Dear blogger friends,
Welcome to the fifth edition of the Creativity Carnival.
This has been a busy and tiring month for me, but I’ve loved creating the cue-arts for the carnival. I wait for Fridays. After spending the whole week reading your wonderful takes on the previous week’s cue-art and thinking of what I’d be creating next, I spend my second half of Thursday or the first half of Friday drawing that week’s cue-art for you. I draw for a story or a poem that I’d like to read; I draw for a picture that I’d like to see; I draw for an experience that I’d like to share. And it makes my drawing that much more meaningful for me.
I loved reading your interpretations of the gun-art. You wrote poetry that tugged on my heartstrings; crafted stories that catapulted me into a different time and world; and drew comics that made me laugh. This week, among the wonderful responses on the Gun Carnival, I discovered a story and a poem – I marveled at how well the story “Hidden Murder” by Ruth Lakes connected with the cue-art. The poem that touched my heart was “Adieu…” by RS.
I’d also like to thank Stu for her post. If you want to visit the sites of the bloggers who have participated in the previous 4 carnivals, please click “Roll-up (Creativity Carnival Round-up Links.) on Stu’s blog”
My Cue-art for this week isn’t an object. It’s a concept. There’s a mystery in it, which you can unravel at your leisure. As always, this artwork belongs to you this whole week.
The Rules are Simple.
- Your cue is the artwork above.
- You have a week to get creative and make a post that connects with the cue.
- You are welcome to do anything creative with the cue. Here is a list of possibilities:
- Write a Story (tiny/short/long…whichever works for you. A tip: Shorter Stories, more reads.)
- Share an Anecdote
- Write a Poem
- Draw a doodle
- Paint a picture
- Some other creative craft that I can’t think of – but it must explore and even extend the portrayal in the artwork.
- Include the cue-art in your post.
- Link back to this Creativity Carnival Post so that a ping back is registered. It will help other bloggers (including this caricaturist) can visit your post, like it, love it, and comment upon it.IMPORTANT:
1. Links to the pages and the home-page of a blog don’t result in a ping back.
2. Links created through an image (linking an image to a post) don’t create a ping back. (Thanks, Meghan.)
For more details (mostly superfluous) please visit the Creativity Carnival page here.
Do tag your posts “creativity carnival”. So if you start following the tag, you’ll find the newest carnivals in your Reader.
I will look forward to visiting your blogs 🙂
And now – what inspired me to create the gun-art and what that picture means to me.
A couple of weeks ago, my friend Nancy, bought a new gun. We were talking and she brought the gun out and we talked about it. For some inexplicable reason, an image of an engraved gun that I had seen somewhere, flashed in my mind. I asked her if she remembered such a gun and she said that it must have been a Colt. Now those guns were things of beauty. They weren’t just machines made for killing – they had a certain vanity associated with them. Right then when we were talking, I decided that I wanted to draw a gun.
But a lone gun has no story, except that of death, and a death without reason doesn’t inspire a story, nor a poem or a piece of art! A death with love at its heart; a death with revenge at its core; or even a death brought about by jealousy or greed – those deaths give us stories and poetry; art and drama.
This is the story of the birth of the cue-art “The Gun.”
I’ll look forward to your take on this drawing 🙂
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You are welcome, Lydia. I enjoyed your essay.
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People with multiple faces crowd our lives, never letting us see their true colors! So apt.
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Hi. Here is my entry http://masterselftherapy.com/d-soc-and-d-asc/
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Two faces, each representing a state of consciousness – and the villain who drags us from one to the other. Thanks 🙂
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Thank You for providing Creativity Carnival. Pingback doesn’t seem to work with me, too, so here is the link 🙂
https://amusicaloffering.wordpress.com/2015/09/01/faces/
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Well, of course it’s there, so You could as well delete my comment. Sorry for causing trouble!
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The two faces – hope vs. despair, enthusiasm vs. depression – and words that bring out the contrast between the two.
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Hi Shafali, this one stretched me which I love. Pingback doesn’t seem to be registering (caught in spam?). Here is the link: http://firebonnet.com/random-moments-of-delight-crones-dont-whine/ Happy Sunday!
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There’s no reason why that should happen now. I don’t even have comment moderation on. I’ll check. Meanwhile, thanks so much for participating in the carnival 🙂
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It’s lovely. Thank you for participating. I wondering what you’ll do with the next prompt 🙂
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That prompt is a hard one! But I have an idea… 😉
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Looking forward to seeing what you create from it. Is it a visual?
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I’m not certain how to do a pingback. Can you explain the process? Thanks,
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Margo, sorry for the delay in responding. In your post, you just need to create a text link back to this post. That’s all. WordPress will automatically print the link to your post in the comment section of this post. This way, we’ll be able to click it and read your post on your blog 🙂
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Pingback: Faces | writingindevizes
What an event this is. I haven’t seen all the contributions yet – I’ll have to check them out – but the range of responses is great.
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That’s what I love about it – the scope and the depth of responses 🙂
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Ah, if only to be able to draw like you do.
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I’m sure if you tried, you’d be better. But the point of the carnival is that creativity isn’t limited by our skill at any medium 🙂
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Stu, thanks for your post on Creativity Carnival.
Friends, this post has a list of everyone who has participated in the Creativity Carnival until now. There’s been four carnivals so far, and I’ve loved each entry. I’ll look forward to your thoughts on Faces.
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Thanks for providing the link to all of the pingback etc. I might have missed some. ☺ I find it so interesting how there are so many variations in interpretation ☺
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For all of them, please visit the carnival posts 🙂 It’s indeed wonderful to read the different interpretations… actually, it amazes me to think how the same cue-art could lead us on a completely different track than someone else.
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