Tuesday, April 9, 2013
blind saving the blind
Jim Sherman and Annie Smith had enjoyed the news and Everybody Loves Raymond together the evening of March 27 when Sherman decided it was time to turn in. Bidding his neighbor good night, Sherman, blind since birth, used his cane and Smith's fence to find his way back from her house to his RV next door in Conroe, Texas.
Once in bed, Sherman, 55, turned on the baby monitor that Smith's daughter Debbie—a nurse who worked nights—had bought for both their homes so Sherman could keep an ear out for Smith, 85, who is legally blind and has Alzheimer's disease. Shortly after 10 p.m., Sherman started to hear odd noises over the monitor and then Annie's frantic voice: "Jim, the house is on fire!"
Sherman sprang into action. "I knew if I were to wait," he recalls, "it might be too late." He made his way to Smith's front door, left open for her dogs. "I could smell smoke," he says. "I asked 'Where are you?' She shouted, 'I'm over here at the back.'" Following the sound of Annie's voice, Sherman found her near the bathroom. Taking her hands, he led her out of the house. "You could hear roaring and crackling," Sherman recalls. "It was like an oven."
The fire, started by a faulty electrical connection, gutted the house and killed Annie's cat and three kittens. But mother and daughter realize that, if not for Sherman, the outcome could have been much worse. "There is no way I can express my gratitude—it's too enormous," Debbie says. Adds Annie: "He couldn't see, but he went into that burning house and got me out."
***
I found this blog, the burning house. It's kind of a lighthearted approach to a terrible situation, but it is a way for people to think about what is important to them. http://theburninghouse.com/
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
end of story
Vukub Caquix and the Tree of Life
Completed talisman necklace and stand
Explanation of the pendants
Using an awl and a hammer, I laid my designs over the aluminum sheet and tapped each mark one by one so that the design was embossed on the other side. I then cut out the surrounding shape with a jewelry saw and drilled holes for the chain links.
Top -- a representation of Vukub-Caquix himself. Him form resembles that of a macaw. His name, meaning "Seven times the color of fire," was given to him because of his brilliant, silvery eyes, which I placed on the top left and right of this pendant.
Middle -- the source of Vukub-Caquix's downfall. These two Mayan heiroglyphs represent the moon and sun, respectively. Vukub-Caquix believed he was so important and brilliant that his very existence made the sun and moon redundant. His arrogance is what ultimatley led to his death.
Bottom -- reads "Chalam," the mayan word for "jawbone." One day, when he goes to his nance tree to pick fruit to eat, his enemies shoot him with a blow pipe from afar. The wound to the jaw severely weakened him and led to his death. Although Vukub-Caquix is not human, it might be significant to remember that the muscles in the jaw are some of the strongest in the entire human body. A severe wound to the jaw might symbolize taking someone's strength and power from him or her. This story acts as a warning to anyone who isn't careful about letting excessive pride overcome them...
The stand -- represents both the nance tree from which Vukub Caquix picked his yellow fruit and also the Mayan tree of life, which contains representations of a constellation (Big dipper), a galaxy (Milky Way), the moon (eclipse), and an offering to the gods. The top of the tree of life is the depiction of the constellation, but it is also actually Vukub Caquix (Seven-Macaw) himself.
More Process...
First, I developed the designs for the wood panel and pendants. The design for the tree is in my previous post, done in illustrator using the pen tool. I used mayan images for reference but did not trace any existing forms - this design is my creation, inspired by the mayan forms. I wanted the pendants to narrate the symbols of the story, as explained above. I began by drawing some potential designs; I then scanned my drawings and live traced them in illustrator so that I could scale them up and down easily. Here are the illustrator images:
Using the scroll saw, I cut out the design of the tree of life. Sanding it by hand is what took more time, really... I then spray painted the form black:
The actual talisman/necklace required aluminum sheet metal, some 4/0 blades for the jewelry saw (so tiny!!), 36 inches of stainless steel chain, chain links, and a clasp/closure. For all these needs Metalliferous and Brooklyn Charm were most helpful. There are just countless necklace charms you never knew you needed there... it's dangerous. Needlenose pliers definitely make the list of essentials.
This project was a great way for me to explore jewelry-making. It was definitely one of those projects whose success was dependent on the amount of focus and concentration. So satisfying in the end!
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
tree and talisman
Project proposal.
• a representation of Vucub-Caquix
• the silvery eyes
• the sun and moon (which his existence made redundant)
• the jaw (possibly?)
Why these symbols? They are the enduring and most notable characteristics of Vucub-Caquix. These symbols represent the cause of his excessive pride, and the reason for his eventual death.
