Saturday, November 21, 2009
Interview with “Fail Whale” artist, Yiying Lu
1) What was the inspiration for the whale and birds illustration?
It was initially created as a birthday e-card for an overseas friend of mine when I was in my last year study at University – expressing my: Sorry I am failed to be there across the ocean, but here is a little console from my heart. The whale is a self metaphor. Hence the original name I had for that artwork was “lifting a dreamer”.
2) Are you surprised by all the attention the ‘Fail Whale’ is receiving?
Actually, both Yes and No:
“Yes” because it was surprising how perfect my whale illustration fits twitter’s brand, and even more perfectly how the whale and the birds fit their “over capacity, too many tweets” usage – the huge whale being carried by the little birdies. Once it was in use, I guess it was not surprising that people would fall in love with the whale – he is really cute. That little image has been the most effective piece of damage control that company could have hoped for: turning a service interruption into a loveable thing! I am surprised how Biz Stone managed to find the image on iStockphoto among 3 million other images, but then that is how the universe works.
“No” because I’m confident with my artwork, as they are made from heart so it wasn’t surprising to see they bring the attention.
3) Will you continue to use stock photo web sites in the future? Would you recommend it to other artists?
I will reserve my comment about this for now. I am currently having a variety of discussions about the licensing of my works.
4) Which artists do you look to for inspiration?
Lots – René Magritte, Alan Fletcher, Saul Steinberg, Bruno Munari, Salvador DalÃ, Shel Silverstein, Feng Zikai, Yoshida Sensya, Ito Junji and many more. Music Artists like Röyksopp, Air, the Buggles, Daft Punk and so on..
Art on Youtube
Scar Also Known As The True Lion King.
A tribute to Scar and His Family, maybe not all pictures are with Scar or Anyone of his family.
Al this art is extremely good and beatiful and i just wanna thank everyone for their great art. Credits to all the people who made this art.
Pictures- Great Artists. Your great Thank you.
Song- The Lion King 2 Simbas Pride- We are One.
Enjoy it.
See full movie at www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9giJWKGZuw
Friday, November 20, 2009
Interview with a Curator
Interview with Robert Jacobsen
Curator of Asian Art
1. What is this room and how does it fit in with the larger building it would have been a part of?
In a cultured household in traditional China—a Confucian household—the library would have been the most important room in the house. After the great hall, it would have been the most important room, for certain. And it was here that the trained scholars, often working for the government as part of the bureaucracy, would keep their art. They would keep their books here. They would do their writing here. It could be poetry. It could be court memorials, but this becomes the intellectual crossroads of the home, and—to a degree—of Chinese culture.
2. What about the furnishings?
(1) Scholar's studies in the Ming and Ch'ing dynasties were furnished according to simple tastes. During the late Ming and early Ch'ing dynasties, rooms like this were put together by scholars—members of the Literati—and typically furnished with rather simple tastes: beautiful proportioned hardwoods, and cabinets that were simpler rather than ornate in decoration and overall appearance.(1)
3. What does the term "Literati" mean?
It's a whole class of Chinese men. They all were trained in Confucian classics—some served the state as scholar officials—and all played the reclusive role of retired gentlemen.
4. There are many natural elements in and around this room.
They would collect objects of nature, like great garden rocks.(2) The big rocks represented actual mountain landscapes of China. They would typically want to have plantings of bamboo and perhaps a few other plants just outside their window. Nature was very important to them. It was a focal point. It was a meditative process to view and think of nature.
And, of course, the Literati are the great landscape painters of China, so they were concerned with nature in much of their works. They were also often the nature poets of China, so they were interested in creating verse around landscape, the dynamic forces of the universe that nature and landscape represented to them.
5. Were they artists in the same way we think of artists today?
It's important to keep in mind that these scholar artists were not professionals. They prided themselves on being amateurs, on the fact that they didn't have to sell their works or pander to a mass audience.
