About

We are a visual learning company that supports business innovation, strategic planning, and collaborative design—
both onsite and online.

learn more
| contact us

Learn to Scribe. Change the World.

Search

Vimeo Twitter LinkedIn Flickr  Blog RSS Blogger
Sign up! Become a part of our community of friends.

Social Media
Powered by Squarespace
Subscribe
Archive

Entries from May 1, 2005 - May 31, 2005

Tuesday
May312005

Uncle Walt, Father of American Poetry

Born into the American Experience on this day in West Hills, Long Island (1819) was Walt Whitman, whose wandering life and joyous, staggering poetry gave voice to the chaos and virility of a nation in puberty.

From The Writer's Almanac:

Walt Whitman moved back to New York City and started writing for newspapers. He loved the penny papers—the cheap ones—their lively style. He said, 'I like limber, lashing, fierce words... strong, cutting, beautiful, rude words.' He liked to walk up and down Broadway and around in Battery Park.

"He wrote a novel about the evils of alcohol called Evans, or The Inebriate: A Tale of the Times, (1842). It sold more than 20,000 copies. He went to New Orleans in 1846 to write for a newspaper there. He was amazed at what he saw: the mixture of Spanish and English and French. He saw slaves being auctioned on the block. He came to believe that he should write something to hold the country together, that America needed a poetry unlike poetry of Europe. The first edition of Leaves of Grass came out in 1855, unrhymed, un-metered poetry that combined language of sermons, romantic poetry and working class slang.


More at The Walt Whitman Archive.
Listen (Real Audio) to Garrison Kieller read excerpts from Crossing Brookyn Ferry.

Wednesday
May252005

Sticks and Stones

OK. This is one of the most mesmerizing, simple displays of beauty and gravity I've seen. Bill Dan plays with rocks. He does not chuck'em. He does not collect'em.

Bill Dan stacks them.

And, he does so in ways that seems so easy, yet defy the basics of gravity. I mean, the dang rocks should fall! See video and photos of Bill at work on the rocky shores of San Francisco Bay.

It has to be the first artistic act of man: to stack a pile of rocks and call it magic. Such towers of stones, known as cairns, have marked pathways and boundaries for centuries.

Photos of Dave Russel's garden full of cairns in Asheville, North Carolina at My Avant Garden.

[Thanks to Leah Silverman.]


Andy Goldsworthy | Passage - Three Cairns, 2003 | Galerie Lelong

Watch another master of geologic creations: the patient, medatative Andy Goldworthy whose "media often include twigs, thorns, muds, snow, icicles, brightly colored flowers and leaves. For tools he often uses only his bare hands and found tools" (wikipedia).

The documentary Rivers and Tides captures the light, the sound, the texture of the artist's life collaborating with nature in the fields, streams, seashores and forests that serve as his studio.


Tuesday
May242005

Happy B-Day, Wonder Boy

From The Writer's Almanac:

It's the birthday of the novelist Michael Chabon, (books by this author) born in Washington, D.C. (1963). He was just 23 when he wrote his first novel, The Mysteries of Pittsburgh. He turned it in as his master's thesis in a creative writing program. He turned it in on a Friday. On Monday he heard that his professor had sent it to an agent. The book was published the following year, in 1988. It was a big success. He was compared to Fitzgerald and John Cheever. He was asked to model clothing for The Gap. People Magazine wanted to include him in its list of "50 Most Beautiful People." He turned down both offers.

He started working on his second novel. He had seen a picture of the original plans for the city of Washington, D.C., and he got an idea for a novel about an architect. Chabon later said, "It was a novel about utopian dreamers, ecological activists, an Israeli spy, a gargantuan Florida real estate deal, the education of an architect, the perfect baseball park, Paris, French cooking, and the crazy and ongoing dream of rebuilding the Great Temple in Jerusalem. It was about loss: lost paradises, lost cities, the loss of the Temple, the loss of a brother to AIDS, and the concomitant dream of Restoration or Rebuilding."

He called the novel Fountain City. He spent five years working on it and wrote 1,500 pages of manuscript. He felt he just couldn't put the pieces together and then one night got an idea for a whole different story and decided to follow it. He wrote 15 pages in four hours. He kept working on it in secret for the next few weeks. He didn't tell anybody. He said, "I didn't stop to think about what I was doing or what the critics would think of it and, sweetest of all, I didn't give a single thought to what I was trying to say. I just wrote."

He finished the book in seven months. The novel was Wonder Boys. It came out in 1995, about a creative writing professor named Grady Tripp who can't seem to finish his latest novel. It was made into a movie five years later.

