The Legion of Doom Is Now in Session!

Welcome back.

Steps:

1. Outer space.

2.  Inner space.

3.  What do you consider one of your worst traits?  Imagine that trait is now your superpower.

Draw you as a superhero using this power as a force for good.

You have three minutes to draw after you press “Play” below to activate R.E.M. singing what was a minor hit for them but that my Survivor-buddy Victoria (also known as Vic, also known as Vic the Slick Chick, also known as Slick, also known as Lady Slick of the Boulevard) and I wore the tape out on (as in cassette tape!) while driving around in my light blue Volkswagen Beetle in high school, singing along in harmony at the top of our lungs:

4.  Give the superhero version of you a name, based on your superpower.  Title: “[Your Superhero Name] to the Rescue!”

5.  Date it.

6.  Email it to me.

See you at 10:00, Super Friends!

(Or, you know, Super Villains, whatever floats your particular boat.)

One of the Very Best of the Super Best

So MACC-sters, if you cast your mind back around 7,000 years, to September of 2019 (I don’t know about you, but that now feels almost another universe ago…), you’ll remember that we spent a lot of that month digging in to the idea of mindset: what kind of mindset is conducive to setting free our best work?  What kind of mindset is conducive to increasing personal happiness and being a decent human being?

I threw some potential role models at you: a Holy Octinity of Bruce Lee, Wu Mei, Lynda Barry, the Hubble Space Telescope, Serena Williams, Raphael Nadal, Brené Brown, and New York restauranteur and best-selling author, Gabrielle Hamilton, and we created webs and then looked for connections within and between these ideals to see what essential truths were revealed.

 

 

Many of the ideas Gabrielle raised have become part of the lingo of Room 105 (actual and virtual): “perfectly bent,” “classic, not trendy,” “very church” (in relation to setting up your workspace and your inner space), the perennial favourite “get close to your enemy and dig the feeling,” and yes, “stir it like &*%@.”

 

(My apologies for not having copies of all your webs and index cards – in both instances I was plagued by my Arch-Nemesis, “Cannot Take Photo: There Is Not Enough Available Storage.”)

I’ve talked about it before, but it bears repeating: one of the biggest lessons I learned from Gabrielle, out of many, many lessons both profound and quiet, was/is the art of the conversation and the all-important Second, Third, and Fourth Follow-up Questions: most people, in conversation, are just waiting for the opportunity to talk about themselves, and their questions are usually doorways to do just that – but if you’re truly getting into it, if you’re actually with the person you are with and grooving on their mind, the “tell me more” kind of questions not only make that person feel heard and seen and appreciated, they bring you closer together; you are truly walking through the valley of your friendship and shared experience together, and the conversations live on as souvenirs in your memory.

John O’Donohue put it like this:

When was the last time you had a great conversation, in which you overheard yourself saying things that you never knew you knew?

When was the last time you had a great conversation where you heard yourself receiving from somebody words that absolutely found places within you that you thought you had lost?

When was the last time you had an encounter with another that created a sense of an event of a conversation that brought the two of you on to a different plane?

When was the last time you had a great conversation that continued to sing in your mind for weeks?

In my opinion, this is what it’s all about, kids.

Your task this weekend is to groove on Gabrielle’s great mind (and knock-out writing) as she wrestles with the short- and long-term impacts of this strange, upending present moment, and in doing so, make connections to your own life and search for personal relevance in her words.

The New York Times Magazine piece that she wrote that has set the Twitter-verse on fire (“I didn’t think I cared about food or restaurants enough to read about them until now. Gabrielle Hamilton, owner of my favorite restaurant, reaches into your soul with the beauty of her writing about what might be the final closing of her dream come true”) is here.

Your job is to set aside an extended chunk of time to swim with her in that ocean and then come back up and report your findings.

