Building Stories

I started reading "Building Stories" by Chris Ware back in October, but had to stop as it started to hit too close to home. I hesitate to call it a book as it is more of an overall experience, but in either regard it is one of the best I've come across; a completely immersive visual, tangible and emotional journey through the lives of several individuals who at one time lived in the same apartment. At one point, the narrative is even told from the perspective of the building itself. 

The main protagonist is a former art student who struggled with the idiosyncrasies of the field, leaving it (and her talents) behind to lead an unfulfilled life of longing what could have been in regards to career, love and existence. As her life becomes punctuated by loss in numerous forms, the doubt over her choices - and boredom over modern suburban life - create an existential crisis that is palpable beyond the ink of its printed page. The entire 14-piece tome can be read in any order but I feel the path I selected (suggested on the back of the box) was the most powerful. Its been a few days since I finished and it's still resonating with me. 

I was pleasantly surprised at how well Chris Ware wrote from a female perspective. There were times in which I felt he was telepathically peering into my head and translating my thoughts into his work (I was especially aware of this when the protagonist's father is diagnosed, and later succumbs to, cancer). Perhaps I need to read more graphic novels as "Ghost World" also did this acutely well. I predict "Building Stories" will eventually be made into a cult classic film like this. Shame there isn't a character Steve Buscemi could play. 

I cannot recommend this book enough. 

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Gustave Doré

Currently mesmerized by the work of French artist Gustave Doré. I love the ambiance of chiaroscuro style:  

From 'Gustave Doré's Illustrations to the Divine Comedy'

From Gustave Doré's  Bible illustrative series. 

From Gustave Doré's  Bible illustrative series. 

I Watched the Water Snakes (from 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner')

I Watched the Water Snakes (from 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner')

Vainly I Had Sought to Borrow (from 'The Raven').

Vainly I Had Sought to Borrow (from 'The Raven').

I was a brunette heathen

I remember using art as escapism even when I was a child. I could spend hours adding life to colouring books or, the older I got, into creating my own rudimentary masterpieces with various hues of Crayola. I liked crayons better than markers because I could build the medium up and use the natural oils on my fingertips as a blending stump of sorts. This resulted in new, accidental colours and arrangements that made me feel as though I was playing God and giving birth to a two dimensional universe of which I would rule. I was five and already an egomaniac. But part of my id understood that great art doesn't cloak imperfections; it embraces them.  

In school, I would do much of the same from elementary through senior year. I recall spending a good portion of Grade 1 developing a style that was partially mimicking the Archie Comics that I loved to read. Each drawing I created was outlined in bold black. I liked the contrast. I appreciated the depth of field the differing weight of strokes could imply. I was pretty proud of myself and the creations that my mother lovingly hung on the fridge…that is, until a fellow pupil told me bluntly one day that my drawings sucked and I should quit doing them. I never forgot how that made me feel. I spent the entire 15 minute recess afterwards crying behind the janitor's shed. Her name was Elaine. At a young age, she had developed a remarkably steely gaze which she employed to let everyone else know they were inferior. Perhaps we were. She was a pretty blonde girl from a conservative, rural background. I was a brunette heathen. Throughout elementary school, I grew to believe that she was my arch nemesis although I never actively instigated the feud with her. We shared a birthdate (April 5) and perhaps somewhere in the alignment of the cosmos that day, our destiny was pre-determined. I may not have been able to articulate what I was trying to communicate back then with my drawings, but I was intelligent enough to know that Elaine was a bitch. I continued, both out of spite and delusion. 

