Thursday, December 19, 2013
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Don't Give Up.
Name me a famous artist that gave up
and decided not to continue with their art. That encountered a
roadblock in their life and decided that this was the end. That there
was no point going on because they were getting told by people time
and again that they weren't any good.
Give up? That's because they are none.
All artists face criticism, as that is
the nature of art itself. Art's value and worth is in the eye of the
beholder, and sometimes those eyes will glare and sneer at it. Those
eyes will judge the work as inferior or crap, as something that's
worth dismissing as nothing more then trash found on the side of the
street.
But that doesn't mean you have to give
up.
No one has the right to tell you you
can't be creative. Anyone who does is wrong. Pure and simple. No one
can pry the brush from your hands, the words from your page, the
recording out of your camera. No one can tell you that you can't make
art because they don't want to see it. Because you don't make art for
them, not really.
All artists, first and foremost, make
art for themselves.
You make art because you have something
to say about the world, about the things found within it. You have an
opinion on it and damn it you're going to express it any way you care
too. A painting, a poem, an online video review. It doesn't matter
what it is, the point is that you made it. That it's yours. And no
one can take it away from you.
But that doesn't automatically mean
that it gets displayed in a museum.
A child's drawing isn't going to be
placed next to the Mona Lisa. An amateur's first draft isn't going to
be printed in the New Yorker. An online video-hosting site isn't
going to take any old video review in a market drowning with shows
like it. They're only going to be taking the best, the cream of the
crop, the piece de la resistance.
So make good art.
Draw a masterpiece, write an epic, make
a review show that rivals that of the best. Don't take one failure as
the end of the world. Don't have someone tell you that you can't do
something. Sure perhaps you can't write, or draw, or make good
videos. Guess what: No one is born a master artist. Oh sure there's
innate talent, but talent alone isn't good enough. There are millions
of talented people doomed to obscurity because they don't choose to
use those talents, but rather hide them for fear.
Don't be one of those people.
Don't be content with your work,
improve. Get better. Always be critical, asking yourself 'How can I
make this better? What can be improved on?' Don't take what you have
for granted, improve on it. Make it bigger, bolder, better. Don't get
stuck in a rut, rise above it. Don't get held back by those that say
you suck. Focus instead on how you can be better. Don't focus solely
on your successes or your failures. Instead take both in equal
measure and learn how you can get better from them.
Don't give up. The world needs more
artists. We will always need artists.
And even if everyone is telling you no,
even if everyone is telling you to shut up, even if everyone is
telling you that you'll never amount to anything and you're foolish
for even trying.
Don't give up.
Prove them wrong.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
To Meet or Not To Meet
It says a lot about a man that doesn't
look up from his work. It says even more about the man who doesn't do
it when a stranger suddenly teleports into the room.
“Autographs are a fiver, signed
portraits are a tenner,” said the man, eyes barely leaving his
writings.
“It's you, isn't it?” said the
stranger eagerly. The man sighed and laid down his quill. It was one
of those people.
“You're
William Shakespeare!”
“So
I've been told,” said Shakespeare, still not turning to face his
guest.
“I'm
Tom, and I must say I'm your biggest fan. I mean Titus Andronicus-”
“Was
written to please the masses and make me a quick buck,” cut off
Shakespeare.
“Well
Macbeth-”
“Political
propaganda to keep my neck out of the noose.”
“Oh
and Hamlet. That whole To Be Or Not To-”
“Conceived
when I was debating about whether to pubically urinate or not.”
“Oh,”
said Tom, a bit disheartened. Then the obvious finally managed to hit
him in the face. “Here, how come you're not surprised to see me.”
“When
one has the status as the greatest writer of all time one gets use to
visitors from the future inquiring about one's person.”
“You
know I'm from the future?”
“I'm
hardly a fool. It became clear the umpteenth time one of your cohorts
inadvertently told me when I was in my youth.”
“Oh-”
began Tom, but Shakespeare was in his forte.
“And
ever since then I've been besieged by idiots who have wanted to know
the true meanings behind my plays. Or worse, offer their own
interpretation, as misguided and humorous as they could be. It
quickly became to become a bore to have yet another stranger
congratulate me on something I'd yet to write.”
“Well
surely the audience must like you?” ventured Tom.
“The
common man on the street barely knows who I am. The audience is
constantly packed with the likes of you lot, come to see my work when
it was 'authentic'.” He practically spat the word. “If it isn't
bad enough that you lot continue to fawn over me, you also do me the
unkindness of claiming that I didn't write any of it myself. Or worse
claim the work of lesser playwrights should be in my name instead!
There is more than one playwright around here you know. Or don't, as
so often the case.”
“Yes
I suppose-” tried Tom, but Shakespeare would have none of it.
“In
fact at one point I tried to destroy my work so at least I could get
some respite from being questioned about that. But no, soon there
came a flurry of people asking me what happened to Love Labours Won
and whether it existed in the first place. They'd even written their
own versions of it.”