After Wonder Boys, Chabon stumbled on a box of comic books he'd kept since childhood. He hadn't looked at them in 15 years. He said, "When I opened it up and that smell came pouring out, that old paper smell, I was struck by a rush of memories, a sense of my childhood self that seemed to be contained in there." It gave him the idea to write a novel about the golden days of the comic book trade called The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay. It came out in 2000, and won a Pulitzer Price. It was the story of a Jewish kid who flees the Nazis just before World War II, has to leave his family behind, and come to America. Along with his cousin, he creates a comic book super hero called "The Escapist."

Michael Chabon said, "Literature, like magic, has always been about the handling of secrets, about the pain, the destruction, and the marvelous liberation that can result when they are revealed. If a writer doesn't give away secrets, his own or those of the people he loves, if he doesn't court disapproval, reproach and general wrath, whether of friends, family or party apparatchiks... the result is pallid, inanimate, a lump of earth."

Monday
May232005

The Father of the Name of All Things

You may have been taught that it was Adam, the first man of Genesis, who attempted to name all the creatures of the earth.

However, it seems that the most prolific giver of names was a plucky Swede named, Carl.

Today is the birthday of Carl Linnaeus, also known as Carl von Linné or Carolus Linnaeus, is often called the Father of Taxonomy. His system for naming, ranking, and classifying organisms is still in wide use today (with many changes).

His ideas on classification have influenced generations of biologists during and after his own lifetime, even those opposed to the philosophical and theological roots of his work.

Like the original namer, Adam, he set to work dividing the starfish from the swordfish.

From Garrison Kieller's Writer's Alamanac:

He was a botanist. He taught at universities. At a time when Sweden was one of the poorest countries in Europe, Linnaeus set out to import exotic plants and animals, hoping they could be raised for profit in Sweden. He hoped to raise tea and coffee, ginger, coconuts, silkworms. He experimented in clams.

It was at a time when people named plants and animals in many different ways, usually based on what they looked like: Queen Anne's lace, ghost orchid, and swordfish. But even within a single country, a plant could be called by half a dozen different names by different people, so Linnaeus decided to develop a naming system based in Latin. He put each specimen into a large group called a genus and a smaller subgroup called a species, and that became the binomial naming system, which he published in 1758.

His botanical experiments failed. The tea plants died. The coffee didn't make it in Sweden, and neither did ginger or coconuts or cotton. Rhubarb did though, and Linnaeus, late in his life, said the introduction of rhubarb to Sweden was his proudest achievement. But today we remember him for his contribution to taxonomy.

When he published his taxonomy in 1758 he listed 4,400 species known to science at the time. Today there are more than one and a half million.

Today taxonomies have a new energy propelling the naming of things.

First, the technical field and other communities of practice struggle to organize the burgeoning bloom of data. Second, the world's scientists race to document all species as global warming, human destruction of habitat and pollution threaten the planet's biodiversity.

The ALL Species Foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to the complete inventory of all species of life on Earth within the next 25 years - a human generation.

To describe and classify all of the surviving species of the world deserves to be one of the great scientific goals of the new century.

In applied science, this completion of the Linnaean enterprise is needed for effective conservation practices, and for impact studies of environmental change.

In basic science, it is a key element in the maturing of ecology, including the grasp of ecosystem functioning and of evolutionary biology. It also offers an unsurpassable adventure: the exploration of a little-known planet.

Take a stroll through the Taxonomy Warehouse.

Sunday
May222005

Globalization 3.0 Targets Pittsburgh


The Primanti Brothers sandwich in Pittsburgh is the starting point for Chris Furrell and Robert Krulwich, hosts of Globalization 3.0, a documentary by American RadioWorks.

In part 1 of this Sunday's, a segment titled The Rustbelt Again? uses Pittsburgh as an example of both the need and the solutions confronting such US cities:

Listen to the hour-long show.
Download MP3.
Read full transcript.



Friday
May202005

JibJab Cartoon Creation Goes Viral

Being a longtime fan of both animation and political satire, I sure am glad the fellers at JibJab are still around.

After a end-of-the-millenium bloom of nutty on-line content (especially zany Flash cartoons), the post-9/11 quasi-Depression looked like death to the fun-for-profit business model of JibJab.

In 2002, I was in a bar in Brooklyn and met a kid who used to work as an animator for the creative shop.

"So, what are you doing now?" I inquired.

"Working as a hazardous material inspector for apartment buildings near Ground Zero."

Sheez, the good times really seemed over.

However, with the success of the company's election season This Land and the sequel, Good to Be in DC, you could tell the boys were back. I'm writing of brothers Gregg and Evan Spiridellis.

For their upcoming productions, the Spiridellis brothers are turning to their burgeoning fan base to contribute everything from photos of props to headshots and voice over work. It is a massive casting call being sent out to over half a million subscribers to their on-line newsletter.

Their creations have an insanely high incidence of customer evangelism. In offices around the world, small clusters of co-workers gather around computer screens trying to suppress giggles in cubicles while watching Second Term or Ahnold for Governor.

