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The Journeys of a Brooklyn Designer
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....who is Jen anyway?
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Tuesday, August 05, 2003
Tuesday, August 5, 2003 10:19 AM
I know that it seems that everyone has something to say about reality television – what the hell – reality TV has been on every station but PBS on some of my evenings home, so how can I not comment on it? Last night I tuned into “Who Wants To Marry My Dad?” and “For Love Or Money”. Hey, I have Monday nights off and it really draws you in no matter how icky the whole thing is. What does it say about a culture that is so intoxicated with celebrating manipulation? In “real” life, it would seem that to tell someone they are manipulative would be a criticism. But here we are, placing groups of so-called “real” people in rooms, on islands, in mansions, and asking them to exercise their powers of deceit and manipulation to see who gets to be prom queen for a day.
The opposing force in the whole equation seems to be the actual reality. That is, rewarding the one who is the best only at at appearing “real” honest and sincere. We fall in love with these Cinderellas, and sometimes they lose. It is fascinating and horrifying. Because what we are really saying is that what is best is to appear as real, sincere and honest as possible while at the same time manipulating your reality. We are teaching that in life, someone always has “hand” (as George Costanza calls it). We insist that happiness (money, love) is about having control, when in truth happiness and love can only come when you remove yourself from these strenuous forces and live without the constant push and pull of power. William Blake’s Marriage of Heaven and Hell is a tribute to this idea. We need to understand that opposing forces such as these are a part of another great dichotomy of one and two. If we split things into Good and Evil, up and down, push and pull… there is no difference in being on one side or the other because to have good is to have evil and to have up is to have down and so forth.
We are making a dreadful mistake substituting television for something that we call “real”. There is a Phillip K Dick novel where the general pastime of society is to take a drug that literally immerses your psyche into a diorama. The participants can join others and interact in their little environments, buying more accessories as they please, and thus escaping their own miserable existences. He illustrates a catatonic society that has forgotten the truth of reality. Our alternate reality is now reality television. You, too can vote for the next American Idol. Now, instead of being a diversion of silly stories and slapstick heroes – we are jumbling our expectations for life, creating Oscar Wilde’s out of us all – expecting every corner to be a melo-meta-drama that everyone else should care about. We suggest that Days of Our Lives is really the days of our lives. Narcissism dives deep into solipsism and human communication breaks down.
Whats more, I am even more ticked off when a reality teevee show is more constructed and fabricated – like “The Restaurant” - filling in actors and models instead of workers, blatant product placement, and taking scenes more than once. If ONLY life worked that way! I sure would like to redo a couple of scenes in my own life. But I can’t do that. Life is not produced. I have to let go of the issue of control and try as much as possible to watch troubles pass by like clouds. Maybe we are actually getting closer to nirvana by blurring these boundaries of reality. After all, someone is always watching, there is always a story of life, actors are still real humans… or is that like saying that in truth there really is nothing that is synthetic, because it all evolved from something natural in the beginning?
posted by jenifer constantine on 9:48 AM
Thursday, July 31, 2003
Well, if design were a lover, he’d have left me a long time ago. “Honey, I think about you all the time, but I just have nothing to give…” It is embarrassing to me how I stammer around for an answer when people ask me what is going on with my work, my projects. “Well, uh, I just put some polyurethane on a cabinet that I’ve been working on for about three years. I had to wipe away a bunch of dust and sand off some water stains before I did it – but I did it.”
I am really stuck. I can’t move on from some of these projects, and all of them have me in a mental pinch somehow – what is the next step? On several of them – I just don’t know where to go or what to do. I still have a clear vision of what they should be when completed… luckily I haven’t lost sight of that. Part of the problem is necessity. I am not feeling any need to finish anything because the bigger problem of “than what?” lies beyond. Who is going to care about my new cabinets when Ikea has forty new cabinets each year? Nobody really gave a damn when I finally finished the chair-chair. Now it sits in my living room and rarely – RARELY when we have a new visitor does anyone even seem to see it – let alone actually GET it.
