December 2009

  • New Arts Journalism: What it Do? (Part Two)

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    Integration of the Arts + Connections

    In the same way that journalists and critiques will grow their audience and benefit their own writing from referencing specific cultures and histories, it’s as important to understand each disparate branch of the arts as a singular whole. There are concrete differences between painting, playing guitar and editing film together, but in each of those endeavors – if the work is conceived as art and not a way to simply make a dollar - the creator will have an aesthetic end in mind. Crafting an object or product to be as beautiful as possible is the hallmark of any successful art object – writing included.

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  • New Arts Journalism: What it Do? (Part One)

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    Commentary/Criticism + Artful Writing

    The largest problem facing arts writing presently is that commentary and criticism have been distanced from the practice of artful prose. Instead of focusing on the craft of properly figured phrases today a form of personal essay has crept into alternative weeklies across the country. Subsequent to taking over the music section of Seattle’s the Stranger, Eric Grandy and his column, “Fucking in the Streets,” grant its Seattle readership smug, insider lingo and common place language.

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  • Art House Literary Project

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    If you are searching for a new experimental writing project after NaNoWriMo, then check out this new literary exhibition being put together by Art House.  Art House is a national  co-operative of artists that bring together talent from around the world to collaborate on a wide variety of projects.  This is the first exhibition that has a focus on text, and looks to be an exciting venture.  To take part all you have to do is register on the site and pay an $18 entry fee.  This will get you a lined Moleskin notebook and a designated theme.  The theme is the only part of the project that is dictated, and after that yo

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  • If You Are Blaming Your Tools... Get New Ones!

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    Does the way that you write affect what you write?  Do you write better when at your laptop?  Or perhaps when you take your favorite pen to paper? Do you have a particular notebook that helps you to feel inspired?  The concept of the tools that you use to create affecting the creative process has certainly boosted the reputation of brands such as Moleskin and Parker.  Some writers even cling to their writing habits in an almost superstitious way, some locking themselves in the bathroom or refusing to write with anything other than a single color of pen.

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  • Literary Tattoos

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    Is there a higher form of flattery than to see your words or ideas permanently inked on someone's body? Love 'em or hate 'em tattoos have always had deep significance to the wearer.  As their popularity has become more mainstream, with approximately one in six Americans now "inked", so too has the subject matter with many people choosing to have tattoos of quotes or elements from their favorite books.

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