Saturday, February 24, 2007

Post Katrina NOLA - Postcard Book (art book!)

I was telling a friend about one of my NOLA related art projects and
it looks as if someone has beat me to it, in some regard anyhow.



statement from the myspace page:
"Degrees of Separation started out as a postcard magazine on the web for designers currently living, originating from or belonging to the New Orleans, Louisiana area. However, after Hurricane Katrina it became an outlet for many of us to share our experiences and reflections upon what had occurred. This book showcases post-Katrina work and serves as a medium to share our personal design narratives."


Official project site www.degreesnola.com
Offiicial myspace site www.myspace.com/degreesnola
Location of Book Release Bouncing Wall - Seattle

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Ihelpednola on myspace

I just created a myspace page in hopes of networking and bringing
more traffic here. Please spread the word.

www.myspace.com/ihelpednola

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Salt in the wound, now a Tornado hits NOLA

Story from today (Feb. 13, 2007) found on CNN.com
CNN.com story on the Tornado




TORNADO HEAPS MISERY ON KATRINA-HIT AREA

• Woman, 85, dies in FEMA trailer; about 30 people are injured
• Official says FEMA teams are assessing damage in the area
• Powerful storms strike region still recovering from Katrina
• About 21,000 people are without power in New Orleans area

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AP) -- Eighteen months after Hurricane Katrina, Stella Chambers' modest red-brick house had finally been repaired, and she was waiting for one last utility hookup to move back in. But the 85-year-old woman never made it.

A tornado tore through her neighborhood in the city's Gentilly neighborhood before daybreak Tuesday, flattening her house, ripping apart the front-yard FEMA trailer in which she was living, and killing her.

At least 29 people were injured, including Chambers' daughter, Gail, as the twister heaped more misery on neighborhoods still trying to recover from Katrina. The storm destroyed at least 50 FEMA trailers and dozens of homes, and damaged many others -- many of which were in various states of repair. (Watch witnesses describe how area will cope with latest setback )

"We were trying to get my mother back in the house. Now there is nothing to repair," said Mervin Pollard, whose 81-year-old mother's Katrina-flooded home was reduced to a pile of lumber Tuesday. "How do you start over again when you are already trying to do that?"

Firefighters went door to door, once again searching for victims of a storm. They spray-painted bright orange rectangles on the buildings and trailers and, as with the circles searchers used after Hurricane Katrina, they listed the date of the search and whether bodies were found.

"Some of these houses still have the circle on them from the last search," resident Patrick Clementine said. "Now we're doing it again."

Gov. Kathleen Blanco became teary-eyed as she talked to residents of the suburb of Westwego whose homes were destroyed.

"It's incredible. It just looks like pickup sticks," she said. "People's lives just torn asunder again."

Blanco issued a disaster declaration, authorizing state aid for the area. She said the state would send in National Guard troops for security.

The tornado hopscotched a 10-mile path from the west bank of the Mississippi River to the shore of Lake Pontchartrain, striking some neighborhoods that had been hard hit by Katrina and have been slow to recover.

In Gentilly, there are vast stretches of abandoned, gutted houses, dotted by trailers and occasional reoccupied dwellings. Some abandoned houses collapsed in the twister's winds.

Blood covered Gail Chambers' face and was running down her side when she banged on the door for help at about 3:30 a.m., said neighbor Hellean Lewis.

"She was crying and screaming, 'Help me! I can't find my mother!'" Lewis said. Searchers found Stella Chambers, crying for her daughter and clinging to life in the rubble. She died at a hospital, where her daughter was listed in stable condition.

There was no immediate estimate of the cost of the damage.

About 21,000 electricity customers in the New Orleans area lost power.

Federal Emergency Management Agency teams began inspecting neighborhoods and said it would provide hotel rooms and trailers for people whose FEMA trailers were unusable. The American Red Cross said 90 people were in shelters late Monday afternoon.

Some storm victims faced the prospect of once again having to find temporary shelter and do battle with insurance companies.

Kamal Namazi, 49, figured the storm did $175,000 in dents, broken windows and other damage to the 18 new and used cars on his lot in Westwego. The car lot was hit by a tornado in 2004. Katrina tore off the roof of his Metairie home and left a foot of water inside.

"Right now, I don't want to live any more," he said. "I don't want to be in this world."

The storm ripped the roof from the 51-room hotel next to Namazi's lot. Owner Stella Lin said 36 rooms were occupied but only minor injuries were reported. ( Watch the scene at the battered hotel )

"Some of the people there at the hotel were still living there from Katrina," Westwego Fire Chief Keith Bouvier said.

Lin said her insurance covered only a tiny fraction of her hurricane losses, and she got that after a "really, really, really big fight."

"Now I have to fight them again," she said.

Sunday, February 4, 2007

The Hurricane Poster Project

A worthy artistic endeavor to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina & Rita.

THE HURRICANE POSTER PROJECT (THPP) has been conceived as a collective effort by the design community to unite and effect change through our work. In order for this project to be successful, we are counting on designer participation. Our goal is to raise at least $1,000,000 for the Red Cross through this project. Please spread the word. Please participate.


www.thehurricaneposterproject.com












Printmaking and Posters go hand in hand. So does social activism. Printmaking
has been used to mass replicate an image or in this case a poster that could be
handed out or sold cheaply. The purpose was to provide an image to express an
idea or story, frequently involving politics or socially relevant issues. The graphic image can say more than words, especially to an illiterate population, such as the case was in the 1900's mexico around the time of the revolution.


Two of the most popular uses of posters today are to advertise music shows &
express frustration with the politics around us. It's simple to design a poster and photo copy 100 of them for 6 cents each. I would encourage people to make a poster or even, dare I suggest it, use one of the images from the hurricane poster project, and bring attention to the need for volunteers.


as stupid as it sounds, a few dollars invested to make a photocopied poster that
leads someone to actually volunteer, does in fact make a difference.