(2) Rubbings taken from famous stone tablets were often turned into books. Most of their paintings are quite small—no larger than books, in many instances. They were very, very interested in collecting and studying their own history. Famous inscriptions were often taken from carved stone tablets, and these rubbings turned, then, into books that would be kept in the library.(2) These were sources not only of history and philosophy, but also of writing styles of past masters.
So we see a combination of this organic taste, this interest in nature, this amateurism and the interest in books and ancient China, all come into play in the type of painting they produced, which is something that was based on the brushwork of prior masters.
6. Lacking a mass audience, what became of their works?
Their objects were passed back and forth amongst one another. These artists painted for other artists in their circle, or friends of theirs. On occasion, pieces could be commissioned for someone's birthday, or an anniversary event or some sort of government award. The art was used that way, but it wasn't done wholesale for a mass market, for popular consumption. That meant that the paintings were often very small. They would be viewed by only one or two people at a time. They were hardly ever used as decoration. In fact, they were kept more like books in a library, which is why the library becomes the repository of their scrolls, their albums and their fan paintings.
7. So these scholars were both artists and collectors?
They did not collect huge numbers of things, by and large. When we say art collecting, we're talking about a few old things; many old books, to be sure—that counted—but ancient bronzes and ancient jades would be collected and used occasionally as display items. A cabinet could have held many treasures, but only a few would be pulled out and put on view during the various seasons of the year.
8. Back in the garden, it appears that everything is very carefully placed.
(3) Nature—in particular rocks from Lake T'ai—were a focal point for the study. They loved ancient rocks. Perforated stones from Lake T'ai are what are decorating the gardens. The big centerpiece stones were dredged up from the shoreline and arranged in gardens to represent the actual mountain ranges of China proper. Other kinds of stones from farther West were collected and prized for their ability to evoke an ink landscape.
9. You mentioned writing, painting, and poetry. Were these scholars also interested in music?
Confucius said that a true gentleman—a refined gentleman—was going to be a poet, a painter, a good archer—remember, he lived during the Bronze Age—but he also had to know and understand music.
(4) The ch'in—a kind of zither—was the scholar's preferred musical instrument. The scholars took this seriously, and an ancient zither called the ch'in—an instrument that dates back to China's Bronze Age, in fact—was the instrument of choice. So, this too would be found in a library, generally hanging on a wall or placed on the table at which they were played, as a reference to the refined intellectuality, culture, and sense of history that any true Literati artist would have.
10. Could you say more about the house itself?
(5) This study was the most elaborately decorated room in its original house. The late 18th century house that this room was taken from still stands in China. It was the fanciest room in the house and amongst the smallest of the rooms in the house, so we know that they concentrated their efforts on this room. The decorative work in the support frame, the ceiling beams,(5) and the latticework in the windows are far fancier than in other rooms in the house.
11. How does this compare with the museum's other Chinese room, the reception hall?
Unlike the Ming Dynasty Wu family reception hall, this Ch'ing study is not a freestanding structure that was linked up, as the earlier Ming house linked its structures up. This is actually a room taken from the corner of a very large, two-story walled structure. In fact, the bedroom is still above the library, just as we found it here. There was a small room upstairs that was reached through the garden doorway.
The study had a rock garden on either side of it. This one we were able to recreate with its pebble floor. Although the stones had been taken away long ago, we were able to find old garden stones and reinsert them where they would have been correctly placed.
12. Would the room have been as open to the elements as it appears here?
They were open to the elements, because a person needed the sun and the rain to keep the bamboo and other plants growing. So our scholar had his table almost in the center of his room. He had his book cabinets to either side. He had paraphernalia spread out. And he had views of nature before him and behind him—facing north and facing south.
The room itself is done in an individual manner. The artist—the patriarch perhaps, the scholar of the household—really was allowed to arrange this room in an independent manner. He was in charge of collecting what he wanted and placing these things where he wanted to look at them.