Enough complaining. I have a new project. Well, besides the DeeJaying thing. Which incidentally is going pretty well. But again, more people come up and ask me what software I am using than actually want to talk about music. But back to the project:
I am (we are) turning a 1964 Globetrotter Airstream into a “food service establishment”. That it, we are going to bring it down here to Brooklyn, park it in a lot, convert the kitchen and make the perfect burgers and subs to be delivered to your doorstep or taken away and enjoyed in our garden. Phew! We had intended to open a bar as our first business venture, but as these things go – this just dropped into our lap.
Now mind you, I am not trying to be a chef. That Rocco guy that now has a dumb reality television show called “The Restaurant” (or something) was on PBS the other day (obviously a pre-big-time-network-TV appearance) and he actually said something smart: that the palate is the ultimate force in discriminating taste. Meaning that our mothers and grandmothers knew nothing about all the elaborate things one learns in culinary school – they only knew what tastes good. That’s where we are coming from. We will be making the food that was fast food before it became such an enormous commercialization, and before it was crap.
Problem is of course, that we have no money. I am liquidating my assets on Ebay. We have made the decision to leap… we just have to do it, little by little. I have been researching information, talking to people, and finding answers every day. I have been learning a lot. This is no small enterprise. A photographer friend of mine is going to chronicle the journey. She wants to make a flip book. It will be called “THE EFFICIENCY”. Here is a picture of it as it is right now:

posted by jenifer constantine on 9:46 AM
Wednesday, April 16, 2003
I love to organize. I hate to clean.
posted by jenifer constantine on 10:07 AM
Thursday, April 03, 2003
In times like these I leave the house so rarely. I am working five days a week now, which in this business is a-plenty. In our house the time I spend here is focused on America’s Funniest Home Videos and home improvement plans. I would like to note that the Home Depot floor paint that we carefully chose a custom color for (lovely plum) has worn almost completely off in high traffic areas in our home. Granted, we have concrete floors but the guy said this was the paint for it. There was a stronger paint, but we couldn’t customize the colors for it. It is basically garage paint. We only painted two summers ago. It looked so beautiful, really. Now it looks so crappy.
We found two really cool rattan 50’s barstools at the crummiest of thrift stores around the corner from our house. They had the nerve to act annoyed when we tried to haggle a little on the price. My folks after thirty years of dealing in antiques and collectibles – think someone is stupid if the don’t try to haggle. They are so nice, though that we bought them even with the slim $5 discount. I have come to the design conclusion though (these barstools excluded) that I do not like barstools without backs. Unfortunately backless ones seem easier to design – but as a bar owner you are not encouraging anyone to stay a while with no backs to lean on. Think about it. It’s pretty dumb, really. The only time you want to use backless ones is in a coffee house where you want people to make their purchase and get the hell out so that someone else can sit there and make another purchase.
Finally, after several weeks of searching “eames credenza” in the New York area we found a Danish modern credenza in someone’s garbage in Ft Greene. After living loft life for so much of my adult life now I have become just a little obsessed with hiding all my crap. We don’t have any closets, so drawers and cupboards are a pretty hot commodity; especially if you are a pac-rat like me. In fact, I am so much of a pac-rat that I have been thinking of opening a little vintage/design store as a stepping-stone to opening a bar. That is, if I could find a cheap little spot. There is a new scheme every week. It’s quite simply the how-to-make-money-without-working-for-anyone-else-scheme. I’ll let ya know if I come up with anything good.
For now I’m off to rip some mp3’s for d.jane.run tonight…
posted by jenifer constantine on 12:00 PM
Monday, March 31, 2003
Well I guess I just feel like design isn’t really doing me much good right now. In fact I some ways it inhibits my happiness. I am the one who gets all prickly when something is really badly designed. I also hate it when someone uses an adjective instead of an adverb. It’s “freshly brewed coffee” thank you. Caring about design looks like maniacal behavior when you are surrounded by people who don’t care about it at all. The other day I was thinking that well maybe I’ll write that novel I’d always thought about. I even considered formatting an InDesign template for it so that I could just plug along. I wrote some, even. I really enjoy writing these bloggs – I just don’t always feel that what I’d write for a day has anything to do with design. I know I have said this before, isn’t everything design? Perhaps. I will try to be better.
