I am participating in my fourth year of Thing-a-Day, a “yearly creative sprint where participants commit to creating one new thing a day and post it on a collective blog” every day for the month of February. In addition to seeing my work in that collective blog, you can also see my contributions isolated. (Technical aside: they are using Posterous to host it this year and I’m finding that rather frustrating. There are many clever ideas in play, but I can’t really recommend anyone use Posterous as it now stands.)
People do many different kinds of creative work for Thing-a-Day, but I take it as an opportunity do a little sketch or a more finished piece of two-dimensional art, sometimes following a weekly theme, sometimes not so much. To see my work from past Thing-a-Days, you can hold your breath for the organizers to finish building their official archive, or look at my own archives. You won’t get the (probably very little) accompanying text and comments that were on the Thing-a-Day site, but thems the breaks. The images from Thing-a-Day 2009 and Thing-a-Day 2008 are both available as Flickr sets. I wasn’t using Flickr as my main image host yet in time for Thing-a-Day 2007, but I was reposting everything here. So just start browsing Gas Water Nothing at February 1, 2007 and keep hitting next.
These days, I am very wary of reposting the same content multiple places on the web. It’s inefficient in terms of storage, and makes life difficult if I need to make a correction. And as I alluded to above, it fragments metadata like number of views, comments, “so-and-so likes this,” and the like. But that’s a subject for another post (and too many uses of the word “like” in a sentence for my liking).
Like (hah!) we did last year, my band the Glass Bees will be assisting the brilliant sound artist Ranjit Bhatnagar share his Things-a-Day with the world. Ranjit makes a musical instrument every day. This year’s performance will be on the evening of Wednesday, March 3 at Barbès in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
I’m not the type of person who does anything everyday (I guess I pretty much always brush my teeth somewhere in there), so doing a daily anything is not easy or natural for me. I hope you enjoy my making a thing a day as much as I stress out trying to get them done!






mp3 (6:36)
field recordings, synthesizers, carpet, harmonica, delay, amplifiers, etc.
Personnel: Andrea Williams, Chris Williams, Jason Das
The Glass Bees will be performing on Saturday and Sunday, June 12-13 as part of the FIGMENT festival of arts on Governors Island, just off the southern tip of Manhattan, and a stone’s throw from Red Hook, Brooklyn. Even if we weren’t participating, you really shouldn’t miss this one-of-a-kind explosion of creativity at one of the most spectacular locations in New York City.

Our interactive, site-specific performance “Reading Governors Island” will combine sound, images, and audience-contributed spoken word. We’ve compiled historical and contemporary texts about Governors Island and invite FIGMENT attendees to be photographed and recorded reading excerpts. Later in the day, we will present a performance mixing the voices and faces we’ve collected with other sounds and images from around the island. This project is an exploration of the location and the context of FIGMENT, bringing past and present, environment and human intervention, and performers and audience into play.
We will begin recording participants’ voices at 10:00 AM and perform our installation at about 3:00 PM each day. Come early, let us record you, enjoy the festival, and then come back later on to hear what we’ve come up with.
We should also add that if you’re a parent, FIGMENT is a great way to experience lots of art in a setting that young children can totally enjoy!
Maps of the festival will be available at the event. We’ll be set up between Building 555 and the harbor, near the intersection of Craig and Clayton. Please note this is a different location from what was originally announced.
You can reach Governors Island via ferry from the Battery Maritime Building (located just east of the Staten Island Ferry in Manhattan) or Fulton Ferry Landing in Brooklyn. Here’s full directions. And check out all the other interesting exhibits and activities on the Island.
We hope to see you there!


mp3 (7:30)
voices, field recordings, WMD Geiger Counter, Loud Objects Noise Toys, delay, amplifiers, etc.
Personnel: Chris Williams, Jason Das

We’ll be performing with Ranjit Bhatnagar on his handmade instruments along with other instruments (mostly made in factories in China or Japan) at the opening of the ScrapCycle show at Devotion Gallery In Williamsburg.
This performance will be more open-ended and expansive than our March performance which was dedicated to demonstrating some of these instruments.
Bora Yoon and Tom Vanderwall will also be performing.
The opening opens at 7:00 p.m. on May 7th at Devotion Gallery, located at 54 Maujer Street, Brooklyn, NY, 11206. The price of admission is a used water bottle, which they may be using for some project or perhaps to serve you the complementary refreshments.
ScrapCycle places an exchange-value on upcycled and reused materials, in order to probe the environmental effects of economic perspective. By presenting concrete implementations of reuse and recombination, ScrapCycle(reUSE/reCOMBINE) serves to liken the small pervasive effects of social sculpture, environmental activism, and economic perspective to a fine-tuning of interdependent parameters with global results. ScrapCycle(reUSE/reCOMBINE) references complexity science as it relates to political economy, ecology, and methods of reuse and recombination (i.e., small-world networks, social systems theory, ecological systems theory, evolutionary computation, genetic algorithms, neural networking).

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
© Jason Das