13. So the arrangement is not formally dictated.
The Wu house, being a reception hall, is far more formal. You had very little choice of where things went. It was more dictated to you by Confucian custom and traditional family worship. If you were the matriarch or patriarch of the household and had that exalted couch to sit on as head of the family, you would have been very, very formal. And you would have carried on conversations in a socially correct manner.
This room is almost the direct opposite. Here you got to be yourself—kick off your shoes, maybe put your feet up a bit, lean back, think, read, and enjoy nature. Because it was all around you in some way or another, via the painting, the stone, a garden rock or a poem about nature, perhaps. It was all in this room.
Curator of Asian Art
1. What is this room and how does it fit in with the larger building it would have been a part of?
In a cultured household in traditional China—a Confucian household—the library would have been the most important room in the house. After the great hall, it would have been the most important room, for certain. And it was here that the trained scholars, often working for the government as part of the bureaucracy, would keep their art. They would keep their books here. They would do their writing here. It could be poetry. It could be court memorials, but this becomes the intellectual crossroads of the home, and—to a degree—of Chinese culture.
2. What about the furnishings?
(1) Scholar's studies in the Ming and Ch'ing dynasties were furnished according to simple tastes. During the late Ming and early Ch'ing dynasties, rooms like this were put together by scholars—members of the Literati—and typically furnished with rather simple tastes: beautiful proportioned hardwoods, and cabinets that were simpler rather than ornate in decoration and overall appearance.(1)
3. What does the term "Literati" mean?
It's a whole class of Chinese men. They all were trained in Confucian classics—some served the state as scholar officials—and all played the reclusive role of retired gentlemen.
4. There are many natural elements in and around this room.
They would collect objects of nature, like great garden rocks.(2) The big rocks represented actual mountain landscapes of China. They would typically want to have plantings of bamboo and perhaps a few other plants just outside their window. Nature was very important to them. It was a focal point. It was a meditative process to view and think of nature.
And, of course, the Literati are the great landscape painters of China, so they were concerned with nature in much of their works. They were also often the nature poets of China, so they were interested in creating verse around landscape, the dynamic forces of the universe that nature and landscape represented to them.
5. Were they artists in the same way we think of artists today?
It's important to keep in mind that these scholar artists were not professionals. They prided themselves on being amateurs, on the fact that they didn't have to sell their works or pander to a mass audience.
(2) Rubbings taken from famous stone tablets were often turned into books. Most of their paintings are quite small—no larger than books, in many instances. They were very, very interested in collecting and studying their own history. Famous inscriptions were often taken from carved stone tablets, and these rubbings turned, then, into books that would be kept in the library.(2) These were sources not only of history and philosophy, but also of writing styles of past masters.
So we see a combination of this organic taste, this interest in nature, this amateurism and the interest in books and ancient China, all come into play in the type of painting they produced, which is something that was based on the brushwork of prior masters.
6. Lacking a mass audience, what became of their works?
Their objects were passed back and forth amongst one another. These artists painted for other artists in their circle, or friends of theirs. On occasion, pieces could be commissioned for someone's birthday, or an anniversary event or some sort of government award. The art was used that way, but it wasn't done wholesale for a mass market, for popular consumption. That meant that the paintings were often very small. They would be viewed by only one or two people at a time. They were hardly ever used as decoration. In fact, they were kept more like books in a library, which is why the library becomes the repository of their scrolls, their albums and their fan paintings.
7. So these scholars were both artists and collectors?
They did not collect huge numbers of things, by and large. When we say art collecting, we're talking about a few old things; many old books, to be sure—that counted—but ancient bronzes and ancient jades would be collected and used occasionally as display items. A cabinet could have held many treasures, but only a few would be pulled out and put on view during the various seasons of the year.
