Pinky Troll and me on a personal quest
Happy holidays to friends and visitors. If you've noticed the date of my last post you'll have figured out I've been absent for a while. There were some things I needed to take care of and they all seem to have worked out, at least for now. This coming year will be one that will present many transitions and it might be interesting to document some of those—we'll see how things develop. At any rate, I might have to spend less time here. Life intrudes, but it's nothing more than what happens to all of us—I still treasure my friends.
It's not that I haven't been busy, quite the opposite, but the right side of the brain has had to take a back seat lately. That changed when I tried to figure out if I was going to do anything about making a Christmas card and/or project for friends. I plunged in during the Thanksgiving weekend, though it took more time and effort that I had planned—which always seems to be the case.
Here's the card, featuring our dear Popper. The quote on the left is a riff on The Holstee Manifesto and refers to Popper's delight in attacking a catnip-laden mouse—hence her drug-enhanced eyes. Of course there's no need for additives to follow the abridged or original manifesto.
It shows the cover, inside and back. On the back I've explained the source of the colophon I designed back when I was considering publishing my own book. Luckily, I got picked up by a real live publishing house, but that meant they had their own publisher's mark so mine was set aside.
It's a bit hard to read here, so I'll transcribe.
Pangur Bán
The poem to the right was found in the margins of a manuscript in the Monastery of St. Paul in Corinth, Austria. It was written in Irish, probably by an Irish monk sometime during the ninth century. Pangur Bán means "white cat."
I and Pangur Bán, my cat,
‘Tis a like task we are at;
Hunting mice is his delight,
Hunting words I sit all night.
Better far than praise of men
‘Tis to sit with book and pen;
Pangur bears me no ill will;
He, too, plies his simple skill.
‘Tis a merry thing to see
At our task how glad are we,
When at home we sit and find
Entertainment to our mind.
Oftentimes a mouse will stray
Into the hero Pangur’s way;
Oftentimes my keen thought set
Takes a meaning in its net.
‘Gainst the wall he sets his eye
Full and fierce and sharp and sly;
‘Gainst the wall of knowledge I
All my little wisdom try.
When a mouse darts from its den.
O how glad is Pangur then!
O what gladness do I prove
When I solve the doubts I love!
So in peace our tasks we ply,
Pangur Bán, my cat and I;
In our arts we find our bliss,
I have mine, and he has his.
Practice every day has made
Pangur perfect in his trade;
I get wisdom day and night,
Turning Darkness into light.
Making a card has been enough for me in years past. It represents more work than purchasing a bunch of pre-made cards or duplicating the dreaded Christmas letter, but there had been something percolating in my brain for a while and I decided to do something more.
I wrote a book—I made a book. Actually, it's a 20-page booklet. And unfortunately, since the production and distribution costs were coming out of my own pocket, it's a limited run. Quite limited. In fact, there are only 60 in the world.
The books were a little under a sawbuck each, but that wasn't the only costs associated. In order to protect it in mailing I purchased a box of stay flat cardboard mailers (wholesale) that guaranteed that it would not bend or fold and damage the contents—about $0.50 each. Then, because the sturdy envelope wouldn't bend, the law of unintended consequences took hold. It had to be mailed as a package instead of an envelope, which added an additional $0.40 or so to each to make the postage a what-was-I-thinking-of $2.22 each just for stamps. And yes, the USPS didn't have to foresight to make a $2.22 stamp just for me. So, not counting my labor (of love) that run of 60 turned out to be north of $12 or so each, which is a lot to spend on a vanity production. No matter, I can be vain.
Which led to a painful process. Triage. Who gets a book? I'm sorry that everyone I know and like and love couldn't get one, but it just wasn't feasible. I did send out twice as many Holstee Popper cards, but I quickly ran out of the booklets. And they weren't just sent to my non mutual spousal friends, there were some bridal business associates that had to be included on the list.
I don't think we had this much of a problem when we constructed our wedding invitation list 30 years ago.
So as a poor substitute, I'm recreating the booklet here with a link at the end for a PDF download, that is, if anyone's interested.
So here commences A Personal Hajj to Beauty, a limited edition vanity press production. It was actually produced and printed by Apple—or its assigned third-party printer—via Aperture, the photo management application I use to store and manage my photos. It was easy enough to do, but since I'm a page layout artist from way back in the Aldus PageMaker days, I lamented the fine tuning and lack of feature set that a real page layout program provides. I had to invent a workaround, for example, to get the Drop Cap on the first page. The quality of what you see here is less than what you would see with the booklet in hand or in the PDF since they are exported from the application as a PDF then converted to jpegs.
