Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
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Quantal Strife looks great at Open Space (thanks to the amazing staff and volunteers)! We had a good opening and lots of nice interesting people came. I am staying on here to do a residency, so I'm meeting with tons of artists in Victoria, and will be mounting a small, packed, ad-hoc exhibition out of those meetings (opening Feb. 8th, also at Open Space). I'm seeing great work and I'm having a ball, despite being nearly as sick as L.M. I've experienced two little earthquakes so far, both while I was sitting in my B&B on the four poster bed. Kinda exorcist-ish, only for some reason not scary at all.
Many thanks to Candy Minx for making me aware of this essay by Parag Khanna, Waving Goodbye to Hegemony from the New York Times.
"Saudi Arabia, for quite some years to come still the planet’s leading oil producer, is a second-world prize on par with Russia and equally up for grabs. For the past several decades, America’s share of the foreign direct investment into the kingdom decisively shaped the country’s foreign policy, but today the monarchy is far wiser, luring Europe and Asia to bring their investment shares toward a third each. Saudi Arabia has engaged Europe in an evolving Persian Gulf free-trade area, while it has invested close to $1 billion in Chinese oil refineries. Make no mistake: America was never all powerful only because of its military dominance; strategic leverage must have an economic basis. A major common denominator among key second-world countries is the need for each of the Big Three to put its money where its mouth is.
For all its historical antagonism with Saudi Arabia, Iran is playing the same swing-state game. Its diplomacy has not only managed to create discord among the U.S. and E.U. on sanctions; it has also courted China, nurturing a relationship that goes back to the Silk Road. Today Iran represents the final square in China’s hopscotch maneuvering to reach the Persian Gulf overland without relying on the narrow Straits of Malacca. Already China has signed a multibillion-dollar contract for natural gas from Iran’s immense North Pars field, another one for construction of oil terminals on the Caspian Sea and yet another to extend the Tehran metro — and it has boosted shipment of ballistic-missile technology and air-defense radars to Iran. Several years of negotiation culminated in December with Sinopec sealing a deal to develop the Yadavaran oil field, with more investments from China (and others) sure to follow. The longer International Atomic Energy Agency negotiations drag on, the more likely it becomes that Iran will indeed be able to stay afloat without Western investment because of backing from China and from its second-world friends — without giving any ground to the West."