Things to Consider:

  • have your comp book with you so that you can write down your thoughts as you go
  • you can use the “Listen” option in the link to hear the article rather than read it, if you prefer to receive information that way, just be aware that after Gabrielle’s introduction, a voice-over actor takes over
  • what do you need to do to calm and still your mind before you begin, so that you are open to intuition and impulse?

After you finish, use “Leave a Reply” below (class names only!) to write about the following:

  • what do you appreciate about how she writes?  What are you learning about writing by reading this piece?
  • how might the ideas she wrestles with apply to your own life?  You may not be a married mother of two with thirty employees you feel responsible for (yet!), but how might these ideas serve as metaphor for your own life at the present moment and extending into the future?

You can put those ideas together into one reply, or break them up into two, whatev floats your boat.  And of course, connections to Wagamese and building off each others’ ideas is always more than welcome.

Those of you who are inspired by Gabrielle’s writing and want to read more could go here and here and here (which contains some tips for making the BEST GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICHES EVER).  You could also look to see if you can find an e-copy of her best-selling memoir Blood, Bones, and Butter (noting that this is a mature read).

Those of you who are into self-torture can scratch that itch by watching any number of videos of Gabrielle cooking mouth-wateringly incredible food here.

And all: after you leave your comments, consider this: the next time you have a conversation, what questions might you ask that could help bring you closer to the person you’re with and make that conversation sing?

23 Across: Focus on This (Hint: Starts with a D; Ends with -etail)

Morning.

Steps:

1. Outer Space (for reals).

2.  Inner Space (for reals).

3.  Your job is to copy an image of the River Ogwen in Snowdonia, in northwestern Wales, in as much detail as possible in the time limit (14-ish minutes), keeping your pencil moving the entire time.  The link to the photo is below, after the music.

  • When you’re ready, press “Play” to hear British composer Vaughan William’s masterpiece “A Lark Ascending,” performed by the wonderfully named Hugh Bean.

  • Then, right-click (or control-click) here to open the image in a new tab or window.  Remember: you’re aiming for detail.  Think of the image like a map – one line leads to the next; all you have to worry about is staying relaxed and being aware of spatial relationships.

4.  When you’re done, give the image a title – “The River Ogwen” – date it, and keep it somewhere safe and organized so that we can look at it together later.

Is there anything in that image that is useful for your The Black Cauldron work?

See you at 10:00!

Here Comes a Sting Ray! Watch Out for that Piranha!

Morning.

Steps:

(My hope is that you do actually invest in Steps 1-2; my fear is that you are so used to seeing them that they have just become a kind of white noise.  If that has been true, maybe today is the day you see what happens if you dig into them!)

1. Outer Space

  • prepare the space around you

2.  Inner Space

  • prepare the space within you

3.  This is an interpretive drawing.

Draw you, having an encounter with a visitor from another planet.

Rules:

  • full body
  • face visible
  • do your best to silence The Two Questions; let what happens happen
  • keep your pencil moving for the entire 4 1/2 minutes

And oh my goodness, if you have not yet met The B-52s, prepare yourself: you’re in for a toe-tapping, can’t-help-but-get-up-and-dance treat!  Press “Play” and set that pencil in motion!

4.  Give your image a title.

5.  Date it.

6.  Email it to me.

A reminder that there is no Class Meeting today – you have a gift of time; how will you use it?  Consider making a brief but specific schedule – can you spend meaningful time with all of our major activities today?  Don’t forget to build in time for exercise, outdoor time, activities that fill you up and connect you to yourself, and virtual social contact with people outside of your bubble – as well as time to do nothing!  Oh, and also schedule a time today to close your bedroom door and spaz-dance around the room to this:

Do it for reals!  Resistance is futile!  You may be surprised by how good it feels!  You may be surprised to discover how much you needed that!

(PS: Science conferences: those whom I am meeting with today, please double-check your time, and set yourself up for success by taking several extended moments to make notes to yourself about the things you want to draw my attention to.)