8. Back in the garden, it appears that everything is very carefully placed.
(3) Nature—in particular rocks from Lake T'ai—were a focal point for the study. They loved ancient rocks. Perforated stones from Lake T'ai are what are decorating the gardens. The big centerpiece stones were dredged up from the shoreline and arranged in gardens to represent the actual mountain ranges of China proper. Other kinds of stones from farther West were collected and prized for their ability to evoke an ink landscape.
9. You mentioned writing, painting, and poetry. Were these scholars also interested in music?
Confucius said that a true gentleman—a refined gentleman—was going to be a poet, a painter, a good archer—remember, he lived during the Bronze Age—but he also had to know and understand music.
(4) The ch'in—a kind of zither—was the scholar's preferred musical instrument. The scholars took this seriously, and an ancient zither called the ch'in—an instrument that dates back to China's Bronze Age, in fact—was the instrument of choice. So, this too would be found in a library, generally hanging on a wall or placed on the table at which they were played, as a reference to the refined intellectuality, culture, and sense of history that any true Literati artist would have.
10. Could you say more about the house itself?
(5) This study was the most elaborately decorated room in its original house. The late 18th century house that this room was taken from still stands in China. It was the fanciest room in the house and amongst the smallest of the rooms in the house, so we know that they concentrated their efforts on this room. The decorative work in the support frame, the ceiling beams,(5) and the latticework in the windows are far fancier than in other rooms in the house.
11. How does this compare with the museum's other Chinese room, the reception hall?
Unlike the Ming Dynasty Wu family reception hall, this Ch'ing study is not a freestanding structure that was linked up, as the earlier Ming house linked its structures up. This is actually a room taken from the corner of a very large, two-story walled structure. In fact, the bedroom is still above the library, just as we found it here. There was a small room upstairs that was reached through the garden doorway.
The study had a rock garden on either side of it. This one we were able to recreate with its pebble floor. Although the stones had been taken away long ago, we were able to find old garden stones and reinsert them where they would have been correctly placed.
12. Would the room have been as open to the elements as it appears here?
They were open to the elements, because a person needed the sun and the rain to keep the bamboo and other plants growing. So our scholar had his table almost in the center of his room. He had his book cabinets to either side. He had paraphernalia spread out. And he had views of nature before him and behind him—facing north and facing south.
The room itself is done in an individual manner. The artist—the patriarch perhaps, the scholar of the household—really was allowed to arrange this room in an independent manner. He was in charge of collecting what he wanted and placing these things where he wanted to look at them.
13. So the arrangement is not formally dictated.
The Wu house, being a reception hall, is far more formal. You had very little choice of where things went. It was more dictated to you by Confucian custom and traditional family worship. If you were the matriarch or patriarch of the household and had that exalted couch to sit on as head of the family, you would have been very, very formal. And you would have carried on conversations in a socially correct manner.
This room is almost the direct opposite. Here you got to be yourself—kick off your shoes, maybe put your feet up a bit, lean back, think, read, and enjoy nature. Because it was all around you in some way or another, via the painting, the stone, a garden rock or a poem about nature, perhaps. It was all in this room.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
This Film Is A Work of Art
ARTISTS IN SOCIETY
A country that loves art, not artists
In a survey of attitudes toward artists in the US a vast majority of Americans, 96%, said they were greatly inspired by various kinds of art and highly value art in their lives and communities. But the data suggests a strange paradox.
While Americans value art, the end product, they do not value what artists do. Only 27% of respondents believe that artists contribute "a lot" to the good of society.
Further interview data from the study reflects a strong sentiment in the cultural community that society does not value art making as legitimate work worthy of compensation. Many perceive the making of art as a frivolous or recreational pursuit.
USA hopes to help close the gap between the love of art and the ambivalence toward artists in society.
Other insights further illuminate the depth of the paradox:
• A majority of parents think that teaching the arts is as important as reading, math, science, history, and geography.
• 95% believe that the arts are important in preparing children for the future.
