April 29, 2014

Do I make a SQv4.0?



My nutty art car the “Squirly Whirly” is on her last leg.  We got her to run on Sunday, but the car is old, she still has low miles because she sat for 20 years in an old ladies garage in Boise ID (which apparently is very bad for a car) and she is rusting due to sea air from living life on the coast. It has a lot of major problems. I haven’t been very good at internal maintenance, so I’m sure that I am most to blame. She has had her 15 minutes of squirrely fame.  It’s been the funniest car ever to drive as my daily driver.  


She qualifies for the State buyback program and I have already spoken to them and can get her pre-approved before the in person evaluation. They will give me $1000 to take the 1989 Pontiac Bonneville off the road.  This is my plan.  My question is: Do I make a SQv4.0? Go here to see all of the versions.

Other artists may just let the theme die with the car, but I have upgraded her progressively over time.  With the “Pinwheels”, it has been an aerodynamic experiment and a social anthropological experiment in the public overall.

Bringing free public art to the world has transformed the quality of my life living with PTSD, panic disorder and depression.  Every time someone waves, honks with approval or stops and get out of their car to take a photo, gives me a happy sense of validation, joy and hope for humanity that they still have a childlike sense of humor.  I like mostly to sit far away and watch and hear people’s reactions to the silly car.  Everyone has a squirrel story too and I have heard them all, good and bad.

I must admit, there are many days I do not want the attention while driving the car or to be found out where I may be shopping based on where my art car is parked.  You can’t be incognito that is for sure, so I have been considering driving a mundane car again.  I took her for a short test run yesterday over to the beach and found a note someone had written and stuck on the windshield under the wiper blade.

The note said “Thank you for making them laugh and smile and that the car made their day and that it is helping cure depression even one smile at a time.”  This made me stop and consider keeping the Squirly Whirly theme going. Maybe I should?  Maybe I could get some funding from the American Psychological Association?  Maybe I could teach fun creative art classes for other people who can also get relief living with depression who can’t take medication? Maybe squirrels will take over the world?

I have many sweet notes from people over the years. I have several other art car ideas too.  I sat on the beach yesterday with that note in hand.  I watched the surfers and kids all gather around my car and laugh and marvel at what a silly fun car it is.  Everyone wonders what kind of person would do such a thing to a perfectly normal car.  Someone sick of the mundane and perfectly normal that's who.  Someone right brained dominate that found a way to heal herself and question authority and the entire western medical system. Little do they know it’s a very silly person who has reached the last half of her life and has decided to make a big statement to the world, “Life is too short to take that seriously.”  Driving such a car reminds me of that every day.

She sat not running for 6 weeks.   It’s funny how much happier I was after driving it yesterday even for a brief time.  I think that I may just do a SQv4.0 with a better car after all.  I did buy 5000 Googley eyes, and most all of the squirrels need their paint touched up and seem so plain without hair.  I love working with SKRATCH.  I have some awesome ideas to make the next version even super bitchin sillier and wilder.

It may have to be done.  


Want to donate a squirrel for the Squirly Whirly Art car?


April 16, 2014

MH 370 Mystery, An interesting discussion with Matthias Chang

I found this discussion very interesting.  He asks and answers some very good questions.  These are worth watching.  Matthias Chang is a Malaysian of Chinese descent. He is a Barrister of 32 years standing and once served as the Political Secretary to the Fourth Prime Minister of Malaysia, Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad. Since his student days in England in the late 1960s, he was and still is, actively involved in the anti-war movement spanning a period of 41 years.  Interview conducted by Yoichi Shimatsu. 

Parts 1 - 5