I can’t seem to finish one of these things, so for now, I’ll just keep stringing together these little haiku cop outs.
We’re having a great weekend: I hope you are too.
I can’t seem to finish one of these things, so for now, I’ll just keep stringing together these little haiku cop outs.
We’re having a great weekend: I hope you are too.
I got this cool e-mail from Liza Cowan, a Vermont artist, director of the Pine Street Art Works gallery in Burlington, and regular blog reader:
I’ve been reading your blackout poems avidly, and trying and trying to find a postcard I made in 1981. It was kind of a blackout poem except that instead of showing all the black areas, i just took the words or word fragments and re-typed them, using a font as close to the original as I could find. Mind you, this was before personal computers. My rule was that the words or fragments had to be in the same order as the original. I probably have a copy of the original catalogue but I’m not sure where. I do remember that “She” came from “Sherwin Williams” I think it is the only word fragment.
I did the card as a part of Jerri Allen’s Apron Project. My text source was a Sherwin Williams Paint catalogue from 1939. That was also the image source. I processed the image with a Mita 900D copier, which I happened to own at the time, because I lived an hour’s drive from the nearest public copy machine (I kid you not!) Then I added a quote from Robert Graves, The Greek Myths. I published the card under my own imprint, White Mare, Inc.
It’s all on the back of the postcard.
Good Grief, I had to look everywhere to find this one scrap of paper. Thank goodness I found the one remaining copy!
I mentioned how impressed I was by Liza’s elaborate pre-Photoshop method, and she said, “Not only was it before photoshop, it was before any design program. I had the words typeset, and used letraset film for the background. And did cut and paste for the composition. It all seemed very modern then.”
Even though I have no interest whatsoever in getting an MFA in creative writing any time soon, Tom Kealey invited me to be a contributor to his MFA Blog on matters concerning comics and where one might go to study them. (Funny enough, Kealey’s great book, The Creative Writing MFA Handbook, was a big help in convincing me not to go for my MFA!) My first posts were on The Center for Cartoon Studies and marriage advice for writers. I really like Tom’s writing, and the MFA Blog has some helpful stuff for people interested in getting their MFA. (It also has a bit of the crap you’d expect from whiny English graduate students, but I won’t be too negative.) I applaud anybody who helps folks navigate those murky waters of MFA-land!
Today I started my new job (!!!) as Electronic Publishing Specialist for UT’s Law school. (That’s a fancy title for web designer.) It’s a great gig, everybody in the department is awesome, and I’m genuinely excited about it. I’ll be doing most of my work under the webmaster, a guy named Adam Norwood. Adam is a really talented designer, artist, and great guy, and his site is worth checking out. He’s a lot better at the technical web stuff than I am, so I think I’ll be able to learn a lot from him.
The only bummer today was sitting through UT’s 4 hour orientation session. Like I told my new bosses, it was “15 minutes of readin’, 4 hours of sittin’.” Luckily, they provided free stationary stationery:
It feels so good to have a job…
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