• In the face of a changing global economy, economists increasingly emphasize that the United States will have to rely on innovation, ingenuity, creativity, and analysis for its competitive edge—the very skills that can be enhanced by engagement with the arts.
In a survey of attitudes toward artists in the US a vast majority of Americans, 96%, said they were greatly inspired by various kinds of art and highly value art in their lives and communities. But the data suggests a strange paradox.
While Americans value art, the end product, they do not value what artists do. Only 27% of respondents believe that artists contribute "a lot" to the good of society.
Further interview data from the study reflects a strong sentiment in the cultural community that society does not value art making as legitimate work worthy of compensation. Many perceive the making of art as a frivolous or recreational pursuit.
USA hopes to help close the gap between the love of art and the ambivalence toward artists in society.
Other insights further illuminate the depth of the paradox:
• A majority of parents think that teaching the arts is as important as reading, math, science, history, and geography.
• 95% believe that the arts are important in preparing children for the future.
• In the face of a changing global economy, economists increasingly emphasize that the United States will have to rely on innovation, ingenuity, creativity, and analysis for its competitive edge—the very skills that can be enhanced by engagement with the arts.
Who said relationships doesn't last between teens???
Lil' Wayne is all messed up now!!!
HOMICIDE INVESTIGATION!!
I Love This Architecture
Yacumama Lodge is unique in both design and operation, with a special emphasis placed upon service, comfort, privacy, and low environmental impact. The resulting atmosphere in the lodge is one of casual authenticity, as warm and intimate as your own living room, yet large enough to offer ample space for multiple activities, along with a bar and separate hammock room overlooking the river. The decor throughout the cabins and common areas utilizes authentic tribal art, indigenous artifacts, and natural history displays. Yacumama was designed with the guest experience in mind with a focus upon the romantic, which translates into each individual or couple having a separate and secluded personal cabin with ample space to relax, complete with sitting areas and a comfortable bed with fresh sheets, pillows, and towels. Luxury suites are available which are spacious and offer a well lit and spotless private bath with flush toilet, sink, and shower, sitting area with table, chairs and recliner, extra large bed with plush mattress, floor rugs, electric light and fan, maid service, and room service.
Art and Film
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
My Phototgraphic Eye....$$$$MONEY$$$$
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
My Favorite Artist Is....
Birth name Jay Jenkins
Also known as Snowman, Mr. 17.5, Lil' J
Born September 28, 1977 (1977-09-28) (age 29)
Origin Atlanta, Georgia USA
Genre(s) Southern hip hop, gangsta rap
Occupation(s) Rapper, songwriter
Years active 2000 - present
Label(s) Corporate Thugz, Def Jam
Associated
acts U.S.D.A., T.I., Akon, Young Buck, Dipset, CTE, Jay-Z, Sin & Rick Ross
My favorite artist is Young Jezzy, who is a rapper and to me he rap about things that i can relate to and his rhymes are put of this world!!! He is FANTASTIC!!!
Friday, November 13, 2009
...... is a culture because......
Perhaps there is no other group in the world that has quite the diverse and richly storied culture as that of the Native Americans. With their gilded histories that are rich in strife, struggle and triumph, the Native American culture is indeed very colorful. So many features and aspects of our modern day living have been adapted from the old Native American cultures and traditions that were practiced centuries ago.
This Music Video in a True Work of Art
Jackson has made no secret of his affection for traditional showbiz and the glamour that goes with it. His talents, not just singing but dancing and acting, could make him a perfect mainstream performer. Perish the thought. The fiery conviction of Thriller offers hope that Michael is still a long way away from failure. Thriller shows Michael Jackson's steps in the right direction.
I'm Having a Cartharsis
By Carol Gioia
We have been together longer
than each of us has been alone.
What makes us tick, and why we click;
the reasons are unknown
You are social and outgoing,
a veritable party for sure
I live inside, attempting to hide
from a world I try to ignore
We are both private and would never
display outward signs of affection.
