To the Older Gentleman Who Only Wanted an Audience
Read Morecreative non-fiction: What Starbucks Gave Us
But in the suburbs, in the 90s, in the great American Midwest, where could a youth go to act out the beat life? Enter Starbucks with her siren call, replete with mismatched armchairs, almond biscotti, and warm piano jazz, a glimpse into the archetypical metropolis.
Read MoreSilicon Valley Girl | Stories to Read on the Shuttle: The Techie's Guide
The Techie's Guide to Quelling the Wrath of Native Residents and Achieving Oneness with the Universe
Read MoreMeet the Bon Vivants | Nirmala Thangam Thomas on Catherine Sylve
Here in English class, we took apart (I'd use the word ‘dissected’ to get their attention) passages of prose or poetry and study the different parts under the microscope of literary analysis, then put them back together to see why and how they worked so well together to create the expression on the face of the page. It was a stretch, but I’d add: “Just like Mrs. Sylve does with her robots."
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Meet the Bon Vivants | Flor and the Fine Art of Adventure
Meet the Bon Vivants is a series that showcases my favorite thinkers and good-lifers, all personal friends with important ideas and interesting musings.
Flor Reyes, LA native and citizen of the world, travels on a whim. Over a long weekend, you are more likely to find her hiking the volcanoes of Costa Rica than at home in San Jose. Flor shares her international recommendations with us here:
Best hotel: Skuggi Hotel, Reykjavik, Iceland http://www.keahotels.is/en/hotels/skuggi-hotel
Best hostels: The Flying Pig (Downtown) — Red Light District, Amsterdam http://www.flyingpig.nl/hostels/flyingpigdowntown.php; Pariwana Hostel — Lima, Peru http://www.pariwana-hostel.com/hostels/lima/; Kex Hostel — Reykjavik Iceland http://www.kexhostel.is
Favorite museum: Centre Pompidou, Paris https://www.centrepompidou.fr/en
Favorite places to photograph: Jokulsarlón (Glacier Lagoon), Iceland; Muir Woods, Mill Valley, CA; Kings Canyon National Park, CA; Machu Picchu, Aguas Calientes, Peru
Most hospitable city: Mexico City, Mexico — one of the most vibrant, large, and welcoming cities I have ever visited.
Favorite restaurant: El Sushi Loco, La Puente, CA
Best bar: The Red Lion Tavern — Silver Lake, CA: "Cozy German tavern and beer garden, serving traditional German food close to downtown Los Angeles;" The Rose & Crown English Pub, Palo Alto, CA
Favorite rental vehicle: The 2014 Jeep Patriot that I drove around Iceland. It crushed snow like a machine, had surprisingly good gas mileage, and the sound system was bumpin’!
Favorite tattoo parlor: Reykjavik Ink
Best seafood: Puerto Nuevo, Baja California. Lobster world! Best seafood I have had in my life, oh my God!
Best street food: The best street food, hands down, can be found on 8th St and Irolo St in Koreatown, LA. There are many vendors serving up delicious and hearty Mexican meals, sweets, and other goodies from Latin America (in Koreatown). Large portions for under $4!!!
Favorite souvenirs: Artisan goods from San Salvador, El Salvador
Qualities to look for in a travel buddy: I recommend traveling with someone who understands the importance of a good mid-day nap and who is willing to wake up at 5:00 AM to hike up a mountain to be first in line to get to Machu Picchu.
Best place to travel solo: Definitely Iceland. And Barcelona.
Best party spot: Downtown Los Angeles and Barcelona
Best concert: Daft Punk at the LA Sports Arena, July 2007 — "What followed was a performance that had the energy and emotion of a religious experience, not only living up to the hype, but shattering my concepts of how amazing a live performance by an electronic music act could be." http://laist.com/2007/07/22/daft_punk_live.php
Best festival: Outside Lands, San Francisco
Most relaxing: Manuel Antonio, Costa Rica and Maui, Hawai’i
Most stimulating: Lima, Peru (Miraflores District and Historic District)
Most colorful: Puerto Maldonado in the Peruvian Amazon
Favorite sunrise: Höfn, Iceland. It was at 10:45 AM and dark until then, so it was beautiful.
Best climate: Berkeley/Oakland, California
Favorite form of transportation: Flying in small planes — they are so scary, but they have the most scenic views because they fly so low. Also public buses.
Favorite airline: Aeromexico — Free food and free alcohol, even on short flights! And of course, Icelandair. Best in-flight entertainment and customer service, and they play BJORK’s music!
Favorite sunset: Nothing beats LA sunsets. Nothing.
creative non-fiction: Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit: Beauty Sleep
Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit: Beauty Sleep
Michelle Sindha Thomas
On a sun-dappled Friday, in response to some long-winded, rambling, oft-repeated complaints, a friend chastised me for selling myself short in romance (You know who you are and I thank you.). As the day went on, her argument consumed me, and that evening I, in turn, berated another friend for selling herself too short, forwarding along an inspiring screenshot from friend #1. I was harsh and cutting, yes, because I saw my behaviors in hers (You also know who you are, and I’m very sorry.). When we finished texting, I flung my phone in frustration.
