Jon and Marissa are living in Mzuzu, Malawi (where?). Jon is a Fulbright scholar working to harness the internet as an academic and economic resource for the Mzuzu University and the surrounding community. Marissa is an artist soaking in the inspiration of Malawi. She works with local artists and dedicates herself to volunteer work.

House at Chiweta

House at Chiweta

Pastel on paper. House at Chiweta looking over Lake Malawi.


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Mayoka Village Hut

Mayoka Village Hut

Watercolor and Pen. Mud hut at Mayoka Village Beach Lodge at Nkhata Bay.


Sketchbook

Sketchbook

Malawi mama's and babies.


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Elephant's Ear Plant

Elephant's Ear Plant

I love the way these plants look. The leaves are so big; "Natural Umbrella" a Malawian friend told me. They are also the leaf of the Coco Yam which, like it's name, looks just like a coconut.


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Sketchbook

Sketchbook

watercolor and pen. House at Chiweta looking over Lake Malawi, and a tree in our yard.


Hugo Chavez visits Africa

A small windup radio, tuned to the BBC Africa, on most Malawi evenings, brings Marissa and I the days news from around the world. Before moving to Africa I worried about loosing touch with Latin America and my travels there. Little did I know that the BBC Africa would provide us better coverage of Latin American news and events that I could have ever hoped for. (Yes, BBC Africa has far better coverage of Latin American news than any of the mainstream English news outlets in America – I regularly receive updates on all of Latin America... more than just the border crazies).

Last week the BBC Africa discussed Hugo Chavez, the current President of Venezuela, and his recent visit to Africa.


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Ubuntu Linux 6.06 has landed in Northern Malawi

Just wanted to let my other Linux loving friends in Malawi know that we have successfully downloaded a copy of the newest version of Ubuntu Linux here at the University. We are installing it in a few of the computer labs.

We are happy to make copies of the disk for anyone in Northern Malawi who, for bandwidth reasons, might not be able to download this new version (700MB). Please bring (or send) us a blank CDR to Mzuzu University. If you want to send 150MK and have me buy a blank CDR that is ok too (arrange by email first).

Use the


Offline web browsing

Here is a new version of a simple script I have written to create local copies of websites suitable for browsing offline. We have been using the program successfully at the university to schedule downloads of websites during off peak hours of internet usage for reading the following day.

The program uses the *nix wget utility to do its magic. My code is simply a wrapper around wget which sets the proper command line arguments for wget to create a mirror website. The script uses conservative settings by default for fetching sites in order to be respectful to website owners and other users of the network. Once a site is downloaded the program automatically zips the file in a tar gz for you. You will need python and wget installed in order to run.


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Front Pew Mama

Front Pew Mama

I first sketched this woman at church a few sundays ago. In this small painting she is brought to life using home brewed egg tempera paint pigmented with red ochre clay, charcoal, and papaya leaves. All of the natural pigments were collected and prepared by myself and Mama Mtetwa.


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Home Brew Tempera Paint

Last weekend, I turned our kitchen into a chemistry lab. The Quest...to successfully make long lasting paint using only my hands and natural resources. The Result…fabulous egg tempera paint!

Egg Tempera ExperimentI was inspired by a number of factors including Victoria Finlay’s book Color: A Natural History of the Palette, Malawian artists’ need of access to affordable paint, and personal curiosity. Over the past few months I have been researching pigments and paint making techniques. Egg tempera paint is one of the oldest paints known to man, even older than oil painting. Some date egg tempera paint back to the first centuries AD, but it was most widely used in the Middle Ages with the Byzantine painters. The Greek Orthodox Church has maintained the tradition, and up to the present still uses egg tempera for icon paintings. In the secular world of art this tradition has seen a revival over the past 10 years. So much so, that there is a great online forum where you can read and participate in discussions about issues relating to egg tempera paint and painting