Monday, May 16, 2011

20 additional ideas

1.       Wish You Were Here-Pink Floyd
2.       I Could Have Lied- Red Hot Chili Peppers
3.       Tightrope Walker-Epicure
4.       Beautiful-Eminem
5.       Sadly Smiling Through-One Less Reason
6.       War And Peace-Leo Tolstoy
7.       Anna Karenina-Leo Tolstoy
8.       Flags of Our Fathers-James Bradley
9.       The Color Purple-Alice Walker
10.   In Cold Blood-Truman Capote
11.   Brothers-Lance Carter
12.   My Sister’s Keeper-Jodi Picoult
13.   Precious-Sapphire
14.   The Titanic-James Cameron
15.   Bridge to Terabithia-Katherine Paterson
16.   Anchor-Susan Meyer
17.   Hold on to Me-Susan Meyer
18.   The Past Is Always Present-Susan Meyer
19.   Lonely-Susan Meyer
20.   It’s Not O.K.-Susan  Meyer

Friday, May 13, 2011

Excerpt 5 Song

Title: A Day To Be Alone
Band: One Less Reason
Date: 2005
Country of Origin: America
Hows it feel hows it feel
to be left out there
in the smoke in the cold
the midnight air

does it hurt does it burn
to be unaware of the torture
of a white lie

i don't know where you are so
why do i care i know we're both even so whys it feel unfair

some say that four seasons
are enough for a lifetime
of change i hope when you
think of me you remember the
love that i gave
(when our seasons change)

hows it feel can you deal
with the rise and fall
of a life that ignites
like a mirror ball
and i wonder are you still afraid of the dark

i don't know where you are so
why do i care i know we're both
even so whys it feel unfair

some say that four seasons
are enough for a lifetime
of change and i hope when you
think of me you remember the
love that i gave

this is the life i left behind
this is the memory of you
thats still embedded in my mind

some say that four seasons
are enough for a lifetime
of change and i hope when you
think of me you remember the
love that i gave
(when our seasons change)x2


(Thanks to RachelNicoleee for these lyrics)
She said I wonder when it'll be my day
'Cause I'm not too far from breaking down
All I've got are screams inside
But somehow they come out in a smile
And I'm wondering if I'll always feel this way, this way

(Chorus)
Tell me about those nights you stayed awake
Tell me about those days you hated me
Tell me how you'd rather die alone
Than being stuck here with me
And maybe you've fallen down
And maybe you just took the long way home
But baby you could never love you like me
And one day this will fade away
In the mirror you'll see a smiling face
And standing next to you will always be me, yeah me

One day you're gonna see things my way
You gave me so much room that I can't breathe
When all I've got are pictures to view
It was nothing before and I started with you
For some reason it's supposed to be that way, that way

(Chorus)
Tell me about those nights you stayed awake
Tell me about those days you hated me
Tell me how you'd rather die alone
Than being stuck here with me
And maybe you've fallen down
And maybe you just took the long way home
But baby you could never love you like me
And one day this will fade away
In the mirror you'll see a smiling face
And standing next to you will always be me, yeah me

(Bridge)
If I could shrink it down and put it in your hands
We made it hurt so much, I can't forget the past
Just tell me what to say, show me what to do
Then I could forgive me and I would forgive you

(Chorus)
And maybe you've fallen down
And maybe you just took the long road home
But baby you will never love you like me
And one day this will fade away
In the mirror you'll see a smiling face
And standing next to you will always be me
You know will always be me, and I will wait
Always be me, til I see your smiling...

Excerpt 4 Literature

Title: Romeo and Juliet
Author: William Shakespeare
Date: 1597
Country of Origin: England
Exit BALTHASAR
Enter Apothecary

Excerpt 3 Poetry

Title: Colorless
Author: Susan Meyer
Date: December 22, 2010
Country of Origin: America
A lonely road on a dark cold night
Leads to an empty city, filled with freight
Where no one speaks nor listens
Where only the moonlight glistens
A day of darkness
A time of sorrow
Where the past is present
Where the sun doesn’t rise
Where the moon’s crescent is the only thing that shines
White, black, gray
Life is not always in color
On this dark night
You may never see another

