My theme for this year’s April A-Z Blog Challenge is fantastical creatures, celebrating my upcoming book, On the Virtues of Beasts of the Realms of Imagination. Please check out my Kickstarter Campaign for all sorts of additional information, pictures, and even a video. Huge thanks to all the backers who have already successfully brought this campaign to its goal, much to my astonishment and delight!
“The ancient artists of Egypt and Greece depicted this serpent as a simple circle, tail in mouth, but not all ouroboroses find satisfaction in the perfect circles common among their kind. Though some find the simplicity of the circle pleasing and satisfying, others prefer to form themselves into other shapes, just as dancers long to sing with their bodies and poets long to paint with words. Yet no matter the strange and sinuous variety of patterns enacted by the more poetical ouroboroses, every one holds its tail in its mouth, without which closure it would no longer be eternal.
By the ouroboros we are reminded that everyone has a unique voice and vision, and it would be a terrible loss to force every person to conform themselves to the same regular shape instead of the endlessly creative variants with which our souls are naturally teeming. But just as the ouroboros must always keep tail in mouth, so must we remember that true creativity consists not in mindlessly altering things merely for the sake of novelty, but rather in balancing the fundamentals which are truly important, with the variations that allow us to celebrate our myriad unique visions.”
For a post about my process in imagining and creating this piece, see here.
Are there any things that you have your own unique way of doing? What quirky personal variations do you have for ordinary activities? (Or maybe not so ordinary?)
The alphabet of anything-but-ordinary creatures doesn’t stop there. Click the link to read
[Picture: Ouroboros Makes a Poem, rubber block print by AEGN, 2014 (sold out).]
I don't think that creature could roll along or even move as he would pull his knots tighter.
ReplyDeleteQuite right, Kristin. But it's like dancing - you don't do it for the practical locomotion, you do it for the joy. =)
ReplyDeleteI love this take on the ouroboros! Everyone has uniqe ways of seeing and doing things. I'm making my own path as a storyteller, and it is fun!
ReplyDeleteThe Multicolored Diary
What an utterly awesome ouroboros! Your work is truly amazing.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting post indeed. Some folk think I am somewhat quirky.
ReplyDeleteAbout twenty years ago I did an IT degree as you do as you get older and your brain starts to shout at you . . . Dont Do It . . . . Anyway one day I managed to work something out before all the younger students did, but the lecturer told them all not to discuss how I solved the problem because I do everything differently to everyone else and I would just confuse them all . . . Well that seemed a bit hard.
I have abandoned IT now because just as I would get my head round one operating system a new one would be developed. That is more that a grumpy old brain can cope with.
Rob Z Tobor