Stay Cool with Jason Richardson

The Stay Cool project aims to develop haiku for responses from Naviar Records’ community of musicians ahead of an exhibition in Griffith during April-May

Project coordinator Jason Richardson led the first of a series of workshops and began with a discussion of creative strategies, particularly how cross-pollination provides fertile ground for developing ideas. 

Interdisciplinary is one term for this approach, ekphrasis is another — which is a Greek term for an artwork inspired by another medium. 

“I find that creativity can be stimulated from strategies, including rules,” said Mr Richardson. 

“So I take many of the ideas discussed here as starting points rather than standards. 

“One great tip from a poetry workshop I previously attended was to consider all of your senses in describing a scene to give details for a reader. 

“I am a believer in there being more than five senses, such as experiencing intuition as a sixth sense, and it can be useful to ponder that interplay of stimulus and your inner response.

“Being in an environment will mean light, sound and smell are entering into us, but one might also ponder what ideas are trying to arise within you as well?

“Landscapes are central to my creative practices and one approach is to write a poem inspired by a photograph, so photography became an analogy used to discuss observation and the role that plays in writing.

“In my experience as a photographer, you learn various techniques that generate a “wow” response and use them to give that effect for viewers.

“A couple of good strategies for night sky images are long shutter speeds and saturating colours in post-production, such as Photoshop.

“These are ideas that a haiku writer might draw inspiration from by spending time in an environment and also finding evocative words to describe it.

“It might be useful to consider yourself as a camera, allowing moments to pass as you absorb the sensations through allowing the time as your slow shutter.

“Then the saturation might be considering the hue of your language, particularly if it evokes complex emotions like the wabi-sabi of Japanese culture.”

Wabi-sabi is a Japanese aesthetic and philosophical worldview centered on finding beauty in impermanence, imperfection, and nature’s natural cycles.

Rooted in Zen Buddhism, it values simplicity, modesty, and authenticity, encouraging appreciation for rustic, weathered, or aged objects (sabi) and unconventional, humble beauty (wabi).”

This is a good point to introduce some other terms related to haiku:

    •    haibun = prose with haiku
    •    haiga = pictures with haiku
    •    renga = collaborative poetry
    •    tanka = also developed from renga, slightly longer form
    •    senryu = haiku-style verse, personal observation style

“In my writing I have developed from the 5+7+5 syllable structure that seems to have become popularly known from the American writers who promoted haiku in the 20th Century, such as Ezra Pound and Jack Kerouac.

“I have always been attracted to this structure as a creative constraint, which is one kind of strategy.

“Over time I’ve learned that a lot of what I write are senryu, as haiku is distinguished through containing a seasonal reference (kigo) and a cutting phrase (kireji).

“A seasonal reference can be less obvious than naming a season, but in the workshop I spoke about how various cultures have viewed the year as being split into more than four seasons.

“For example, some of Australia’s First Nations describe six or more seasons, while one Japanese author I read proposed micro-seasons of 10-14 days as a way to characterise parts of the year.

“The kireji is often the line at the end and is sometimes identified with a em dash-style hyphen, which provides a new way to view the scene that came before the dash.”

One of the most influential haiku authors was Matsuo Basho of the 17th Century and, rather than sticking to the formulas of kigo he aspired to reflect his real environment and emotions in his poems.
 

A famous example is:

The summer grasses
All that remains
Of brave soldiers dreams  

  

You can see the kigo (seasonal reference) in the first line, while the last line is the kireji (cutting phrase) that forces you to reconsider the scene in a new light.   

“Aside from photography, one of the creative strategies that I have promoted for generating ideas is the Cut-up Technique and it follows on from the kireji idea as a way to view previous text in a new light.”

The Cut-Up Technique has established itself as a viable technique for making art after being developed by Tristan Tzara in the Dada movement and then being popularised by William S. Burroughs, who became known among the Beat writers and had a long and influential career.