 

 

Branwen, Daughter of Llŷr

Morning.

Steps:

1.  Outer Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space around you?

2.  Inner Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space within you?

3.  This is a copying drawing.

Choose:

  • sketch out the entire image, calmly and purposefully – fill in with detail if you have time
    or
  • zoom in on one aspect and draw it in detail, aiming for precision

This is another Margaret Jones illustration from The Mabinogion, this time from the second branch, “Branwen, daughter of Llŷr.”  In this scene, the captive Branwen has taught a starling how to speak and sends it with a message to her brother in Wales to help her escape from her unhappy life in Ireland (spoiler alert: everyone dies).

If you want a high-res version that you can zoom in on, right-click on this to open it in a new tab or window after you get the music going.

Before you begin, press “Play” below to hear the utterly enchanting 2nd movement of Mozart’s “Concerto for Flute and Harp in C Major,” which may offer a blast to the past and bring you briefly back to the head-warm confines of Room 105.

Start when the music starts; stop when it stops.  Keep your pencil in motion for the entire time in between.

4. Title: “Branwen’s Messenger,” by Margaret Jones.

5.  Date it.

6.  If it’s on loose paper, file it somewhere safe and organized so that we can look at it together later.

 

Now that you’re done, what can you do to ride this calm, focused energy into a productive day?  But before you leave this page, is there anything in that image that might be helpful for your work with The Black Cauldron?

See you at 10:00!

PS: want to see photos of the original written version of these Mabinogion texts (remembering that these legends existed in oral form for hundreds of years before they were committed to print)?  Go here to see The Red Book of Hergest!  And the translated version of this branch can be read here.

PPS: Anyone remember how to pronounce the double-L in Welsh?  Doesn’t it seem like about 5000 years ago that we learned that??  Time flies when you’re stuck inside the same four walls for six weeks – except when it doesn’t…

Hold On to Your Meatball / Whenever You Sneeze

Morning.

Welcome back, MACC-sters.  While I can’t promise you unexplained bacon, I can guarantee you some epiphany-delivering meatballs.

(Vocab: epiphany [def. #3])

Remember when Lynda Barry talked about the R. Crumb comics in Zap with the ordinary person walking down the street and then getting hit by a meatball falling from the sky and experiencing a sudden revelation?  Now it’s your turn!

Steps:

1.  Outer Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space around you?

2.  Inner Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space within you?

3.  Draw a frame in your comp book.  Divide that frame into three.

While you listen to the just-now-finally-starting-to-get-her-due Sister Rosetta Tharpe, you will draw three panels:

First panel: a person doing something.

Second panel: a meatball falling from the sky and hitting that person on the head.

Third panel:  that person having a life-changing revelation.

You have about 7 and 3/4 minutes.  Go!

4.  Title: “Meatball!”

5.  Date it.

6.  Send me a photo.

Now that you got that out of your system, perhaps consider making your schedule for the day.  If you haven’t already done so, maybe reread Friday’s virtual HW Sheet – did you miss anything?

See you at 10:00!

 

 

 

The Unspeakable Horror of Noses and Hands

Weekend homework (due before Tuesday morning):

Please watch this interview with the official Godmother of Div. 3, Lynda Barry:

When you are done:

1.  Make notes in your comp book about things that stood out for you in the interview.

2.  Post at least one comment using “Leave a Reply” below, using your class name.  Feel free to build on others’ comments.  Possible ideas:

  • what in what Lynda Barry said might be useful to you in your life?
  • what in what she said might be useful to you in your work with The Black Cauldron?
  • connections to previous learning, including things like mindset and Wagamese, and Science and Writing

3.  Consider trying their 90-second drawing challenge with family members: give each other a shape and then put on 90 seconds of music and turn the shape into a self-portrait of you dancing.

If you’d like to see the drawings Lynda Barry and Tom Power did, go here.

If you’d like to take things a little further and listen to another interview between these two from 2015, go here.