“Well
why don't you stop writing?” countered Tom.
“You
didn't think that occurred to me you foolish man. The moment I vowed
never to put quill to parchment I was besieged with people wanting to
know why I'd stop. It eventually became simpler just to start writing
again so I didn't have to repeat myself.”
“Oh,”
repeated Tom, thoroughly disheartened by this encounter. However he
remembered one last thing he wanted to bring up. “What about your
sonnets?”
“Believe
me when I find the man who will publish my diary after my death I
will screw him quite firmly to the sticking place. Now begone with
you. This Winter's Tale isn't going to write itself, although some
buffoon already told me how it was going to end. So begone!”
With
that Shakespeare turned back to his work, ignoring Tom entirely.
Before Tom left he remembered one piece of wisdom his teacher had
told him before he left:
Never
meet your heroes, for you will always be let down.
Who is the March Hare?
The nature of the March Hare had often been the subject of wonder to the wonderful inhabitants of Wonderland. Born on what could approximately be called the 29th of February, there was something about the March Hare that made him mad. True one might think that that was a given, given where it was taking place. But even the other beings of Wonderland regarded him as being a bit odd. A bit unusual. Something completely and utterly confusing and perplexing.
The March Hare was sane.
At any given point he was in full control of all his mental facilities. Whilst there were times the other inhabitants could stop and think in a straight line, the train would often go down a very short track before derailing spectacularly. Whilst there were times where the other inhabitants could see the oddity of their surroundings, these times were as fleeting as the average tea time. Whilst there were times when the inhabitants could realise they were mad, the decided that this was the norm.
Not the March Hare.
He knew exactly what he was doing and why he was doing it. He understood the connection between cause and effect and how sometimes some things were only correlatedly linked. He understood how logic worked and was the full master of it. His razor sharp brain would have been much welcomed at the likes of Oxford. He was, in short, quite a brilliant logical genius.
Unfortunately the March Hare was in Wonderland.
And thus his madness came from not being too crazy, but being too sane. He didn't disconnect from the world, he was ingrained in it. He didn't give into the madness, but defiantly resisted it. Even with the breakdown of cause and effect in an eternal trap of tea time he stood his mental ground, remembering the sequence of events the best he could.
He refused to go mad amongst mad people.
He'd only ever found one solace. In a strange girl called Alice who seemed to be the only one that could think sensibly. His dear friend Hatter (whose meeting and friendship is a story for another tea time) was as mad as ever, but the March Hare saw solace in this one creature. He saw a fellow being who also knew how to think logically, even if the reasoning itself was flawed. A few logic tests were proof of that. But something was better than nothing, since nothing was nothing at all.
But she was free to leave, whilst the March Hare had to stay.
Stay in this confusing, complicated world where logic was merely a word in a dictionary that no one bothered to read. A world where a simple hare was forced to sit through an eternal tea party in the hopes of curing his friend's sanity, or at least relieving the crushing boredom. A world the Hare knew he could never escape, not without the Hatter, who could likewise never leave.
The March Hare is Wonderland's greatest victim, and forever there he will stay.
The March Hare was sane.
At any given point he was in full control of all his mental facilities. Whilst there were times the other inhabitants could stop and think in a straight line, the train would often go down a very short track before derailing spectacularly. Whilst there were times where the other inhabitants could see the oddity of their surroundings, these times were as fleeting as the average tea time. Whilst there were times when the inhabitants could realise they were mad, the decided that this was the norm.
Not the March Hare.
He knew exactly what he was doing and why he was doing it. He understood the connection between cause and effect and how sometimes some things were only correlatedly linked. He understood how logic worked and was the full master of it. His razor sharp brain would have been much welcomed at the likes of Oxford. He was, in short, quite a brilliant logical genius.
Unfortunately the March Hare was in Wonderland.
And thus his madness came from not being too crazy, but being too sane. He didn't disconnect from the world, he was ingrained in it. He didn't give into the madness, but defiantly resisted it. Even with the breakdown of cause and effect in an eternal trap of tea time he stood his mental ground, remembering the sequence of events the best he could.
He refused to go mad amongst mad people.
He'd only ever found one solace. In a strange girl called Alice who seemed to be the only one that could think sensibly. His dear friend Hatter (whose meeting and friendship is a story for another tea time) was as mad as ever, but the March Hare saw solace in this one creature. He saw a fellow being who also knew how to think logically, even if the reasoning itself was flawed. A few logic tests were proof of that. But something was better than nothing, since nothing was nothing at all.
But she was free to leave, whilst the March Hare had to stay.
Stay in this confusing, complicated world where logic was merely a word in a dictionary that no one bothered to read. A world where a simple hare was forced to sit through an eternal tea party in the hopes of curing his friend's sanity, or at least relieving the crushing boredom. A world the Hare knew he could never escape, not without the Hatter, who could likewise never leave.
The March Hare is Wonderland's greatest victim, and forever there he will stay.
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