“There’s a story that Tzara was unimpressed with the manifesto writing that Surrealists were engaged in producing and decided he could do better by cutting up a newspaper and selecting words randomly.

“In some tellings of this story, Tzara found himself kicked out of that famous art movement and went on to establish the Dadaists.

“As a creative process these cut-ups predate “remixing” and share similarities in rearranging existing material to create new meaning and potentially new artworks.

“David Bowie promoted using cut-ups to write song lyrics and explored various approaches during his career, such as drafting his own text to cut-up as well as using software to do a similar process.

The Cut-up Technique is seemingly so simple that it likely had other guises earlier in history.

“One reason why I think it’s often overlooked is that it treats art dispassionately as a process and doesn’t respect either the integrity of the source material nor the artist as a genius.

“Given the basis of literature in western culture developed from respect for the Bible, the idea that one would disfigure text to create new meaning must be seen as an affront.

“I combined the cut-up approach with haiku and senryu in my book Earthwords (2019) as a way to engage readers as collaborators, while demonstrating that creative practice is available to anyone with text and a pair of scissors.”

In conclusion, Jason ended the workshop encouraging participants to be receptive to their environment and become observers who allow landscapes to saturate their experiences.

“I ask everyone to take time, mentally use a slow shutter speed and allow observations to reveal the contrasts which can help to frame a cutting phrase in their poems.

“And then you might consider how a Cut-up Technique type of approach can be as simple as swapping around the first and last lines of a poem.”

The workshops continue through February and, if you’d like to join, please email staycoolexhibition@gmail.com 

These workshops are supported by Western Riverina Arts and Create NSW through financial assistance from the NSW Government. 

Becoming

 

One of my projects this year will be compiling a new album

I write a lot of music and it's surprising how effective it can be to remix that material, like the track above was played with guitar and then became something else when I played with it in the computer.

The Bible verse that always kept me going


 

Twisted

Bought a pack of discounted chips and they left me unsettled

The cheese flavour was okay, but the sight of a Twisties brand not packaging the twisted shit-shaped nuggets of my childhood was strangely unsatisfying.

 
They even twisted the slogan "Life's pretty straight without..."

While I've never been to New Zealand, I wonder if the experience is like going to Shelbyville?

(That's a Simpsons reference, Mum.)

 

The thing that drains you

One of the things nobody seems keen to discuss is Covid

While I can relate to some of what Mr Valbrun is raising in the comment shown, my feeling is that it began in the early '20s.

That's the 2020s because it was this decade when quarantines were lifted in a rush to normalise life as a new coronavirus was still circulating.
 
We're still seeing the impacts that it has on lives.

I know that some days it's surprising how exhausted I feel and there's a sense that my thinking skills aren't what they used to be as well.
 
It could just be me, but the more that I look around the more that I see signs everywhere.
 
In the UK there's been a significant rise in graduates who are unable to work due to health reasons. 

It must be devastating to be at the beginning of your adult life and not have the energy to pursue your ambitions.

People are increasingly tired and, judging by the admission testing for US colleges in the same period, thinking skills are also struggling.

It was seeing these patterns in data that began giving me an insight into the disconnected attitudes that I see in people.

I hope it gives me patience by recognising that people don't have the energy and possibly are lacking in other capacities as well.

Social identity

A friend on Facebook has been arguing that status is a driving force in society

It makes sense given that imitation is a large part of how we learn and the gauge by which progress is evaluated.

As a teenager I remember trying to provoke a reaction from my father, who studied honours in psychology before being conscripted into the army near the end of the Vietnam War.

I grew my hair, pierced an ear and pursued various ways to appear obnoxious like wearing t-shirts with offensive slogans.

His response was frustrating at the time of being a rebellious young adult, as he'd opine something droll like "I see you've moved from one social norm to another as a way of asserting your individuality."

So the idea in this post that my friend shared on Facebook reflects something of that lesson.