Excerpt 2 Song

Title: Last Resort
Band: Papa Roach
Date: 1999(recorded) 2000(released)
Country of Origin: America
Cut my life into pieces
I've reached my last resort, suffocation, no breathing
Don't give a fuck if I cut my arms bleeding
Would it be wrong, would it be right
If I took my life tonight, chance are that I might
Mutilation out of sight and I'm contemplating suicide
Cause I'm losing my sight, losing my mind
Wish somebody would tell me I'm fine
Nothing's alright, nothing is fine
I'm running and I'm crying
I never realized I was spread too thin
Till it was too late and I was empty within
Hungry, feeding on chaos and living in sin
Downward spiral, where do I begin
It all started when I lost my mother
No love for myself and no love for another
Searching to find a love upon a higher level
Finding nothing but questions and devils
Cause I'm losing my sight, losing my mind
Wish somebody would tell me I'm fine
Nothing's alright, nothing is fine
I'm running and I'm crying
I can't go on living this way

Excerpt 1 Literature

Title: Misery
Author: Stephen King
Date: 1987
Country of Origin: America
Paul looked at the typewriter. The typewriter was there. N’s! He had never realized how many n’s there were in an average line of type.
I thought you were supposed to be good, the typewriter said – his mind had invested it with a sneering and yet callow voice: the voice of a teenage-gunslinger in a Hollywood western, a kid intent on making a fast reputation here in Deadwood. You’re not so good. Hell, you can’t even please one crazy overweight ex-nurse. Maybe you broke your writing bone in that crash, too … only that bone isn’t healing.
He leaned back as far as the wheelchair would allow and closed his eyes. Her rejection of what he had written would be easier to bear if he could blame it on the pain, but the truth was that the pain had finally begun to subside a little.
The stolen pills were safely tucked away between the mattress and the box spring. He had taken none of them – knowing he had them put aside, a form of Annie-insurance, was enough. She would find them if she took it into her head to turn the mattress, he supposed, but that was a chance he was prepared to take.
There had been no trouble between them since the blowup over the typewriter paper. His medication came regularly, and he took it. He wondered if she knew he was hooked on the stuff.
Hey, come on now, Paul, that’s a bit of a dramatization, isn’t it?
No, it wasn’t. Three nights ago, when he was sure she was upstairs, he had sneaked one of the sample boxes out and had read everything on the label, although he supposed he had read everything he needed when he saw what Norvil’s principal ingredient was. Maybe you spelled relief R-O-L-A-I-D-S, but you spelled Norvil C-O-D-E-I-N-E.
The fact is, you’re healing up, Paul. Below the knees your legs look like a four-year-old’s stick-drawing, but you are healing up. You could get by on aspirin or Empirin now. It’s not you that needs the Norvil; you’re feeding it to the monkey.
He would have to cut down, have to duck some of the caps. Until he could do that, she would have him on a chain as well as in a wheelchair – a chain of Norvil capsules.
Okay. I’ll duck one of the two capsules she gives me every other time she brings them. I’ll put it under my tongue when I swallow the other one, then stick it under my mattress with the other pills when she takes the drinking glass out. Only not today. I don’t feel ready to start today. I’ll start tomorrow.
Now in his mind he heard the voice of the Red Queen lecturing Alice: Down here we get our act clean yesterday, and we plan to start getting our act clean tomorrow, but we never clean up our act today.
Ho-ho, Paulie, you’re a real riot, the typewriter said in the tough gunsel’s voice he had made up for it.
“Us dirty birdies are never all that funny, but we never stop trying – you have to give us that,” he muttered.
Well, you better start thinking about all the dope you are taking, Paul. You better start thinking about it very seriously.
He decided suddenly, on the spur of the moment, that he would start dodging some of the medication as soon as he got a first chapter that Annie liked on paper – a chapter which Annie decided wasn’t a cheat.
Part of him – the part that listened to even the best, fairest editorial suggestions with ill-grace – protested that the woman was crazy, that there was no way to tell what she might or might not accept; that anything he tried would be only a crapshoot.
But another part – a far more sensible part – disagreed. He would know the real stuff when he found it. The real stuff would make the crap he had given Annie to read last night, the crap it had taken him three days and false starts without number to write, look like a dog turd sitting next to a silver dollar. Hadn’t he known it was all wrong? It wasn’t like him to labor so painfully, not to half-fill a wastebasket with random jottings or half-pages which ended with lines like ‘Misery turned to him, eyes shining, lips murmuring the magic words Oh you numb shithead THIS ISN’T WORKING AT ALL!!!!” He had chalked it off to the pain and to being in a situation where he was not just writing for his supper but for his life. Those ideas had been nothing but plausible lies. The fact was, things had gone badly because he was cheating and he had known it himself.
Well, she saw through you, shit-for-brains, the typewriter said in its nasty, insolent voice. Didn’t she? So what are you going to do now?
He didn’t know, but he supposed he would have to something, and in a hurry. He hadn’t cared for her mood this morning. He supposed he should count himself lucky that she hadn’t re-broken his legs with a baseball bat or given him a battery-acid manicure or something similar to indicate her displeasure with the way he had begun her book – such critical responses were always possible, given Annie’s unique view of the world. If he got out of this alive, he thought he might drop Christopher Hale a note. Hale reviewed books for the New York Times. The note would say: “Whenever my editor called me up and told me you were planning to review one of my books in the daily Times, my knees used to knock together – you gave me some good ones, Chris old buddy, but you also torpedoed me more than once, as you well know. Anyway, I just wanted to tell you to go ahead and do your worst – I’ve discovered a whole new critical mode, my friend. We might call it the Colorado Barbecue and Floor-Bucket school of thought. It makes the stuff you guys do look about as scary as a ride on the Central Park carousel.”
This is all very amusing, Paul, writing critics little billet-doux in one’s head is always good for a giggle, but you really ought to find yourself a pot and get it boiling, don’t you think?
Yes. Yes indeed.
The typewriter sat there, smirking at him.
“I hate you,” Paul said morosely, and looked out the window.

