No cause of death is listed in his obituary, and I wonder if Covid was involved or if the pandemic-induced loneliness (no travel to the island for over a year) affected the artist.

It's been over four years since his death, and I'm curious about the museum's fate. Was there a foundation or trust to keep it open, or has it fallen to developers eager to build on the south lagoon shore? Googling turns up no answers.

A few days after meeting Pilioki, I was having dinner at a friend's place on Mele Bay. My host has an original Michoutouchkine on his wall, and I mentioned my visit to Esnaar. His brother fetched a book on Oceanic Art, which had a chapter on the two artists, emphasizing their significance and foundational role in South Pacific art. My friend has had a home in Vanuatu for years and has decorated it beautifully with local art. Most expats I met in Vanuatu have left, but my friend still has a home there. I make a mental note to check if he knows what happened to the bizarre live-in gallery, Esnaar.


Ultimate Best Books List


Taking the Media out of Social Media

Ev Williams (one of the creators of Blogger, Twitter, and Medium) on his new app, Mozi:

Clearly, it would need to be private. Non-performative. No public profiles. No public status competitions. No follower counts. No strangers.

Mozi claims to be a private social network that connects you to people you already know via your contacts list. This may seem a little counterintuitive, but here's a true example from my own life:

I lived in a small town called Oliva, Spain, from September through November, 2017. In the summer of 2018, when I was living in Culver City, CA, I saw a photo on social media of a friend I'd drifted apart from and hadn't seen in 20 years. That photo was taken in Gandia, Spain, in October, 2017. Gandia is the neighboring town to Oliva and my friend was staying just 2KM away from where I was living. In fact, in those months, while I was hiking through Orange Groves, we were closer to one another than we are when we're both home in Toronto.

Had Mozi existed back then — and we'd both been using it — we would have been alerted to each other's presence and been able to make plans to meet.

I'm not normally someone to evangelize for social media, but I do find the purpose of Mozi to be useful and am therefore giving it a shot. At the moment it's only available for iPhone (there's an Android waitlist) and it's pretty much pointless unless your contacts are on it, but I'm willing to give it a shot and see what happens.


Goshin

One of the most famous bonsai trees in the world, John Naka's 'Goshin' or Protector of the Spirit features a tree for each of his grandchildren. This foemina juniper resides at the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum at the National Arboretum in Washington, DC. It is featured in Stephen Voss' new book of bonsai photographs entitled In Training.

Via Nag On the Lake.


They led a cycling revolution...

"The day before the Taliban trammeled her freedom, a young woman went for a bike ride."

Terrific long-form piece in Bicycling about female cyclists in Afghanistan after the return of the Taliban. The Taliban of course doesn't want females to ride bikes because the bike seats "threatens a woman’s chastity": The Alchemists by Kim Cross.

These Women Were Some of Afghanistan’s Best Athletes. Then They Started Getting Death Threats.
They led a cycling revolution in a country where women were forbidden to ride. When the Taliban returned to power, their only hope was a harrowing escape to an uncertain future.

Visualizing Architecture

You ever see those images of future-spaces or -buildings that are "coming soon" and wonder who creates them?

One of the companies responsible is Design Distill and their work is great. Who wouldn't want to be in these places?

More at Design Distill.

Alex Hogrefe is one of the partners there and he's also responsible for the Visualizing Architecture site, which offers tutorials and has a blog, though it hasn't been updated in a few years. You can see some of this gorgeous work below.


Francois Prost's Toilet Festival

TOILET FESTIVAL captures the essence of festivals through unexpected photographic portraits of festival-goers emerging from the toilets. These photos, taken spontaneously with a flash, reveal a gallery of unusual looks and attitudes, tinged with a touch of humor, constituting a sociological inventory of the various festival communities. 

More on the Toilet Festival web page.


Memberships

Become a member!

Sign Up Today.
Memberships

Great! You’ve successfully signed up.

Welcome back! You've successfully signed in.

You've successfully subscribed to A Tiny Bell.

Success! Check your email for magic link to sign-in.

Success! Your billing info has been updated.

Your billing was not updated.