However, one of the experiences that probably had a more profound effect on me than the wisdom of my father was living with divorced parents.

On weekends I'd be in my father's house and discovering new technology like computers, compact discs and video tapes, then during the week I'd live with my mother who was surviving on a government benefit.

In some ways mum's demonstrations of being able to survive on less in an affluent society have probably had a more profound impact on me, I think.

I still do a lot of shopping at secondhand stores, seek out discounted items at the supermarket and when I took out a loan on a house I made sure I could make repayments while on unemployment benefits, because I sooned tired of full-time work and have never really returned.

It's the idea of a social identity that probably underpins my creative practices, but I am wondering whether I have a couple of identities from the modelling I saw as a child.

 

Heatwave

Sought respite at the public library

There I overheard a guy explain "I'm not here because I like reading."

Conditioning

I used to have a problem with my ringtone after setting it to something unobtrusive that sounded like crickets

In summer the cicadas would have me reaching for my phone to answer calls when it wasn't ringing and missing others. 

Now I have a problem with the beep when my postman scans a package. 

I'm like Pavlov's dog salivating at the gate when I hear similar small electronic noises.

Australia Day

Australia is a young country yet there's a reckoning awaiting in the telling of its history

Every now and then you get a glimpse of how our Asian neighbours view our nation as a remnant of the colonial powers that have largely left the region. 

The recent referendum on reconciliation, which proposed constitutional recognition for a First Nations advisory to the Federal Parliament, was thought to have been unsuccessful in part because questions remain as to whether a Treaty or a Truth-telling is first required to move forward. 

Likewise it is the reconciliation of Australia's position in the Commonwealth and this legacy of colonial brutality that remains to be addressed. 

Many of our country's residents, for example, do not ponder the genocide that allowed a legal term like Terra Nullius to exist until 1992. 

The treatment of Tasmanian Aborigines that saw their culture almost entirely eradicated from the island state was so shocking that it inspired HG Wells to write War of the Worlds. 

This is something that's been gaining discussion recently, particularly in the book Question 7 by Richard Flanagan. 

For those of us on the mainland of Australia it is worth considering the question of whether smallpox was deliberately released in the late 18th Century to unleash a genocide in the fledgling colony of New South Wales.

First Fleet surgeon John White brought sealed bottles containing "variolous matter" (pus and scabs from infected individuals) with him, intending to use it for future inoculations in the new colony.

There were no recorded cases of active smallpox among the colonists or convicts during the long voyage.  

Then a major smallpox epidemic broke out among the Aboriginal population of Sydney in April 1789, about 15 months after the First Fleet arrived.

This killed an estimated 50% to 90% of the Indigenous population around the Sydney area and spread inland, leaving dead bodies in campsites across the landscape. 

Recently I learned that some marines in the First Fleet had served in North America where British forces had previously used smallpox-laden items against Native Americans. 

The use of germ warfare was known and feared enough that George Washington sent smallpox survivors into Boston to occupy it after the city was evacuated by the British in 1776, since they were immune to reinfection and wouldn’t fall prey to smallpox-tainted items left behind.

It is this question of whether Australia waged a civil war through the early centuries of the colony that remains to be answered by the nation as it moves toward becoming an integrated society, along with many other important reforms to create equity among citizens.  

Changing the date would assist in creating a new and more inclusive way to celebrate a national day.

Dawn's haiga

Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery

I know the quote from Oscar Wilde has a barb in its tail, but I think that recognising one's influence is a pleasing experience.

So I share with you the haiga that my mother penned after a visit to Narrandera yesterday, where we saw my exhibition Zen Roo and looked for koalas and ate a meal at the Red Door Cafe. 

It was also pleasing to have my brother and son along for the drive, as the latter asked if there was a picture of him in the exhibition and I was able to identify one and also one that I think he might've taken (which I really should've acknowledged but I guess he's still my minor).