I took the long weekend to stop and think. I ignored all calls (a real feat, as my dear friend Flor has diagnosed me with e-OCD). I sat up in bed tapping my chin and sometimes slid down into long naps. One of the most productive weekends of my life.
Between sleep and dreams, I realized it is important for a woman to respect her womanhood. Expect to be loved. Demand love. Don’t slip along timidly accepting anything less. Assume you are pursued because you are loved and drop anyone who is demanding of your time while offering something less than love. “Wow,” said Flor when she read these words, “You’ve come a long way, MST!” Well, I hope so, Flor. It’s about time. And it’s about time. We must stop friend-zoning ourselves. Friend-zoning is at fault. Texting is at fault. Ghosting is at fault. Emojis are very much at fault. We don’t have time. We are each looking for someone beautiful and respectable and intriguing enough to love, but we have to learn to put that quest in the background instead of making it the prevailing topic of all our lunch hours and girls’ nights and smudged and deflated after-parties.
So let’s fill our lonely hours with activities we enjoy, the arts and travel and eating and exercise, leisure pursuits that build up, with people we love and who love us, too (!). Our lives abound with healthy relationships, with people who are loyal for the simple reason of shared blood or a history that includes a thousand inside jokes; they ride out bratty behavior, buoy us through loss, hear a tremble behind the words “I’m fine." Our parents, our nieces and nephews, our old college roommates await. Let’s seek them out, revel in an unconditional affection which heals and feeds. This way, we remain whole, vital beings, growing richer and finer over time — rather than allowing ourselves to be chipped at and hurt by the careless who don't really mean to inflict such harm but nevertheless cause a lot of lasting damage. Love yourself, said my friend, and demand love from others, I say (always shooting for the extreme), and settle for nothing less. You have better ways to pass the time.
And when the pickings are slim, nay, nada-null-zero, Mister Marvelous hasn’t stepped up and there’s no one with potential that you’d like to pull from the pool, spend a luscious weekend in bed. We can all benefit from beauty sleep.
Global Warming and the Little City Man
When the wind blew cool, cold that June, he hugged her close and laughed, “Remember San Francisco?” When that wind led to rain and a sticky humidity, he was reminded of Singapore’s hot, wet, delicious dewiness and they went for Chinese in a part of town that was not quite Chinatown but had enough dumplings and spicy slithery noodles and shrimp for him to nearly recreate that exotic weekend layover.
Read MoreMeet the Bon Vivants | Amaka Onongaya
Meet the Bon Vivants: Amaka Onongaya
Read MoreMeet the Bon Vivants | Nirmala Thangam Thomas
Introducing guest bloggers to the Michelle Thomas Fine Art web log
Read MoreShe: In Memory of My First Muse
She: In Memory of My First Muse by Michelle Sindha Thomas
Read Morecreative non-fiction: Mr. M
The following essay, from the collection Le Midwest: an ode to the noble suburbanite, illustrates the impact of one dedicated teacher on my early professional choices.
Mr. M
Michelle Sindha Thomas
One fine day:
1 We all want the same thing, don’t we? A little kid’s picture of paradise looks so similar to a big person’s picture of paradise with a swaying palm tree and a smiley-faced sun. I’ll paint my dreams and forget about making all those statements about war and injustice. Statements are tiresome. I’ll go walking to the market for bananas with my man and go fishing with my babies and I’ll do mehandi for visitors and I won't have to sell my paintings in paradise or do graphic design because we’ll just live off the land. A little garden, some chickens, a boxer dog or two.
“You’ll go far, Michelle, Rani G,” Mr. M— said before he disappeared too far away for me to hear clearly. “Everything you touch becomes gold, you see that, Michelle?” And then he left me all alone. But he gave me a foundation. Confidence in the art that I make, a confidence that cannot be found in any other part of my personality. I’ll go far. What’s far, Mr. M—? Far away? To my pretty bungalow by the ocean with fancy friends and beautiful children, a handsome husband, two boxer dogs, and walls full of paintings?
2 She shrugs her shoulders and bats a little shine into her eyes, sighing deeply, “Ah, you darlings. I appreciate your concern, but we’ve done a thorough investigation into the matter.”
“Did you speak to any students?”
“No. It was a confidential matter.”
“Then what investigation, ma’am?”
Politics labels passion as lunacy. Labels a goodbye kiss as sexual harassment. Discipline as discrimination.
Don’t expect us to get motivated.
A lovely homogeneous family is created with two namesake black teachers who kinda want to bust out but have got to grin and hold on to those good suburban-school-district jobs. The noisemakers are only noisemakers because they know somebody who knows somebody who knows somebody who knows somebody who can get something done. Any other noisemakers are sexual harassers, bigots, or lunatics.
3 As I pulled the oxidized skin off the ink in the tin, that orange, crusty rust off to reveal still moist Vine Black #2, still alive after a year without moisture, I thought of you. Your ink. The ink you left behind for nobody to use. I turned around and all the Mona Lisas gone and the Giacometti sketch, Walking, the “essence of energy and movement and activity,” and the ballerinas and Romare Bearden poster, all disappeared. Ran off with you.
