(
catscradle Jan. 26th, 2003 10:19 pm)
After finally seeing Frida yesterday, I felt a bit inspired. I scanned a bunch of my doodles and thought I'd share. I haven't finished the gallery yet, but here are a few pieces. . .
One I did last night:

Heart of the River
About a month ago:

Leary's Brain
Two years ago:

Despair
Four years ago:

Rat
Six years ago:

Jellyfish
One I did last night:

Heart of the River
About a month ago:

Leary's Brain
Two years ago:

Despair
Four years ago:

Rat
Six years ago:

Jellyfish
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=)
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Oh, and you did make me smile the other day =) I miss the gathering at O'Flaherty's. . .*sigh*
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"I have cried .... tears left."
AND
"...: Portrait of woman in misery."
Between the titles I've given these paintings and reading through many of my old internet posts, I scarcely recognize who wrote all that angsty, haltingly grammatical balderdash. Not that I don't have my moments now, but the lapses in grammar are far less common and my usual balderdash dwells more on nothing than misappropriated scorn.
Still: Do not misunderestimate my capacification for Busheries and other -isms!
Give me some time and prodding and I may turn up those old pictures.
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Thank you for all you've supplied me with thus far.
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I like especially Rat and Jellyfish, but Heart of the river and Leary's Brain too! (and this means a lot coming from someone who doesn't like modern abstract art!)
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I miss those notes. I don't have much of anything from college. Turns out that people who don't take notes don't have notebooks to look back at to jog their memories. And here I thought those pages were only for the tests.
Minogue and Waller were so much more Zen the Bache could ever be.
Can you imagine Bache trying to remain calm while two undergrads pass notes and
ignore his lectures?
Amazing!
Amazing.
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Amongst those who would light a classroom on fire, there is a brotherhood.
In Critical thinking with Bruce Waller, the class made it to appeal to authority, to which I responded that what was written in the book was wrong. Bruce, being the author of the book, was not at all offended. He said that he's had arguments over that section with Dr. Minogue and other people and has not changed it because nobody else sounded right. He summed up their arguments. I replied that I knew exactly what was wrong with his and his critics definitions of appeal to authority. We continued our exchange outside of the class. He changed his book. I was in the acknowledgements for one edition. I passed on the opportunity to actually write that section of the book.
My thoughts are that they didn't so much recognize brilliance as INSANITY! We were completely nuts and they did not know what to do besides smile and nod.
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