Many of the images will be familiar to frequent visitors to this blog, but it's the first time they've been collated in such a fashion.
Front Cover
Title Page
Page 2, verso or the left hand of the spread that includes the next image
Page 3, recto or the right hand of the spread that includes the former image. Typical for the following separated pairs.
Page 4
Page 5—There is an additional nearly subliminal enjoyment of this photograph for me. First, I owned a 1964 356C Porsche for a while, and I loved it. I was very sad to see it go. Second, as noted in the text, the film Giant, starring Rock Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor and James Dean, was filmed in and around Marfa in 1956. James Dean later died in his own Porsche, a Spyder, the precursor to the one that I later owned. That I happened upon this Porsche parked on the main street of Marfa seemed just too serendipitous to me at the time and even now.
Page 6
Page 7
Page 8
Page 9
Page 10
Page 11
Page 12
Page 13
Page 14
Page 15
Page 16
Page 17
Page 18
Page 19
Page 20
Back Cover
You can download a high quality full sized (8" x 6") resolution PDF of the booklet here: http://tinyurl.com/7883gzk since the copy on the uploaded image is difficult to read. (You should see the cover as a stand alone page on the PDF, with subsequent pages showing a two page spread until you get to the final single back cover page.)
You're welcome to download the PDF and even convert it and upload it to your eReader of choice for your own personal use. You may not distribute it in any way, including, but not limited to, e-mailing it to any third party or uploading onto any storage/retrieval service or onto any web page. Thanks in advance for observing the requested restrictions.
Previous Marfa Posts
Previous Holiday Cards
Thanks for visiting, and my apologies for being away for so long.
all photos copyright © 2009, 2010 or 2011 by barry b. doyle · all rights reserved
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Comments
Happy Holidays to you.
Myriad, no, thank you for your consistent and continual support, it means a lot to me.
Joanie, I tried to send you a PM, but I keep getting error messages...will keep trying. Happy holidays to you and your family as well. xo
Thanks friend for your kind words.
What el$e do we need?
R+
I like how you say:`
`
My bride. You blessed.
No wed Russian Bride.
They cook turnip soup.
`
I'll email this to my son.
He attended art college
It went to Maryland Institute of Art in Baltimore. Then he studied Plant Science at Cornell.
He'll tell me bbd is cool.
You a walking art school.
`
Courtroom in Maryland
Judge uses crab mallets
He bangs and yells`Awe!
`
Truth is Beauty
Beauty is Truth
You take cap off
I forget. Photo?
It is jest so dark.
Thanks, Beauty.
Go Kiss Bride.
She wear veil.
She cute too.
She lucky too.
She lifts veil.
`
I just bantering
I'll view later
It's soup time
No burp as
you kiss
Ya Bride.
I bet She
is Lovely.
Yes, the poem as you said, likely was written by an Irish monk who took a vow of silence, I believe, as his observations seem to indicate so. What a fitting poem for your Popper and your inner stirrings.
Have a lovely, warm and healthy Christmas holiday.
Diana, it was so nice to meet you a couple of weeks ago, and yes, I feel the exact same way re friendships...we both hit the lottery this year.
Oryoki, alas, and one might expect, breaking into the Prada Marfa store, and it would be very difficult to do, would only benefit a select group of amputees, as the shoes are all only for right feet. They are lovely to look at though. My bride and I won a raffle a few years back that allowed us to stay overnight, with dinner, at an upscale boutique hotel here in Dallas in one of their signature suites. It was larger in square footage than our home...we stayed in the Manolo Blanik suite and while they had thousands of dollars of shoes in all sorts of displays, they too were behind doors that did not operate. Thanks for stopping by.
Cathy, I hope your Christmas is lovely too, but of that I have no doubt knowing you as I do...you scatter light and love wherever you go and whomever you're with. xo
Here's hoping the holidays and the coming year bring a lot of good things for you and the family (including the four-footed members).
Susan, isn't it remarkable the amazing friends we've made here. I hope we can connect in this next year once again, face to face of course. Thanks as always for your fierce dedication to your friends, I'm honored to be among them. xo
Gary, it's always a pleasure to connect with you, it really is all about friendship, and to have such an exemplary artist as a friend, well, I'm blessed more than I can say. So we're both a bit speechless.