We have different interests, and often
each goes in a different direction
I am intellectual, you are artistic,
we are an unseemly pair.
All we seem to have in common
is our mutually snow white hair.
You will rise to a challenge,
I tend to procrastinate
Your generosity is legend;
frugality is my strong trait.
Although we are an odd couple,
whatever the reason or rhyme
A half century together has passed
in what seems like almost no time
Romantics would find us annoying,
as we each march to our own beat
We do not complete one another,
but together, we are complete.
Human Nature
Human Conditions
Artist: Jennifer Jackson
Artist Statement: The simplest of things are the truest recollection of fact, an aspect of herself , is a part of a larger series that I am currently investigating regarding the human condition. This piece represents an aspect of the human condition known as human spirits. Self image is an inevitable aspect of human spirit due to the effects esteem plays on our existence. One sees themselves in various lights, often multiple visions throughout the hour, day, month or year. We are neither fully impervious nor vulnerable; we encompass the entire spectrum. This piece is just the beginning of esteem, an aspect. The rest is up to your interpretation
Human Struggles
Art Education in Schools
The education of art in schools in very well taught, many kids learn how to draw, color, and even create extraordinary masterpieces.The teaching of different artist is increasing due to living in the modern day where everything revolves around some form of art.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
I Know What Art Is
Art is the quality, production, expression, or realm, according to aesthetic principles, of what is beautiful, appealing, or of more than ordinary significance.
The Graffiti Beat
On the graffiti beat, I feel that graffiti is a type of art that is freely drawn by a person hat wants to express themselves at that certain time and moment. many are opposed to graffiti because of where that graffiti is drawn and other admire it substantially. I believe if a drawing, painting, or any form of art effects any one person or more, then it is ART!
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Fashion as Art
Public Art
Poetry Slam
MEANINGLESS FATHER
NOW THAT I AM OLDER I CAN
TELL YOU HOW MUCH YOU MEAN
A FATHER PLAYS AN IMPORTANT ROLE
TO A LITTLE GIRLS SELF ESTEEM
A LOT OF LITTLE GIRLS
CAN'T SAY THEY'RE AS
LUCKY AS ME BECAUSE
THEIR DADS DON'T COME
AROUND OR ACKNOWLEDGE
THEM BEING OFFSPRING
I FEEL SO VERY SORRY
FOR THOSE GIRLS ESPECIALLY
THEY WILL SEARCH AND SEARCH
FOR THEIR FATHER'S LOVE
AND THEY SEARCH FOR IT
ENDLESSLY
FOR A FATHER THEY ARE
ALWAYS LOOKING
NO MATTER WHERE IT BE
TO FILL THE HOLLOW SPACE
INSIDE OF THE ONE THING
THAT is ALWAYS MISSING
THEY WILL USUALLY SETTLE
FOR A MAN WHO WILL
DELIVER A DAILY BEATING
BECAUSE OVER A PERIOD
of TIME THEY BELIEVE THAT
THEY DON'T DESERVE hiM
THE ONE THING, I WOULD TELL
THOSE GIRLS IS THAT
EVERYTHING WILL BE OK
NO ONE NEEDS A FATHER
FIGURE THAT NEGLECTS
THEM ANYWAY
TODAY IS THE DAY, I WILL TELL
MY DAD JUST HOW MUCH HE MEANS
ON SECOND THOUGHT THERE'S NOT
ONE MEMORY HE'S EVER CREATED
WITH ME
FOR ME HE'S NEVER BEEN THERE, FOR
A BIRTHDAY OR EVEN HALLOWEEN
I'M GLAD I'M NOT THE CHILD OF HIS MOTHER
WHAT SHE RAISED, IS A USELESS HUMAN
BEING
THE DAUGHTER OF MY MOTHER
IS WHO I'M PROUD TO BE
MY MOTHER IS ACTUALLY DOING
A GREAT JOB SO MUCH SO
