JUNE 2006

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Cc: christelle alin <alin@villa-arson.org>

Date: Jun 1, 2006 7:59 AM

Subject: Smoking bans in force in Que. and Ont.; Les premiers ministres continuent leur combat contre le passeport

Dear Stephen,

We’ve stopped in Lancaster, New Hampshire, after chasing lightning

then fog swirls through Vermont. Mass MoCa was a few hundred miles

detour but was it ever worth it. North Adams is a tiny little

“anywhere U.S.A” town which had relied mostly on one industry for many

years (a dyeing company until the late sixties, then building

electrical components until the mid-eighties). When Sprague Electical

closed 4,137 people were out of work—in a town of 18,000, that was

quite a blow. Faculty at nearby Williams College were shown the

sprawling complex while searching for sites to exhibit large scale

works of contemporary art and voila, the idea of Mass Moca was born.

It opened in 1999 after years of planning, research, lobbying and

fund-raising. It’s the largest museum for contemporary art in the

country. It reminded us a bit of Shawinigan, only a few of those

museums could fit in this one. One of the exhibits we saw was rides

from an amusement park—all functioning, but slowed down, moving

incrementally, lights going on and off but in altered patterns. The

room they were in was simply unbelievably huge. The Huang Yong Ping

snaked through even more massive, massive brick and sunlit rooms. I’ll

tell you more about the exhibits later on, as well as our thoughts on

how to propel our own little gallery in our own little town forward,

but right now we’re about to hit the road again and do a little hiking

in the White Mountains before zipping home.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Cc: christelle alin <alin@villa-arson.org>

Date: Jun 3, 2006 1:45 AM

Subject: Loonie might equal greenback; Harper cite le Québec en exemple pour les relations intergouvernementales

Dear Stephen,

Sorry I didn’t write yesterday. I was busy waking up early, finding a

fun trail somewhere in the White Mountains, hiking up and down a small

one called Pine Mountain, near Mount Washington, then driving through

New Hampshire and then Maine chasing and then being chased by

torrential rain, stopping at various Wal*Marts looking for “support

our troops” magnets, they are for a future project, then stopping at

the border and having our messy messy Yaris searched by the customs

agent because of course we were in a rush and hadn’t bothered tallying

our receipts and just guessed at the amounts (I’m not allowed to do

the talking with customs again, ever), then I dropped Claudine off at

Judith’s for Janet’s wedding shower and I dumped everything from Yaris

onto the salon floor (most is still there), changed and went to work,

and by the end of the night I was tired and fell asleep instantly.

Today I slept in a bit and then had coffee and something to eat and

read the paper and continued to think about the uproars surrounding

same-sex marriage and religious fundamentalism and the War On Terror

and the War On Drugs and War And Peace and War In General and Kyoto

and general apathy concerning the environment and how I’d like to see

An Inconvenient Truth, the documentary based on the book by Al Gore,

but it probably won’t be distributed here, and I wonder if the book

is, how many years will it take? And we gave the cats some catnip and

they wrestled and we watched them wrestle, and then Claudine and I

spent time studying our “daily positions” book, then I was off to open

the gallery and prep the bar, which was quiet quiet until past

suppertime, I ate at home, Claudine cooked, we talked, we made plans,

we’re always making and revising and fleshing out our plans, then I

was back to work and it was busy and now I’m back home getting tired

again and overwhelmed with so many things to write about.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Cc: christelle alin <alin@villa-arson.org>

Date: Jun 4, 2006 11:45 PM

Subject: Canadians apathetic to terror threat; Gilles Duceppe lance un appel à la vigilance face à la menace terroriste

Dear Stephen,

I’m still feeling hung over. Last night I left work early to go to a

barbecue at Katie and Rich’s new place. They just moved a few days

ago, into a really nice apartment on Duke, the apartment below one

that Judy lived in. I don’t know if it was the wine, the pot or the

crazy 80-proof rum that Rich pulled out of somewhere, but by the time

we left to walk to Elwoods to catch a band I was already a handful.

The beer and tequila were certainly not required. I’ve forgotten

almost everything, thankfully. Apparently I was the only one dancing,

manically, to the band, and threw a beer bottle on the floor, which

was when Claudine first attempted to drag my sorry arse home. I left

the cab and played in traffic for awhile, clearly deranged. There

were more shenanigans, newspapers emptied to the sidewalk, then

finally Tim helped load me into another cab. I think there was

projectile vomiting as well.

So today was a bit of a recuperation day, and mellow apartment

cleanup. My parents came over and I helped a bit with their new blog,

we had tea and snacks. Claudine and I decided to use her free film

passes to see a movie, despite there not being anything we really

wanted to see. We settled on The breakup. Let’s just say it didn’t

exceed my expectations and leave it at that.

Yesterday Ray and Sarah came by the gallery. He’s writing a catalogue

essay for the Kelly Mark show. We went to Sebastians for a beer before

I began my shift and they drove back to Fredericton. We had a nice

talk. It’s always fun and stimulating to talk about art.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 6, 2006 12:27 AM

Subject: Tempers flare in Caledonia, Ont.; Au procès de Charles Guité les jurés délibéreront pour une septième journée

Dear Stephen,

We just came from a marathon of incompetence. We went to the weekly council meeting because Jay was giving a presentation in support of the yet-to-be-built Saint John Skate Park. It’s only been in the works for about six years but that’s the pace of life here. We stood and listened to almost two hours of mindless drivel as the councilors either couldn’t or wouldn’t make up their minds about decisions, rules of conduct, procedures or the time of day. I have a feeling that there are major personality conflicts on council. Jay’s presentation was fun, animated and informative. It ended and the council took turns massaging their own egos in support of the project before they deferred their collective support of $226 000 and then re-affirmed their support but only in the 2007 budget, and only if the skate park raises an additional $300 000 in cash and sponsorships, but it seemed like a victory. The dozens of skater kids that assembled in support\ probably left with the idea further entrenched in their minds that most adults are idiots and that only the supremest of idiots would run for council. Welcome to real-world politics, kids! Here we have the leaders of tomorrow, already totally disenfranchised with our political system. Way to go, guys! Because of course, it is mostly guys. Tired-looking old white guys with thinning or white hair, wearing wrinkled suits. Nothing short of a vision of inspiration.

