Sparking Creativity: Idito the Chicken and Moonpie Nobot
Posted: January 27, 2012 Filed under: Art, Creativity, Fun, Love, Makers, Sparking Creativity 6 Comments »For today’s entry in our ongoing “Sparking Creativity” series, we catch up with quirky Portland based creative duo “Idito the Chicken and Moonpie Nobot.” We’ve featured them and their unique brand of lo-fi musical genius before.
Today, Brandon and Tarehna share their thoughts on the benefit of self-imposed goals, and the joys of creating great things with someone you love.
You can find them online on Facebook and Google Plus. Check them out. Now. Go on, do it. Go. Go now.
UPDATE: Their January Album is available for free (or donation!) on Bandcamp. Go get some good tunes.
Your “just do it” attitude towards art is so inspiring. Where did that come from?
Tarehna: I think for me it’s a combination of getting bored easily and wanting cool stuff (or wanting to give cool stuff). I’m always looking for the next project.
My mother is an artist, and when I was younger, we’d go to stores and see something cool and she’d say “we could do that!” I’m basically still doing that.
Brandon: It seems like we have always had it. We’ve always admired artists from different media. For a short period of time Tarehna and I were squatting in an abandoned condo and when we weren’t looking for jobs we were spending all of our time painting and writing and playing music.
Being that poor was horrible, but they were also some of the happiest times of my life. It helped us bond. It’s always been the two of us against the world.
Plus, it just feels cool. When people ask me what I’m up to and I can say that I am working on CD art for someone, and doing a collab with a friend in Canada, and doing monthly music projects with my wife who is working on a novel, and oh yeah, I play bass in local band Zombies Love Gizzards, AND my two boys say they want to start a band with me or put on plays, I feel cool.
But I also feel compelled to create.
Where do you two find creative inspiration? Read the rest of this entry »
Wizards of a Narrow Path
Posted: January 25, 2012 Filed under: Books, Community, Personal Growth, Simplicity | Tags: life path, personal mentor, thought and language, ursula k le guin 7 Comments »“As a man’s real power grows and his knowledge widens, ever the way he can follow grows narrower: until at last he chooses nothing,but does only and wholly what he must do…”
― Ursula K. Le Guin
The first time I saw this quote, it was taped to the bookshelf of a favorite professor and personal mentor. Feeling a bit lost, I had come to him to hash out my own thinking on choices that (at the time) seemed like they would define my life. At some point in the conversation, he referenced the quote.
As I sat in Ray’s office, I was feeling a bit overwhelmed at the many options I felt that I had for further education and employment. I felt lost. It was tough to identify what I wanted to do. Really, it was tougher to identify who I was becoming.
His quiet listening and patience were what I needed to sort my brain and heart out. As I was leaving (the first of many such conversations), he reminded me of LeGuin’s words again.
“You may find that your life path is discovered more than it is chosen” he said.
I pretended that I understood what he was talking about. Read the rest of this entry »
MilkThistle on the Beautiful Ugliness of Parenting
Posted: January 24, 2012 Filed under: Community, Culture, Intentional Living, Love | Tags: baby weight, joy and pain, uncomfortable experiences Leave a comment »Over at MilkThistle today is a great confessional post on the unique ability for the discomforts of parenting to bring out the ugliness in all of us. And strangely, that ugliness in itself can be a great beauty.
Emily writes:
“Being a mommy stretches me and takes me to a place that no other experience has ever come close to equaling. Being a mama is daily making me a more beautiful person. Not outwardly, as I have my share of stretch marks, baby weight and “mom hair.” But inwardly I have never learned or loved so much. My 25 lb, 20 month old daughter teaches me more each day about human nature, grace, and love than anyone else.
Our culture avoids pain, inconvenience and hardship to its own detriment. What are we missing out on by religiously avoiding uncomfortable experiences? Are we so scared of seeing our limits that we cautiously avoid anything that might test us? Joy and pain go hand in hand. Refinement follows struggle. Growth comes after pruning.
Let us embrace the situations that reveal our ugliness and be grateful for the chance to be different from the person we were yesterday.”
Yes. Let’s embrace this. Read the full post here.
[Iconic image by George Eastman House. It's copyright free, and available via Flickr's Creative Commons.]
Sparking Creativity: Tom DesLongchamp
Posted: January 20, 2012 Filed under: Art, Cats, Creativity, Culture, Makers, Sparking Creativity | Tags: Animation, Art, artist interviews, Creativity, Drawing, Interview 1 Comment »For our second interview in Sparks and Ashes’ “Sparking Creativity” series, we caught up with designer and animator Tom DesLongchamp. I’ve featured Tom’s work before, having been a fan since early high school.
Today, Tom lets us in on the source of his unique style, the magic of “reverse inspiration,” and why creativity is sometimes just about being a kid again.
