Here are a couple more sneak-preview slides for my part of the VizthinkU Visual Note-Taking 101 seminar. I took my map of Carl Jung’s Memories, Dreams, Reflections and broke it down into pictures, modifiers (speech balloons, captions, etc.) and words.
THE BATTLE BETWEEN PICTURES AND WORDS
Here’s a little sneak-preview of the slideshow introduction I’m working on for my portion our Visual Note-Taking 101 webinar that’s a week from today! (Register here.)
I got the idea from some sumi-e doodles and quotes I collected a couple years ago, thinking about my formal (and informal) education:
…lately I find myself frequently torn between whether I’m really an artist or a writer. I was trained and educated as the former, encouraged into the world of paint-stained pants and a white-walled studio where wild, messy experiments precipitate the incubation of other visual ideas— though I’m just as happy to sit at a desk in clean trousers with a sharp pencil and work on a single story for four or five days in a quiet and deliberate manner. In short, I’m coming to believe that a cartoonist, unlike the general cliché, is almost—bear with me now—a sort of new species of creator, one who can lean just as easily toward a poetic, painterly, or writerly inclination, but one who thinks and expresses him- or herself primarily in pictures.—Chris Ware, Introduction to The Best American Comics 2007
“When you have the talent to be able to write and to draw it seems a shame to choose one. I think it’s better to do both.”
—Marjane Satrapi
A comics-art curriculum is interdisciplinary. As comics-art students learn to become literate and visually literate, they need to develop a vast array of skills. They need classes in drawing, writing, computer art, literature, storyboard, and character design. They need research skills, so they can make their stories convincing and make their characters behave and look real enough to come alive on the page or screen.—James Sturm, “Comics In The Classroom”
RATHER THAN REPAIR
And thus, we wrap up International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month with poem 30 out of 30!
Looking back, I think I must’ve been nuts to set off on something like this, but I’m glad I did. Heck, 30 poems…that’s 1/5 of a book! Maybe I’ll see if I can’t make a little mini-zine out of them?
Thanks again to everyone who spread the link love and tried their own poems. Y’all are awesome.
Here’s a list of all 30:
- POETRY CAN BE BORN
- THE BEAUTY OF EARLY WORKS
- DASHED HOPES
- HERE THERE BE DRAGONS
- WHAT SOUNDS SIMPLE
- HOW WE KEPT BUSY
- HISTORY DITCH
- CATASTROPHE INTO NOTHING
- LONG-DISTANCE
- FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS
- THE TRANSFORMATION OF THEIR MUSIC
- THE FACE OF THE EARTH
- LET’S PRETEND
- IN THE SUBURBS
- JUST A MATTER OF TIME
- KNOWING THE CHANCES
- CLOSE THE SHOP
- IN AND OUT OF DIRT!
- OFFING
- ME AND MY BIG MOUTH
- WINE CAN HELP THE PARTY
- SUITLAND
- PIGGY-BACK
- A SPECULATIVE SCHOOL
- THE RIGHT TO DECLINE
- INVOCATION
- THE DATE
- THE CALL CENTER
- HOW TO BE POPULAR
- RATHER THAN REPAIR
If you want to browse all 30 poems, you can use this link:
http://www.austinkleon.com/tag/international-newspaper-blackout-poetry-month-2009/
I’m taking a break for the month of May. Might have some new ones in June.
HOW TO BE POPULAR
Poem 29 out of 30 for International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month.
SHOUT-OUT! to all the folks on Twitter who mentioned the poems during April (Sorry if I missed your name here! Post it in the comments!) In no particular order:
@RubberJenny
@catpoetry
@Margosita
@brookerandel
@luismendo
@marcjohns
@rhimyers
@coryleahy
@davidburn
@johntunger
@gemarkeerd
@inkscar
@DustinFaulkner
@ywalker
@thenewmckechnie
@artwithbyte
@349
@BicyclingNate
@productjustin
@ItsMikeD
@LPT
@iggynore
@drawn
@BladBlog
THE CALL CENTER
Poem 28 out of 30 for International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month. Only two more days! (And two more poems…)
SHOUT-OUT! to My Brain Is Too Small For The Internet for blogging about the poems. Say hi on twitter: @RubberJenny
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