‘Wonderland' began in July 2009, as a small summer project in memory of my mother Maureen whom I lost to cancer 7 months before. She was an English teacher who spent a lifetime inspiring myself, and generations of children with her captivating stories and plays. She was my best friend, and so escapism through my camera quickly became the only way to deal with the reality of my loss. Nothing prepared me for the enormous personal journey that followed, as the project spiralled into a 3-year adventure, leading me to leave my 10-year career as a fashion designer, to commit my future to producing the book and exhibition of the series. The project has been created out of nothing, and is the result of relentless hard work, in which almost everything within the frame has been made or designed by myself with the help of the hair and make-up artist Elbie Van Eeden and the occasional kindness of friends. There are no large support teams, designers or stylists involved, and nothing has been commissioned. The characters and their worlds are the blurred hybrids of the stories and book illustrations from my childhood memories with my mother. Nothing is a direct recreation of a particular tale, and the title ‘Wonderland,' was purely to express a girl's escapism through the pages of her book – something that echoed my personal situation in real life.
Despite initial impressions, my work is not the result of multiple digital composites and Photoshop special effects. It is for this reason that my work sits between the lines of traditional photography and digital artistry as all the elements including their locations and colours are real, made by hand, and true scale. The pictures are polished with retouching, and in a few exceptions I add small manipulations to suggest a sense of magic, but that is all. My focus is to create ‘fantasy for real' using anything from smoke bombs glued to umbrellas, to painting trees and making giantesses out of models balancing in 8ft dresses. I push myself to create whatever is necessary to bring the illusions to life, and then document the process in my online ‘Diary'
The support for the project from around the world has been overwhelming and at times deeply moving. I never imagined anyone to understand the emotion I felt behind the camera, yet I continue to receive letters from people from all walks of life who feel connected with its sentiment and find beauty with the frame.
The series is now in its final stages with its completion planned for the end of the summer 2012. There are currently 60 pieces in the collection.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Fairy-Tale Artwork for a Mother Lost
Artist Kirsty Mitchell (Facebook Page) has been creating a series of "Wonderland" images to commemorate her mother who lost her battle to cancer. Mitchell's artist statement reads:
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Andrea Gibson - Poet, Activist
by Jolie Roberson
Andrea Gibson is an award-winning poet and activist. Her poetry focuses on gender norms, politics, and the struggles queer people face in today's society. Gibson disclosed that she chose to write what was in her bones and thus these subject matters are what came out. On top of using poetry to express what she feels and tackle real issues, she is involved with many group activists. She often performs at Take Back the Night Events, LGBT events, Pride events, Trans* events, Anti-war rallies, Peace rallies, organizations against the occupation of Palestine, groups focused on examining the wrongs of capitalism, patriarchy and white supremacy. - Wikipedia*Warning, may contain some adult language.*
These are just my favorites. Go to YouTube and type in her name to find many more.
Monday, June 25, 2012
Simple & Brilliant Videos: Matt and Kim
by Jolie Roberson
Matt and Kim just released a new video for their song "Let's Go" that features the skills of Pat the Roc, "the world's greatest ball-handler."
I have to say, as impressed as I am by the courage it takes to strip through Times Square, the video for "Daylight" is my favorite. It's just so charming!
Friday, June 22, 2012
Friday Video Feed
by Jolie Roberson
Here are a few of my favorite videos of the week, enjoy!
Cute children discussing literally anything makes me bust into incurable giggle-fits. Watching cute children discuss dubstep dynamo Skrillex is too hilarious for words. Don't worry, kids, I sometimes have a hard time understanding him, too.
I don't think I need to explain this one. This is a tortoise trying to eat a tomato and failing miserably.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Inspiration: Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet
by Jolie Roberson, originally posted here
You will find here “Letters to a Young Poet” by Rainer Maria Rilke. This batch of letters has served as a point of inspiration, grounding, and consolation at times. I do hope you will take the time to read them, re-read them, and find solace in the words of an artist to another artist…which could just as well be you, or me, or anyone else. Read them here.
Here are a few of my favorite quotes:
This most of all: ask yourself in the most silent hour of your night: must I write? Dig into yourself for a deep answer. And if this answer rings out in assent, if you meet this solemn question with a strong, simple “I must”, then build your life in accordance with this necessity; your whole life, even into its humblest and most indifferent hour, must become a sign and witness to this impulse.