Paul: When did you start drawing and animating?
Tom: I started drawing when I was 2. My mom kept a lot of my childhood drawings. The first characters I ever drew were “Walking Windows” which were windows with legs and faces. 
The first time I ever animated was when I was 12. I used my parents’ camcorder to record a 2 frames-per-second stop-motion film of an action figure riding a toy skateboard across my desk. I didn’t animate with drawings/computers until I was 15 when I bought Flash 4. I can’t explain how excited I was to have Flash in my possession. I made animated experiments daily for months. A lot of them are still online [http://tomthinks.com/flash.html see years '00 and '01].
What inspired your creativity early on?
Cartoons were my first inspiration. I watched a lot of the classics like Tom & Jerry, Looney Toons, Woody the Woodpecker, Curious George, etc. I was also very inspired by Canadian children’s shows. I grew up in Seattle and we got this Canadian channel called CBC which had awesome TV shows like Mr. Dressup, Fred Penner’s Place, and other stuff I can’t even remember names of.
Also, Shel Silverstein was huge for me… and might explain my love of offbeat, simple, black and white drawings. My dad, Dean DesLongchamp is also an inspiration to me. He made an 8mm film in high school that I used to watch when I was a kid. It had some funny special effects in it that made me curious about filmmaking.
Your art, and especially your animation, has a very recognizable aesthetic. How consciously have you crafted that? Read the rest of this entry »
Patti Smith and Polaroids
Posted: January 19, 2012 Filed under: Art, Creativity, Culture, Makers Leave a comment »
Over at the BBC, a lovely interview with music icon Patti Smith on her recent Polaroid image exhibition of images from her life and touring career.
Halfway through, she begins discussing how working with “limited,” simple equipment forces her to know herself artistically, and use her shutter well.
She concludes with this gem:
“The creative process is sometimes tortuous, but when the creative process equals a piece of work that you like–it’s a fantastic feeling.”
Full interview and slideshow of her exhibition is here.
Why Was Jesus a Man?
Posted: January 18, 2012 Filed under: Advent, Biblical Studies, Community, Love | Tags: Christian Feminism, Christian Theology, Gender Studies, Incarnation, Jesus, Theology 3 Comments »Sparks and Ashes warmly welcomes Dianna Anderson in this guest post, dealing with an old mystery and an important, complex question.
Dianna has a day job as a radio producer in Chicago, IL, where she is one of several producers on a program for English Language Learners. She moonlights as a feminist blogger, taking a critical eye to church, media, and country. Her blog can be found at http://www.diannaeanderson.net.
At my alma mater – a private Baptist institution of about 1500 students – every undergraduate student is required to take a class called “Christian Thought.” The class is a basic survey of [Baptist] theology, to make sure that all the students are on essentially the same page. I don’t remember much about the class, to be honest, except for one question that stuck with me: “What gender is the Holy Spirit?”
Looking back, I realize a couple of things:
1. The question is kind of brilliant in its absurdity (which is part of the point). It’s a Spirit. Does it need to have a gender?
2. My response reveals a lot more about me than it does God: “Of course the Spirit’s a ‘he’ because that’s how he’s referred to in the Bible.”
This question, in the hands of my more socially aware colleagues, would have been a cause for entire books. At 18 years old though, in a little bubble, “because that’s how it is in the Bible” seemed to be a fine response.
Two years after that, I spent a semester in Oxford, England. During a week spent on the language we use when referring to God, my tutor assigned Janet Martin Soskice’s “Can a Feminist Call God Father?” I honestly didn’t know what to do with the essay – I remember that it became a footnote in my essay that week. Not wanting to open that can of worms and only knowing the very basic elements of the conversation, I ignored it and went on to talk about what we mean when we say “God is a rock” – a somewhat easier philosophical conundrum.
And now, five years later, in establishing myself as a feminist blogger, my work is frequently preoccupied with the role that gender plays within the body of Christ, which every so often touches on the person and gender of God. I’m much more open and better suited to such a conversation now, but that doesn’t mean it’s an easy one to have.
Looking at God in relationship to gender is very difficult. As God is a three-in-one being, it’s important, first and foremost, to decide which part of God we’re discussing, and each part has different implications. Assigning a gender to the Holy Spirit, for example, is problematic because, contrary to what my 18-year-old self thought, there’s not a clear depiction either way in the Bible – it is genderless.
The relationship becomes more complex when we discuss God the Father and Jesus the Son. God the Father is a topic for another day, and theologians like Soskice are much more qualified than I to discuss it. But I’d like to take a crack at Jesus as the Son.
Is it a problem that Jesus came to Earth as a man?
