Showing posts with label School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label School. Show all posts



Work and school has been keeping me busy lately... sorry for the lack of posts and picture taking. It's been a while since I've had a chance to take pictures... in due time, my friends... in due time. Soon I will be going to Japan, and my 5dMII will literally be my conjoined twin during the entire trip. I will not hold back, that's for sure. I plan on packing light in clothing and heavy in camera gear... camera bag, different lens and my one and only Manfrotto tripod. I'm really looking forward to this trip... can't wait!

On another positive note, I got my Visual Arts"Screaming Silence" assignment back from my teacher yesterday. My teacher really liked it and found it very interesting... in fact, when I got to class early and headed for my seat, the teacher saw me and immediately said how interesting and scary my project was. She said she didn't realize that there was such a condition known as "Sleep Paralysis" and continued to ask me questions about when I got these dreams. She also liked that I included my poem in it. This project was worth 8 points, and she gave 8 plus an extra bonus point! That made me very happy. It felt good that she identified me through my project and knows who I am. It must be hard to remember each student's names in your class... I'm so bad with names, I can't even imagine trying to remember a whole classroom of students. Glad she remembers my name and liked my project.

Photo taken with my Holga 120CFN
Fuji Velvia 100F Film



It's amazing how only two days of school can enlighten you. I've only been to my digital art class once since school started, (I have Digital Art on Mondays and Wednesdays; and Visual Art on Tuesdays and Thursdays) and I have already begun to work on awakening the imagination and creativity that was dormant in my mind for far too long. I can't even remember the last time I got out a paper & pencil and began to draw before going back to college this week. It's almost as if I had built a wall or barrier to block that side out of me since I grew out of childhood. I can't really say why... I used to LOVE drawing when I was a kid... constantly sketching and drawing Marvel Comic characters... I'm even embarrassed to admit that I once drew a portrait of Jason Priestley from 90210 when I had a crush on him back in those silly pre-teen days... but what I drew is not the point... it's the simple fact that I drew and enjoyed doing it. Somehow, it all got lost as I got older, but just one day at my digital art class sparked that old memory in me. I came across such an interesting section in my Visual Art textbook, which talked about early encounters with the artist within. I quote:

Young Children often demonstrate an intuitive sense of composition. Unfortunately, we lose much of this intuitive sense of balanced design as we begin to look at the world from a conceptual, self-conscious point of view. Most children who have been given coloring books, workbooks, and pre-drawn printed single sheets become overly dependent on such impersonal, stereotyped props. In this way, children lose the urge to invent unique images based on their own experiences. Without ongoing opportunities for personal expression, children lose self-confidence in their original creative impulses.

Children begin life as eager learners. If they are loved and cared for, they soon express enthusiasm for perceiving and exploring the world around them. Research shows that parents' ability to show interest in and empathy for their child's discoveries and feelings is crucial to the child's brain development. Before the age of one, and well before they talk, babies point tiny fingers at wonderful things they see. Bodies move in rhythm to music. Ask a group of four-year-olds "Can you dance?" "Can you sing?" "Can you draw?" and they all say, "Yes! Yes!" Ask twelve-year-olds the same questions, and they will too often say "No, we can't." Such an unnecessary loss has ominous implications for the spiritual, economic, social, and political health of society.

Most abilities observed in creative people are also characteristic of children during interactions with the world around them. What becomes of this extraordinary capacity? According to John Holt, author of 'How Children Fail', "We destroy this capacity above all by making them afraid - afraid of not doing what other people want, of not pleasing, or of making mistakes, of failing, of being wrong. Thus we make them afraid to gamble, afraid to experiment, afraid to try the difficult and unknown."

Feels good to rekindle with an old flame...

Photo taken with my Canon 5d Mark II
50mm f/1.4



Hope everyone had a nice and relaxing long weekend... I sure did! I soaked it up and got as much R&R as possible, knowing that Monday (today) marks the first day of school for Fall Semester. To be honest, I'm shocked that I slept quite well last night... I was afraid that anxiety would keep me tossing and turning. Hopefully all goes well for my first day of school! I'm sure I'll blend right in since I still look under 18... I say this because this weekend a sales clerk at Macy's asked me if I was 18 and over to sign up for a Macy's card. Haha! (I didn't sign up for one, btw... in case you were wondering...)

Good luck to everyone starting school today... I know I'll need it...