I had spent the afternoon with Mark recording footage for the upcoming CBC show. It will air the day after his and Janet’s wedding. In about three weeks. Boy, time just flies. It was a good afternoon but I found it a bit heady, close to three hours just thinking and talking about this project. Then Elwoods went up in flames and sirens and fire trucks arrived to put out the grease fire. No one was hurt and the restaurant only appeared to suffer from smoke damage, but still. Weird.

After the council meeting a bunch of us went to Thandi’s, the new Asian-fusian restaurant that took over d’Amico’s, formerly il Fornello. The decor has been changed a bit, with the worse addition being the cheap-o faux-art prints all over the wall. I just don’t get it. Don’t they know they could probably hire a local artist to make original works for the same price, and have something that doesn’t look like it came off the walls of a K-Mart or Wal*Mart or I*Suk*Mart? The food was delicious but those prints make me want to never go back.

You want to know another bizarre thing? Common council here has a pastor say a prayer before they begin their meeting. He went on and on about asking the “Lord Father” and the “Father God Almighty” for aid

and assistance with the meeting. The Almighty lord on high was obviously busy elsewhere as the three hours I witnessed were about the most excruciating I’ve ever spent anywhere. But don’t you find it weird that in a so-called era of separation of Church and State we have a prayer from a clearly Christian religion? What about pluralism? What if there were Muslim or Hindu or Buddhist or *gasp* atheist councillors? Oh right, I keep forgetting: this is Saint John. 95% of council will be male, white, old and christian.

Like Michelle Goldberg highlights in her book “Kingdom Coming”: America is a Christian Nation. Why should Canada be any different?

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 7, 2006 1:23 AM

Subject: Guite guilty on all charges; Charles Guité reconnu coupable de fraudes est menotté et incarcéré

Dear Stephen,

Today was a blah day. I couldn’t get motivated to do either gallery or

studio work and kept reading the newspaper or books that made me more

angry and depressed. Claudine was working all day and I washed dishes

then dirtied more and alternated between reading bits of Kingdom

Coming, which consistently scares the bejeezus out of me. Later in the

afternoon we visited Mary in the hospital, then cycled around the

South End looking for houses, then went to a Continental Drift Film

Festival meeting. Then we made supper, which made us drowsy and a

little ill—either the cod was bad or the cheese sauce for the veggies

was too rich—then we went for a walk and rented a movie from Terry’s

on King St. The movie was called Junebug and was really well-done,

great pacing, sound, dialogue, lots of realism and depth to the

characters. A simple story of a homecoming, a family visit, but with

the richness and complexity of religion, family, family values,

tensions and the search for meaning. And who’s not searching for

meaning? Those that already believe that they have it.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 8, 2006 2:15 PM

Subject: Goddard laid to rest in nation’s capital; Exiger le passeport à la frontière ne sera pas une solution miracle, dit Wilson

Dear Stephen,

I’m heading into the CBC studio this afternoon to read through some

letters for that Atlantic Magazine interview. It airs June 25th. We’ll

all be struggling to wake up in time to hear it after Mark and Janet’s

wedding. I guess we could record it. I have almost two thousand

individual letters to scan through to find some to read as samples for

this CBC thing. I have no idea where to begin. They all seem the same

to me. All equally embarrassing. And I sound terrible and incompetant

when I read them.

Mary had another seizure yesterday. It was her quick-thinking

roommate, the indomitable Ruth, who noticed something was amiss and

called for backup. Mary suffered a broken rib as a result of all the

resuscitating action, but she is apparently a bit better now.

My daily blahs have continued. I am now blaming the weather as well as

the disturbing news stories (reading the news counts as research while

in studio mode). We haven’t had sun since New Hampshire! Over 1 week

ago! And my five-day forecast doesn’t predict any until Tuesday! It’s

enough to drive someone mental. Or at least drive my sweetheart to

greener pastures; she’s off to her hometown of Montréal for a

week-long visit.

We visited another couple bank repos yesterday with Don, our real

estate agent. There seem to be lots of those repos around, which makes

me wonder a little bit about the foundations of our economy, but

that’s another story. We might make a bid on a definite fixer-upper on

Garden Street, just down the road from us. There are currently some

crackheads living illegally in the ground-floor apartment. They

wouldn’t let us into their apartment, and the back half should just be

torn down, and we couldn’t even view the attic rooms because the

staircase had been blocked off, but there is some good potential. A

larger place we viewed on Princess Street is just too far gone and

they are asking four times the price! So we shall see.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 10, 2006 3:16 AM

Subject: Homolka can’t change name, court rules; Jean Charest se moque des volte-face du PQ au sujet des écoles privées

Dear Stephen,

It’s been a long day. It started out with the book launch of “How to

live a great life”, a collection of essays by people in SJ, Judith

included, a fund-raising project for the Saint John Regional Hospital

Foundation. There was a brass band playing and almost twenty

contributors to the book signing copies around the Market Square

fountain. Afterwards Peter treated Judith and I to a filling buffet

lunch at the Asian palace. Then Jude and I went to Hell’s Creation,

her to deal with some Blue Cross issues for Robyn and I to peter

Wal*Mart about those ‘support our troops’ magnet ribbons. They keep

giving me the runaround.

