Remington Roundup: #Art, #CreativeExpression, & #Bravery

Woman at typewriterThe month of May brings sunshine (hooray!), hints of the lazy days of summer (ahh), and a new roundup of links to #Art, #CreativeExpression, and #Bravery.

Watch, listen, read, and enjoy.


#Art

I love this video of Shantell Martin (via The New Yorker, The Scene), “Follow the Pen,” in which she talks about drawing, letting the pen go where it wants, and creativity being “just like a language unfolding.”

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I come to a drawing with intention, a good intention to make something work. . . . I don’t plan…I trust in the pen, and I trust in this experience.


#CreativeExpression

Issue 60 of The Drum Literary Magazine offers four great stories, of fiction and non, for your listening ears and includes Melanie Senn’s essay, “The Art of Drumming Badly.” Senn doesn’t wait until the mood (or inspiration) strikes; she dives in the moment someone says, “Let’s do it.”

pexels-photo-62215I stopped caring what other people thought, and I learned to play with attitude. . . . If I tried to be a perfectionist at this juncture in my life, I’d accomplish nothing.  . . . we persist because it is fun and cathartic and makes us feel young.


#Bravery

So, we follow the muse to where she wants to go; we stop caring about what others think; then, we hit send. None of this happens without a stiff shot of courage or without the support of those around us. This month I have an essay up on Hippocampus Magazine, a piece that’s been several years in the making and one I’ve tried tackling in a myriad of ways. Many thanks to those who’ve read (and re-read) this piece in its many draft forms and to Donna Talarico at Hippocampus for finally bringing “At the Fence” to the page.

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You love a good rain, the relief after the humidity falls, the way everything outside looks so green and alive. But as you follow your mother through the field, you notice patches of dead grass drowning in puddles and clumps of clover beaten down by the storm. The air is still heavy, and you slip in the mud.

 

Remington Roundup: The #Classics, #Art, & #Writing

IMG_0702Clickety-clack, copy and paste.

Here’s your February round up of articles and essays on lessons from a classic, making art until the end, and why I carry a stack of paper & pens in my backpack every day.


#Classics

28 Lessons We’ve Learned from Pride and Prejudice on Bluestocking Salon, which mentions Colin Firth three times. But that’s not the (real) reason I love this post.

12592293_10208681678268381_5700226019705664968_n“2. Be persistent in the face of rejection.

19. “Obstinate, headstrong girl!” really is a compliment.

21. When it comes to a man’s library, size matters.”


#Art

Elizabeth Gilbert’s post on David Bowie’s death, which shares the link to his music video, “Lazarus.” I didn’t grow up a die-hard Bowie fan (hey, don’t hate me…only because I was very religious when I was young), but I certainly appreciate his art and what Gilbert says about him and his work.

“[He spent] his final months dying doing what he’d done his whole life–making outrageously original, beautiful, complicated art. . . . This is what it means to be a great artist.”

As a bonus, read Richard Z. Santos’ “A Partial List” about David Bowie on Barrelhouse Magazine.


#Writing

On Keeping a (Writing) Notebook (or Three) by Randon Billings Noble in Brevity Magazine. Noble opens her essay with a few quotes from Joan Didion’s “On Keeping a Notebook,” and that could be enough. But in the end Noble herself explains why she (and I) have more than one notebook within reach on any given day.

12390869_10208342498749105_771019349669136394_n“there’s a difference between a diary and a journal…in a diary you record each day’s events and in a journal you write whatever you want about your day whenever you want to write about it. . . . my writing notebooks keep me writing – through rejection, triumph, inspiration, and disenchantment…on the crests and in the troughs; at home and away….”

What have you bookmarked lately?

Guest Post: Susan Maciolek on #Writing, #Art, & Chiffon

“The lightest of barriers against a breeze is the little head scarf of chiffon.”
~ from CHIFFON

art-brush-painting-colorsSusan Maciolek has written a lovely book of art and verse called Chiffon that grew from the simple image of a woman waiting for a bus. Her guest post today is a testament to the joy found in pursuing a project for the love of the story and includes artwork from the pages of her book.


