Grandgreen's Blog

My Two Month Project December 26, 2011

Filed under: Art,Challenge,Daily Project,Economics,Fashion,Life,Politics,Project,Triumph — grandgreen @ 10:21 pm

I, like many women across these United States, have too many clothes. I am not going to pretend I wear everything I own, or that I am going to. So what that means is that I have some serious closet culling to do. Now, like many young women I am going to completely over complicate the process for the sake of my own amusement, and to avoid a moment in my closet wear I exclaim “if I just make them shorter!” while clutching a pair of jeans in my cold irrational hands.

So I am going to clean out my closet but I am going to wait until February 26th. Until February 26th I am going to take a picture of what I am wearing that day and post it on here for all of the world to enjoy. Every piece of day-to-day winter clothing that I do not wear by  February 26th will be taken to Goodwill.

My obvious goal for my two month closet cleaning project is to clean out my closet, but to also get me posting everyday on a schedule. My hope is to deliver a cheesy picture of me from that day with some cool commentary on something that sounds witty and smart like economics or politics.

I’m not trying to do the fashion blog thing so my outfits may not be aesthetically appealing all the time, but for performance sake I’m going to try and bust out some cute stuff. Here I go!

Day 1 – December 26, 2011 Happy Birthday Mom!

Image

 

Coffee Cup Reflections March 13, 2011

Filed under: Art,Ballet,Coffee,Life,The Beatles — grandgreen @ 11:54 am

Yesterday started with ballet class to Beatles music and ended in my friend’s driveway chatting.  It was a really nice day. After ballet class I flew solo to an art gallery that was on a lower floor and looked at some really great things and some scratched up wood with paint on it. Maybe I just don’t understand art but it really truly looked like a rung for a children’s bunk bed that the dog messed up. I guess it has its place because I was inspired enough to write about it and it made all the other art look a little bit better.  After that I went to a restaurant that was also in the building on the lower floor, sat at the bar, and had a cup of coffee.  You see I was making a statement to say that I am woman and I can have a solo cup of coffee at the bar of a restaurant, I don’t need people [Editor’s note: I was flirting with the bartender].  As I was enjoying my cup o’ jo I snapped some pictures of my coffee’s reflection, and I think it turned out pretty neat! Would I call coffee cup reflection pictures art? I don’t know, but it at least looks cool.

 

The Little Pleasures in Life March 11, 2011

Filed under: Art,Baking,Life — grandgreen @ 6:13 pm

1. A cup of coffee that’s at the perfect temperature
2. My dog wagging her tail in her sleep
3. A brand new tube of tooth paste
4. My political candidate winning
5. Voting
6. That short and totally polite exchange when you get a wrong number
7. A public toilet that hasn’t been used since it was cleaned
8. Finding a really good book
9. Laughing babies
10. Getting something right in dance class
11. Dance class in general
12. The way my feet look in ballet shoes
13. Watching other people dance
14. That moment of hysterical joy when I’m running from someone in a game
15. Answering a test question that I know to be 100% right
16. Answering a question right when I was not 100% sure about my answer
17. Waking up with the window open so the birds are extra loud
18. The chirp that an RCX makes when the program loads
19. A program that runs just as planned
20. Coaching a happy team
21. Watching the happy team do well
22. Coaching in general
23. Fresh cookies
24. Cookies that turn out really well
25. Cookies in general
26. Strangers that smile back
27. The first day of class
28. The hour or so before it rains
29. Puppies
30. A really good sandwich
31. Finger nail paint that is not smudged, wrinkled, or chipped
32. Freaking out because two people looked at my blog
33. Being done with midterms
34. Realizing that the decisions I’ve made with school have been pretty good
35. Finding a new band and feeling like I just discovered my very own secret planet
36. Hearing a song I really like in a movie/t.v. show/radio/general location unexpectedly
37. A freshly loaded iPod
38. Eating exactly what I was craving
39. Successfully removing all traces of waterproof mascara without blinding myself
40. Getting something right on the piano.
41. Listening to a song and identifying which kind of chord she/he is playing on the piano
42. The piano in general
43. Being employed
44. Having a bed to sleep in
45. Food to eat
46. Air to breathe
47. Access to a college education
48. Looking at the clock and it being earlier in the day then I thought it was
49. “Being really, really ridiculously good looking” -Derek Zoolander
50. Having the time and care to write a list of the little pleasures in my life

And those are few of my favorite things.

 

Robot Art February 20, 2011

Filed under: Art,Life,Notebook Art,Robot — grandgreen @ 1:30 pm

I like to draw robots.  Sprawled across every notebook I have had since drivers ed are small 50’s style robots.  My robots are simple, usually consisting of a two boxes, antenna, outstretched arms, straight little legs, and some number of buttons and knobs to chose from.  My robots are without a name (being one of the few things I don’t name) but are far from without a purpose.  The kitschy little critters make me happy; they center me before class and encompass my total drawing ability. Having grown up with robots and engineering they are also reminiscent of something that is very much a part of who I am.

Comparatively, I am not much of an artist. Visual arts like drawing have never been my forte, so to think that my robots could be construed in any way shape or form as art seemed totally preposterous to me, but that is exactly what one of my robots was.

It was a cool evening at the end of summer, I was with my family and a friend downtown for a festival.  In one of the centers there were huge lengths of paper spread out with cups of paint and brushes, painting after painting was printed side by side on the paper.  Some paintings were very small, but some were as much as four feet long.  My brother made a scene, my sister made one of her comic characters, and I made a robot.  My robot took up the height of the paper, was proud and smiling. With a flower in his right hand and a speech bubble proclaiming his love to the left, he quickly blended in with the other paintings.  At the end of the night the scissors were handed out so the paintings could be taken home.  People, mostly children, cut out their own favorite picture.  I took a final look over the different works, debating taking one home, when I looked up to see my very own robot getting cut out.  A little boy, 7 or 8 years old sliced the edges, carefully singling out the robot finally hold it up in the air and smiling proudly.  I watched him show his mom, then his dad, then his sister, exclaiming “look what I found! Its a robot!” with each new person.  The response was a usual “that’s nice”, but I could see just how excited he was.  My robot, the same robot I have drawn time after time, notebook after notebook didn’t seem quite like mine anymore.  It also didn’t seem cheesy, silly, or kitschy, or like a space filler or a time waster.  It wasn’t poorly drawn or sloppy, it just was, and it made him happy.  The face that I projected on the square frame now was spread across this boys face like it was meant for him.  He found something he liked and was excited about, and I made that.  I made art.

I am no Van Gogh, Dali, or Da Vinci, but I did manage to make something that made someone else happy and meant something to someone else.  I have had much the same reaction to pop song lyrics and dance numbers and splendidly fit dresses, but now I can know that somewhere out there someone made, created and wrote those things that made me smile.  Made me fee like it was just for me.

So now I can see that my robots are kitschy, simple, and sometimes plain, but they are not just mine anymore, they are that kid’s too.  That robot is just for him, too.

 

 

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.