High school was a different beast altogether. I was an artist. I was THE artist (at least for my 500 student collegiate). I was "commissioned" to create custom pieces that incorporated popular band names and symbolism of whatever low-level drug was de rigueur for the day.  I was paid with bags of Doritos or packs of gum, my own narcotics of choice. I even created a few tattoo illustrations and it amuses me today to picture someone walking around with one of my high school notebook doodles permanently etched into their flesh. I never actually considered a career in the fine arts though. I always envisioned myself getting a degree in Philosophy and obviously subsequently working at Tim Hortons for the remainder of days. But encouragement from several people during this period changed my life. First off, there was my father. No matter what I wanted to do or become, he supported me. I felt as though I could (and still can!) become President of Mars with him backing me. Secondly, I had some great teachers. Specifically my English instructors who informed me of various art shows in the city or when the University of Manitoba School of Art was having an open house. Every student deserves to have a teacher help them realize their potential. To have someone get them to "think bigger and beyond" what is in the standardized text books. Without having these people believe in me and the talents I displayed, I would very likely be that coffee shop philosopher asking people if they'd like some Confucious with their cruller. 

Getting a push will only take one so far though. I recall visiting those U of M open house student shows and realizing that fine art - or rather the pretensions that follow it - weren't my cup of tea. I can't paint. I can't sculpt. I can't handle criticism on things that I put my heart into. It's too personal. I'm too sensitive. I also realized that this would probably land me nothing more than that job at Tim Hortons. I wanted a career. Something that could fund my love of travel and high thread count sheet sets. This is when I was introduced to the dark side of 'advertising art' (which is the specific name of the program I took before it was changed to 'graphic design' a few years later). I wouldn't have to expose my soul in developing a typographic treatment for a car dealership but it was a path that I could still utilize my skills in and, most importantly, make money. I enrolled in a local college.

My first day of classes was the fall of 1998. I was 18. Nearly everyone in my class was in their mid- to late-20s and had much more life - and computer - experience than I. They have become such extensions of ourselves that it's hard to imagine a time when they weren't as omnipresent, but back in high school the introduction to computers course was optional. I didn't even own one in 1998. The learning curve was overwhelming. My naive confidence soon withered. In the context of it all, I was an infant.

As a coping mechanism and distraction, I started to spend as much time studying my classmates as I did on my assignments. There was the odd guy who turned his chair to face and stare at everyone else in the classroom while the instructor was giving their lesson. I'm sure he went on to become a successful serial killer. There was the former teenage model who spent her time flirting with the young Brad Pitt lookalike. They were the Brangelina of Red River, regaling in their collective beauty and "coolness". There was also the quiet girl with the glasses that reminded me of myself. She was a symbolic infant in the grand scheme of things too. I never got to know her well though as we were both too shy.  

My favourite person was a 27-year-old male who sat in front of me. He was taking the program for the third time after life's distractions kept calling him away. This included typical college partying and the subsequent poor grades that followed, as well as the birth of his daughter (which I partially suspected was also subsequently from the partying). I greatly admired his tenacity and desired the quality for myself. He always told interesting stories and I enjoyed listening to them as I felt I could drink upon his fountain of knowledge and somehow develop his traits by-proxy. One tale I will always recall is how he self-treated an immense toothache by stabbing a knife into his gums. Yes, it's shocking and barbaric (not to mention unsafe, unsanitary and unhealthy). But it soothed his initial pain. Despite medical evidence to the contrary, bloodletting can be an effective way of dealing with one's ills.

Especially by using a pen. Or crayons. Or computer. 

12-year-old me in class with Elaine sitting behind me. 

12-year-old me in class with Elaine sitting behind me. 

The Life & Times of Marie Antoinette: An Infographic

I like to think I have a life plan that is attainable. 

I want to buy an apartment in Paris. Preferably the latin quarter.

I want to rent that apartment in Paris in the latin quarter to tourists, artists, lovers, those who are lost and those who will eventually find themselves as in love with the city of light as I am.

Then I want to move to Paris when my life savings merit it. I will live in that apartment in the latin quarter displacing any tourists, artists and lovers residing there to some other shelter in the city. I will first change the sheets. 

I will need a job. 

I don't speak French well. 

I am currently taking a university course on French history. 