If you want to take a deep dive into the Image World, go here.

Meanwhile:

Don’t forget to groove on Life!

 

We’re Only Particles of Change / Orbiting Around the Sun

Morning.

The dawn has risen on the final day of Joni-Fest.  Prepare yourselves, young padawans, for all of your work has been building toward this moment…

Vocab:  Hejira – “a journey, especially when undertaken to escape from a dangerous or undesirable situation” (Merriam-Webster).

Hejira – “a flight or journey to a more desirable or congenial place,” or “escape with honor” (Joni Mitchell).

Joni found the word “hejira” while reading the dictionary, and was drawn to the “dangling j, like in Aja… it’s leaving the dream, no blame.”

Steps:

1.  Outer Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space around you?

2.  Inner Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space within you?

3.  This is an interpretive drawing.

Think back to the art we created while listening to the “Prelude” and “Liebestod” from Tristan und Isolde.  We’re going to do something similar here.

Your job is to listen to the title track from Joni’s ground-breaking 1976 album Hejira and to draw what you hear.

There is no right or wrong: you can interpret the lyrics; you can interpret the music; you can draw what you see in the YouTube window, just images, images and words – totally up to you.

Before you begin, though – have you actually done Steps 1 and 2 above?  If not, please do so now.

If you wish, you can read the lyrics before you begin – this is not required.

This album was mostly written during a road trip across the U.S. (disguised in a red wig and sunglasses and going by the aliases “Joan Black” and “Charlene Latimer”!) and is full of the kind of density of imagery and metaphor (and the layers of sound – “braided together . . . a sheet of sound,” as Joni said) that has made Mitchell famous – painting with words, as it were.  It also is known for the deeply groovy bass-guitar work of Jaco Pastorius, who played a uniquely fretless bass.

Deep breath.  Do your best to allow what happens to happen.  Go.

4.  Title: Joni Mitchell – “Hejira.”

5.  Date it.

6. If you have not already done so, you will send me all five of your Joni drawings today, doing your best to send me clear images (but not obsessing over it).

For those who are interested, there are three live versions of this song, one with a full band here, and a solo one here, and one really strange one with Jaco and a figure skater here.

For those who are now full converts, or at least Joni-curious, you could do worse things with your time than watch this documentary or watch Joni tame a crowd of 100,000 hippies If you do so, let me know your thoughts and we’ll consider it extra credit in Socials, Writing, or Art – your choice.

Check-in question: what is one thing you’ve learned, noticed, or appreciated about Joni Mitchell?

See you at 10:00, cruciverbalists!

 

In the Middle of This Continent / In the Middle of Our Time on Earth

Morning.

Oh, come on: it’s not that bad.

Steps:

1.  Outer Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space around you?

2.  Inner Space

  • what do you need to do to prepare the space within you?

3.  This is an interpretive drawing.

Who are you looking forward to seeing in person after physical-distancing restrictions are lifted?

Draw you, Ivan Brunetti-style, with that person (or persons), Ivan Brunetti-style.

With your Ivan Brunetti-ing, think: what are the defining physical characteristics of you?  Of this person (or these people)?  (Physical characteristics include shapes of body, face, and hair, but also things like habitual body language and/or items of clothing or other objects.) How would we know it is you?  How would they know it is them?

This is the music to listen to while drawing – you have about three minutes:

4.  Title: Joni Mitchell – “Stay in Touch.”

5.  Date it.

6.  Email it to me today, or email it tomorrow with all five of your Joni-Fest drawings.  You might consider emailing it to the person (or people) you drew, too.  Think what a nice start to their day that would be. : )

Interesting fact: the above song was written after Joni was reunited with the daughter she had given up for adoption thirty-two years earlier.  Here’s the heartbreakingly beautiful song she wrote after signing the adoption papers in the 1960s, “Little Green.”  Here’s a short clip about their reunion.  Here’s a clip from an interview in which she discusses getting pregnant while in art school and the factors that led to the adoption.  And if you’re a music-lover or art-lover or a lover of social history and you want to go all in, here’s the interview in its entirety.  