Why a necklace? In this case, the necklace would be more representative of a talisman, or an object whose power affects human emotion – like an amulet or charm.
The process so far.
The wooden display board I designed for the necklace is a combination of these two versions of the Mayan tree.
Mayan Version.
A slightly difficult-to-read explanation of the tree's elements.
My design on illustrator - definitely required some simplification, considering I have to cut this out of wood in a short period of time...
I played around with the scroll saw and cut out a few practice shapes. Here is my favorite one, along with some experimentation with marking and bending metal (copper here).
Also, I heard about a great store in Brooklyn for jewelry findings! Brooklyn Charm
Drawings to come!
the myth evolves
I'm not entirely convinced of the authenticity of the myth in my last post. So here is the new story, the legit one...
THE MYTH OF VUKUB-CAKIX
"...There existed a man "full of pride," whose name was Vukub-Cakix. The name signifies "Seven-times-the-colour-of-fire," or "Very brilliant," and was justified by the fact that its owner's eyes were of silver, his teeth of emerald, and other parts of his anatomy of precious metals. In his own opinion Vukub-Cakix's existence rendered unnecessary that of the sun and the moon, and this egoism so disgusted the gods that they resolved upon his overthrow. His two sons, Zipacna and Cabrakan (earth-heaper[1] (?) and earthquake), were daily employed, the one in heaping up mountains, and the other in demolishing thorn, and these also incurred the wrath of the immortals. Shortly after the decision of the deities the twin hero-gods Hun-Ahpu and Xbalanque came to earth with the intention of chastising the arrogance of Vukub-Cakix and his progeny.
"Now Vukub-Cakix had a great tree of the variety known in Central America as "nanze" or "tapal," bearing a fruit round, yellow, and aromatic, and upon this fruit he depended for his daily sustenance. One day on going to partake of it for his morning meal he mounted to its summit in order to espy the choicest fruits, when to his great indignation he discovered that Hun-Ahpu and Xbalanque had been before him, and had almost denuded the tree of its produce. The hero-gods, who lay concealed within the foliage, now added injury to theft by hurling at Vukub-Cakix a dart from a blow-pipe, which had the effect of precipitating him from the summit of the tree to the earth. He arose in great wrath, bleeding profusely from a severe wound in the jaw. Hun-Ahpu then threw himself upon Vukub-Cakix, who in terrible anger seized the god by the arm and wrenched it from the body. He then proceeded to his dwelling, where he was met and anxiously interrogated by his spouse Chimalmat. Tortured by the pain in his teeth and jaw be, in an access of spite, hung Hun-Ahpu's arm over a blazing fire, and then threw himself down to bemoan his injuries, consoling himself, however, with the idea that he had adequately avenged himself upon the interlopers who had dared to disturb his peace.
"But Hun-Ahpu and Xbalanque were in no mind that he should escape so easily, and the recovery of Hun-Ahpu's arm must be made at all hazards. With this end in view they consulted two venerable beings in whom we readily recognise the father-mother divinities, Xpiyacoc and Xmucane (4), disguised for the nonce as sorcerers. These personages accompanied Hun-Ahpu and Xbalanque to the abode of Vukub-Cakix, whom they found in a state of intense agony. The ancients persuaded him to be operated upon in order to relieve his sufferings, and for his glittering teeth they substituted grains of maize. Next they removed his eyes of emerald, upon which his death speedily followed, as did that of his wife Chimalmat. Hun-Ahpu's arm was recovered, re-affixed to his shoulder, and all ended satisfactorily for the hero-gods."
Vukub Cakix, or Vucub Caquix, is often depicted as having the head of a macaw.
Excerpt from http://www.sacred-texts.com/nam/pvuheng.htm
The Popol Vuh: The Mythic and Heroic Sagas of the Kichés of Central America, by Lewis Spence. 1908.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
balam
Balam - the Mayan name for Jaguar.
The ruins of the Yucatán Peninsula are full of jaguar
imagery. For thousands of years, peoples of many cultures have admired and
feared its power, strength, and hunting prowess. The jaguar also came to
symbolize “beauty, power, cunning, and mystery entwined in rituals and
stories.” For the Mayan culture in particular, the jaguar’s skin is said to
resemble the heavens and starry night sky if it were spread out. The jaguar is
a god of duality – of day and night, and of fear and admiration…
“According to one Maya myth, it was a supernatural being,
Jaguar Sun, who rose each day in the east and prowled west, aging along the
course, until finally plunging into the darkness of the west. Then Jaguar Sun
fights the Lords of Xibalba (the Underworld) all night. Through his strength
and cunning, Jaguar Sun wins the right to rise each day in the East.”
