Category: Urban Exploraration

Dog Days

Chandler White photo shoot

photo courtesy Chandler White from his yearly Christmas Card conclaves. Treasure Island 2011.

We’re almost half way through our Kickstart campaign to restore the 3 mobile Doggie Diner Heads that I and some friends have kept on the Bay Area roads since the early days of Cacophony in the late 80′. Here’s the KS address Please encourage your friends and associates to go there and contribute whatever they can. The main distinction from many other “surreal” or simply “weird” Americana or regional “kitsch” totems or icons can be illustrated by making two points. Firstly: These Dogs are FORMER commercial signs that have broken loose from their mercantile moorings through time (the chain closed 27 years ago) and the simple fact that they are no longer used as any type of monetary exchange devices. In other words, they aren’t for rent. (Full disclosure – I got $ renting them ONCE, fairly recently – although the  folks were very nice and I REALLY needed the dough for a quick fix on the trailer, I SWORE at that time that I would never do it again. It’s the reason I started the KS campaign.)  Secondly and more exclusively: They are mobile. These three financially disembodied heads travel all about the Bay Area on a semi-regular basis and have been to Southern California for the movie premier of Into the Zone, and N.Y.C. for several events sponsored by the fabulous Laughing Squid. As far as I know this is the only instance of such a thing anywhere in our country, a former commercial sign/logo whizzing about with no commercial intent – please inform me if I’m missing something….

I believe this unique arrangement confers special status on these totemic figures. They are only grounded more to the regional collective memory and the cultural core BECAUSE the restaurant chain is gone and all that remains is an image, a whisper, a dream: nothing terribly substantial like the memory of a child’s birth, or perhaps the passing of a close relation, but just a ghostly hint of a past sunny day at the beach or maybe the ball game, a vague half image of a child walking hand in hand with his Father, the taste of mustard, old long gone buildings: were they ever really there? I think that for a Bay Area native of a certain age, simply seeing these silly, enigmatic, Mona Lisa like sentinels of memory brings all that and more back. I see that whenever we drive these Pups around the neighborhoods of SF, Oakland and other local towns. People of all walks come up to pat the noses of the Dogs and they ALL have two things in common. Each one has a story, a memory. And they all have a smile.

These crazy Dogs have also piqued the curiosity of and mildly inspired creativity in some unique and noted artists. Polish born New York City OLEK had some labor intensive fun with the Dogs while here in SF a while back. Painter, sculptor, troublemaker Ron English made our very cool trip poster for the Doggie run to NYC. Bishop Joey of the 1st Church of the Last Laugh (St. Stupid) adopted the Dogs in the early 90’s and decreed them the Holy Trinity of the Dogminican Order. The very first piece of art I ever bought, (forgoing beer money for a month at the time!) in 1988, was this awesome piece by stencil legend Scott WilliamsDD SW

Now, for those too young to recall these impassive and smiling(?) behemoths as they were during their mercantile heyday of the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s, and for the relative new-comers to our fair land here at the edge of the world, the intrinsic strangeness, the perplexing, enigmatic visage of these looming totems is more than enough to ignite the curiousity of any but the most dull and phlegmatic. When we took them to NYC in 2003, almost no one that we ran into was familiar with Doggie Diner – it was after all, exclusively a Bay Area chain. All you have to do to realize that these absurd figures have a universal appeal is to look at the reaction shots of people across the land as they check the Dogs out and try to figure out what the hell they might mean…. See here in Head Trip, the movie.

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Local Sunset District grade school kids serenading the SF City restored Dog Head.

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SFDPW Chief (and future wildly successful politician) Ed Lee getting ready to speak at the 2nd annual Dog Head DPW ceremony at Ocean Beach. I spoke right after Ed, giving the local kids a little background on their Googie heritage.

This Head is being moved from Sloat Ave. and the beach right now to it’s new permanent home at the Yerba Buena Center in downtown SF.  If you are having a particularly dull day at the office, you could spend an hour at least perusing all the Laughing Squid posts of the last going back years and years, here.

So why you ask, all the bother? Why have I spent 26 years hauling around these 10 foot tall, 350 pound, unwieldy, difficult to move, expensive to keep, former commercial signs? I have a job, a business, a kid, wrote a couple of books, responsibilities, partnerships, needs, and very little “expendable” cash for “frivolous” endeavors. I’ve had some help for sure. There are a couple of friends I trust to drive the large, difficult to safely maneuver trailer around the city streets. With help from Cyclecide and others, we repainted and repaired the Dogs in 2003.

Well, it’s HELLA FUN to bring them around, when I can. Everyone smiles, if it’s a party, it gets better, if someone is having a downer of a day, these crazy, silly things instantly make it a smidgen better. How many things do that?

Julia Solis’ “Stages of Decay”

“My favorite buildings are all falling down Nobody seems to know how long, All of these buildings belong, Till they become part of you” –

Robyn Hitchcock

Action sequence of the artist at work:

Action sequence of the artist at work.Very precarious stairs. Whole floors of some older waterlogged ruins have been known to collapse under the weight of a lone urban explorer. Made it to the landing! Go girl, go!

