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National Features >
Miami New Times
South Florida's lawless exotic rental car industry keeps rolling.
By Gus Garcia-Roberts
Houston Press
In Texas, restitution for victims is nothing but a state-sanctioned sham.
By Chris Vogel
Seattle Weekly
If you thought Seattle couldn't fetishize coffee any more, you haven't been to a "cupping" yet.
By Jonathan Kauffman
Faux to Joy
Published on December 05, 2007 at 4:20am
It looks hoaxy: The "Centennial Celebration of the Elationists" is presented as an exhibit of items from a lost San Francisco art movement. This is unlikely, but we don't care. The ideas of the Elationists are so good, the artifacts so well-made, and the esprit so inspiring, the event's authenticity seems irrelevant. Whether the collection refers to the immediately-post-1906 earthquake era, as claimed, or to sometime early this year, when the event's organizers (Brent Bishop, Tyson Ayers, and Robert Larkin) may have started making the charming stuff this may never be known, and we say pffft. No matter when the little sculptures of cobbled-together Victorian detritus were made, they still have little porcelain buttons that read "push" fitted on brass handles. The gentlemanly paintings of Captain Muldoon show melancholic gazes into deep water; a Theda-Bara-type siren named VeryVery Morley appears in photogravures; and mutated, sometimes very large, musical instruments abound. Brought together by a philosophical embrace of joy, the group's members are said to have consumed a "mildly intoxicating chocolate elixir" and generally enjoyed themselves in spite of the calamities around them. The current event promises more of the same, including the chocolate drink.
Dec. 8-15, 8 p.m., 2007