If you are not exploring the above, now would be a great time to make your schedule for the day.  Can you spend time with all of our on-going projects – The Black Cauldron, Wagamese, Science research, Math – and also build in exercise breaks and time for reading, mental health-boosting activities, social interaction, outside time, and laziness?  

Remember: I’ll be asking to see your chosen system of time management tomorrow.

See you at 10:00!

Oops.  I meant this:

PS: “Joni Mitchell.” 

 

 

 

 

Crop Rotation

Wakey wakey. 

I know, I know, but get up anyway – if it’s true love, your bed will wait for you. 

So: no Class Meeting today – but all the other usual things will happen anyway, including Team 6-Square’s 1:00 Wagamese discussion.

Today’s Index Card Drawing will take a little longer than usual – it’s a copying drawing; I’d like you to invest in it.  It also involves some choices – you get to Choose Your Own Adventure – so please make sure you read these instructions slowly, purposefully, and carefully.  Try to do each step in order.

Fun fact: Joni considers herself more of a painter than a musician – which is saying something.  She uses each of these disciplines to feed the other, in the same way that farmers let certain fields go fallow for a year in order to increase the nutrients in the soil for the years to come:

“Anytime I make a record, it’s followed by a painting period. It’s a good crop rotation. I keep the creative juices going by switching from one to the other, so that when the music or the writing dries up, I paint.”

Today, you’re going to copy one of Joni’s paintings – you get to choose which one, and you get to choose what kind of music you’re in the mood for.

Steps:

1.  Outer Space

  • materials (a sharp pencil is your friend) (but don’t tell your bed: it may get jealous)
  • remove or turn off distractions
  • clear workspace

2.  Inner Space

  • body relaxed but aware (this takes a little time)
  • connect to breath (so does this)
  • clear head

3.  Choose your painting.

Go here, and then take a look until you find an image that calls to you.  Use the “Browse by Decade” tool to explore the possibilities.  I’m not in a rush – are you?

Click on the name of an image to get to its page, and then click on the painting itself and a small version of it will pop up.  If you’d like a larger version to work with, open a new tab in your browser and google the name of the painting + “Joni Mitchell.”

Your job is to copy this image with as much detail and precision as you can – slowly and calmly, remembering Lynda Barry’s advice about images as maps, with one line connected to the other, focusing on spatial relationships.

If you wish, you can add color – that is optional. 

Take your time – allow yourself to get lost in the work.

4.  Choose your music.

Are you in the mood for something with lyrics or an gentle, extended guitar solo?  

If you choose lyrics, you will press “Play” here when you are ready:

 

If you choose guitar solo, press “Play” here, then right-click the YouTube window and select “Loop,” and then keep listening until you are finished with your drawing:

5.  Title: “Joni Mitchell – [the name of the painting]”

6.  Date it.

7.  Either email it to me today, or email it on Friday with all of your Joni drawings.

 

Now –  how will you start your day?  Consider making a schedule based on yesterday’s virtual HW sheet.  Build in some DPA breaks.  Set aside time to just relax.  Can you spend meaningful time with each thing today?  The Black Cauldron, Wagamese, Math (those who are interested, check out the entirely optional new Math Extensions page), Science.  Daily Diary.  

Also, check out this (note that Judy has started to broadcast from her home – what pattern do you notice in her choice of reading material?  She didn’t get that smart just by hoping):

Other interesting segments last night: an interview with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and a piece about a new documentary about the search for a vaccine for the novel coronavirus.  

Team 6-Square: see you at 1:00.  Make sure to arrive with your notes and thinking organized.  The liveliness of the discussion depends on you.

Everybody else: see you tomorrow at 10:00!

PS: “Joni Mitchell”