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Tomorrow, a documentary about Sami artist Solveig Arneng Johnson, will be shown in Duluth:

Solveig: The Life and Artwork of Solveig Arneng Johnson

4 p.m. Feb. 11

Zinema 2

222 East Superior St.

Duluth, MN

A bio on her – Johnson’s Works as Fresh as Arctic Ice

From the Duluth News Tribune:

Solveig Arneng Johnson was considered an up-and-comer in Norway’s art scene, though the name probably isn’t recognizable to today’s art aficionados.

She married Rudolph Johnson and came to the United States in 1949 and, though she continued to paint and take classes, she gladly made art a secondary priority — family first.

The Duluth artist is the subject of “Solveig: The Life and Artwork of Solveig Arneng Johnson,” a documentary directed and produced by Kiersten Dunbar Chace that will have special preview screening at

4 p.m. Feb. 11 at Zinema 2.

“I came to Duluth and soon realized that a career in art was not possible in Duluth at that time,” Solveig Johnson said. “I decided to paint not for fame and fortune, but for my family and for myself.”

The 39-minute film is Johnson’s life story told in her own voice and through her oil paintings: It tells of her growing up in Kirkenes, Norway, during World War II, gaining recognition for her artwork at a prestigious art school in Oslo, meeting the love of her life and moving with him to Minnesota, the life they built together and her identity as a Sami, the indigenous people of Europe.

Johnson’s art serves as a photo album in the film. There are portraits: her son, Kai, with his classic baby face and rosy cheeks; her father and the red mustache he twisted; her husband fresh from the garden caught in a moment where she stopped him and asked him to pose, and her daughter, pregnant, wearing a sundress and flip-flops.

There also are captured moments: a fox she and her husband encountered on a walk in the woods or the view from an airplane window, different shades of green and brown, a reminder of the time she was flying over Minnesota with her mother and said, “This is my country.”

There are more-abstract pieces: She painted a large-scale piece using Sami colors and images that includes two stick figures as a 25th anniversary gift to her husband.

Chace met Johnson through connections made while working on the documentary, “I’m Not Black, I’m Coloured: Identity Crises at the Cape of Good Hope.” Chace had spent some time in the Sami region of Norway and was told there was a large population of Sami people living in Duluth.

“There was just something about her spirit that I loved,” Chace said of Johnson, a Sami elder. “This one I was led to spiritually; not in a religious way, I just felt a connection.”

Chace intended to make a 15- to 20-minute biography, but when she found out about the artwork the project grew.

“I tried to let the art speak for itself,” Chace said. “I wanted her spirit to show and her artwork to lead the film. The challenge is to take someone no one knows about and make a beautiful story. It’s brought me a lot of joy.”

Chace will show the work at festivals and said she has gotten interest from cultural centers around the country.

Some of Johnson’s work hangs in her home near Chester Creek, and some has been given to friends and family. There are two pieces in the Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum in Decorah, Iowa. She’s had pieces shown at the Duluth Art Institute and the Tweed Museum of Art at the University of Minnesota Duluth.

Johnson, who has macular degeneration, is legally blind and stopped painting about a decade ago.

“The colors aren’t the same,” Johnson said. “It’s discouraging to paint. As my daughter says, ‘I’m on vacation.’ ”

Send in the clowns

February 4th, 2012

clown-shaped-electrical-towers

Seems that they’re making an effort in Hungary to design industrial edifices more user-friendly…  from the Telegraph.  Couldn’t they just use a big eagle nest as a hat?

Busy day for Goodhue Wind Truth

February 2nd, 2012

Yesterday was a busy day for Goodhue Wind Truth.

First was a Motion to the Appellate Court:

Goodhue Wind Truth – Motion for Intervention/Request for Participation as Amicus Curiae

Next was our Petition for Rulemaking, filed yesterday as a part of our Power Plant Siting Act Annual Hearing Comments, and formally filed with Dr. Haar at the Public Utilities Commission.

Petition for Rulemaking

The PUC is in charge of the Wind siting rules, well, the EQB was directed by the legislature in 1995 to promulgate rules, and finally in January, 2008, the Commission finalized the siting rules for wind projects under 25 MW (and above 5 MW):

PUC Order – Siting of Wind Projects under 25 MW

And for projects 25 MW and above, they haven’t done anything, that was 17 years ago, so here we are… do we have to get a Writ of Mandamus?

WAKE UP PUC!  Time to do some wind rules!

216F.05 RULES.

The commission shall adopt rules governing the consideration of an application for a site permit for an LWECS that address the following:

(1) criteria that the commission shall use to designate LWECS sites, which must include the impact of LWECS on humans and the environment;

(2) procedures that the commission will follow in acting on an application for an LWECS;

(3) procedures for notification to the public of the application and for the conduct of a public information meeting and a public hearing on the proposed LWECS;

(4) requirements for environmental review of the LWECS;

(5) conditions in the site permit for turbine type and designs; site layout and construction; and operation and maintenance of the LWECS, including the requirement to restore, to the extent possible, the area affected by construction of the LWECS to the natural conditions that existed immediately before construction of the LWECS;

(6) revocation or suspension of a site permit when violations of the permit or other requirements occur; and

(7) payment of fees for the necessary and reasonable costs of the commission in acting on a permit application and carrying out the requirements of this chapter.

eagledoubletrouble

T. Boone Pickens’ AWA Goodhue AVIAN AND BAT PROTECTION PLAN was to be on the Public Utilities Commission agenda on Thursday.  That’s too soon, they just dumped hundreds of pages of info on us, and on the reviewing agencies, week before last:

AWA Goodhue Fall Migration Study

Revised AWA Goodhue Avian and Bat Protection Plan

And here’s the primary documents that caused the ruckus — the ABPP plan from hell and agency comments on it:

AVIAN AND BAT PROTECTION PLAN

USFWS Comments on AWA Goodhue’s Avian and Bat Protection Plan

DNR Comments on AWA Goodhue Avian & Bat Protection Plan

Given the specificity and many pages of comments, it’d take a bit more than a week to analyze the Comments (WHICH WERE WITHHELD BY COMMERCE FOR A WEEK AND NOT FILED UNTIL JANUARY 19!) and determine whether AWA Goodhue had properly addressed them.

I was floored by their last minute filings, and filed a Motion with the PUC to take it off the agenda:

Goodhue Wind Truth Motion for Extension

And not too long after, day or two, the PUC did indeed pull it off the agenda and didn’t reschedule:

PUC Notice of Withdrawal of Agenda Item

And now for the bad news today… the Appellate Court has tossed out the Goodhue Wind Truth appeal on a jurisdictional issue, that the Petition for Writ wasn’t served by personal service or Certified Mail.  This sucks in a big way…

Order to Dismiss Goodhue Wind Truth Appeal of AWA Goodhue Certificate of Need and Site Permit

It’s based on a Supreme Court decision in 2009, when the rules changed, or rather, interpretation of the rules, making service as specified under the Administrative Procedure Act a jurisdictional issue — if a Petition for Writ is not served personally or by Certified Mail, the Appellate Court does not have jurisdiction to hear the case.

In the Matter of the Risk Level Determination of J.M.T.

D-I-S-M-I-S-S-E-D.

solarstormwashingtonpost

Solar Flare – Washington Post/AP