This blog is a visual articulation of MY views of the world around me. I will present various sides of arguments, and always sum them up with my own personal take.
My more entertaining/diverse/ridiculous/lovable blog can be found at http://mrjdjude.tumblr.com/ and I'll do all of my following from that blog as well!
Thanks and enjoy!
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
When people attempt to look back and find that EXACT moment where they felt that shift in their professional career, they often tell some anecdote about people who once looked down on them breaking their necks to look up at them. No matter how sincere some of these stories are, their is always an air of snotty-ness attached the statement. …at the risk of perpetuating that, let me explain a moment of revelation I recently had.
Before I start, as a kind of disclaimer, I, in NO WAY, think I have “made it” in my field but am just noticing, appreciating, being thankful, for a little upward movement.
I’ve been hired as a consultant at a local play development center to help them investigate the viability of one of their fellowships specifically for early-career playwrights of color. I was responsible for going through all of this informational material about the programs, some of their reports during its existence, and their grant proposal to funders to see what the history and focus of the program has been and what are ways it can improve. After forming initial thoughts on the subject, I interviewed field-wide practitioners on their thoughts about new play development, as it relates to early-career playwrights of color and collect their proposals on what an ideal program would look like. From these interviews, I am to write a report on the findings and help them think about the program’s redesign.
Well as I was conducting one of the interviews, I had a young staff member ask me “If there was anything else I needed?” A small gesture, admittedly, nothing more than just shear polite. I generally just ask for a bottle of water or politely say no, but this day I had a little bit of a headache (part sinus, part the drinking I did to celebrate Kappa Alpha Psi’s 101st birthday) and really needed something to eat. I ask if there was something I could munch on. To my EXTREME AND THANKFUL surprise, he brought back cookies, peanut butter-filled pretzels (an underrated treat!), an apple and some crackers!
I didn’t even think he would produce the crackers, but the fact that he went above and beyond for me really made my day, well shit, my professional career up to this point. While I realize one will never outgrow the role of getting things for invited guests to one’s organization, one does not always have the luxury of being asked “if there is anything else [they] need?”! This small, possibly petty and vain and shallow, moment really made all of the stress, drama, disappointment, and the like I’ve endured worth it. For this brief moment, I thought that a career in this field wouldn’t be such a bad life, after all.
I’m shouting out this article for a couple of reasons. First and foremost, for the artist that they are honoring. My homie Paige is an amazing actress, dancer, B-girl, teaching artist, motivator, etc. and this article doesn’t even begin to articulate just how much she means to the kids she serves. I’d also add that she motivates those she works with. I’ve been moved by listening to her one woman show Paige in Full and I’m sure I’m not the only one.
I also highlight this article because I think it shows just how important arts education is. It is highly undervalued but can do so much. Paige has developed strategies that will help reach kids that traditional ways of learning have left out in the cold. There are times when I’m at the elementary school I also work for and wonder what affect could an arts education curriculum make in some of these kids lives. Maybe that is being too optimistic, but articles like this one, and mavericks like Paige, give me confidence that it is all possible.
I just read this article on Nathan Louis Jackson. The article disucesses his new work, “When I Come to Die” and about his trajectory as an artist. I won’t rehash everything (because I want you to read the article!) but reading his sotry inspired me. Here is someone who blazed their own path and is doing very well for himself. His play “Broke-ology” is very successful and is being produced more rapidly. Every now and then you need to come across a story to really inspire you and Mr. Jackson has done just that! Check the article out!