Let's go algae

Not my photo but it inspires me

Obviously there's a political context for North Americans, but I really like the idea of celebrating microorganisms.

Currently I'm back into milk kefir, for example, and previously I've been keen to celebrate the local cryptogamic crust.

Dreams are wild

Been a while since I wrote about a dream and my partner thought this one was significant

I was at some sort of a corroboree, where First Nations men were bringing food from a shipwreck in a river nestled in a lush, tree-filled valley and that included hot pizza. 
 
When we sat down to eat in a big venue, it was clear that I was attending with people I knew from work and saw Ray from the gallery while I was eating prawns. 
 
An older man sat down, seemed to be my manager and he said he was sorry about the death of my father and how they didn't know what killed him. 
 
I still had a mouth full of food and he said he'd come back later to talk about something important.
 
Later I realised this manager figure looked a lot like my paternal grandfather.

Jo saw this as a healing dream, where I was supported by male ancestors in a process that was still occurring through the nourishing quality of eating. 
 
She asked me to reflect on the role of prawns and, since they were being served by Ray, and I assume it is a symbol for my creative practices. 
 
I have been thinking lately on how few men engage with the arts and how my guitar-building project could be a way to interest more of a male audience. 
 
The location of the river with the shipwreck seemed to be the wilder landscape in a section of the dream from the night before, which was a journey between Sydney and Bega.

Interesting to me is that my grandfather's coast house, where I spent time through my childhood, is in that stretch of the landscape.

Potato

Half a potato is a serve of vegetables

It surprised me when I learned just how nutritious the humble spud can be, so I began eating them more often.

Easy to cook in a microwave but obviously sublime when roasted. 

Cheap too, only $6 for 2.5kg at my local supermarket.

 

ChatGPT knows me

Recently I asked the large language model about myself

I found a fair bit about Jason Richardson — he appears to be a multidisciplinary regional artist from Leeton, NSW, working across sound art, electronic music, photography, writing, curation, and community arts projects.

A few key things about him:

* He’s known musically under the alias **Bassling**, creating experimental/electronic music and sound art heavily influenced by field recordings and regional landscapes. ([RealTime Australia][1])
* His work often focuses on the Riverina environment, especially sound, memory, local history, and community identity. ([RealTime Australia][2])
* He has collaborated with regional arts organisations including Western Riverina Arts, The CAD Factory, and Leeton Art Society Inc. ([Leeton Art Society Inc][3])
* He’s also worked as a curator and arts facilitator in the Riverina region. ([Leeton Art Society Inc][3])

Some notable projects and themes:

### Playground sound recordings

One of his better-known projects involved recording the sounds of playground equipment around Leeton using contact microphones, then transforming those recordings into ambient/electronic compositions and audiovisual installations. ([RealTime Australia][1])

### Environmental and wetlands work

He created community/environmental art around Fivebough Wetlands to raise awareness of the site’s ecological importance, including installations featuring local and migratory birds. ([NSW Landcare Gateway][4])

### Haiku, poetry and sound

He’s also active as a poet and collaborated internationally with sound-art and haiku communities through The Haiku Foundation and Naviar Records. ([The Haiku Foundation][5])

### Regional arts advocacy

Several profiles describe him as someone deeply engaged with regional Australian creative culture — especially how geography and local environments shape artistic practice. ([RealTime Australia][1])

One profile from [RealTime Australia](https://www.realtime.org.au/regional-profile-jason-richardson/?utm_source=chatgpt.com) describes how he became interested in transforming everyday regional sounds into music after exposure to experimental sound artists in Wagga Wagga and the Riverina.

You can also browse some official or arts-related pages here:

* [Leeton Art Society – About / Our Riverina project](https://lasi.com.au/about/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
* [Regional Profile: Jason Richardson (RealTime Australia)](https://www.realtime.org.au/regional-profile-jason-richardson/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
* [Cities and Memory artist spotlight](https://citiesandmemory.com/2025/06/artist-spotlight-jason-richardson/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
* [Orana Arts creatives profile](https://www.oranaarts.com/creatives?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

If you want, I can also dig deeper into:

* his music releases and where to hear them,
* exhibitions/projects timeline,
* whether he still performs under Bassling,
* interviews or videos,
* or connections with the Riverina experimental arts scene.

[1]: https://www.realtime.org.au/regional-profile-jason-richardson/?utm_source=chatgpt.com "Regional Profile: Jason Richardson | RealTime — Australia"
[2]: https://www.realtime.org.au/a-common-magic/?utm_source=chatgpt.com "A common magic | RealTime — Australia"
[3]: https://lasi.com.au/about/?utm_source=chatgpt.com "About - Leeton Art Society Inc"
[4]: https://landcare.nsw.gov.au/groups/murrumbidgee-landcare-inc/birds-of-a-feather-flock-together?utm_source=chatgpt.com "Birds of a feather flock together — NSW Landcare Gateway"
[5]: https://thehaikufoundation.org/haiku-music-challenge-18/?utm_source=chatgpt.com "Haiku Music Challenge 18 - The Haiku Foundation" 

 

Alda on overcoming writer's block

Recently I finished reading Alan Alda's autobiography Never Have Your Dog Stuffed

It had been on my brother's bookshelf and, since he's lightening his possessions before moving house, I offered to take it away.

Alda is a comedian, so I figured it would be an entertaining read, but I also learned he's a scriptwriter and found his advice on dealing with writer's block to be interesting enough to want to share it here: 

Norman Lear told me once about a way of working that had saved him from severe writer's block... 

I dictated the scenes into a tape recorder and disciplined myself never to go back to change or even listen to what I had said earlier. I was working from an outline; so it became a kind of controlled improvisation, but it poured out. 

[...]

Later, reading the transcript of what I had come up with. things that I couldn't even remember saying. I reworked the script many times before we shot it, but most of that draft... wound up in the picture. 

Socket to me


 

PHONies

One of the weirdest things is how many commentators make the observation that Pauline is Australia's version of Donald, yet fall into the same dismissive position when criticising her 

It's like they somehow expect an increasingly illiterate group of people to read their thoughts in media that most of the population have abandoned. 

(Yes, it's kinda ironic that I'm writing this thought here.) 

I'm beginning to think the only people who consume the Fourth Estate are working in the major political parties, because I doubt there is a readership outside of those vested interests that cares. 


 

Fairy guitar

We had fairy wrens in our garden earlier this year while the zucchini plants were growing

So, of course, I decided to record the scene on a guitar. 

Keep calm and carry on driving