Work was busy almost all night. A combination of the Atlantica

conference, the Atlantica protesters—apparently a couple were arrested

today, but I don’t know any details. Smells like over-reactions at

first blush. There was also a nurses reunion and a big bash on the

waterfront hosted by the SJ Board of Trade. All of this added up to

the bar being a busy place. I was there until 2 AM, but earlier I took

my supper break with David Suzuki. Lisa had a spare ticket and wash

rushing over to the university late with her friend Dawn, who drove us

there and back in a flash. His autobiographical talk was fun and

informative, and he made an impassioned plea for environmental

activism at the end. I’d vote for him.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 10, 2006 7:54 PM

Subject: Two cameraman injured in Caledonia; Un homme est arrêté après avoir menacé des musulmans devant une mosquée

Dear Stephen;

“Off with his head!”

Ha-ha, just joking.

I ran into Joquim in Java Moose this afternoon while having a coffee

and a chat with Elizabeth, who has moved back for the summer, and we

joked about how just about every teenage male has joked about

beheading someone, usually someone in a position of authority, often a

politician. Is Alice and Wonderland going to become a banned book

because of references to decapitation?

Elizabeth and I had a fun afternoon. We met up at the SJAC, where,

true to the article in the Reader this week, we were the only

visitors. She had brought an Etch-a-Sketch, and we practiced drawing

the extremely realistic paintings on display in the Frazee Gallery. I

suppose the incessant rain could be blamed for keeping people away;

it’s been almost three weeks now and only the words of David Suzuki is

keeping me from exhibiting the harshest form of “Climate Rage”. He

believes we have to learn that we are a part of our natural

environment, and not separate from it. Though if we built a big-ass

bubble over the city then we could control the climate and have it

rain only between the hours of 2 AM and 6 AM. Sunshine every day! It

would be perfect.

And isn’t that what humans are after? Perfection?

I had a fun chat with an older Leftist gentleman from Manitoba who was

just aghast at the “editorial” news stories on Atlantica that appeared

in the TJ. Welcome to concentrated monopoly-ownership of the print

media in NB! I loved the irony of the TJ running “Pro-Atlantica, all

the time” editorial-style “news” items, while the “”balance” appears

in the “alternative” paper, [here], which is of course also owned by

you-know-who, and relies on the fact that most of the writing is

complete and utter shite too further discredit any balanced debate

about the pros and cons of Atlantica.

For my part, I’m actually more on the pro side, but only because I

think Massachusetts and the rest of New England should secede and join

a seceding Maritime bloc to form our own nation of Atlantica. We’d all

be better off; Albertans would be happy, so would Ontario, Québec will

secede as well and the USA could draw new boundaries around

“Jesusland” and the religious right can be left to their inbreeding

and shoot one another up in complete family dysfunction as they

gleefully await the Great Rapture or WW3 or the return of Papa J,

whichever comes first.

My biggest beef with the Atlantica conference has been that by and

large, there was no cultural representation or discussion. It’s as if

for big business, it’s all business, all the time. They forget that

for the non-workaholics, there exists more to life than business. For

those that work to live—not live to work—there is a whole world full

of literature, art, poetry, films, and ideas.

Does a creating a super-highway economic “corridor” transporting more

“made in China” for more distribution by Wal*Mart and company impact

positively or negatively on our collective culture?

Will tightening our connections with New England expand our collective

talent-pool so we can address pressing issues of energy-consumption

and share more energy-efficient ideas?

I don’t know the answer to these questions because I’d rather buy a

$700 painting by a local artist than spend it on a seemingly one-sided

business conference with one-sided coverage in the one-sided press.

Hey check out my parent’s blog: http://www.jillandbobcyclecanada.blogspot.com

They are documenting the lead-up to and the entire 62-day cross-canada

cycling tour they are about to undertake. You can follow the links

from their site to help contribute to their effort. Be generous:

You’re the freaking PM!

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 12, 2006 1:02 AM

Subject: Troops encamped in Taliban’s ‘backyard’; Le PQ dévoile son programme électoral en matière d’éducation

Dear Stephen,

The rain continues, and with it, my slide in temperament. Slept in

late, after staying up late, after closing early. The bar was busier

than normal for a Saturday, what with the Atlantica conference and

all, but the place spontaneously emptied out around midnight. I had a

couple beer with Meghan and Ben upstairs, then a slice of pizza at

Spagos before walking home. In the rain.

Today I met Travis at the gallery to take photographs of the

installation for the upcoming catalogue. We came back to my place for

coffee and looked through magazines and websites and my stack of PM

paintings, as well as the ones on the go. The one’s on the road to

nowhere. What gets me down is the idea of making more stuff; I’m

feeling too cluttered as it is. What I think I want to do is make art

without adding more junk to the planet.

Went for a walk around suppertime to take photos of Tim Hortons cups.

Got grossed out by a crow pecking at a flattened pigeon. Went to

Church Street for supper. Was hoping for some soccer on TV but there

was only golf. Walked home. In the rain.

I tried to get my butt in gear to tackle the studio but I just

couldn’t. I’m questioning the point of it all and putting myself into

a bad mood. I spoke to Claudine on the phone and we’re both unclear

about how to tackle the next few months, where our priorities should

be. We want a house, but the question is where? We want to travel, but

again, where, and when? Should I go back to school for a Master’s and

if so, where, and in what field? It would make more sense to stick

with curating or museum studies or maybe something useful like

welding.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 12, 2006 10:57 PM

Subject: Terror suspects strike back at law; La session parlementaire va s’achever comme la précédente: sous le bâillon

Dear Stephen,

I finally had what one could consider a productive studio day. In this

case it means some paint was put on canvas and some products purchased

from the Internet. I’ve decided the best art is that which can be

ordered in bulk. After pointlessly harassing managers and staff at

various Wal*Marts trying to find those damn ‘Support our troops’

magnetic ribbons I searched online and hit a gold mine. There are

dozens and dozens of companies devoted the fine art of vehicular

magnets! Everything from the standard yellow to customized to photos

included to personalized soldier name to the red-white-and blue to a

bless this and bless that and of course the seminal ‘Freedom isn’t

free’. So I should be expecting a parcel by the end of the week or

early next.