THAT MAN'S WORTHLESS TO ME
---Donna Faye Newton, USA
NOW THAT I AM OLDER I CAN
TELL YOU HOW MUCH YOU MEAN
A FATHER PLAYS AN IMPORTANT ROLE
TO A LITTLE GIRLS SELF ESTEEM
A LOT OF LITTLE GIRLS
CAN'T SAY THEY'RE AS
LUCKY AS ME BECAUSE
THEIR DADS DON'T COME
AROUND OR ACKNOWLEDGE
THEM BEING OFFSPRING
I FEEL SO VERY SORRY
FOR THOSE GIRLS ESPECIALLY
THEY WILL SEARCH AND SEARCH
FOR THEIR FATHER'S LOVE
AND THEY SEARCH FOR IT
ENDLESSLY
FOR A FATHER THEY ARE
ALWAYS LOOKING
NO MATTER WHERE IT BE
TO FILL THE HOLLOW SPACE
INSIDE OF THE ONE THING
THAT is ALWAYS MISSING
THEY WILL USUALLY SETTLE
FOR A MAN WHO WILL
DELIVER A DAILY BEATING
BECAUSE OVER A PERIOD
of TIME THEY BELIEVE THAT
THEY DON'T DESERVE hiM
THE ONE THING, I WOULD TELL
THOSE GIRLS IS THAT
EVERYTHING WILL BE OK
NO ONE NEEDS A FATHER
FIGURE THAT NEGLECTS
THEM ANYWAY
TODAY IS THE DAY, I WILL TELL
MY DAD JUST HOW MUCH HE MEANS
ON SECOND THOUGHT THERE'S NOT
ONE MEMORY HE'S EVER CREATED
WITH ME
FOR ME HE'S NEVER BEEN THERE, FOR
A BIRTHDAY OR EVEN HALLOWEEN
I'M GLAD I'M NOT THE CHILD OF HIS MOTHER
WHAT SHE RAISED, IS A USELESS HUMAN
BEING
THE DAUGHTER OF MY MOTHER
IS WHO I'M PROUD TO BE
MY MOTHER IS ACTUALLY DOING
A GREAT JOB SO MUCH SO
THAT MAN'S WORTHLESS TO ME
---Donna Faye Newton, USA
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Speak Out Against Child Abuse Diorama
FACTS:
- 3.5 milliom children are abused each year
- The most tragic consequense is dealth
- 794,000 children are victoms of abuse and neglect each year
MY UNDERSTANDING:
In the past child abuSe has not been looked into as much as it should have but now that we have many bold people that are willing to speak out about it, the more it has been looked into. Being abused not only leave bruises but also pain, low self esteem, no confidence, and the shedding of many tears. Many parents don't see themselves as abusers because that's the way they grew up and that's how they find confort in dealing with what they've been through. Most abuse is done to te kids that are classified as "mistakes".
My Diorama
My diorama shows the difference between the past and the present and the way of life that was onced lived and the way American's live now. In the past many families grew there own produce, farmed themselves, and could only afford what was needed, nothing more, nothing less. Now I feel that many people take life for granted and don't appreciate the smaller things in life. We now have the funds to buy extra clothing, cars, houses, and many other material things. The point that I wanted to make was that now we as American's see that we're in a recession and that the smaller things such as recycling, being more self-suffencient, and not making everything an neccessity, will help all of us become better as a nation and teach the next generation the meaning of values.
Sunday, August 23, 2009
About Me!!!
Hello I'm Wauketa Denise Hill, freshman attending University of West Georgia. I'm that girl that has a great sense of humor and the one that you can always come to about personal or non sense things. Many people say I am a strong black woman that knows what she wants in life and don't let anything get in my path of success. At the age of 16 I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, but just by looking at me you will think that I'm your average girl. To me that is what makes me different from everybody else. I am my own women.
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