Yes and no. Read the rest of this entry »
Church/Literature Post at Blackbird Press
Posted: January 17, 2012 Filed under: Biblical Studies, Culture | Tags: literature, scripture 2 Comments »Over at Blackbird Press is a re-print of my recent piece on the cultural impact of Scripture - “Does Anyone in the Church Ever Think About Literature?“
Go enjoy it all over again (or for the first time), and get to know a great little web magazine.
Following them (and exploring their extensive archives!) is well worth your time.
Here’s the link to my piece over at Blackbird Press.
Sparking Creativity: Photographer Fritz Liedtke
Posted: January 13, 2012 Filed under: Art, Creativity, Culture, Makers, Sparking Creativity | Tags: Art, artist interviews, Creative Process, Creativity, Interview, Photography 3 Comments »
Sparks and Ashes is pleased to welcome world-class photographer and personal friend Fritz Liedtke as the first artist in the “Sparking Creativity” series.
Sparking Creativity is an exclusive, ongoing interview series exploring the creative processes of artists who have something special to say about what they make and how they make it.
Fritz Liedtke is a respected professional photographer, and photography teacher and writer working out of Portland, OR.
Just to be clear, that’s not him in the skateboarding helmet.
Please get to know his work on both his commercial site and his dedicated arts site. You’ll be glad you did.
Earlier this week, I featured Fritz’s recent project “Astra Velum”; whose subject and process is very interesting in its own right.
In this interview, Fritz emphasizes inquisitiveness and the importance of the artist’s “inner life.” I hope you enjoy his perspective as much as I do.
-Paul
Paul: For you, what is photography? What are you really doing when you shoot photos? Read the rest of this entry »
“Sparking Creativity” – Exclusive Interview Series on the Creative Process
Posted: January 12, 2012 Filed under: Art, Creativity, Culture, Makers, Sparking Creativity | Tags: artist interviews, Creative Process, liedtke, photo credit Leave a comment »Beginning tomorrow morning, Sparks and Ashes will be hosting “Sparking Creativity” – an ongoing, exclusive series of artist interviews exploring craft and the creative process.
I’m very excited about the contributors from a wide variety of backgrounds and disciplines, who have already committed to sharing their perspectives on how -and why- they make what they make.
Be sure to read tomorrow’s interview with acclaimed photographer Fritz Liedtke, and subscribe or follow postings here on Sparks and Ashes to make sure that you don’t miss an interview.
If there is an artist or creative that you’d like to see interviewed as part of the “Sparking Creativity” series, please share your suggestion by emailing paul (at) sparksandashes (dot) com.
“Astra Velum”: Photogravure Project on Freckled Beauty
Posted: January 9, 2012 Filed under: Art, Creativity, Makers | Tags: Art, beautiful project, Creativity, darkroom work, Freckles, Photography, Photogravure, Sparking Creativity 1 Comment »As a warm up for our upcoming “Sparking Creativity” series (beginning Friday), here’s a fascinating and beautiful project from world-class photographer and personal friend Fritz Liedtke.
“Astra Velum” (“Star Veil”, if my year of high school Latin is right) uses the simple, tactile process of photogravure to convey the beauty of freckles and the people who have them. It’s a gorgeous project, utilizing (in Fritz’s words), “A mix of modern and historic media.”
On creating the series, and why he chose a time consuming and “outdated” method of printing, Fritz says:
“…in the digital age, I feel more and more distant from the handmade quality of photography—the manual labor of developing film and dodging and burning prints. But even darkroom work—which I never particularly enjoyed in and of itself—created a product that was made by hand, but showed no evidence of it. For this reason I’m drawn to processes like tintype, encaustic, and photogravure, which show clear evidence of the artist’s involvement with the final product….
“I’m also drawn to the tactile nature of a photogravure. The papers used are often handmade, with a texture meant to be felt with your fingertips. The ink embedded in the paper also gives texture to the image itself. For these reasons, handmade photogravures seemed the perfect medium for a series which, at its essence, explores the beauty of surface textures: human skin and its freckles and scars, like a thin veil of stars.”
His close involvement is apparent, and excellent. Enjoy more of Fritz’s art here.
Join us this coming Friday for an interview with Fritz as the first of Sparks and Ashes’ “Sparking Creativity” series. He’ll be commenting on the creative process, inquisitiveness, and what he does to hone his craft. Trust me – you will not want to miss it.
Parabolic Blackberries! Tin cans! Heat!
Posted: January 6, 2012 Filed under: Creativity, Ingenuity, Makers, Natural Living, Simplicity Leave a comment »I am an unapologetic lover of all things survival, and most things solar.
Put those together, with a heaping dose of awesome, and you get THE PARABOLIC BASKET AND TIN CAN SOLAR COOKER.
