Archive for May, 2009

Getting Into Art Again After Being Away for a While

I remember being in highschool, and drawing this detailed perspective finished drawing of a castle. It was so fun to pick up the drawing for art class with my ruler, and keep going where I left off a few days before. It was one of my favourite things to do. Now that I am an adult, I have the opportunity to do that stuff all the time, but I don’t. I never do it (until lately).

A few times I have picked up paints and canvasses, but it is hard to get inspired, until recently. I thought I would write this post to inspire other people who may be trying to get back into art after an absence.

1. Keep the pressure off: If you were an art-star in High School or University, you may be a bit out of practice. You may not want to start off with a large painting – it could be helpful to start off small.

2. Stay cheap: You may have more money for supplies than you used to, but buying expensive supplies can make it stressful. I just got a box of multi-coloured acrylic paints, and worked from there.

3. Explore stuff you never did: I was too snooty when I was younger to try crafts, but now, why not? It is fun. It also let’s me use my imagination in new ways.

4. Let yourself fail: Part of using cheaper supplies etc., allows you to simply throw away what you don’t like. I also have a drawer for pieces that are “marked for destruction” just in case I am being rash.

You can see below some simple art pieces I did. I hope this post inspires others to have fun with art!

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Star Trek 2009 – Yet Another Sexist Movie

I was pretty excited to see the new Star Trek come out. As a kid, I used to watch the show in syndicate after school. I enjoyed watching them discover new worlds and cultures, reflecting my own interest in different cultures and places. I liked the way that in the Star Trek world, Kirk was rewarded for not following the rules – very different from the suburban, Canadian, rule-following, governmental environment I grew up in.

At the time, I don’t remember thinking much about the female characters, other than some of the “weird” female aliens Kirk had romantic entanglements with. I also had a sense of feeling “left out” somehow of the game, but I didn’t quite reason why.

As an adult, I realize that that feeling was due to the fact that the rebel characters that I related to the most were almost always male, and when there was a female character, she would simply be someone sexy, someone to love, or someone to give birth to the guys. All of these roles are simply showing the women as revolving around the guys. And, unfortunately, so many movies still follow the exact same formula.

Take the new Star Trek movie for example, recently released by J. J. Abrams. Lt. Uhura, the leading woman, certainly has some cred. She is a linguistics specialist and is said to be one of the smartest in her class. And, she even uses her skills during a brief scene in the movie (I am trying not to give spoilers here). Unfortunatly, her prime role is to be in the middle of a love triangle. Her actual skills fade into the background, and her “someone to love” role is central to the movie. Actually, you probably see more footage of her in her underwear than her actually using her skills.

Although there are many other characters who have skills that contribute to the mission, there are no other women. The guys get to have character development, where they evolve and change, but Uhura only reflects her development by which guy she chooses. There is the character of Spock’s Mom as well played by Winona Rider, but of course she is in the role of “someone to give birth to the guys”. Again, showing the women as just being little moons revolving around the important planets of men.

The pilot of the original Star Trek is said to have had more strong female roles, but the network would only accept the show if they marginalized the females. At the same time, the show was rather groundbreaking for the time, with Lt. Uhura as an officer, and it also showed TV’s first interracial kiss (between Uhura and Kirk). The annoying part is that movies have fallen so short of evolving with the time. They are just following the same formula as the 60s, with a few minor twists but amounting to the same thing (Uhura having skills for example, but still being marginalized.)

I was also surprised at the quote in the Trivia section of IMDB:

To develop the female characters, the wives of J.J. Abrams, Damon Lindelof, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman were consulted. In fact it was Katie Abrams‘s approval of the strong female characters that convinced her husband J.J. to sign on to direct.

What happened, similar to the original, did the “strong female characters” get cut?

So – I still watched the movie, and went back to my child-habit of relating to my habit of relating to the male characters instead of the female. You would just think a movie made so recently would be a bit more refreshing. J.J. Abrams is known for his “Mystery Box”. I just wish that for the sake of the young girls watching this that there was something more suprising.

Organization for the Unorganized

Typically, I find people who are organized and tidy kind of full of themselves. They often look down on people who are less-so, and if a messy roommate lives with an organized one, often it is the organized one who dominates.

I thought this until I met a friend in University who was naturally organized, but I never held it against her because she had a refreshing attitude. I told her how amazing she was, and how I wished desperately that I was the same way. She did not make a deal about it, and simply said “well, some people are that way, some people aren’t,” hinting that it was obviously a nature thing rather than nurture.

A few months ago, I read an article in the New York Times about a writer (Sara Rimer) who was trying to get organized, but she wasn’t really a naturally organized person. She wrote a great article about it. I needed this advice, since during tax time I was trying to reconciliate my old life as a single one-person sole-proprietorship to my new life as a coupled-off president of an employeed corporation. I also moved three times last year.

Sara says:

Organization is not a one-size-fits-all proposition. Just as people’s differing appetites, metabolisms and capacities for exercise mean that a given diet will work well for some, not at all for others, differences in work styles can run deep, and often call for customized approaches to the home office. And yet, the experts say, few of us take (or even believe we have) the time to figure out how we really work, or what kind of system is likely to work for us.

Agreed! I took her advice of using bins instead of files, to simply throw things in, rather than needing to file it in a forgotten drawer. I have been using the system for a few months, and just got Matt to put up some shelves to hold them. Check it out! (you can also see that I like Pocky ;) ).

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