Monday, May 2, 2011

hw 5.2.11 and poem 5.3


Still air and silence
I’m left alone
To remember the memories
I long once known
                                                My new bride so petite and young
                                                One day you will mother our son
                                                I know you little yet must agree
                                                Fate by law has brought you to me
The man I loved
The man I knew
Poor but kind
With a brilliant mind
                                                Arrangements have been made
                                                Strangers at best, we’ve just only met
                                                The dues have been paid
                                                I worry, I worry, I fret
I’ve lost my love
I’ve found reality
This place I’m in
Seems like a tragedy
                                                Wealth and fame has its ups and downs
                                                Some days I smile, others I frown
                                                Long we will be wed
                                                What’s done is done, what’s said is said

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Short Story 4/27


The Nightmare Come True
As a young lady, every year Sarah saw the big tent filled with the supernatural people. Shaking in her seat, holding her mother’s hand tight enough to break her fingers, anxious to go back to the car; Sarah sat in misery for the one day of the year when the unimaginable people come to town. The extraordinarily strange people, the one who perform crazily unnatural trades, left Sarah’s young mind twisted. Permanent markings were made to her brain, things that could never be unseen and surely would never forget. Many years have passed since Sarah has been to another gigantic fort. Rebellious and dangerous she has grown, hating the creatures she once encountered. On a dark dusty day, Sarah exerted her built up anger for these creatures by setting a flame one of the old red and yellow tarps. The men in the white cars with the flashing lights chased Sarah down. The serious uniformed man took hold of Sarah’s red hands and clamped them together with tight metal rings. Sarah was taken into the dark room where the only light that could be seen was pointed directly at her twisted scull. The man with the notebook questioned Sarah about the incident. “What caused you to take such drastic action?”, the curious man in the dark uniform asked. Sarah whispered to the man, “I hate those freaks”. After much conversing, the big man with the big black belt and the metal rings decided on Sarah’s punishment for this dreadfully horrid crime. Sarah was sentenced to the freak show. Sarah would live for the rest of her days performing at each presentation as a miserable big shoed, white faced, red nosed supernatural. Miserable and lonely, Sarah spent her days living her worst nightmare.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Critique #2