In this there is no measuring with time, a year doesn’t matter, and ten years are nothing. Being an artist means: not numbering and counting, but ripening like a tree, which doesn’t force its sap, and stands confidently in the storms of spring, not afraid that afterward summer may not come. It does come. But it comes only to those who are patient, who are there as if eternity lay before them, so unconcernedly silent and vast. I learn it every day of my life, learn it with pain I am grateful for: patience is everything!
Therefore, dear Sir, love your solitude and try to sing out with the pain it causes you. For those who are near you are far away, you write, and this shows that the space around you is beginning to grow vast. And if what is near you is far away, then your vastness is already among the stars and is very great; be happy about your growth, in which of course you can’t take anyone with you, and be gentle with those who stay behind; be confident and calm in front of them and don’t torment them with your doubts and don’t frighten them with your faith or joy, which they wouldn’t be able to comprehend. Seek out some simple and true feeling of what you have in common with them, which doesn’t necessarily have to alter when you yourself change again and again; when you see them, love life in a form that is not your own and be indulgent toward those who are growing old, who are afraid of the aloneness that you trust.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Your Monday Inspiration: Ran Ortner
originally posted by Lee Jones
Ran Ortner
In this work Swell by Ran Ortner, the artist has created the illusion of water coming out of the walls. It’s almost impossible to not be fooled by this illusion and, no matter how many times I try to see a 2D surface, I can only ever see the sea. Ortner’s fascination with water began during his romantic childhood in Alaska. As his portfolio describes his unlikely beginnings,
“He and his family lived in an isolated log cabin, with no running water, a wood fire for heat and a grass airstrip for a driveway. To escape the brutal winters, Ran and his family would take their single engine Cessna “Ragwing” on 3-4 month adventures from Alaska to South America. On these expeditions, Ran would turn to the open expanse of the sea to escape the confines of his unconventional childhood. When Ran was eighteen, he left home and began surfing the waves off the coasts of California and Mexico. While surfing he was able to consider both the wondrous and perilous conditions of life. Overwhelmed by what he saw and felt, he turned to art as a form of exploration.”
Ortner describes his works as a collision of opposing forces. “Every day I enter my studio, prepare my materials and, as James Joyce said, “go for the millionth time to encounter the reality of the experience.”I attempt through painting to sustain my encounter with life’s biting reality.” For more information on Ortner’s works, click here.
Friday, June 15, 2012
4th Avenue Exposed
BreakOut Studio's "4th Avenue: Exposed" event was a huge success! Tickets sold out, the performances were all top-notch and well-received, and the audience left smiling. This won't be the last one, so add yourself to our Facebook Page to stay up-to-date with future events!
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Your Wednesday Inspiration: Ernestine Shepherd
by Jolie Roberson
I don't think I'm alone when I say I want to be like this woman when I'm her age. What an amazing story!
Monday, June 11, 2012
Thursday, June 7, 2012
BreakOut Studios Presents: 4th Avenue Exposed!
This will be an opportunity for artistic and creative types to display their talents, abilities, genius and for the community around them to support different ventures that these individuals are involved with. You will experience a night of art, music, dance, culture and so much more. Get involved with your community and open your eyes to the magnificence this city has to offer you.
June 9th, from 7pm-9pm.
$5 entry at door or online.
BreakOut Studios:
522 N. 4th Ave
Tucson, AZ 85705
For more information contact (520) 670-1301 or 4thexposed@gmail.com.
Take a look at just a few of the phenomenal local acts we have performing!
The Missing Parts
The Missing Parts are an acoustic instrumental quartet featuring violin, lap-steel guitar, cello, and guitar. Written collaboratively, the songs journey through an odyssey of dreamscapes, always arcing back and forth from the source: One Madly Dreaming Mind. Their influences are literally all over the map: tango, Roma, Turkish, a wide range of classical composers and styles, folk music from old time to new-grass, and too many more influences to list without sounding like a world music textbook. They particularly like soulful instrumental music (and, hence, the movie scores of Rota, Morricone, Hermann (Bernard, not Pee Wee), and to a lesser extent Badalmanti). The Missing Parts feature Oliver Blaylock on violin, Douglas Francisco on lap steel, Brian Hullfish on cello, and Paul Wright on guitar and percussion.
