microRevolt reBlog http://microrevolt.org/reblog/ Copyright 2010 Wed, 04 Aug 2010 13:48:44 -0500 http://www.movabletype.org/?v=3.16 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss RESOURCED Justseeds Print Portfolio 2010 Josh_Resourced_2010b.jpg
Josh Macphee

RESOURCED portfolios are available on limited basis in the Justseeds online store for an introductory price of $250. You may purchase one in the Justseeds online store and support this groundbreaking project, support the Justseeds Artists Cooperative, and invest in ongoing handmade portfolios.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/08/resourced-justs.html cat Wed, 04 Aug 2010 13:48:44 -0500
Appeel

Appeel is a virus spreading through interacting individuals, it demonstrates the basic principles of interactivity largely reliant on people’s behaviour. A surface is covered by a large number of coloured stickers, positioned in a grid. People can remove stickers, leaving white spots in the layout, as a result individually and collectively changing the walls appearance. These stickers then take on a life of their own, as they spread, extending beyond the installation itself, infiltrating private space and merging the boundaries of public and private space.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/08/appeel.html cat Wed, 04 Aug 2010 13:44:52 -0500
Pressured, Nike to Help Workers in Honduras The Central General de Trabajadores de Honduras (CGT) and Nike announced on the 26th of July a ground-breaking agreement that will provide a US$1.5 million fund for workers in Honduras that formerly produced Nike apparel. According to a press release from Nike and the CGT, workers will also receive a year's access to the health care system, training and priority hiring. Over 2,000 workers at the Hugger and Vision Tex factories were laid off last year, leaving them unemployed and owed over US$2 million in unpaid wages and severance pay. The agreement comes after intense pressure was put on Nike by a student-led campaign that had convinced some US universities to end lucrative licensing agreements with Nike.

Read full story here

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Coverage in the NYTimes here

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/08/pressured-nike-.html cat Wed, 04 Aug 2010 10:10:01 -0500
Providence JournalCraft Goes Digital Does anyone in Providence have this in their recycling bin? It's the cover of the Arts section in Sunday July 11th's Providence Journal (section F1 & F4). It's a review of the exhibit at the Fuller Craft Museum that has some microRevolt pieces and my video art. The article by Bill Van Siclen is called Craft Goes Digital on-line here, but I'm looking for a hard copy for my tenure files. Email me if yes.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/07/providence-jour.html cat Tue, 20 Jul 2010 06:16:25 -0500
Joseph Frank 500butterfly_josef_frank_fabric-771527.jpg

google's homepage celebrates his 125th bday

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/07/joseph-frank.html cat Thu, 15 Jul 2010 13:37:43 -0500
Poor People's Alliance play football in solidarity

As the World Cup draws to completion in South Africa, the social movements of the Poor People's Alliance continue to face off against the governing elite's escalation of harassment, displacement, repression and the violation of their human right to housing. Some of NESRI’s partners and allies (Chicago Anti-Eviction Campaign, Coalition of Immokalee Workers, Picture the Homeless, Poverty Initiative) who attended the recent U.S. Social Forum in Detroit rallied a solidarity soccer game, as a sign of solidarity with the South African grassroots, in particular the Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign who visited the United States in 2009. The poor of the US have found common cause and inspiration with the poor of South Africa in their creative struggles and visions for a better world. See photos from the solidarity soccer game. link

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/07/poor-peoples-al.html cat Sat, 10 Jul 2010 22:35:52 -0500
Nike’s Love Affair with Sweatshops: Still Doing It Folks in Portland were asking about current Nike abuses, this is a report from April

Just a few miles from Nike’s global headquarters in Oregon last night, two Honduran workers revealed Nike’s family-destroying labor practices.

Gina Cano and Lowlee Urquía testified in front of members of the Portland Area Workers’ Rights Board and a crowd of more than 100 community members.

Jobs With Justice chapters conduct such Workers’ Rights Board inquiries across the country, inviting prominent members of the clergy and academy, along with business leaders and activists, to hear testimonies, issue reports, and create an open space to air local and international labor battles.

Both Cano and Urquía had worked in Nike-contracted factories in Honduras for many years before being laid off in January 2009 without notice and without legally mandated severance pay.

“We’re here in Oregon, the home of Nike, because we want to put a face to the consequences of Nike’s behavior,” Urquía said. “We’re saying to Nike that it is responsible every step of the way.”

The two women represented more than 1,700 workers who are owed $2.2 million in severance pay. The workers are also owed health care premiums, which were deducted from their wages but never paid to the health care system. This meant that workers could not access health care in the four months before the closure. At least one worker, who had been receiving cancer treatment, died because of this denial of care, according to Cano and Urquía.

Read entire post by Margaret Butler on Labor Notes.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/07/just-a-few-mile.html cat Sat, 10 Jul 2010 22:33:30 -0500
Nike Blanket 9 Miles from Nike Headquarters nike_mocc.jpg

After 5 years of stitching and 2 years of touring the Nike Blanket Petition is in full view at the Museum of Contemporary Craft (MoCC) in Portland, Oregon - 9 miles from Nike Headquarters. The CEO Mark Parker has been invited and has politely agreed to visit the museum before June 11 - the last day to see the swoosh. It will continue to show at MoCC during the exhibition Gestures of Resistance (through June 26); however, after June 11 it will be in the Study Center looking like Nana's afghan folded on her sofa. Museum admission is $3, $2 for students. Please contact me if you participated and intend to visit -- make it before June 11th!