Now all I need is a big car to put them on. Like a Hummer limousine or

something like that.

Did you hear about the new H3? (http://fuh2.com/)

My parents needed some help with their computer so I came out with dad

after he finished work. We stopped at Sears so he could compress down

pillows. He’s trying to find one that he can make super small to take

across Canada.

I hadn’t realized before how complex the grading system of down

pillows can be. The five stars compressed the best.

I’m watching the Oilers/Hurricanes game. The only hockey game I’ve

watched—and probably will watch—all season. No cable or TV at home and

even if there was I probably wouldn’t watch hockey. Not in June. I’d

rather be all over the World Cup. If I could figure out some way to

scam cable for the next month at the gallery I’d screen the games

there with the projector.

Tomorrow is another studio day. Unless the sun miraculously comes out

again, in which case I might make some sidewalk rubbings.

Oilers are down 2-1 after 2; I’m going to look for movies. With 62

channels there must be something on. Maybe CSI or Six Feet Under?

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 14, 2006 12:21 AM

Subject: Billionaire philanthropist remembered; Mont-Orford: le premier ministre Jean Charest nie être en conflit d’intérêts

Dear Stephen,

I just gave the cats some catnip before bed and they are flipping out.

Manu is rolling in and out of the bedroom doing cartwheels and Kuan is

compulsively licking her entire body while she tries to eat every last

speck from the floor.

They don’t seem to suffer from any paranoia, however, which is the

biggest reason I’m staying away from my own catnip. Lying awake all

night imagining being chewed alive by the very same cats is not the

best way to get a decent night’s sleep.

Had a good studio day, with an excursion to Giant Tiger to buy TP and

lunch at a nearby diner my only outing. Then of course it rained

again, most of the day, the humidity keeping paint wet longer and

thwarting plans layering as well as a mid-evening stroll or bike-ride

around the South End. I concentrated on cleaning up the apartment

instead. This involved a vigorous scrubbing of the toilet. It also

involved bringing back downstairs things I had previously brought

upstairs. I’m going to make another go of the studio in the basement,

now that I am a little more organized.

Imagine that: me, organized.

My bedtime reading as of late consists of Nobrow by John Seabrook,

issue 122 of Parachute, and Money, Value, Art. It’s a race to see

which book helps me nod off the fastest.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 14, 2006 1:30 AM

Subject: Billionaire philanthropist remembered; Mont-Orford: le premier ministre Jean Charest nie être en conflit d’intérêts

Dear Stephen,

My zany fiancée just called and woke me up to share a little bit of

the fun she is having in Montreál. We couldn’t hear each other but I

could hear Malajube rocking out at the Metropolis. Her very good

friend Stephane and his band Avec pas d’casque opened.

“Place en premier lieu à l’énergique rock garage du duo

guitare-batterie Avec pas d’casque, qui vient enflammer la scène du

Métropolis à la demande expresse des gars de Malajube. Le rock

paradoxalement déjanté et sophistiqué du quintette français AS Dragon

(souvenez vous d’A.S Dragon VS Bertrand Burgalat…) prendra la relève

avec, aux commandes vocales, la déroutante chanteuse Natasha, qui vaut

presque le déplacement à elle seule. Sautée ! Le brillant quatuor

Malajube, LA nouvelle sensation du rock montréalais, vient clôturer ce

décapant programme armé de ses orchestrations gonflées aux sonorités

pop rock punk. Ambiance coup-de-poing, guitares abrasives et claviers

survoltés au menu. Décoiffant”

And damn I’m here in bed. And damn but didn’t Rodney get re-elected

and his Tories another minority in NS. Atlantica is making me blue.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 15, 2006 10:06 AM

Subject: Battle restarts with Parliament Hill rally; Le député Charbonneau se défend de contredire le programme du PQ

Dear Stephen,

What a contrast in citizenship I witnessed yesterday afternoon! I was working at the bar, like I do every Wednesday—well, almost every Wednesday—and a couple patrons informed me that a friend of theirs had just received her Canadian citizenship.. They were all meeting up to celebrate, a group of friends, a real party.

Then another patron came in who is related to the ‘founding fathers’ of Saint John, the United Empire Loyalists. She loves her country—seems scared to leave it, actually, due to the recently-discovered ‘terrorist plot’—but she spoke with such grandiose authority about ‘her’ country that I was left feeling annoyed with her claim to citizenship.

For most people I know who have gone through the immigration process it takes about five years. Five years of paperwork, meetings, studies, examinations, the whole nine yards. It’s not an easy process.

For those of us ‘naturalized’ citizens, we perhaps take it or granted.

I ran into the newly-minted Canadian outside on my way home; she appeared radiant and jubilant and carried small flags.

Maybe the United Empire Loyalist will renounce her citizenship so she can become a Lady. She spoke a lot about Paul McCartney and Elton John, conflating Canadian and British citizenship.

I ate at Saigon Noodle last night and thought more about immigration. Here we have a great Vietnamese restaurant, perhaps not the greatest location in the world but certainly not bad, great food and decent prices, and only two people in the restaurant. Sure, the decor could use some work, but it’s not hideous. The music playing was elevator-style, so I spoke to the manager afterwards about it. He asked what kind of music around here people liked (music with the voices?). I told him to just play what he listened to, whatever he liked (as long as it wasn’t elevator music). He asked, Vietnamese?

I looked around. This is a Vietnamese restaurant, right? Yes. Well then, sure, why not?

Elevator music is like the inoffensive colour beige. It represents the urge to bring culture down to the lowest possible level. It stands for big-box-store homogeneity. It’s about anonymity and placelessness and lack of identity. It drives me absolutely insane.