Seniors don’t rush around with mats and erasers and slide carousels anymore, getting ready for the spring contests and exhibitions. Rachie looking a little winded with no one to argue with and all subtlety lost on Mr. K—, the potter. And I’ve graduated to a place muddled in pretension and shaky hot air philosophical abstraction. Shhh. I was anticipating that, but I was counting on visiting you like a jet up for air before another plunge into the deep end again.
My folder was still there with every drawing intact, and the print you promised to mat on the last day I didn’t know was the last day was matted and framed. Complete as promised--“Not neat, not nothing.”
You didn’t touch her.
“Not neat, not nothing,” inside out, outside in. Now nothing left.
The classroom was so still early in the morning with no Drawing I freshmen tumbling in to cram a value scale before 8:00 (no excuses). Just K— in his office and Mrs. S— next door. And I’m standing there not just missing you, but missing my table, waiting for the bell with Jon and Anuj who snuck in from K—’s study hall and the day I first walked in when you proclaimed, “Girl, you’re good, but here you are going to learn how to take on the world.” And the senior with the red button-down eyeing me from across the room, in that seat. And how you never let the silly boys visit me during school study hall except for Sidaker because he was Indian and intelligent and could help me with physics.
Remember Gesture Day Fridays? Drafting tape made from blue-jean lint covered masking tape and, “Draw, draw, draw, 30 seconds left, 15 seconds, two seconds,” a long pause, then, “Aw, guys, I gave you too much time. . .”
You made Mike a true bohemian. At Webster, now he only goes by his Russian name and and he likes to stand on the tables and talk about art the way you did on the day he transferred to North from the Jewish school.
We talked to her. She said you were crazy. “I can’t give you any details, but. . .” Grave smile.
Bureaucrat.
Anyway, I broke all school rules and didn’t get a Visitor’s Pass because I’m not a visitor and I went to our drawing room and I felt you died. I couldn’t feel a clean plaid shirt and braided leather belt and Levi’s and loafers and an oddly matching tie. I couldn’t smell pink erasers. I’m looking around the corners and behind the flat file trying to show you my new piece, wanting to hear, “Rani G, Rani G, (which means the Queen of G[raphite]), you have a Midas touch, girl, you make this job worth it.” And so I went there and missed that buzz so badly and saw the crusty skin on that always wet ink and was tottering around the room, looking in the hallway for Camran or Mr. R—, someone who could share this loss. The wet, moist, fecund ink crusted over like a scab, but when I pulled the dry skin off I found you, and I went about inking the plate with a righteous fervency, knowing I learned from the best. You put me on that hot-air balloon and got the fire red and roaring and then vanished so that when I turned around to find you I choked for a moment but found out I could fly now on my own. What’s it like now? Do you miss us? Teaching at a place where half the students have a universe on their shoulders and no energy to explore?
“Why even bother teaching, Mr. M—?”
And you quote Giacometti: “There’s a burning building, Rani G, and you’ve got a choice: Do you save the Rembrandt or do you save the cat? One one now, Rani.”
“The Rembrandt!”
“No! The cat, the cat! The cat is still alive, it’s still breathing, it’s still got a whole life to experience! Save the cat.”
And so now I’m having fantasies of standing in front of a class and loving every one of those kids and giving them nicknames like Commie and DJ Ho and Cami and Sphynx. I’m having these dreams of standing in front of a class with a gray pleated skirt and an oddly matching sweater, saying, “I’m Miss Thomas,” before I start banging the projection screen with a yardstick, praising the rhythm and balance in a lonely Hopper.
You.
I found you, I found you, I found you when I found that still breathing ink, like a commission to stand on tables and to make them come to class on time and to coax them into a habit of classical music. I’ll drop graphic design in a flash if you say the word. I can just imagine, “I taught you everything you know so now you can help scam America, staring at a blue screen blinking away your regret.”
Today I missed you so much. I missed you so much.
Client Communique
Thanks! My wife just opened her birthday presents and loves your prints. She sends her compliments!
—M.C.
Taxi!
Visit PostDate: Photography and Inherited History in India at the San Jose Museum of Art
Dying to visit India this year — hope this isn't going to be as close as I get!
"Portrait of an Artist: Michelle Thomas" by Dani Wang, Momo Ge, Stephen Song, and Eric Medina
panic in style!
It's here! Visit Panic In Style by Alessandra Toscano for Widespread Panic concert gear, including a bamboo fiber skirt with chili pepper heart based on drawings by Michelle Thomas.
collaboration with Squeezed Yoga Clothing and Panic in Style
Dresses and scarves silkscreened with original designs by Michelle Thomas are coming soon! Check back often for updates and visit squeezed.ca and panicinstyle.com for details.
joie de vivre series
The Joie de Vivre series of watercolor paintings celebrates the joy of life and features calligraphic detail based on mehandi henna design. While the paintings were created on rainy winter days they represent a yearning for heat, music, movement, and leisure.