Friday, March 30, 2007

Shern's Amazing Short Story - Varnasi,India - January 2007

(shern and I, India. Shern's short story, written after visiting the Burning Ghats in Varanasi, where families travel from all over India to burn their dead. Written on location. Shern is my boy that I traveled in India with. We have known each other since preschool.enjoy...)

When confronted with death, most recollect from the same well of experience, that of lost pets and televised murder and perhaps the emotional context of a close family member passed.

We sit in restaurants waiting for meat as we wait for a tape to finish rewinding; our closest daily encounter with death, merely seen as a moderate though necessary convenience. One that ironically sustains our living. Seeing an animal on the road side, or a dead dog on the street, however peaceful they lay -before the flies, the eternal custodians of living existence arrive- although a more distilled experience of death, is still just an unpleasant after thought, after the experience. We encounter death every single day.

On the way to work, at lunch, on television sets in waiting rooms, during an evening stroll in the park; these mostly weighing equal in our grand experience of what death is...

An idea.

An obscure notion. A form of rationale. For some, a philosophy.

And as death, as life, is a constant companion to our realities, it is perhaps the least understood, the least contemplated, and the most disassociated. When death is too close, when death has a face we recognize, it is not us, but them. They met a demise we somehow assume we'll avoid. Not us, it's not possible, time is not taken but given, and it's ours. We live forever after all... don't we?

Unless of course, it is directly in front of us, free of our ideas and staring with cold slate eyes, unwavering in its resolve. When we actually see another dead human being, it is an assault, a slap in the face of our false and ephemeral immortality. For a brief and uncomfortable moment we remember what we had not actually forgotten, but merely pushed to the corner of the room, under the carpet, that we are going to face the same fate. That death is behind us, chasing always, gaining steadily, encroaching upon our fallacious immortality.

And then, it is death that unites us; that of the dead dog, that of the television, that of the faceless obituary, for a fleeting capture of time, we see that we are all the same. Perhaps for some, this juxtaposition creates a reversal of symbols: Death real, life figurative.

But that time passes. It has to. We need to forget. We remember that death is an uninvited guest at an already crowded table. Life becomes real, and death an idea once more, an abstract concept.

As I sit on the banks of the river Ganga, my eyes burn and my throat is choked. I can feel the heat on my ears as I struggle to find words, words that are perhaps enabling me to objectify death, using them to draw from its essence what my heart should be experiencing solely. But when I shake my hair and brush my arms, I realize that I am surrounded by death. These are the ashes of those fallen that once again dance in the winds around me, that are lulled into the sky on the notes of a solitary flute and swept into the Ganga through the tears of their mourners. This is a scene that is played daily. Flames spring from overpriced timber, enveloping bodies that may have chopped the same trees. It is small, but still a microcosm of life.

I ask only to remember.



- Sorry I took so long to type that up, I've had so much to do since I've been back. Although I did run a spell check, this is exactly how it was written in my journal. Otherwise, it's pretty raw and unedited,
and exactly how I wanted it to be read.

Peace big boy. Shern -

Thank You Yathrib



This is my first sale through mail thanks to my home girl Yathrib. Thank you Yathrib for your support... and thank all you guys for all your support through my baby step stages of getting something going! - rico

(the ella fitzgerald stamp is classic!)

Friday, March 16, 2007

Peace in Iraq - (handprinted Rico Tee's For Sale!)

On March 17th, this Saturday, many are marching on the Capitol Mall to express their feelings toward the war. Now, this is a tough situation to stand for. We got ourselves into something thats not going as hoped. Withdrawing may not be the right decision, but then staying and loosing more lives might not be the answer either. Who really knows? But, what I do know or feel is that Peace can make Peace and that War doesnt always make Peace.

I will be at the March this Saturday selling my latest Tee-shirt design, which is all about Peace in Iraq. Not war, not hate, but peace. We need more peace and lovin' in this world! The shirt which I designed says "Peace in Iraq" in Arabic and the rest is self expanitory.



PEACE IN IRAQ (written in Arabic)
(sizes : L/XL) - $10!
Hand printed and designed by me ; )

Ladies, Im sorry my distributor couldn't supply me with women's shirts this time sadly, but maybe your papa would like one! My apologies...



leave a comment or contact if interested: federicofrum@gmail.com / 703.772.7273

much love, rico

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

T Shirt Express


Thats me on New Years eve with the guy that showed up for like 2 days and Amy

Thats me in a phat penthouse after having blown up about 600 balloons with my home boy Jose. He was running around at the time also taking pics, cuz the view was OFF THA HUUK!

Thats Jose and Neil tryna act cool while I take this pic, ha! Yea they were like "No dont take a pic!" but the pictures will never stop when the cameras in my HANDS!! ha That is the studio in our shop... kinda small, but priceless works of art come out of there!

Kitchen sunrise



dont mind the screen in the window... trust me it was beautiful. Sometimes now I dont even want to take the picture, because it does little justice on what I am really seeing. (ya feel me??)

indiaz animalz

So I was looking through some of my pics from india and ran across acouple of pics of the animals there. There were so many, running wild. If it wasnt a monkey tryna snatch your roti bread though the window it was a random dog walking on the tin roof of a building. They were everywhere.... here is a small clip of some of the animals I saw and caught my eye. (click Image to see bigger) : )