Speaking of beige and big box stores and NAFTA, Third Space Gallery is going to host the artist Nancy Nisbet and her Exchange Project (http://www.exchangeproject.ca). She’s driving all over Canada, the

USA and Mexico with all her personal belongings that have been tagged with Radio Frequency ID tags and is exchanging everything with visitors to her trailer. I have to find all-day parking for an eighteen wheeler for Monday, June 26.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 15, 2006 10:34 PM

Subject: Feds table street racing bill; Ottawa pourrait devoir déployer plus de soldats en Afghanistan

Dear Stephen,

I’m so much happier now. I can see clearly now, even though the clouds

have NOT gone. No, the happiness of which I speak can only be brought

about by the return of my sweetheart, who flew in from Montréal last

night. Life has returned to normal.

Today was a good example of an almost perfect day; waking up not too

early, not too late, having coffee in bed, spending the day working on

projects, we get together to talk about this thing or that, we make

lunch and eat sitting down, read the paper or magazines, talk about

ideas and life, have sex, again, back to work, upstairs-downstairs, a

mix of gallery event planning, studio painting, translation contracts,

research, reading, then a walk outside. All that is missing is great

summer weather and about fifty thousand people milling about the

uptown.

Still, check out those housing prices. Even here it’s booming, up 12%

over last year. Still near the bottom of the pack nation-wide, and

less than half the national average, but still.

We had a late lunch / early supper at Opera with Elizabeth after

running into her on the street. She’s nearing the end of her training

week as an operator at Aliant. We split a nice bottle of tempranillo.

Now I’m at work again, another slow night and I’m debating closing

early. Travis was in for a long while and we talked about North

American consumerism, America, China, Korea, art, music, cities,

family, a bunch of stuff. He and his sister put up a bunch of the

posters for Michael’s upcoming show, I fooled the children of the

revolution. Should be fun.

I’m really looking forward to the Exchange Project show. I’m waiting

to hear back from the Port Authority about parking.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 17, 2006 6:49 PM

Subject: Avian flu detected on P.E.I.; Les 11 candidats au leadership libéral s’affrontent en débat à Moncton

Dear Stephen,

Sorry I didn’t write last night. It was a late one.

First of all, the sun came out, finally, so we borrowed my Dad’s car and drove to the nursery and bought seeds and sheep manure and soil and peat moss. We have taken a plot at the SJ Community Garden, even

though we also want to use out backyard for planting and barbecuing this summer.

The bar was real quite for the first few hours and when Jess arrived I met up with the gang at Asian Palace as Em, their new chef, was offering a special sushi menu. They had him set up at the bar5, rolling and slicing up a storm. Tasty.

Afterwards we went up, up, up to Jay’s studio and then went up some more; up a ladder through the attic to the roof, and hung out there for a bit. Went back to work and it finally picked up and we had a good 2-hour rush. Had some late tables but I still finished in time to catch a few songs from Mr. Something-something, at Elwood’s. They had the whole place dancing and grooving tho their rhythmic sounds.

We debated going to an after party but it was already quite late so we decided against it. Still past 3 AM before getting to bed.

Today we grabbed a quick breakfast at Reggie’s and then cycled to Frenchy’s to find outfits for tonight’s Horsefield St. Annual Summertime Courtyard Party. It’s a ’70s them tonight, so appropriate outfits are a must. Claudine’s currently adding bell bottoms to a pair of tight-fitting Lee-brand jeans, that combined with a tiny zipper-up top gives her a bit of a Daisy Duke look. I found yellow pants with an elastic and a bizarre top, as well as terrible shoes. I’ve shaved, leaving a small baby mustache. I’ve parted my hair. It all looks terrible.

After Frenchy’s we tackled our dirty plot at the community garden. We picked the most ghetto spot, but only because it was right beside Dave and Erin. Our site was partially covered with an orange tarp and weeds and strange grasses grew everywhere. We weeded and tilled and added the good stuff. Did it all by hand because we couldn’t get the roto-tiller going. Water in the gastank, perhaps. We worked away, quite content to be outdoors in the sun, until I was quite late for work. We had completely lost track of time.

Managed to bike home, have a shower and change before heading the bar, opening just on time.

Now it’s just a countdown until Jess arrived and I’m off to the Courtyard party. About two more hours.

Been to any themed parties lately? Been to any parties lately? Do you barbecue at Sussex Drive? We found a big round charcoal-fired barbecue yesterday at a secondhand shop. Twenty bucks. Practically a steal.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 19, 2006 12:55 AM

Subject: Happy Father’s Day: She’s one. He’s 56; Cannon ne fera pas des pieds et des mains pour aider Québec à respecter Kyoto

Dear Stephen,

Happy father’s day. Did you do anything special?

The courtyard party was a blast. The bar was slow until the time I

left, late, around ten-forty, because a new arrival to the city, a

poet and playwright, discovered the bar and I had a couple glasses of

wine with him. His name is Clyde. Check out his website,

http://www.clydeawray.ca/, you can listen to some of his poetry. I

find he sounds like Al Green.

I missed the band but Mike Hawkins was spinning some silky wax and the

dance floor was grooving. I teamed up with Jamie as some sort of

Laurel and Hardy dance-off duo. We ran back to the bar to get beer,

after running low from Meghan and Ben’s fridge. At the bar we

collected Jess, then grabbed cigarettes from Callahans. At O’Leary’s

and ran into Clyde again. Some sort of celebratory toast involving

tequila ensued. We dragged him back to the party, despite the fact

that he was originally out only to rent a movie and had yet to phone

his wife. We tried to tell him it was the best thing to do but he had

resigned himself to the fact he was already in trouble. Despite the

many cigarettes floating around I smoked little, and no pot, though I

could smell it almost everywhere. One goal of the night was to

maintain just a little bit of control. Which I did, even after the

police came and left and the music died down. A few of us went over to

Debbie’s place across the street to hear stories of the seventies from

Kim and Diane. Claudine and I walked home.