I will use the knowledge gained through this to transition my career from artsy-fartsy type to English-speaking tour guide in French-speaking Paris. I will use the skills I honed in my first life as a designer to create supplementary materials similar to what I've developed below, an infographic on the life and times of Marie Antoinette. People will appreciate this. There will be word-of-mouth. I will be successful. I will live the rest of my life in Parisian joie de vivre. I will die from eating too many eclairs. It will have been worth it.

 

 

I'll probably die in Saskatchewan. In the winter. After choking on a tidbit from Tims. 

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Download the full-size version here

Let them eat cake.

Since my trip to France last year I've become greatly intrigued by the history of the nation. In particular, the era of unabashed excess which led to the French Revolution has provided vast inspiration for some design work that I've been working on including this poster of my current historical muse, Marie Antoinette…the noise of reputation shouldn't silence true self:

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To order a copy of this 16"x20" print (titled "Let Them Eat Cake"), please contact me here.

Vintage Advertisements: 1983

I have a Rolling Stone magazine archive that I occasionally like to browse to read original articles/interviews with my favourite artists, study era-specific fashion and review vintage advertisements, the great barometer of our life and times as a society. Here are some ads from the year Michael Jackson dropped "Thriller" and McDonalds introduced the "McNugget" - 1983: 

Great series of Budweiser beer advertisements that prompted readers to write in to receive a complimentary 20"x26" version (1983). 

Great series of Budweiser beer advertisements that prompted readers to write in to receive a complimentary 20"x26" version (1983). 

Great series of Budweiser beer advertisements that prompted readers to write in to receive a complimentary 20"x26" version (1983). 

Great series of Budweiser beer advertisements that prompted readers to write in to receive a complimentary 20"x26" version (1983). 

Great series of Budweiser beer advertisements that prompted readers to write in to receive a complimentary 20"x26" version (1983). 

Great series of Budweiser beer advertisements that prompted readers to write in to receive a complimentary 20"x26" version (1983). 

It was a simpler time for dating in the early 80s… I would be totally down with having some drinks at an arcade (if they still existed) (1983). 

It was a simpler time for dating in the early 80s… I would be totally down with having some drinks at an arcade (if they still existed) (1983). 

Sexual innuendos are part of every decade (1983). 

Sexual innuendos are part of every decade (1983). 

Advertisement for Frisbee…it's somewhat refreshing to view advertisements before the age of Photoshop. Any hint of hair on a woman's leg would not be tolerable today (1983).

Advertisement for Frisbee…it's somewhat refreshing to view advertisements before the age of Photoshop. Any hint of hair on a woman's leg would not be tolerable today (1983).

The style of the early 80s was quickly being defined by the yuppie look (1983).

The style of the early 80s was quickly being defined by the yuppie look (1983).

For whatever reason, a lot of early 80s advertisements replicated being on a different planet. Apparently everyone was trying to escape Devo (1983). 

For whatever reason, a lot of early 80s advertisements replicated being on a different planet. Apparently everyone was trying to escape Devo (1983). 

I always remember the omnipresent Calvin Klein advertisements from the 90s that featured a naked Kate Moss (1983).

I always remember the omnipresent Calvin Klein advertisements from the 90s that featured a naked Kate Moss (1983).

I only included this because it is the flattest arse I have ever seen, selling jeans no less (1983). 

I only included this because it is the flattest arse I have ever seen, selling jeans no less (1983). 

The headline from this advertisement could describe the modern iPhone (1983). 

The headline from this advertisement could describe the modern iPhone (1983). 

This NIKE advertisement reminded me of visiting the medieval wing of a European art gallery (1983). 

This NIKE advertisement reminded me of visiting the medieval wing of a European art gallery (1983). 

Ballerinas were featured in a lot of advertisements in the early 80s…including this one, curiously selling cigarettes (1983). 

Ballerinas were featured in a lot of advertisements in the early 80s…including this one, curiously selling cigarettes (1983). 

Manly men smoke (1983). 

Manly men smoke (1983). 

The Timex Sinclair Computer System is the first advertisement I've seen for a product that is similar to computers and the internet of today (1983).