One usually discovers a new creation through a giddy email from an aquaintance with the tagline: "YOU HAVE TO SEE THIS!!!!!"

Following a model used by such groups as Obtainium Methodologies, Wikipedia and America's Funniest Home Videos, JibJab hopes to both accelerate the production process and augment the creative process through consumer participation.

From the JibJab blog:

For our next JibJab, we’ll be posting a list of all the items we’re looking for and invite you to submit your photos. If we use your submission, you’ll get a credit at the end of the movie. Imagine the bragging rights around the water cooler!

As we mentioned in our last blog entry, we’re only going to accept a limited number of people to join us for the beta launch. Why? If millions of people signed up, our precious community would spiral out of our control and into a spam infested wasteland. We want to make this experiment as fun and productive as possible.

So what happens when Hollywood finally gets a clue and goes viral, too?

Monday
May162005

Alphachimp's Firehouse Studio

Back from vacation in the desert and ready to work!

After years of kvetching and cramming my easel into awakward office spaces, we have finally secured a creative space for big thinking and sloppy painting.

The Firehouse Studios are located on Pittsburgh's North Side in the historic Mexican War Streets, this 125-year-old firehouse serves as workspace for almost a dozen local ceramicists and a couple of 2-D types.

The building was originally a firehouse, the oldest still existing in the city. There is abundant natural light from 23 large windows. The expansive beauty of the space is not interrupted by cubicle-type walls. The first floor contains a massive gas and electric kiln.


Our recent vacation in Santa Fe has rejuvinated our entire team-- especially the one-year-old artist.

The current punchlist for paintings include a batch of color studies inspired by the mountains of New Mexico; a camo shirted self-portrait; a highway 66 smoke shop; and several large scale plywood cut-outs including a Mexicali pimped out truck; a folk art church and more.

I'll be working hard to produce for several upcoming shows in 2005.

Firehouse Studios Open House
June 24 at 1416 Arch Street in Pittsburgh

Annual Art in the Garden Show
August 6 at 1230 Resaca Place in Pittsburgh

36th Annual Mexican War Streets Home & Garden Tour
Sunday, September 11
(see official site)

Monday
May162005

NBD Quilts Knoxville Dogwood Arts Festival

Congratulations to our artistic colleague and mentor (and aunt), Nellie Bass Durand, whose fiber art has once again placed highly in the Knoxville Dogwood Arts Festival Art Show.

Her work was on display at the TVA building in Knoxville, Tennessee. The quilt show was well attended with between 150-425 visitors per day from April 14th to the 21st.

There were 153 entries from 16 states as well as from England, Norway, and Holland. There are multiple web pages, so be sure to click on the photos or "next" to see them all: CLICK HERE.


Psycho Deco Fleurs


By Nellie Bass Durand

Dimensions: 32"x41"
Description: A collection of "flowers in a container" blocks made by Thursday Bee members of the Smoky Mountain Quilt Guild. Arranged with sashing and border fabrics with an art deco feel (most designed by Jane Sassaman) amazingly unifies the diverse styles and sizes of blocks.

3rd Place
Dogwood Arts Festival 2005
Knoxville, Tennessee

Tuesday
May032005

Sterling on Rushdie

WIRED Magazine's futurist, Bruce Sterling, writes:

"We're all Rushdie now, but, uh, maybe life could be worse."

Sterling is referring to a paradoxical situation: No one has seen much of Rushdie in the last 16 years except Mrs. Rushdie, Padma Lakshmi, who, at least in this article, cooks in leather pants (?)

The fatwa, or religious edict, calling for Rushdie’s execution was issued by Iranian religious leaders, because of alleged blasphemy and apostasy in his novel The Satanic Verses.

From The Telegraph (Calcutta):

THE TROUBLE WITH RELIGION
"Wherever religions get into society’s driving seat, tyranny
results"
by Salman Rushdie

"I never thought of myself as a writer about religion until a religion came after me. Religion was a part of my subject, of course -- for a novelist from the Indian subcontinent, how could it not have been? But in my opinion I also had many other, larger, tastier fish to fry. Nevertheless, when the attack came, I had to confront what was confronting me, and to decide what I wanted to stand up for in the face of what so vociferously, repressively and violently stood against me.

"Now, 16 years later, religion is coming after us all and, even though most of us probably feel, as I once did, that we have other, more important concerns, we are all going to have to confront the challenge. If we fail, this particular fish may end up frying us."


READ FULL ESSAY

Tuesday
May032005

Condi! Condi! A Love Letter from Ze

Truly a breath of fresh air blowing away the stink of political acrimony, Ze Frank has composed a gentle and lyrical love song to our current Secretary of State, the inimitable Condelezza Rice.

Listen and swoon as Ze croons.

You can spend hours grazing silliness at Frank's site.