Denise, we're husbanding our mileage points now in anticipation of changes coming, but I think I need to squeeze out a few and make it to SoCal to see you and Candace.
Candace, see above dear. Merry Christmas to you and Mot, may it continue to burn bright for you in all you do and feel. xo
John, thanks so much for your lovely words. As I said to Gary, that an artist of your abilities and talent finds some good in what I do, it just means a lot to me. Thanks for constant support and encouragement. You're right I think in that shooting in RAW means that there is no guessing as when one shoots in jpeg, which is a lossy algorithm with pixels guessing what it ought to be based on what it's neighbor is doing. So the post processing becomes part of the work flow to take the information packed pixels that RAW provides and coaxing it to the final image. I think the sharpness though is a combination of using good glass and a steady hand or tripod. Most of my Prada Marfa shots are not hand held, I use a good pro level Manfrotto tripod with a ball head and then a wired remote to trigger the shutter to eliminate even the small chance that pressing my finger on the shutter release will impart the slightest cam shake. All that, and years of experience is what works for me.
only YOU could pub at 6:23 eastern and get an ep!
Wishing you and yours the merriest of holidays
♥
Wishing you and your family a peaceful Christmas. However things work out in the new year, I hope it's satisfying and meaningful for you.
I love the picture of Popper looking slightly stoned. The ninth century poem gives me shivers, it dissolves 1200 years so easily. Your creation makes me feel like such a slacker. But I bought puppy cards from the Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind instead of William Wegman, so I don't feel quite so bad as I would if I'd gone with decorated Weimaraners.
I love this post. Happy Christmas, and thank you again.
Jim, dear friend, we go back a ways, long before OS and it's such a joy to continue that friendship. It's no secret that I hold you in such high regard from longstanding evidence of your kindness and generosity and strength of character. It's an honor to know you and your words mean the world to me. Thank you.
Algis, thank you so much. You understand much with intuition and much with experience. I think your essential knowledge of translating the big sky and big geology juxtaposed with the intimate goes a long way to show not just a knowledge of translating four dimensions into two, but the essence of your own artistry.
Lorraine, I am always inspired by you, your courage and passion and your flat out ability to write...but that what you write strikes such chords is what makes our friendship special.
Lisa, it's so nice to see you! Thanks so much for your kind words. I hope your Christmas is filled with love and happiness.
Anne, thank you for once again demonstrating a friendship wrapped in kindness. I hope you have a wonderful Christmas too, and pray for the protection and safety of your husband. May the new year be free of any health concerns for the both of us. xo
Mumblety, I'm so glad you love the Pangur Bán poem, it has long been my favorite. In fact, I first read it in 1976 at the Bodleian Library in Oxford while doing research on the Celtic precursor cognates of the Arthurian Romance...it didn't really fit the research, but I loved it nonetheless.
I feel such a pure pleasure looking at your photos. Beyond the beauty inherent in the shot, it's your composition. You take a bicycle crossing sign and produce an image that makes me think that sign has a wonderful story to tell.
This book is great...
Another bonus is that I can zoom in on the images, which I love because I hate pulling out the readers.
Stim, what a lovely comment, I can't thank you enough friend for that.
Hi Mission, happy holidays to you too and thanks.
Marcelle, you are 100% correct, and I found that same experience when I mailed the pdf to myself and saved it to iBooks on my iPad. And the zooming is so cool--and effortless.
Stacey, the same to you, your lovely bride and beautiful kitties. Hope they recover from their own catnip cocktails on kittymas eve. I expect you'll have a spectacular year ahead of you.
Deborah, mucho gusto. It is indeed beautiful in many ways. As a child I used to wonder about people who chose to live in deserts or desolate places, but I now see beauty in things that I didn't understand or experience before. I'm not much enamored of our current location in Dallas, though I've been here 30+ years...next year we should begin to build our place in Ridgway, near Ouray on the western slopes which is achingly beautiful. It will be an interesting transition. Thanks so much for stopping by.
Jennifer, nice to meet you too. I took the liberty of perusing your OS writings and I'm impressed. Thanks for your kind words, and hope your holidays with the three little ones is filled with love.
Zanelle, nice to see you again. Hope you and Alpine are doing well and your own art is progressing to your satisfaction. Thank you for your too-kind words.
R♥
It is so good to see all these colors and places, to step into the stream again ~