“Agony”
Lives are lost every day, leaving others behind to feel grief while mourning the losses. People struggle with loses in many different ways. Often times, one mourns the death of a loved one, or close companion for a very long period of time. Suffering from misery and feeling sympathy throughout these struggles causes a loss of hope for many people. In the painting, “Agony”, Jerome Richard Tiger carefully uses distinct juxtaposition, contrasting color and strong body language to demonstrate the misery and sympathy one feels when another is lost.
Jerome Richard Tiger uses distinct juxtaposition to show the pain that the native man feels as he mourns the death of the woman. Though the woman has passed away, her body appears full. The man is shown to be weak and malnourished, showing his misery over the death of the woman. The fullness of the woman’s body emphasizes the malnourishment of the man’s body. Though the woman is dead, the man appears to be even more lifeless than the woman in the sense that his body is nothing but skin and bones, while her body appears plentiful. The contrasting juxtaposition emphasizes the harsh extent at which the man is suffering.
In the painting, “Agony”, Tiger uses contrasting color to emphasize the misery and sympathy the native man feels after the woman passes away. The artist uses blue and orange, complementary colors to add contrast to the painting. The blue color causes the viewer to feel the sorrowful emotion expressed in the painting. The woman’s pale blue dress shows the strong sorrows her death has inflicted upon the man. The blue background also adds sorrow-filled emotion to the entire painting. The blank blue tinted background also shows that the man doesn’t have much else in life besides the woman who has just passed away. The orange color used throughout the painting shows the man’s warm sympathy towards the death of the woman. The contrasting colors emphasize the strong emotions that Tiger demonstrates in the painting.
The strong body language used in the painting shows how desperate and alone the man has become. The man is sitting down with the woman drawn across his body. The empty background shows the man is alone and has no one else. Tiger paints the arm drawn across the forehead of the man as he looks upwards toward the sky and possibly the heavens. The native man is looking to God and the heavens in grief. He is struggling with the loss of the woman and is miserable now that she is gone. The man is searching for an answer that cannot be found, looking for an explanation of some sort to give reasoning for this terrible tragedy that he is now encountering.
                Tiger’s use of distinct juxtaposition, contrasting color, and strong body language complete his painting. He uses these techniques to establish a sense of misery and sympathy throughout his painting. Tiger demonstrates a strong feeling of sympathy and misery that many feel when facing the loss of a loved one. The painting, “Agony”, relates to many people who have lost someone who has closely touched their life and will forever remain in their memory.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Self-Portraits

1. Rembrandt van Rijn
 -“Self-Portrait with Beret and Turned-Up Collar”
 -1659 AD
 -Netherlands
Vincent Van Gogh
 -“Self-Portrait with Felt Hat”
 -1888 AD
 -Netherlands
Lucian Freud
 -“Reflection (Self-Portrait)”
 -1985 AD
 -United Kingdom
Paul Gauguin
 -“Caricature, Self-Portrait”
 -1889 AD
 -France
Susanna Coffey
 -“Eris”
 -2003
 -America
Kathe Kollwitz
 -“Self Portrait”
 -1898
 -Germany
Gregory Gillespie
 -“Self-Portrait with Yellow Background”
 -1999
 -America
Pablo Picasso
 -“Self-Portrait”
 -1896
 -Spain
Paul Cezzane
 -“Self-Portrait”
 -1885
 -Russia
Brett Gamache
 -“Self Portrait”
 -2008
 -America

2.      The self-portraits painted by Gillespie, Coffey, and Gaugin use intense color, sharp contrast, and careful detail. All three artists use both warm and cool colors throughout the self portraits. Complementary colors are used to show contrast in each of the paintings. The paintings are very detailled, especially the face of each artist. Coffey and Gillespie's faces appear to be rough, while Gaugin's face appears to be smooth. All three artists use careful detail to show the texture of their faces. Gillespie, Coffey and Gaugin similarly use color, contrast and detail throughout their self-portraits.

3.       Vincent Van Gogh's self portrait, "Self-Portrait with Felt Hat" is the strongest self-portait. Van Gogh uses a radial technique which causes the viewer to concentrate on his face, the center. The painting is made up of lines. The repitition of lines gives the painting rythm. The variation of color causes the painting to stand out. Van Gogh unifies his painting by evenly distuibuting color to each part of his painting.  Vincent Van Gogh's self-portrait is very distinct and stands out amungst the rest.

