Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Stricken, Scrabble und Sonnenschein

As a few people have pointed out, I haven't written an update since January. I'm just a bit crap really, but with 16000 words of essay to write before April this is kind of justifiable procrastination. My most recent tales of Berlin generally sound like this: library, library, library, cook food, talk tangentially about anything and everything, sleep then library library...

So my life otherwise. The sun has appeared (!). Temperatures are now holding a steady 10 grad, and this city's monotone grey has turned a flawless blue. March has been particularly beautiful. One afternoon a few weeks ago, in the -6° but brilliant sunshine, I met a friend in the park and decided winter was finished. Equipped with hot water bottles under jumpers, blankets to get lost in, tea and chocolate to survive a winter, we set out the board and played scrabble (auf Deutsch, natürlich). You could almost kid yourself it was summer. It was quite, quite perfect.

Other significant news is that of the S(trick)-Bahn. Armed with crochet needles, a woolly bearded team of 15 gathered in a Monday morning's half light to stitch up the train. A complete carriage, every pole, stitched with its own cosy. A multi coloured, squishy explosion of wool.

It was ridiculously good fun. Mira, Mara and I had knitted 41 metres of long thin scarves since November (you have probably seen me somewhere, everywhere, knitting obsessively) in all sorts of colours and patterns. Why? Why not. We had all sorts of vaguely pretentious reasons - feminising guerrilla art, turning street art into slow art, making some sort of statement or another. But I think the most important reason is to make commuters smile in the morning and look a little differently at what's around them. Because it is ridiculous really. It's decadent, that we live in world that allows us to spend months knitting for a project that lasts half a day. But that's kind of what makes it brilliant, it's no more insane than all the absurdity in this world, so we might as well laugh at it.

It lasted till around 4pm. But afterwards we would find photos of our project posted by strangers on the internet, overheard other commuters talking about it on the train. A student journalist talked to the BVG official who took it down. Was it art? He asked. No of course not, it was vandalism, it was dangerous. Woolly pole cosys were dangerous. I'm not sure he really got it.

Right. That's part one of my update. I'll put some more stuff up in a tic.

Some Guerrilla knitting links, for Stitchers and Bitchers in:

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