Monday, December 31, 2007
New Years sklog; recent lapses & failures
Sunday, December 2, 2007
Latest sklog and graphic novellette progress report
5,685 words and counting! In the midst of the production of which I made some creative control decisions and went through some sleepless nights and decided to make the novel a graphic novellette. It seemed more realistic after I took a look at the novel's content in terms of quantity (averaging a shade over 189 words a day) and in terms of quality (five disparate plots, innumerable changes in tone and genre, and a change in narrator from first-person to third-person, back to first, then back to third-person again, basically a literary triple play and we're still not out of the first chapter) and I've decided that my text could use some bolstering from visual aids. And I hate describing things to people. And I hate reading other people's descriptions of things. Hence the graphic - and I don't like over-long books - hence the novellette.
Of course that means I'll have to practice comic forms. This week's sklog is my first attempt at incorporating text boxes, word balloons, and thought bubbles into the visual arts medium. Text boxes are fantastic because they're cheating on the purity of the visual narration, just as the visual narration is cheating on the purity of the verbal narration, and everyone's cheating on each other and nobody minds because it's a party and let's invite the word balloons and the thought bubbles too because they're both totally groovy and they understand and everyone can just crash on the couch or the floor. Happy Holidays!
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Stunning progress on the Novel
So I've decided to start posting self-congratulatory notes to myself whenever I find time to work on My Novel, the noble and majestic tome the conception and creation of which has consumed the better part of my life and which after numerous re-writes and deletions and inevitable memory losses contained before tonight just over 2400 words.
But I toiled over it like a machine today, stretching it out to just over 4100 words in one day (pant pant, gag, retch, spit, blink uncomprehendingly at appalled onlookers)!
About 1800 of those words, written on previous occasions under the influence of far less inspiration than tonight, will have to be deleted, but oh the survivors are looking perky and well indeed! Vibrant and healthy and fit, the words I'll have left after the necessary extinctions will be the Times New Roman version of phytoplankton, ready to teem!
On a slightly negative note: I may have to find a new writing spot. Keep getting bugged while I try to write.
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Rome LIves!
The hagenart sklog for 11/11/07, which happens to be Veteran's Day, which I celebrated by reading excerpts from a book about World War II, but did not employ any veteran's themes in the sklog, which I drew while we waited outside the Borghese Museum to go in and view the Bernini sculptures which my uncle had so fervently recommended to me as being superior to anything by Michelangelo.
Well, I couldn't honestly tell who was better than who. The Michelangelo's and the Bernini's and the Donatello's were all amazingly detailed and lifelike, but by the time we went home I'd seen so many other statues that I could hardly bear to look at them. They had halls and halls of them in every museum over there, and after a while they kind of blurred together, good and bad.
I think the statues were like billboards in ancient rome, that they put them up everywhere and most of them were garbage by hacks and people going home from the market or the forum would look at them and sigh and say; "Another goddamn statue - why do they have to do that?" and shake their fists at them and try to get the senate to pass laws against them and the senators all agreed, it was a damn shame, all those statues cluttering the city, you couldn't even see the sky or the trees anymore, and they shook their heads but the head of the sculptors union was a sleaze ball businessman who shook his head and told the senators that the statues were actually helping the city by encouraging citizens to win wars or do well in business to get their own statue made, and disarmed opponents by thoughtfully sketching their heads and telling them how excellent their image would look in marble, overlooking the Via Sacra, and when all else failed asking senators if they wanted to see a small sculpture he was particularly proud of, a little two-dimensional profile of ceasar, and why yes, it was sculptured in gold, and yes, it was in fact a dinari, and yes, he did have a large chest full of such sculptures available - why, senator, are you a supporter of the arts?
I'm actually quite fond of statues, especially big ones, but Italy gave me my fill.
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Italian Epilogue: Pompei Scavi
Monday, October 29, 2007
Las motocicletas
Thursday, October 25, 2007
The Italia trip II
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
The Italian Sklog
The first sklog from Italy, drawn while we sat in St. Peter's Square, resting after our ordeal in the Vatican Museum; we staggered shoulder to shoulder with about 50,000 other suckers through endless hallways filled with monotonously beautiful paintings and sculptures and decorations and finally ended up jammed into the Sistine Chapel with everyone in Europe, looking up at Michelangelo's frescoes and not really feeling anything but an intense desire to leave and enjoy some fresh air (or relatively fresh air, as fresh as it gets in Rome, anyway). I've seen those images too many times to get anything new from it. I did feel an immediate sympathetic connection to the miserable souls depicted in the Last Judgement on the one wall, though.
I don't remember what else we did that particular day, it was the second day in Rome and we'd already seen the ruins of the forum and the Collosseum and I kept wondering what part of the ruins were really the ruins and what part had been slightly re-built, because I'd always thought that 2,000 year old ruins would be all stoney, like gray rocks, and these ruins had a lot of brick in them. Can reddish bricks be 2,000 years old?
It doesn't seem right, and I kept thinking that maybe in the intervening 2,000 years - everyone knows that the people living in rome would take marble and stones from the old temples and buildings for a while, and use them on their own houses and such, which seems natural, why not? And really, after 500 years, wouldn't they tear down buildings that nobody lived in? And if people still lived in them, they probably repaired them, shored up the walls, added bricks or whatever. So at what point did they stop taking marble and rock and stop adding brick and decide that what they had there were not buildings or a source of building materials or anything with any practical value, but were RUINS, to be preserved exactly as ruins, for future generations of tourists? What do you do with ruins? Do you try to re-build them and make a theme-park, or do you let them slowly dissolve, integrity intact?
Sunday, October 7, 2007
The End Cameth Quickly
Thursday, October 4, 2007
Notes on a Failed Enterprise part 1: Foot Lady
Monday, October 1, 2007
9-30 Market: A Crushing Blow
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Fighting the Flob with Larger Descriptive Text
x o xx
Moving the Sklog
This week's sklog looks horrible in this format, but I'm not to blame - total incompetence at text-based formatting, if those are the right words, and they're probably not, but I'm not to blame - total incompetence at text-based composition. I could go on and on. I'm moving the sklog to a more formal blog-type format, and this is where I've begun, with the sklog for 9-23-07, a diatribe against something-something in the something-something.
Usually the words in the image would be legible, or somewhat legible, or at least bigger, but I was worried that if I put the full sklog image up it would be too big for the descriptive text, even though the sklog itself contains descriptive text which itself has turned out to be too small. So basically, this first post has turned into a ruthless struggle between the descriptive text within the sklog image and the descriptive text in the blog format, and at this point the descriptive text in the flob, by which I mean blog format, towers over the descriptive text in the sklog, which I will re-post in larger format.
xo