4.       In earlier times, there were no cameras; the only way to have a visual image of something was to draw or paint it. Older artists use to paint self-portraits so that later on people would know what they looked like. Artists often enjoy portraying themselves as they see themselves, regardless of what others may see. Many modern artists do not focus on self-portraits as much as their other works because today there are cameras.There is not as much of a need to paint oneself today, as there use to be.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

homework due 3/11


"Misery Painting" Michael Anthony


"Misery" (Sculpture) Asad Hossein

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Critique #1: "Watime Misery Self Portrait 1945" Janos Pirk

“Wartime Misery Self Portrait 1945”
       War after war the world moves forward, leaving ongoing challenges left behind. Often times, only those who partake in the war are affected; citizens tune in to the news but make little contribution to the war effort. However, in World War Two everyone in America was affected; factories began producing war materials, families bought less food, and women knit clothing. Job opportunities also increased due to the necessities needed for war. Not only were soldiers fighting in the war; everyday citizens aided in the war effort. At times the war seemed never ending and hopeless. Misery took hold of many individuals during this terrible time of war. In the painting, “Wartime Misery Self Portrait”, Janos Pirk carefully uses simple symbolism, rundown facial expressions, and contrasting juxtaposition to demonstrate the misery and hopelessness that many people feel during a time of war. 
     In the painting, Janos Pirk, portrays a tattered blue shirt at the end of a pole, appearing to look like a flag. Normally, a flag represents a country’s pride. However, in the painting Pirk uses a tattered blue shirt rather than a flag to symbolize a loss of hope. The tears of the shirt show poor conditions; much like the country and its citizens face during a time of war. Citizens pledge to the American flag for hope and what is to come in the future; using a tattered shirt to represent America’s flag shows a loss of hope and a feeling of misery for all of America.
               As one year passes another slowly begins. War is an ongoing process that seems never ending. Janos Pirk portrays himself to be rundown and miserable through his facial expression, as many other Americans feel during a time of war. In the painting, Pirk paints one eye closed as the other is being held open with his fingers to show how exhausted and run down people are from the war. This detail adds affect to the painting and gives it a sense of misery. Citizens are tired and uninterested in the war effort; it has gone on too long and needs to end.
           Strong and hopeful, people often begin war with confidence. However, years into war people often lose hope and become weak, lacking the confidence they once had. In the painting, Pirk uses contrasting juxtaposition by placing a strong solid coffee cup next to weak brittle hands to emphasize how weak the citizens become due to an everlasting war. The comparison between the coffee mug and the hands is very distinct. Placing two opposites next to one another, strong and weak, emphasizes just how weak the citizens became during World War Two.  
         Janos Pirk’s use of simple symbolism, rundown facial expressions, and contrasting juxtaposition completes the painting. In using these techniques Pirk allows the viewer to feel a sense of misery at the sight of the painting. Pirk expresses a strong sorrow-filled emotion felt by many, during a time of war, through his painting, “Wartime Misery Self Portrait 1945”. Not only does the painting apply to those who lived through World War Two, it applies to anyone who is emotionally rundown and miserable because of any war.

Monday, February 28, 2011

"Wartime Misery Self Portrait 1945"-Critique #1

Title: "Watime Misery Self Portrait 1945"
Artist: Janos Pirk
Medium: Oil Paint on Canvas
 Notes: weak handstructures, holding eye open with hand (rundown), holding knife in his hand, sick looking skin coloring, blue tattered shirt put on pole to look like a flag (represents loss of hope) *uses complementary colors, blue and orange, to draw attention to the blue shirt against the orange background* 
Background info: born: 1903, died: 1989, lived: Hungary

Thursday, February 17, 2011

MISERY

          The concept I have chosen for the class is misery. Artwork can express emotions that one can't explain in words. Being sad can be understood by many; however, feeling misery takes the emotion to another level, one that many can't explain through word of mouth. I chose misery to be my concept because I think it will be interesting to research. Personally, I find paintings relating to sadness to be more meaningful with a hidden meaning behind it that no one can really understand. Researching the concept of misery will be a challenge as well as an interesting project to complete.