Today Judith stopped by and we all drove out to Hell’s Creation to get

some groceries and herbs. We stopped at home Despot and the place

drove us all batty and we left without buying anything. Stopped at

Dairy Queen and we all ordered burgers and strange ice cream

concoctions. Mine was called Chocolate Corruption. I couldn’t finish

it and the amount I did eat almost made me vomit it was so rich.

Jude dropped us off at our garden on the return to town and we seeded

for a couple hours, shaping the garden into various plots for

pumpkins, squash, cucumbers, beans, radishes, carrots, lettuce and bok

choy. Walked home and washed our muddy feet.

Dad collected us and we went out to my folks’ for supper. Salmon on

the barbecue. We all played on our laptops and other technological

gizmos. Once we figured out how to get the DVD player working again we

Watched Les triplettes de Belleville.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0286244/ I think we’re going to screen it

in the gallery some night to help raise some money for their trip. Can

you think of other fun cycling-related films we could screen? I was

thinking maybe Quicksilver. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091814/

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 21, 2006 12:19 AM

Subject: Khadr’s lawyers face extradition; Jean Charest compare la hausse de la cote du Québec à la coupe Stanley

Dear Stephen,

Sorry I didn’t write yesterday, everything is getting faster and more compressed with more complications. We drove in town later Monday morning with my mom, and had a disorganized day trying to get back in the routine of working from home. I spent the first part of the day trying to get us back online at home; our router was on the blitz. I wa son the phone for hourse with various technicians from who-knows where. The apartment is a bit of a mess and the weather was the shits again. Fog and cold, an authentic greeting for the first cruise ship of the season.

You can always tell when they are here: sales of dulse triple.

So there is so much going on I don’t know where to begin: Boys’ night out, stag parties, hockey, Jessie, the National Portrait Gallery, computer glitches, the CBC Interview, yoga, the gallery, Heather Button and more. It’s all a bit overwhelming.

Yesterday I took my first ever yoga class with Jay at the Yoga Outlet. It was fun, a decent workout (I sweated), and relaxing. It helps my back.

So after yoga I went home, had a shower, did some more email and went back to the Yoga Outlet with the projector from the gallery. Jay has digital cable and we can hook that sucker right up to the projector. It was for the Game 7 Stanley Cup final between Edmonton and Carolina. It was only after smoking a joint that I fully realized the complexity of Coach’s Corner with Don Cherry. The game was exciting, with lots of ups and downs and some solid hockey, few penalties, but June is way too late for hockey. One had the sense that the players were skating through melting slush at times, it was so sluggish. A fun guy’s night out though. Chips and beer.

I tossed and turned most the night, my mind just reeling with the idea of Google Earth and satellites everywhere watching everything.

Then today I was trying all day to catch up on computer work and it was always slipping away. Gallery stuff to do, letters to write, I couldn’t find my groove. Mark needed me for a revision of some interview material for the CBC piece. I met him at the building but managed to lock my keys in the gallery. Judy lent me hers which are now lost. The interview went fine; I think at some point I joked about writing to the PM until I’m 75. Travis arrived and we did some work in the gallery even though I had forgotten to bring my tools, especially my screwdriver, and I’ll probably forget again tomorrow and there will still be a room full of televisions bolted to the floor while Michael tries to install. Good grief!

I did receive a positive email: the National Portrait Gallery would like some of my PM portraits and an edition of books. This means I really need to get a few portraits cranked out of you. I’m thinking the “Mr. Harper goes to Ottawa” would make a nice one. It’s of you walking the tarmac with your family and dozens of assistants and security in tow, plane in the background. Either that or one of the “three amigo” pieces, with you and George and Vincent. We shall see.

Travis drove me out to the valley. We stopped at the garden on the way so I could water the beds. Even though we have had two straight days of cloud and/or fog, there has been no rain, so we were worried the beds would be too dry. Travis dropped me off at my parents’ house before heading out to Mark’s stag.

There is an absence here. Jessie is gone; she was put down earlier this morning. It was and has been hard on my folks; Jessie was a faithful companion for almost fifteen years. She was truly a fun and loving dog. But she was growing a nasty tumor and had slowed down considerably in the last number of months. With the cross-Canada cycling trip coming up this was a tough decision but probably the best one. You can read more on their blog, http://www.jillandbobcyclecanada.blogspot.com

Mom dropped me off at Craig’s house on her way out to an evening ride. Mark’s “stag” party was basically a regularly-scheduled book-club meeting (tonight they were discussing “Tideland”) with a few other invitees. Some of us barbecued, we all drank various beers, we shot some basketball hoops outdoors and shot some pool indoors while watching NBA finals. Another fun guys’ night out.

Now I’m back at my parents’ listening to Yaga wander around the house (he sports a bell), and planning a few more emails before heading to bed. Heather Button has been calling our house, angered because I haven’t been emailing her from the gallery. I have nothing against the Toronto art scene, but I can’t stand hearing about it anymore from her. It’s not productive.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 23, 2006 2:00 AM

Subject: Alberta gambling study a world first; Le Bloc met en place des mesures pour reconquérir la région de la capital

Dear Stephen,

“Harper makes long-anticipated apology for Chinese head tax”. Good for you, this has been a long time coming. I’m assuming an apology and compensation to Natives for completely destroying their way of life and stealing their land from them is in the works, right? Right?

I guess that apology could come from France and England, since they started it.

Whatever, I’m way off topic before I even begin!

Happy Summer Solstice. We rang it in on Elwood’s new patio, which they managed to complete in time for a big three-band show. I arrived after work, which was a bit busier than usual for a Wednesday, and had a few beers with Claudine and Tim. Somehow we managed to be out until 3 AM. I tossed and turned and had weird dreams all night. Needless to say it was tricky getting up this morning.

Had a board meeting at noon that was quick and efficient, then went back, for the third time, to look at the crackhouse on Garden Street, this time with the bank’s agent. He was able to get us into the ground floor apartment, even though the “tenant” was still “sick” and “sleeping” in the “bedroom”. A gaggle of pimps and prostitutes and drug dealers wandered in and out as we checked out the furnace and oil tank in the back. A regular party. They complained that nothing was being done about the mice, despite having already received many eviction notices and having not paid rent in over seven months. No wonder CMHC doesn’t want to be in the landlord racket.