Nica Statman
The Boogie Pimps
Facebook | YouTube
Janet Hermalik
Janet Hermalik is an extremely talented poet. You may have seen her work on the sidewalks around downtown Tucson. She will be doing poetry readings during this event, but you can preview some of her work by visiting her website, Web of Whys.
Bruce Gulick of The Magic Fun Store Gallery and Tattoo Parlour will be showing some of his incredible paintings.
Bruce Gulick
Bruce Gulick of The Magic Fun Store Gallery and Tattoo Parlour will be showing some of his incredible paintings.
Labels:
4th Avenue,
Arizona,
art,
artists,
Boogie Pimps,
BreakOut Studios,
Bruce Gulick,
entertainment,
Exposed,
Janet Hermalik,
Missing Parts,
music,
Nica Statman,
nightlife,
paintings,
poetry,
The Magic Fun Store,
Tucson
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Stroke of Insight: Neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor's First-Hand Experience with a Stroke
I had another post planned for today, but I watched this and couldn't wait a second longer to share it. There's nothing that I could say to better explain it than Jill Bolte Taylor does in this TED talk, so just watch!
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Heart & Soul: Workshop with Tadd Gadduang (SYTYCD8)
by Clayton Ashcraft
Wow, how can I explain the workshop this last weekend with Tadd Gadduang?! Heart and soul would be the two words to define his class, the knowledge shared, and the feeling of the room. I take from not only my conversations with him to and from Tucson, but what he had to say about being an artist in everything. Tadd said,"As artists or whatever form of artistry you do; singing, dancing, painting, anything…anything that you do that expresses in a sense you're giving something to those who are engaged who are committed to what you are projecting on stage. Sometimes I am guilty of this…I would just move to music…I wasn't giving or sharing. I try to draw from experiences in my life and express it through what I do." The heart and soul of the dancers, ranging from kids to adults, that attended the workshop left the studio with a better idea of what being a 'true artist' is all about.
Part of my mission for Step X Step Dance was featuring talented dancers in small communities that don't normally have a large voice like other dancers, studios, or crews may have! The mission I set to achieve and the artistry of Tadd's class fused together to create a force of progression, happiness, and motivation for the future. No one should be left out of the equation that makes up this beautiful lifestyle and culture, which is something that I feel Tadd hit up very well in his explanation of 'artistry.'
After a very successful master class with Tadd, he spent another hour or so talking with a few of the dancers from the workshop outside. I could see him giving one on one time with many dancers who were itching to pick his brain on street dance culture, So You Think You Can Dance, making the leap to L.A., and many other subjects. Outside while talking to a few studio dancers he mentioned how the real important part of a class or workshop is the knowledge that is taught about the art, the culture, the foundations, the founders, and how it relates to our life. I look back now and wish I had really got that on camera because we all felt like we had the most nourishing meal for our minds, bodies, and spirits!
Big Thank You to Todd, Janna, Jolie, Garrett, and everyone at BreakOut Studios! Tadd absolutely loved the dancers, his experience and wants to come back! Thank you to everyone that came from others studios in Tucson and supported, we would love to support your studio as well! From the bottom of my heart, it's people like you that help make this dream of mine, Step X Step Dance, come true! Slowly, but surely we are "uniting dancers worldwide step by step!" Please make sure to check us out at StepXStep!
Here is the video link to the workshop recap with Tadd:
Monday, June 4, 2012
Your Monday Inspiration: John Cleese on Cultivating Creativity
by Jolie Roberson
I have grown up on John Cleese. My mother was a huge fan of "Fawlty Towers" and "Monty Python" so, of course, I am now a huge fan. I find these videos below to be inspirational not just because I adore John Cleese, but because I have a reference now of what it took to create all that he has created. It's so disheartening to try and try to create and get nowhere, I know I've been there my fair share of the time, but what he says specifically about tolerating the discomfort of not having an answer in order to come up with the most creative solution made my day. "Look, baby-cakes, I don't have to decide 'til Tuesday." Enjoy, be inspired, play!
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