posted by jenifer constantine on 1:14 PM
Wednesday, January 29, 2003
So: let’s see… are you still out there? What am I doing? well… I got a rad new computer. The titanium g4 laptop. I have been in constant adaptation to the new interface and work habits of it. I am Djing from it now (Diner in Williamsburg Thursday nights…9 – 1am – shameless!). I have been justifying the diversion by describing what I am doing as “music design”. See, I am not concerned with beat matching or any of that other sort of old school DJ stuff. Obviously – I am doing it from my laptop. I am interested much more in the song. The song as a singular piece of work. Then… what brings you to another song doesn’t have to be something as simple as a beat (to all of you “real” Djs out there I’m not insulting this complex task). What about what the song is saying? Is it about boyfriends? Does it preach to you? Who is singing it… who are their influences? Where does this song come from? Where can it take you?
On another note, I spent the morning trying (Trying!) to research the best drafting/rendering software to invest in for OS X. A fruitless task. I used to love love love Vellum. It was so simple to use and had small file sizes. Now Ashlar Vellum has new versions of everything out that you can get at a low low price of $4000!!! Who do they think we are?? I guess its back to the drawing board…
posted by jenifer constantine on 11:15 AM
Tuesday, September 03, 2002
I, in another moment of jen-get-organized, have decided that Monday is Blogg day. I am having a difficult week. I guess that is often when I feel like writing. The therapy of words on a page… or a screen. Do kids read books anymore? I am stuck in this place where reading a book is a solitary luxury. I almost think I shouldn’t afford myself the time for it, because I have so many other things waiting. It’s sort of like I can’t make a pie before the dishes are done. Slowly, I feel my vocabulary sliding into the gamut of “It’s like…” or “ya know what I mean?” - with out any thought about the precision of language that I so cherish. I think the problem is the receiver. Who wants a complex conversation from a bartender? The bulk of my conversations are over a bar, in a bar, about a bar… Can we really get into it about the last Nabakov book I read? What a shame, because I love Nabakov and I haven’t read one of those beauties in a couple of years. Sometimes The Times is just too much for me. Aaah, my Dad says, “put one foot in front of the other”. That goes along with, “you can’t conquer the world in a day”. I am overwhelmed by possibility – put down by option.
I find myself addicted to e-bay shopping. I just recently lost 25 pounds and resurrected my deep love of fashion once I started to like wearing clothes again. Before I moved to NY, I was a thrift store and garage sale junkie. That goes along with having Antique Dealer parents. But in NY- well, the thrift stores are as expensive as the other stores… so e-bay is my friend. It’s actually a lot like gambling. I have a Ladies Poker Night every week, and I’ve discovered that ladies can be a bit hard pressed to take anything more than a quarter out of their purse. But when the stakes are that gorgeous cheongsam in a 60’s silk print… let the bidding begin. Fashion to me is not about status. It is about the design of dressing the body. I kind of wish I could say that I only look for thirties bias cut print dresses, or 50’s stilettos or catalin purses. But my fetishes run deeper – studying all the things that women adorn themselves with to create different ideas of the self. One week it was vintage aprons, the next it is 50’s circle skirts and peasant tops. Do you want to look like Rita Hayworth today? Or are you feeling al little more Catherine Hepburn or one of my personal favorites, Ingrid Bergman? Maybe it’s Patti Smith you’re shooting for… but Debbie Harry is always nice. It’s about the design of how exactly they create themselves. Is it boyish and soft, slutty but smart, discreet and elegant? Do we realize that clothes speak these things to the subconscious you and me? Can these design thoughts be translated to products? Think of how the styling of products seems so limited. Everything is so streamlined, alien-ish, futuristic. It’s plastic plastic plastic (which I do love) but just think of how sick of neon you were after Frankie Goes to Hollywood. On the other hand there’s the sober and traditional tediousness of blah blah blah classics be they modern or not. Well, heres to hoping that you all make really weird stuff with really weird functions. Cheers.
posted by jenifer constantine on 11:10 AM
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