Wally bailed on me, despite the fact that I booked this meeting around his schedule. We might just make a low-ball offer on the place, conditional on some final estimates and getting in to see the attic, which suffered a small fire during a crack cookout and has been blocked up ever since.

Despite being a crackhouse, we feel the place has potential.

Spent the rest of the day trying to complete errands and failing at every turn. Ended up worked more than I expected due to some communication breakdowns between Peter, Jess and I. It all worked out. I had supper with Claudine and Travis at Lemongrass, then after work Travis and I checked out the sparsely-attended Blue Quarter show at Nep-Tunes. Travis has been helping like gangbusters up in the gallery, from building funky shelves to helping Michael paint his ridiculous slogans on the wall. Shannon has finished her “cartoon meat”—drumsticks in the upstairs bathroom, porkchops downstairs—and they look great. There is still lots to do but I think we can get it done in time for the opening.

I have an interview live and in the studio with CBC tomorrow morning at the insane hour of 6:50. They are interested in the PM project, specifically the paintings. I think they are also using it to promote the Maritime Magazine program which airs this Sunday, also at a ridiculous hour, though 8:30 is not so bad.

I MUST go to bed now, I am exhausted and my feet ache.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 24, 2006 12:47 PM

Subject: Bikers, police gather in Windsor; Stephen Harper refuse de reconnaître l’existence de la nation québécoise

Dear Stephen,

I have good news and bad news and good news and bad news and a bunch

of in-between news and more good news and more bad news.

The good news is that Michael’s opening went off without a hitch, we

were totally ready hours before 6pm, with enough time to catch the

Korea/Switzerland match.

The bad news was that Korea lost, which made Travis sad.

The good news is that Heather Button was not too disruptive and kept

Toronto talk to a minimum and was actually quite pleasant. The good

news is that my parents and friends Donnie and Joyce came and

Michael’s whole family came, even some cousins.

The bad news is that not a whole lot of other folks came, but in other

bad news, it was also raining most of the day.

The good news was that I wasn’t working last night, enjoyed a glass of

wine and Claudine and I rented a movie, which we fell asleep to.

The bad news was that I had to go to Hell’s Creation this morning to

buy pants to wear to Mark and Janet’s wedding.

The good news is that I actually found pants that fit me from le Chateau.

The bad news is that they needed to be hemmed. The good news is that

Claudine can hem.

The good news is that today is St. Jean Baptiste, the National Holiday

of Québec and, ironically enough, the founding date of Saint John, NB,

by Samuel de Champlain in 1604. The bad news is it makes Claudine sad

to be far away from her friends and family and culture.

The in-between news is it appears you have put your foot in your mouth

when it comes to recognizing Québec as a nation, which is sure to pull

even french federalists away from the conservatives, and further

inflame sovereigntists and separatists.

The good news is the wine spots on the shirt I am wearing today mostly came out. The good news is we have a ride to the wedding with Tim Phinder. The bad news is it is raining. The good news is, we don’t need to water our garden.

The bad news is it appears that the Kazemi case will close with no justice. No justice, no peace.

So don’t forget to listen to the Maritime Magazine program that features Mark’s interview with yours truly. The bad news is that is airs at 8:30 in the morning.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 26, 2006 11:41 AM

Subject: Report suggests biker gangs will rebound; Une politique de défense doit précéder l’achat d’équipement, selon le Bloc

Dear Stephen,

We survived the weekend. It included a wedding almost overrun by

babies, a reception threatened by rain, a lost coin toss to determine

who was to work the bar in the evening, a switcheroo at the bar, a

house party with barbecues and DJs, an extreme bout of paranoia, a

sweaty dance club, a late night visit to a poet’s house, an

early-morning CBC program, a day at a lake with sunshine, beer and

another barbecue and a movie full of iambic pentameter.

I’d go into more detail but I don’t have the time at the moment and

you probably don’t care anyhow. Not like that has stopped me before.

I’m waiting for a call from Nancy Nisbet, the artist from BC who is

driving a transport truck around North America in an effort to raise

awareness of the growing and insidious practice of RFID tagging. She

has all her worldly possessions in the truck that she is freely

exchanging with anyone who has an item to trade. The rain has stopped

and Richard from the SJPK moved our location back to beside the

Barbour’s General Store, right at the bottom of King Street, on Water

Street. A good location. Her exchange event starts at 1pm and goes

until 3 or so. You can check out more of her project at

http://www.exchangeproject.ca. Looks like you missed her when she was stopped

in Ottawa. Too bad.

-chris

Chris Lloyd Projects

http://www.dearpm.blogspot.com

A Division of ADD Painters:

“we’re here to swerve”

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca, odab1@parl.gc.ca

Date: Jun 28, 2006 5:04 PM

Subject: SAVE THE PORTRAIT GALLERY OF CANADA!

Dear Stephen,

It’s ironic that just as The Portrait Gallery of Canada decides to

aquire some of my work—which will include a portrait of you—I hear

that YOUR government is trying to scuttle the project. The Portait

Gallery has been in the works for close to a decade. It has already

collected over 1,000,000 drawings, paintings and photographs.

Initiated by public choice, and under the wing of the National

Archives of Canada, the Portrait Gallery plans to open in the building

formerly occupied by the American Embassy. The location is brilliant!

It is situated on Wellington Street, directly across the street from

the Parliament Buildings. Built in 1932 in Neo-Beaux-Arts style, the

scale of the rooms is ideally suited to portraiture. The building has

been gutted, and the architect’s plans have been drawn and approved. A

large addition has been planned.

