Israel, redux

Back from another trip to Israel! While exhausting, this trip provided great fodder for the next issue of ReNew Canada -- forming a story on electric vehicles and peak lithium in my head as I type. Not much for WC, though, since the delegation tour was mainly focused on renewable energy innovation.

Arava Power Company's 4.9 MW solar field is under construction. Israel 
has committed to make 10 per cent of its energy mix renewable by 2020.

Arava Power Company's 4.9 MW solar field is under construction. Israel has committed to make 10 per cent of its energy mix renewable by 2020.

Seemed a shame to waste those carbon emissions to get all the way to Eilat, which sits at the tip of the Red Sea, and not visit any of three countries that border it: Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. But our friendly hosts -- Gil, Zavi and Yuriy from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, not forgetting Herman the driver -- put together a fabulous itinerary. On day one, I ran into fellow Canadians (our country sent a huge delegation) at the opening reception. Despite travel-related delirium, we managed to have a few cold drinks and share airport security stories. On day two, the press delegation joined Arava Power Company as it celebrated the launch of its solar field (see above).

Day three brought us to the golden Aora solar tower, which looks like an item straight from space. Later, we saw (and ate) strawberries and beautiful heirloom tomatoes grown in desert greenhouses, learning about Israel's collaboration with students from other countries to teach them about sustainable agriculture (a tad contradictory considering the water-needy strawberries). The next day, we took turns driving lithium-powered electric vehicles around a concourse at Better Place in Tel Aviv.

Somewhere in there, we found time to take a dip in the Dead Sea. Watch me float!

Reading a Russian newspaper while bobbing in the Dead Sea. Worldly, intellectual, buoyant. (Thanks to Rodrigo for the photo.)

Reading a Russian newspaper while bobbing in the Dead Sea. Worldly, intellectual, buoyant. (Thanks to Rodrigo for the photo.)

A Merry Yeti Christmas

Wandering the streets with two of my teenaged cousins this afternoon, I ducked into Narwhal Art Projects on Queen and picked up this little guy for my tiny prized objects collection.

I was tempted by Sonja Ahlers' new batch of sweater bunnies (I've got a sweet little lilac one, thanks to an old roommate) and her new book, The Selves, but instead found myself drawn to this heartwarming scene. It's a small Yeti family celebrating the season with a snowball fight, courtesy of Jennie Suddick. The image does it no justice, but you get the idea. In addition to her solo work, Suddick is one third of the group responsible for "Cry School Yearbook" (one of Nuit Blanche's greatest participatory successes thus far, IMHO). Check out her website to see more enclosed treasures.

Everything will blink

This week InterAccess held an introductory course on the LilyPad Arduino, easily the cutest item in the Arduino series of products. Made specifically with artists and crafters in mind, the LilyPad makes it easy to incorporate physical computing into clothing and fabric projects.

My demo project.​

My demo project.​

Our instructors designed our in-class project to demonstrate the basics of Arduino programming and get the creative juices flowing. My LilyPad is sewn with conductive thread to a soft switch (top left) that we made with regular and conductive fabric. Upon contact with another piece of conductive fabric, the two pieces create a connection -- it works like pushing a button. The soft switch is connected to the negative side of a tiny LED (my apologies, this is the cutest Arduino product). Its positive end is connected back to the LilyPad at pin no. 6.

We programmed our LilyPads and the directions for pin no. 6 using Arduino's open source software, learning to make the LED obey simple commands -- fading up and down, blinking with various delays, et cetera. We also learned how to make the switch work. You can see developer/artist Leah Buechley's slightly more complicated application of these ideas here.

Our instructors, Dave McCallum and Angella Mackey, showed us examples of what they'd done with Arduinos in their own work, as well as more mainstream examples in fashion and art -- more than enough to start a million fires in this head!

To be continued..

Society's monsters

This is not Ted Witzel.

This is not Ted Witzel.

Q: What should we do with madness?

A: I think we should be exploring it. I don’t know what the answer is, but I see a problem, and I want to say something about it. Let’s open a dialogue. We should be trying to understand where madness comes from. Woyzeck is showing us that there are causes.

I interviewed Ted Witzel, co-director of the red light district, last week. rld is a small but mighty Toronto theatre company that's currently mounting his newly translated version of Karl Georg Büchner's famously unfinished Woyzeck (June 3-19 @ Lower Ossington Theatre). After speaking with Witzel (and having only seen a filmed version of Alban Berg's opera Wozzeck), I'm very curious to see this production. Read the interview here.