One Mayan creation myth recounts:
“As god created people out of mud, jaguar, curious, watched.
God didn't want jaguar to know how this was done, so he sent jaguar to the river
to fetch water, using a leaky calabash to fill a jar. God figured to finish
people by the time jaguar returned. At the river, as jaguar was mindlessly
scooping water with the leaky calabash, frog advised patching the holes with
mud. Very quickly, jaguar filled the jug and returned to the god who had
finished 13 of the people and 12 arms; god was in the process of making a dog.”
While Jaguar expressed an interest in eating the dog, “God
said the dog was to serve people and that the arms were to teach jaguar
respect.”
After man wounded Jaguar’s paw twice, he learnt to leave
humans alone. (He did eat the dog though.) Even still, people were still
fearful and envious of Jaguar’s hunting ability and power.
“But although these powers are alluring, the jaguar teaches
that people should never try to be what they aren't, as in the story of the
possum who asked the jaguar to be godfather to her son… Jaguar, to be a good
godfather, took little possum hunting at the waterhole. Jaguar leapt on a very
large animal. The possum and jaguar ate their fill. Later the little possum
took his mother to the waterhole where the little possum leapt upon a very
large animal, but the animal simply shook himself and threw the little possum
off into the mud. The little possum called his mother for help, but when she
came to him, she, too, was trapped, and they both died. Jaguar stories also
teach that power, by itself, is not enough.”
Then there is the story of the three lazy jaguars that were
dying of hunger but didn’t want to find food. The rabbit asked them why they
were complaining – they had been given the perfect hunting tools of claws and
fangs – but the jaguars just grumbled that it was too much work to hunt.
“Rabbit offered to carry the jaguars into the forest if they
would climb into a net. Once they were in the net, rabbit tied it shut, then
found a long green guava stick and beat the jaguars. ‘You are built like great
hunters, but you are lazy beasts.’ Thus the jaguar can be wise and foolish,
powerful and weak.”
There are many myths about the jaguar even within the Mayan
culture. Some say “The Jaguar Sun has
the wisdom and mystery of day and night, life and death, [while] other stories
give a jaguar deity the power to eat the sun. One Maya story says that the end
of the earth will come when jaguars ascend from the underworld to eat the sun
and moon, maybe the universe; an eclipse will foreshadow this final event.”
But the Mayans believed that appeasing the Jaguar Sun god
with rituals, singing, and honoring them in various ways has prevented this
occurrence.
“Perhaps the stories and details about the jaguar are
contradictory in part because people themselves are contradictory. Sometimes
humans protect the jungle and share in its bounty. Sometimes people foolishly
take more than is needed for food, consuming their environment - maybe even
themselves.”
Text paraphrased and quoted from: http://www.oneworldjourneys.com/jaguar/jag_myth/body.html
Jaguar Rising by Marian Blue (2001-2002)
Jaguar Rising by Marian Blue (2001-2002)
problem? solved.
Here's a look at some of the process involved. This is the second attempt at lining up the gears, with slightly more success but still not fully functioning.
And this was just what I needed to make my day even better.... chipped mirror finish. Thank you, canal plastic.
But I had to recut the frame anyway so life was good again when I got to this stage:
The gears appear to line up, but the problem is that the hole I drilled for the gear shaft was not exactly in the center. So when they rotate, sometimes they match up but they easily slip off track.
Some photos of the final piece with hinges and all:
Various things I learned from this project:
- the exponential impact of a small measuring error
- how to use the bandsaw (truth: never used it before this project!), plexi cutter, jewelry saw, and sanding machine
- when you think you're almost done, you probably have a good 2 or 3 days of work left... at the very least
- dowels and how to create a simple gearshaft
- having extra material can literally save your life
- mirrored plexi melts and cracks easily
- how to use the bandsaw (truth: never used it before this project!), plexi cutter, jewelry saw, and sanding machine
- when you think you're almost done, you probably have a good 2 or 3 days of work left... at the very least
- dowels and how to create a simple gearshaft
- having extra material can literally save your life
- mirrored plexi melts and cracks easily
technicalities
My ruler. The markings on this piece of found metal are spaced according to the width of my index finger. The side opposite the markings is the width of my wrist. The rigidity is useful, but the one thing that might be more helpful is if it were longer.
Technical drawings. The top shows plan view and the bottom shows side view. The numbers are really for my sake, to help me remember how many different types of parts I'm cutting. The mechanical connections will include dowels, screws, hinges, and nuts & bolts. Originally I wanted the entire piece to be made of plexi...but cutting gears out of plexi would most likely be an inefficient use of my time. So wood will be substituted for the gears and the temples.
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