Monday, November 30, 2015

Education and Storytelling

Once in a Lifetime


Here is the story I told today at the LGBT storytellers gathering. Think of it as somewhere between true confessions and entertainment--some kind of art!


“Opportunity knocks,” we’re told in adage and advertising. “This could be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for you.”

I’ve grown to hate advertising, to resent Madison Avenue’s influence in hyping sales of clothing, stockings, cars, trips, meds, and Presidential campaigns. This change in American life got underway with terrifying seriousness during the 1940s and has never quit. I was born in 1947, surely my first once-in-a-lifetime experience. But eventually I came to see that everything that happens is singular. Any event of a life is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. For example, although one may go to worship week after week, the service is different if only because of how the worshipper experiences it. Surely the sermons are different even though preachers know they really have only three sermons. A few ministers work hard to keep them interesting.

But to a story! It occurred in the 1950s back when catalogues were still big time. My parents didn’t get them, but my grandparents who lived on a farm did. At around age 8 I discovered at the farm a new catalogue that had a very large toy selection, a kind of 50s version of Toys ‘R Us®. I was fascinated and marked in it all the toys I wanted for Christmas. Later my grandfather was perusing the catalogue and found my marks. He added them up and was amazed and amused to find that their cost totaled nearly $1,000. (In those days my dad’s salary was probably around $6,000. The sum made a good story for the family but one I didn’t hear about for several years. The catalogue went the way of all catalogues, meaning to the outhouse where I saw it later as it was recycled in what I suppose today would be called low purposing. Perhaps I mentioned seeing the catalogue there and then heard the story. I don’t know if this story of my childhood glee and greed changed me in any way, but I do later recall a Christmas when I got exactly what I wanted but didn’t expect to get, a Fort Apache and a knock-off Lincoln Log set. I was elated and played so many years with those gifts I failed to ask again for anything specific for Christmas. Still I got gifts and learned how to say thank you for gifts I didn’t appreciate.

Somehow I came to disdain the influence of fad making and advertising to the point I avoided purchasing anything faddish. Still do. I think my big change came one summer when I was directing a residential camp for kids going into fifth and sixth grades. That year I came across a group of children comparing the designer labels on their clothing—a first experience of this kind I ever observed among Kansas youngsters. I felt like leaving that work that afternoon, angry that parents and society were stealing childhood away from the children. A few years later David Elkind wrote a book, The Hurried Child (1981), a social/psychological study of cultural change and its effect on children. The book made a splash with reviews, interviews and some discussion, but made little impact on child rearing and American society. The power had already been handed over to Madison Avenue.

I still don’t go with the fads, even the thirty-years-ago fad of storytelling groups is still with us! I read and appreciated their literature, but when I attended one, the stories really had nothing vitally related to the lives of the tellers, or at least that’s how I perceived them. Thus I failed to join such groups then. But these days I am ever so happy to be in this group of storytellers in which we sell nothing faddish, nothing marketable, and tell stories of our own experience, ideals, and values. I like that our sessions seem like a revival of ancient gatherings of elders around a campfire to tell and sometimes evaluate the good old days and speak of how events shaped them and their tribe.

© 30 November 2015

Monday, November 23, 2015

Writing

What my writing efforts look like on paper!
by Phillip Hoyle
Writing used to be a job. It was part of my profession as a minister and educator. I wrote notices, the occasional column for the church newsletter, and recruitment letters for volunteer singers and teachers. I worked hard to write well and in my thirties began writing curriculum resources for religious education. In my forties I began writing resources for a publisher and did so for ten years. In my fifties I began writing as an artist, at least that is how I think of it. I wrote then for myself stories from my life experience, pieces for magazines, short stories, and more. In my sixties (I’m still in them) I wrote a novel and so far several hundred stories of my life, vignettes of life from different points of view. And as you know if you are reading this, I keep a blog related to art matters—mostly the arts in which I am involved directly.

These days I am not going it alone, but while I don’t have an editor like I had at the publishing company, I have two groups that hear my pieces. Reading them aloud always sharpens my ear to mistakes and awkward expressions.

I write a bit almost every day and in so doing start stories I wasn’t planning to write. Writing is not a job but still some kind of vocation and always a joy. Still its joy demands some kind of discipline that to me is more like play—play among the world of ideas and words.

If you are interested to read more of what I write, follow this blog artandmorebyphilhoyle.blogspot.com. Also I contribute occasional pieces to sageoftherockies.blogspot.com.

Denver, 2015

Monday, November 9, 2015

Artist Trading Cards

My favorite three ATCs in  my ZOO ABCs
Cards by Phillip Hoyle

The theme for the Artist Trading Cards swap at CORE New Art Space is ZOO. I've been hard at work to get all twenty-six letters represented in what I'm Calling ATC ZOO ABCs. It's been quite a fun project, and I am looking forward to the trades this coming weekend. 

So I've made my ABC ATCs. Tell me what you think of me.
Cards by Phillip Hoyle


Denver, 2015

Monday, November 2, 2015

Dreams

Mechanical Dreams ATCs by Phillip Hoyle
These could be studies in line, blue and orange. I took the photos of
my very mechanical as well as artistic son's tractor engine, at least I think
that is what I was photographing.
I added pieces of colored transparent acetate.

An upcoming ATC topic is taking me into the world of dreams. I’ve had some, actually quite a few. This I recall because most mornings I write several pages of whatever I may think of and that sometimes includes dream images and actions I recall upon awakening. I know I dream a lot more than I can recall. I have conscious dreams as well. For instance, I loved my grandpa Pink, as we kids called him, a farmer in Kansas. I loved his tractor and loved riding on the tractor with him. I got an idea about dreams, in this case conscious dreams, mechanical dreams, especially since I have never thought about myself as being mechanical. But I can dream of it and did.

My eldest sister, who I always thought rated high on the mechanical scale, said a couple of years ago she was amazed when as a boy I took apart an old clock at our grandparents’ house and then put it back together. She could never think of doing that. Well, whatever childhood or adult perceptions may be, I have no memory of any such 
event. I do like to watch clock gears working but can’t imagine I fixed anything!

At least I can make these tiny art pieces out of such dreams.

Happy dreams to you this week. I’ll have more to show in a couple of weeks.

Denver 2015