Gas Water Nothing

Rashied Ali, 1935-2009

Rashied Ali, a great musician and one of the most emotionally intelligent drummers I ever heard, died last night. I did this paper stencil screen print based on a photo of him a few years ago (though the text was different in the original; I photoshopped it today to say his name).

Update: WKCR is playing his music in for several days straight… no idea how long exactly.

Update 2: Irena has produced a vector version if anyone wants to make their own stencil or lasercut (see comments). Please respect my Creative Commons License when reproducing my work from this site.

Rashied Ali 1935-2009

Comments [2]

  1. hi Jason,
    nice drawing.
    i just did a vector version of it for people to make stencils/lasercuts.
    Here is a link: http://data.gesammtvorstellung.org/ra/rashied-ali-1935-2009.ai

    Irena    August 13, 2009    #

  2. Very cool, Irena! Thanks for doing that.

    (Um, personal use only and all that jazz—follow the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.)

    Jason Das    August 14, 2009    #

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The Last Twelve Things I Did (Cumulatively) With the Glass Bees or Posted on Thing-a-Day
or Urban Sketchers

Last night I went to a pre-opening "pencil party" for a new community/arts space on on Franklin Avenue in Crown Heights, Brooklyn a few blocks away from my home. The space will be called Launchpad. I had a chance to chat with Mike, the founder (and owner of the building) and his priorities seem right on. Most remarkably, there is no obvious political, religious, or ideological agenda--how rare is that for a grassroots community space?! They just want to provide a place for people to hold events, classes, share resources, etc. Mike expects non-profit incorporation to be completed within the week.

Launchpad is reaching out for foundation funding, and Mike is donating his storefront, but they do need financial support from individuals as well. They're raising start-up funds via Kickstarter, and have about one more day to meet their goal. Please consider contributing! I really hope this place gets a strong start and thrives.

The gist of the "pencil party" was to draw on the walls, in this case with markers instead of pencils. One of my contributions was an urban sketch--a view from the window right on the window frame:

Urban Sketch on the windowframe at Launchpad Urban Sketch on the windowframe at Launchpad

(Sorry the pics are so lousy--it was dark and all I had was my phone.)

I neglected to take any photos of the space or the party, but here's one I snagged from Mike's Facebook:



While I'm excited about Launchpad and have high hopes for it, the crowd at the party did give me cause for worry--it was extraordinarily skewed in terms of age, race, and class. As they go forward, I really hope Launchpad can involve a more representative cross-section of who lives in the neighborhood. A major point of a place like this is that everyone will feel welcome, and given the demographics of the neighborhood (shifting fast and loose these days), it may take some real effort and reaching-out to achieve this.

Launchpad is located at 721 Franklin Avenue, between Sterling and Park, in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York City.

I know it wouldn't be a big deal for many people, but it is for me! Besides, I didn't have a chance to make another thing that day. (The occassion for getting dolled-up was a Krinkle Bearcat show.)

I Combed My Hair

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Still can't quite believe I got away with this one...

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