Now, as part of an effort to trim $2 billion dollars off its overall

expenditures, the Conservative government has placed the Portrait

Gallery under review. Construction has been halted, and there is an

agenda in place that wishes to have the project abandoned, or at the

very best moved to some less visible location in order ostensibly to

“save money”.

You tool! Quit picking on and cutting culturall programs and save your

precious dough elsewhere. I’m sure you can find the cash somewhere,

maybe from oil subsidies or armaments. Tell Bev Oda for me that I

think she has no backbone. And you have bad hair.

-chris

From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 28, 2006 10:56 PM

Subject: Canadian commander dismisses report criticizing mission in Afghanistan

Dear Stephen,

I think you should really consider this story and report as it

pertains to the Canadian mission in Afghanistan. I didn’t realize that

we were still calling the mission “OOperation Enduring Freedom”, which

is the cheesiest title ever for a military mission. On that basis

alone I vote we pull out. The following story is from Canwest:

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan – The commander of Canadian combat troops in

Afghanistan reacted angrily to a scathing report published today by a

European think-tank that says Canada’s military mission in South Asia

is an impossible task that is doomed to failure.

The report released in London by the Senlis Council, a drug-policy

research organization, was crammed with alarming tabloid-style

statements such as “Following U.S. policies is turning Kandahar into a

suicide mission for Canada.”

The 91-page report states “Canadian troops and Afghan civilians are

paying with their lives for Canada’s adherence to the U.S.

government’s failing military and counter-narcotics policies in

Kandahar” which the council claims has triggered a new war with the

Taliban.

“It is completely off, this report, from what I’ve read,” said

Lt.-Col. Ian Hope, commander of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light

Infantry battle group. “It tries to place the blame for the insurgency

on those who are here trying to help the Afghans instead of

insurgents.

“The blame is not on those who are trying to help the Afghan

government. It’s on the Taliban and those who are supporting the

Taliban.”

The Senlis Council, that has in the past suggested licensing

Afghanistan’s opium production to produce morphine and codeine,

recommends more development money and engagement with the local

community to differentiate the 2,300 Canadian forces from their U.S.

counterparts.

“Canadian troops are more or less following U.S. policies in

Kandahar,” executive director Emmanuel Reinert said. “It is turning

the mission into some kind of suicide mission,” he said.

The Senlis Council interviewed Afghan farmers, mullahs and others to

produce the report, titled Canada in Kandahar: No Peace to Keep.

Reinert said the Americans’ Operation Enduring Freedom “has failed to

bring security into the region.”

“It is now blatant, after almost five years of presence over there

(that) it is absolutely necessary for Canadian troops to break away

from this legacy,” he said. “It appears that they have not been able

to do so in the past 10 months.”

The Canadian forces took over the provincial reconstruction team in

Kandahar last August and are working under Operation Enduring Freedom.

Reinert said Kandahar province faces crises due to poverty, the opium

trade and lack of security.

“Development money has to come first” to alleviate the poverty

problems, he said.

The Senlis Council also recommends avoiding civilian deaths and

stopping the eradication of the poppy crop.

“It’s very important to send a clear signal to the local population

that there was a change of management,” Reinert said.

“To clearly manifest that this is now a totally different approach so

as to avoid attacks on the livelihood of the farmers, to avoid the

deaths of civilians, and to avoid being seen as invaders” would signal

a more positive contribution in Afghanistan, he said.

(c) CanWest News Service 2006From: chris lloyd <dearpm@gmail.com> Mailed-By: gmail.com

To: pm@pm.gc.ca

Date: Jun 29, 2006 12:46 AM

Subject: Canadian commander dismisses report; Déséquilibre: sans chiffrer ses demandes, Audet déplore l’attitude d’Ottawa

Dear Stephen,

What a couple busy days! I can’t even remember what happened on

Monday, but I was busy all day, and in the evening I helped Claudine

and Sam and Jessica Rhaye paint their new office. Yes, Claudine is

renting space with them and Mark at the John Law building, which was a

former Revenue Canada building. It is a nice space, right across the

hall from the Cobalt Gallery and with nice neighbours like Lise and

Suzanne. So we painted until late, then Sam drove us to Judith’s so we

could borrow the Element to pick Rebecca up from the airport.

Yes, Rebecca Rose Roberts is in town for a visit before she moves from

Toronto to NYC to begin her new job as a junior editor in the

publishing department of the MOMA. Swanky! It is certainly good news

for her. She finally finished her thesis not too long ago, also good

news.

So yesterday RRR and I hung out and did St. John sight-seeing and

gallery-going, I paid off my new Peter Salmon painting (we decided to

go with the shopping cart over the Home Despot parking lot), and we

had coffee and talked art and stuff. We came home for supper and

attempted salmon on our new barbecue but the coals took forever to

heat up properly. I didn’t allow enough time. After supper we were off

to Patio-Oh!—the launch of Opera Bistro’s new patio. Lots of wine and

snacks. Talked to Paul Zed about the CBC interview and his

interpretation of the roses on the Chrétien’s lapels in the painting

that Jamie had given him. He doesn’t believe that they were in the

original photograph. I’m still trying to convince Jamie to go to yoga

with me on Mondays. He’s trying to get Judith to organize a big labour

day party at his place.

We went to Elwoods and then Churchills after Patio-Oh! and were out

far too late and drank far too much for a Tuesday evening. As a result

I’m paying the price today. I was up early to get Judith’s Element to

drive out to my folks and test the packing of bags and bike boxes.

Everything fits but it will be a tight ride. Put a second coat of

orange on the walls at Claudine’s office and then it was time to open

the gallery and the bar. Jess relieved me for supper and we met my

folks and we ate at Sebastians. Always pricey but always so tasty.

Then it was back to work. Sam had organized a ‘creative professionals’

networking meeting at the bar, which was busier than usual for a

Wednesday night. Decent tips; enough for gas money.

We’re up at a ridiculous hour tomorrow to get my folks and drive them

and Rebecca to the airport in Moncton.

-chris