The Delicate, Diaphanous Tale of How Chiffon Came to Be

by Susan K Maciolek

When I used to take the bus to work, one of the regulars at the bus stop was a little dumpling of a woman who was always neatly dressed in knit tops and pants. She had the kind of immovable hairdo some older ladies are partial to and she sometimes wore a scarf over her hair. The scarf was white and semi-sheer – a chiffon scarf – and I hadn’t seen one in years. Seeing it reminded me of Christmas shopping trips to Chicago when I was a kid, where ladies wore chiffon scarves in the middle of December, and it mystified me. How could something so flimsy do any good in such cold, windy weather?

Chiffon in groupAh, yes, the very gossamer quality of the chiffon scarf was the point: it kept a bouffant hairstyle intact without mashing it down the way heavier fabrics would. And like other scarves, the chiffon came in silk, or the more affordable nylon, and later polyester. I wondered if chiffon scarves might be an ethnic thing, adopted by European immigrants in industrial cities near the Great Lakes – perhaps an American successor to the babushka? Chiffon scarves had been spotted in Chicago and Milwaukee, maybe we’d find them in Cleveland and Buffalo, too.

However it came to be and wherever else it might be worn, the chiffon scarf was still a Midwestern thing, and I was captivated by the way something so light and insubstantial was deployed for such hard work. Defending hair against the elements is no small task on the shores of Lake Michigan. I had to know more.

Chiffon fallingI resisted the compulsion to learn the complete history of chiffon scarves since I wasn’t doing a research paper, just a lighthearted salute. But soon phrases like “a sheer pastel wisp” and “beauty shop hair” started dancing in my head. I eventually captured them in a story told in verse and void of any illustrations. My writing group at that time didn’t hate Chiffon, but they didn’t warm to it – disappointing since I was so taken with the notion. Still, I kept at it and even sent the story off to a local magazine. When the editor replied “We don’t publish poetry,” I thought, He doesn’t get it. It’s not poetry, it’s humorous verse!

Chiffon didn’t fit neatly into any market at the time, so I moved on to other stories and let it languish for years. When going through old manuscripts, I found it again and it struck me that what was missing were illustrations. That’s when I became inspired.

Chiffon walkingThough it’s better to create art along with your story and not afterward, as a visual person I already had scenes in my head for most stanzas. I also knew my Chiffon ladies had to be rounded and simple to draw, especially their hands. I’d done figure drawing for years and knew I’d fixate on getting every finger right, which could take forever. Then I unearthed a clip I’d had in my files for ages (you never know when something you’ve kept will come in handy) of a blob-like cartoon creature with pointy hands. Problem solved – I knew that pointy hands would suit my ladies just fine (and give their creator a break). Pipe stem legs and bee-stung lips completed their appearance.

Chiffon coverWith Chiffon, I didn’t have all the doubts I usually have about my work. This time I had a vision in my head of how the book should be. I chose to keep the drawings simple and sketchy. I knew I wanted the cover clean and uncluttered, with just the title in an inviting typeface. I found a gorgeous shade of green cover stock called “Casaba” at Broadway Paper, along with matching chiffon ribbon to use as a decorative “binding.”

At this point I sent the book off again, this time to a unique and arty publisher. As is so often the case, their only response was no response–a rejection. Rather than sulk and let the story sit on the shelf again, I headed to a local printer and handed over my flash drive. When the guy at the counter checked my PDF file, he chuckled as he read it. That made my day; he got it! I shared copies with friends, and they got it, too. Eventually I found the courage to approach retailers about selling it.

Chiffon is one of the few projects I’ve done that ended up almost exactly as I envisioned; I had a certain image in mind as the end goal and felt driven to achieve it. What I pictured was a small illustrated book in a beautiful color, tied with a sheer ribbon. Eventually that came to be.

Chiffon is available at The Sparrow Collective on Kinnickinnic Avenue in Bay View and at Woodland Pattern Book Center on Locust Street in Riverwest in Milwaukee.