Built by Bart Orlando and friends at Humboldt State in California, the basket is woven from invasive Himalayan blackberry vines (the stuff of my fiercest childhood forts on the farm); a thick, strong cane that forms flexible parabolas when dead.
Layered with the cuttings of tin cans, this bad boy can boil water.
Read the above link for more details on the project, from the team that designed it.
via Neatorama.
Pedaling to the South Pole
Posted: January 5, 2012 Filed under: Bikes, Fun, Technology 1 Comment »Via the BBC, a great story on an epic polar expedition.
Upping the ante for cyclists everywhere, Helen Skelton is riding 500 miles through some of the most desolate terrain on the globe, to raise funds for charity Sport Relief.
Her ride – and the custom cycle she’s pedaling- takes the recent craze for Fat Bikes to a frigid new level of awesome.
Speaking from Antarctica, Helen comments:
“People keep saying a bike shouldn’t be able able to make it to the South Pole, but that makes me even more determined… Read the rest of this entry »
Rachel Held Evans on Driscoll’s “Real Marriage”
Posted: January 4, 2012 Filed under: Biblical Studies, Culture, Love Leave a comment »
Rachel Held Evans shares a balanced, insightfully scathing review of Mark and Grace Driscoll’s recent bestseller Real Marriage.
Unlike other unfavorable reviews of the popular latest book from the macho Seattle preacher, Rachel’s focus goes beyond Driscoll’s lack of manners or sound exegesis to focus on the twisted culture of “celebrity pastors” that has made his public career possible in the first place.
Evans manages to stay fairly kind in her critique–a quality that usually vanishes when Driscoll shows up, regardless of whether you’re shouting with or against him.
Link to the full post is here.
She begins her review with this gem:
“Evangelicals expect too much of their pastors. Read the rest of this entry »
How the Bible Feels
Posted: January 3, 2012 Filed under: Biblical Studies, Culture, Technology | Tags: christianity today, consumer attitudes, holy writ, infographic, negative sentiments Leave a comment »Christianity Today shares Stephen Smith’s (of OpenBible.info) fascinating recent infographic on Scripture sentiments.
Smith ran Holy Writ through an algorithm typically used to calculate “positive” and “negative” sentiments in a body of social media data, (such as crunching the cumulative tweets related to Nestle, for example), to spot trends in consumer attitudes. Black peaks represent positive sentiments, red shows negative ones. Their relative height shows the intensity of those sentiments.
The infographic is far from perfect due to its inability to accurately determine context (CT observes that the Resurrection is a “negative” event because of references to death). In spite of this, it is an interesting cultural artifact, a lens into how consumer marketing would begin to get their heads (and hands) around upping the Bible’s public image.
If you ever felt a little negatively about biblical laws for cleansing lepers or Jehu slaying Ahab’s descendants, well, now there’s a marketing algorithm that agrees with you! Doesn’t that feel nice?
What are your impressions of this infographic? Useful? Interesting? Waste of computing power?
Full size graphic is available here.
All image credit to Christianity Today Intl.
You Are a Terrorist’s Worst Nightmare
Posted: January 2, 2012 Filed under: Community, Culture, Intentional Living, Paranoia, Political Engagement, Privacy | Tags: former president bush, politics of fear, right wing extremist 1 Comment »
As we enter a new year, I think it’s a good time to share some thoughts on terror and freedom that have been percolating for a while.
Last Summer, as I followed the aftermath of Norway’s July 22 terror attacks, I was humbled and shocked by the admirable response of the country’s prime minister Jens Stoltenberg. His statements that the attacks were not only upon people, but upon their nation’s heritage of trust and openness were insightful.
His firm stance was that Norway would respond, not with quick or thoughtless legislation, but with more openness to show their strength in the face of a competing and violent ideology. I was duly impressed and secretly wanted to become Norwegian. That feeling’s only increased as my own country has continued down the path of fear and folly, with a shortsighted commitment to security in all the wrong ways.
These growing sentiments were admirably summed up by Euro-journalist Bruno Kaufmann, in a recent article published on Zocalo Public Square. His piece is titled “You Don’t Scare Us, Terrorists,” and tells the story of Norway’s official and unofficial response to the homegrown terrorist killings of right-wing extremist Anders Breivik, who both blew up one of the most important government buildings in Oslo (miraculously only killing 8 people), then massacred 69 teenagers at an island camp of the country’s Labor Party. In a recent trip from Stockholm to Oslo, Kaufmann’s ID was not even checked – and he shared a plane with Sweden’s Crown Princess and her husband.
As an American living in the days of the post 9/11 Patriot Act, Norway’s response is a breath of fresh air. It speaks quietly against a stifling culture of collective fear, war for war, and futile chest-thumping wrapped in Old Glory. Read the rest of this entry »