Also on view is the work by: Sara Black And John Preus, Anthea Black, Carole Lung, Mung Lar Lam, Ehren Tool and Theaster Gates, curated by Shannon Stratton and Judith Leeman. A new installation called Fiber Alliance (images below) was created during my brief residency last week, cut short due to my 19th century pregnancy.

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Setting up a process by which knitted cast-offs of American brands are unmade - unraveled and spun into new balls of yarn.

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Pictured here is 3 Gap Inc. sweaters unraveled and recreated into knitted textiles. The motifs created on the knitting machine are made with the freeware knitPro, sampling patterns that have origin in the country where the labor was exported. In this case, the light & bright blue sweaters were made in Bangledesh and the new people pattern was sampled from a kantha. The chartreuse yarn was from an Old Navy sweater made in Thailand. The Thai pattern stitched in green traditionally means "Bird's Wings".

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The unraveled yarn on the world map connects the brand headquarters to the country where the product was manufactured.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/05/nike-blanket-9-.html cat Tue, 25 May 2010 15:30:18 -0500
The Mill Series at the San Jose Institute for Contemporary Art outside_ICA_final-1.jpg

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Photo credit: Kathryn Hetzner

San Jose Institute for Contemporary Art
560 South First Street
San Jose, CA

The Mill Series is a two channel video of animated woven swatches sourcing footage of American textile mills built during early industrial capitalism. It is up for one last week (Feb 6 - May 15) as an evening projection concurrent with the exhibition By A Thread. Read more here and here.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/05/post_6.html cat Sun, 09 May 2010 10:03:29 -0500
Coal Will Never Be Clean COAL_400.jpg

New prints on Just Seeds "Coal Will Never Be Clean" by Shaun Slifer

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/04/coal-will-never.html cat Thu, 08 Apr 2010 20:21:53 -0500
Massey Energy Mine Cited for 1,300+ Safety Violations in Years Leading up to Deadly Explosion Four people remain missing in a West Virginia coal mine two days after a huge explosion killed at least twenty-five miners in the worst mining disaster in the United States in more than a quarter-century. According to federal records, MSHA cited the Upper Big Branch mine for more than 1,300 safety violations from 2005 through Monday. link via Democracy Now

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/04/concesus-by-bec.html cat Thu, 08 Apr 2010 20:05:09 -0500
Thousands respond to Bangladesh Factory Fires - Send an email to H&M After the recent tragic fire at the Garib & Garib Sweater Factory in Bangladesh, which claimed the lives of 21 trapped workers who could not escape because exits were locked or blocked with debris, no less than 1,500 ILRF and SFC supporters contacted the Swedish fashion giant H&M, the main buyer at the
factory, expressing concern and demanding change. Please add your name to the list of supporters by sending an email to H&M through our Take Action page here:
http://www.unionvoice.org/ct/b1Xz99Y1SQwP/

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/04/thousands-respo.html cat Thu, 08 Apr 2010 19:53:07 -0500
Whaling Artifacts whale1.jpg

These pictures were taken in the New Bedford Massachusetts Whaling Museum, which has a very bizarre film from early last century on American Whaling. Also in the collection are these two artifacts (top) a woven "Whaler's Hat", 19th century, probably Nootka, made from spruce root and pigment. "Documented during the voyages of James Cook in the mid 18th century, these hats held special status significance to both the men and women of this whaling culture."

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This is a swift (yarn winder) made from whale bone. The museum wall text says "From Pursuit to Preservation" but it's mostly bones, artifacts and amazing paintings from the history of Whaling.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/03/-these-pictures.html cat Mon, 01 Mar 2010 11:21:45 -0500
Sweatfree Olympics 2012? On Saturday 27 february, As the Olympic torch was handed on from this year's Winter Olympics in Vancouver to London, the Playfair 2012 coalition launched a campaign for an ethical London Games.

Playfair 2012 is co-ordinated by the TUC and Labour Behind the Label (the UK Clean Clothes Campaign) and involves unions and various campaigning organisations.

The coalition wants the organisers of the London Olympics to ensure that workers making sportswear for the 2012 Games won't be working in appalling and degrading conditions, and that all Olympic-branded goods will be ethically produced.

The campaign website http://www.playfair2012.org.uk/ sets out the standards the coalition expects from the London 2012 Games organisers, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and sportswear brands, and explains how individuals can get involved in the campaign. There is also a resources section with reports and video clips.

Millions of people are employed in the global supply chains that produce kits for Olympic teams, and the sportswear and souvenirs available on our high streets. Evidence shows that the sportswear industry and Olympic movement have a poor track record on workers' rights, says the campaign. Playfair 2008 research published before the Beijing Games found workers employed by Adidas suppliers in China were making sports shoes that retail for upwards of £50 a pair for just £20 per month, and others working 80 hours a week stitching footballs. In another factory producing stationery, children as young as 12 years old were being forced to work 15 hours a day.

TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: "Delivering a legacy for London was at the heart of the Government's successful Olympic bid. And what better legacy than a commitment to end the exploitation and abuse involved in the sportswear and athletic footwear industries? We want London 2012 to raise the bar on workers' rights throughout Olympic supply chains."

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/03/sweatfree-olymp.html cat Mon, 01 Mar 2010 11:13:01 -0500
Apple admits Using Child Labour Apple has admitted that child labour was used at the factories that build its computers, iPods and mobile phones. At least eleven 15-year-old children were discovered to be working last year in three factories which supply Apple. The company did not name the offending factories, or say where they were based, but the majority of its goods are assembled in China.

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tag:microrevolt.org,2010:/reblog//1 http://microrevolt.org/reblog/archives/2010/02/apple-admits-us.html cat Sun, 28 Feb 2010 21:34:40 -0500