Gripping Fodder

Dates: December 7, 2024 - January 11, 2025
Location: 120 Olympia Ave NE, Olympia, WA, 98501


ARTISTS

Anton Seder and Max Nordile

Gripping Fodder all around all the time. A gust of wind. A dog barks. Two artists in a small town watching the movie Groundhog Day in a cold living room. Moving with Life forever, forever in motion.

Can't you see? 

My butterfly stomach 

Growls growls 

I drank a jar of coffee

The four major types of estuaries classified by their geology are drowned river valley, bar-built, tectonic, and fjords. In geologic time, which is often measured on scales of hundreds of thousands to millions of years, estuaries are often fleeting features of the landscape. Water is good for everything, it goes where it is effortless and never misses an easy shot.

Then I took some of these sweet, cheese-topped fried onions, smashed between fluffy buns, the tang of pickle punctuating each bite as mayonnaise becomes one with the partially buried in sediment and slowly melts, leaving behind a pit. In many cases, water fills the depression and forms a pond or lake—a kettle. Kettles can be feet or miles long, but they are usually shallow. 

The kettle is hot, the living room is cold

And when I'm sad, you're a clown
And if I get scared, you're always around
So let them say your hair's too long
Cause I don't care, with you I can't go wrong

Growls Growls

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“Future Generations” Fall Arts Walk 2024