The Timex Sinclair Computer System is the first advertisement I've seen for a product that is similar to computers and the internet of today (1983).

Advertisement for a book on the joys of pigging out on food. Oh, America (1983). 

Advertisement for a book on the joys of pigging out on food. Oh, America (1983). 

What is a modern day yuppie? Or are they extinct? (1983).

What is a modern day yuppie? Or are they extinct? (1983).

Lord, have mercy (1983). 

Lord, have mercy (1983). 

91

I spent my Christmas break at the hospital. Not as a patient, but rather a support. The first day though, I wasn't much of one. There are moments when you try and be strong, where you try and deflect the gravity of a situation through sheer will or just ignorance, but fail miserably. I wrongly assumed that because I had spent literally every night of the previous two months crying that I could hold it together for an hour. But I was wrong. And I knew I would be.

My grandfather was there the first day when we arrived, as he had been nearly every day for the previous two months. Taking the bus or, depending on the time of day for which the appointment was scheduled, hitching a ride with my aunt who worked there. It was something he had to do, even though his mobility wasn't always the greatest. Family bonds are strong. A part of me regretted ever moving away, as now I couldn't be there when I needed to be. But I would be there now, for two weeks, fully, completely and in spirit always. We stayed in the waiting room and the weight of reality became even heavier. There was a female patient around my age with her boyfriend. I could see her shaking as she was called. There was an older woman, all alone. I could sense her resignation. Over Christmas break, I often encountered the same faces here. In a way, it was a community. You didn't really have to talk to the person seated next to you, but there was an understanding and there was a bond. I like to think that it was in strength, rather than the condition that brought them all here. 

I had mentioned my time in Kentucky previously. This was the last period of my life where I was carefree. Where I didn't have a fuckin' cloud of worry hanging in my peripheral vision that resembles a violent, shapeless scribble. There are days I feel I can actually see it. And I always hear it. It's been good for work and as a creative outlet, as the intensity with which I try to avoid it manifests itself in ideas and action that I had probably previously just phoned in. But it's there and I know one day it may manifest itself into action as well, even though I pray it doesn't. 

On October 26, 2013, 91 days prior to this journal entry being posted, my father informed me that doctors had given him one year to live. After seeking medical advice on his difficulty swallowing, he was informed that it was caused by cancer. Esophagus and thorax to be specific. I will write about this moving forward for two reasons: one being that this journal is an outlet for me and I can't think of another single event that has changed my life and outlook like this. My father is my best friend, mentor, sentry and rock. I cannot imagine my life without him in it. I hope this takes a positive turn and I can document it here. Secondly, this was completely unexpected for everyone in my family. My father doesn't smoke and rarely drinks: two of the main causes of this particular strain of cancer. If it can happen to him, it can happen to anyone. I'm hoping my writings will educate on this matter and get people to get tested and treated as soon as they believe symptoms appear. There is a much greater chance of survival the earlier it is caught. 

My father's radiation treatment mask.

My father's radiation treatment mask.

 

 

Stuck in the Middle

I'm originally from Winnipeg. I spent most of my 20s devising a plan to get out of it. I have spent the first few years of my fourth decade on the planet looking forward to returning (only for brief visits though…I haven't changed that much).

I recently ordered this book online after following Bryan Scott's work for years on the WinnipegLoveHate blog. He manages to capture my hometown in a way that is thoughtful, striking and evokes long dormant emotions for a place that I once thought was just a transitory backdrop to my existence, but has turned out to emanate itself from my very being. One never truly leaves. Bryan's work inspired me to document my new home of Saskatoon with the Streetsof#YXE project.

I'm entering a period of my life where I crave the familiar. Where I dream of walking down those snow-covered streets and everything being as it were, frozen in time. I'm old enough now to realize that one can only follow their trajectory through the universe and not control it. I may never return, but this book gives me all the comforts of home that I need. Highly recommended, whether you enjoy photography, architecture or urban issue analysis. 

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To order Stuck In The Middle, click here.

To view more of Bryan Scott's compelling photography, click here.