Made it to the landing! Go girl, go!

Very precarious stairs. Whole floors of some older waterlogged ruins have been known to collapse under the weight of a lone urban explorer.

Made it, let's get that shot...

Made it, let’s get that shot…

Julia Solis. Where to start? Well, she has a new book and it’s called “Stages of Decay” and you can buy it here: http://www.amazon.com/Stages-Decay-Julia-Solis/dp/3791348191 This book is the culmination of many years of exploring and recording spaces that, once upon a time, housed throngs of laughing, shouting and applauding people. Julia’s darkly beautiful pictures are, in one respect, simple remnants of bygone days, of a bygone humanity; her photos capture the essence of those times in their stellar compositions. That alone in an archaeological sense, would be cause to celebrate these singular images. Even so, if you peruse them carefully, you will recognize that they resonate on much deeper levels. The residue of spirits past seem to emanate from the wood and metal almost as though the crumbling foundations, tilting columns and precariously hanging chandeliers were irradiated during some terrible cataclysm – a flash of psychic incandescence that literally impregnated the very walls. As she says in her introduction: “Ruins symbolize the transitory state of human endeavors and show that even our strongest barriers against the forces of nature will one day crumble and collapse, even fortresses made to withstand whole armies and cathedrals designed to raise the spirit from the earthly muck into the heavens. No matter how grandiose, all would succumb to the dark embrace of rot, pulling the physical building back into the cycle of nature, inevitably ending with decay and decomposition. By touching on these powerful sentiments and becoming a visual reminder of mortality, ruins are the embodiment of drama.” solis_palace In the spirit of full disclosure here, I am compelled to admit that I have been the greatest fan of Julia and her work for nearly twenty years. I met Julia in 1993 while she was yet a core member of the Los Angeles Cacophony Society

In 1997 she moved to New York and began in earnest her life’s work of exploration, discovery and documentation. After co-founding the short-lived yet influential Brooklyn chapter of the Cacophony Society Julia founder the seminal UE cabal: Dark Passage http://www.darkpassage.com. Soon thereafter she co-founded the “above ground” underground group Ars Subterranea http://www.arssubterranea.org. Her first book, New York Underground http://www.amazon.com/New-York-Underground-Anatomy-City/dp/0415963109 is now a primary text for urban explorers the world round.  Published in German, French and English, it is mandatory reading in the field. solis_sanitarium Julia’s life-long fascination with the ethereal and ephemeral as manifested in the decay and dissolution of the built world, provided the inspiration for her next work, Stages of Decay http://www.abandonedtheaters.com. A while back certain folk of small vision began to categorize the love for and fascination with the ruins to be found in distressed cities around the world as “ruin porn.” Perhaps they mistook the true depth of feeling that so many artists, photographers and explorers have for these singular spaces for some kind of callousness for the people and times past. This would be a simple enough mistake for someone who has not taken the time to truly appreciate the best of the work that a wide range of very talented photographers has been creating for many years now. Tom Kirsch   Troy Paiva ,  Joe Reifer  and preeminently, Julia Solis show, thru their wonderful images, a world gone, yet lingering. The value of these photographs is greater than the undeniable pure beauty they portray. These adventurous artists are recording for posterity a rapidly dissolving and disappearing segment of our infrastructure, our history, our essence. If anything, the best of the urban ruins photographers honor the past and those inhabitants long gone by preserving the darkly beautiful remnants of their forgotten worlds. Julia Solis, often as the very last witness, preserves images of worlds that will never come to be again. Worlds that once held sway over the imaginations and dreams of children and adults alike. The documentation and preservation of these worlds is a gift we should be very thankful for. solis_michigantheater I’ll end with another passage from Julia’s introduction. This description in prose of the organic process that takes place as these ghostly edifaces return slowly to nature, is as beautiful as the images that succeed it in her new book, Stages of Decay: “With their abandonment, a whole new drama begins to unfold. It starts slowly at first, with a few open windows letting in the wind and rain, the snow and the spores for the first patches of moss to take hold. The expanding and contracting moisture plays accordion with the building materials until the top layer of paint begins to crack, often in a sharp, continuous stroke that sounds like a clawed animal scurrying across the wall. Plaster ornaments dissolve right on the wiring until they can no longer support themselves and their flower petals and flourishes melt into a soggy pile on the floor, forming an entirely different kind of sculpture. Horsehair, once used to hold together plaster decorations, begins to stick out between structural elements like strange, insect-like antennae, emerging to explore their new post-apocalyptic world. The seats burst, their stuffing sweeping into alien reptiles crawling down the stairwells. The stage curtain drops as its fireproof backing splits and bubbles into the moldy fabric, combining with the deteriorating floor of the stage into a fantastic fungal landscape.”