Showing posts with label drawing on the right side of the brain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drawing on the right side of the brain. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

June 12






Sketching
Sketching/drawing/doodling I've found is a great way to relax and let ideas flow. I usually don't have any definite plan of what I want to draw. Just put the pencil to the paper and let my imagination go.




Love Marshall McLuhan's writing!
McLuhan on Wiki
McLuhan on Technology
McLuhan Speaking in NYC

All media work us over completely. They are so pervasive in their personal, political, economic, aesthetic, psychological, moral, ethical and social consequences that they leave no part of us untouched, unaffected, unaltered. The medium is the massage.


"The Medium is the Massage" - Marshal McLuhan, pg 26

Newsletter
eMusician Xtra - June 11 2009
"Ben Weinman Interview
EM interviews guitarist Ben Weinman of the The Dillinger Escape Plan at the recent Reason Producers Conference. He talks about how he incorporates electronic elements from Reason into his band's "mathcore" music, and he plays recorded examples for the crowd at the conference."
See the interview here
Ben Weinman and the Dillinger Escape Plan video

Looking forward to the next issue and the Jon Hassell (trumpet, electronic music) interview.
Jon Hassell on WIKI



Email
Got this interesting little email from my uncle this morning. An interesting way of looking at Gen Y.....

The Silent Generation are people born before 1946.
- The Baby Boomers are people born between 1946 and 1959.
- Generation X are people born between 1960 and 1979.
- Generation Y are people born between 1980 and 1995..
Why do we call the last one generation Y?
I did not know, but a cartoonist explains it eloquently below...Learned something new today!

June 11

Are you right-handed? Left-handed? I'm very happy to say I'm a lefty. I know my 2nd grade teacher is still greatly disappointed. Sometime during that year, I fell and broke my wrist and had to wear a cast for a couple of months. She got me switched over to writing with my right hand. As soon as that cast came off, I went back to the left side.

Over the years, I've enjoyed reading a lot of things about left-brain, right-brain styles of thinking.
A book that comes to mind is Betty Edwards', "Drawing On the Right Side of the Brain." If you buy into the idea that the brain is split into the left hemisphere (logical thinking) and the right hemisphere (creative, spatial thinking), Betty's book will give you lot's of exercises and ideas for stimulating the right side of your brain.

Exercise sample

"You have two brains: a left and a right. Modern brain scientists now know that your left brain is your verbal and rational brain; it thinks serially and reduces its thoughts to numbers, letters and words… Your right brain is your nonverbal and intuitive brain; it thinks in patterns, or pictures, composed of ‘whole things,’ and does not comprehend reductions, either numbers, letters, or words."

From The Fabric of Mind, by the eminent scientist and neurosurgeon, Richard Bergland. Viking Penguin, Inc., New York 1985. pg.1

An exercise I've found fun and interesting is to use the opposite hand for a day. If you are right-handed, try eating, brushing your teeth, dribbling a basketball and other things with the left hand. Try writing with the opposite hand. Take out a piece of paper and sketch or doodle with the other hand. If you keep a diary, put an entry in your diary writing with the opposite hand. You might be very surprised to go back a few days later and look at what you wrote. I often times will practice certain exercises on the trumpet with the left hand. It's amazing how easy the same exercise is when I go back and use right-handed fingering.



"Dead In The Water - Sinking of the USS Liberty"
Documentary
I've known about this story for a couple of years. I know, it's unbelievable. Most won't believe it until they do their own research (which most won't do). Is this creative material? Maybe...maybe not. I think it is. I'm interested in how history shapes the world we live in. Or should I say, our perception of history. I really had no interest to study history in school. Now, I'm so interested in history. I'm very interested to see how history is rewritten (in an almost Orwellian fashion) and HOW THAT affects the world I live in, including the arts.

Books
I'm crazy about books. Went to Junkuro last night to look at a Photoshop book. When I got into the store, I realized they were having a 70% off sale on English books. Oh mannnn!!! Picked these up......











Energy
Read some articles today on a couple of sites I enjoy:
http://www.yogajournal.com/
http://www.qigonginstitute.org

Listening
Alan Watt's Cutting Through the Matrix - June 8 (mp3)

Movie
Went to see the new Star Trek movie. Unfortunately, I was pretty sleepy and missed a lot of the movie.

Practice
Chops are feeling good today.
Practice VERY slowly. Imagining my trumpet practice is like a taichi practice.
Playing with the left-hand a lot today.

Photography
Took a walk in Itabashi-ku today just before sunset. Happened to catch these shots of the sun.