October 27, 2011

Remembering Halloween From Witches, Fairy Tales, The Atomic Age of Godzilla, to Mega Con



Halloween is almost here. I remember the fairy tales, shows such as Wizard of Oz, Twilight Zone, Godzilla and the atomic age, all things that shaped my generation's creativity and gave us a sense of the magic in life. I remember the witches hat I wore almost every year and how Halloween influenced my life, from the women's movement to raising my own child. Mega Con now reflects that  sense of magical creativity in people today.

When I was a child I had one Halloween costume, which was a witch's hat, perhaps a black dress or even a cape. All I remember is that hat which served me well over many seasons. Sometimes my costume would vary and I would dress as a hobo, easy; old clothes and charcoal. There were not too many off the rack costumes that I can remember, back in the 1950's.

The Witch held a fascination for me as she lived in the woods, made brews, and had a rapport with animals. She was scary and things that scare were a hit even when I was young. Even though she held a place of fear and misgiving, she was fun to play on Halloween.

Plays by William Shakespeare were television special's in the early 1950's. I remember seeing the Witches from Macbeth, and I found it interesting that one was young and pretty. I remember my sister making me up for Halloween when I was very little, with my witch's hat and lipstick, and telling me that I would be, "the Pretty Witch".




Reading was a problem for me because I am dyslexic which was considered a lazy brain back then. Alice and Jerry did not cut it for me, just too slow to read. I lost my focus. My oldest sister started reading Fairy Tales to me, and this grabbed my imagination. Because of that I developed an interest in books and reading.

Being a nature lover from perhaps forever, I loved being outside more often than cooped up in the house. These people of the Fairy Tale lived so close to nature. They got word of bad goings on from the beaks of crows, raised swans, lived in marshes, and were punished with toads, lizards and spiders. Children walked in the woods at night guided by the big dipper, and when they died, angels came in large feathered wings and swept them up to heaven.



Every year, in the fall, The Wizard of Oz was on Television. What a magical movie it was, even strictly in black and white, since color TV had not been invented. The Wizard Of Oz artfully used the magic of Technicolor on the big screen, as it amazed audiences by contrasting the small Kansas farm where Dorothy lived, which was filmed in sepia tones, with the wonder of Technicolor, which she saw when she stepped though her door into the world of Oz. This color change brought the magical place of Oz into focus like nothing else could. The arrival of fall meant seeing once again, The Wizard of Oz, with its tale of magic and witches, both good and bad and values, love, and courage.



When Rod Serling's TV show, The Twilight Zone hit the scene in 1959, concepts of a reality which could be distorted kept me thinking, as fear stalked me weeks on end; not that I would ever give it up, mind you. This was the sort of good fear that keeps you alert as life took on another dimension. I think Twilight Zone itself made me an avid reader of science fiction books.

Ghoulardi TV Poster from the early 60's

On Saturday morning in the early 60's, Ghoulardi, who hailed from Cleveland was on the TV; a floating head surrounded by vibrating, sound activated energy waves. 

 
Ghoulardi had the classics like Godzilla and similar shows with insects grown large from the effects of radiation. Radiation and the potential of nuclear war were issues we were learning to deal with in grade and middle school; crouching by your desk or in hallways of school with your arms protecting your neck. Duck and cover and don't touch the lockers, they may be radiated. That was the time of the Cuban missile crisis when the Russians and Communists were all part of the big scary.

John William Waterhouse, Magic Circle
In the early 1970's "Witch" took on a new meaning; studying the women's movement and learning that "Witch" meant wise woman. The town Witch was often the town healer, the herbalist and the midwife. I learned how powerful independent women were targeted as Witches to subdue their influence and make way for traditional medicine. I also learned that many women who were attacked were not witches in any sense of the word but had land or other tangible assets that men wanted.

As a mother of a young child, I made costumes with and for my daughter Leela each year. We had a large steamer trunk in my art studio with scarves, child's swords, chain's and anything else that might make a good costume to play with. Her friends often came over the house to play, going into the trunk to help their imaginations come alive. On Halloween we would make a costume and she would go to a local recreation center to compete for prizes.

Leela as Pokemon with Teen Rocket, watercolor 9"x12"  Aleada Siragusa

Now as a young woman in her 20's, Leela is a gifted graphic artist who loves dressing for Halloween, and for Mega Con in Orlando Florida, which is held in the spring each year. She says Mega Con is a big costume party for adults. There are comic book artists, all sorts of interesting things to buy, celebrities and seminars. My husband and I attended the past two years, dressing as Dr Spock's parents. We photographed the costumed people who would pose for us and I drew quick sketches of the participants. We shopped and met the many of the comic book and graphic artists. Most attendees wear costumes they create themselves with so much originality.

So on this Halloween let's get some of the magic back into our lives and open our senses and minds to the possibility of great adventures into this magical land of the imagination.

Please write and let me know about your Halloween adventures.

This article was accepted and published by Ezine Articles.
The links to this publication are below.

October 23, 2011

Weird Sisters, Women Who Run With The Wolves, and Halloween Remembered

"The Weird Sisters" self portrait age 22 by Aleada Siragusa

Happy Halloween, with the change of seasons, there is magic in the air, you can smell it in the cool breeze beckoning you to walk outside to breathe deep and reflect upon the stars.

Above is a drawing I did for one of the first classes I took in college when I entered the BFA program at The University of Akron. The Weird Sisters are from Shakespeare's Macbeth.

As a child my favorite books were the classic Fairy Tales; Anderson and Grimm, I was just that weird little girl who was a witch almost every year for the season and I am one who still loves and feels connected to spirit in nature. 

I find Women Who Run With The Wolves by Clarissa Pinkola Estes, Ph.D. a wonderful analysis of the fairy tales, making them an empowering tool for the woman of today. I enjoyed it so much and to learn her lessons at a deeper level I took notes and I illustrated the first few chapters. Here are most of these illustrations:

La Que Sabe; The One Who Knows, Self Portrait

I have the rest of the illustrations in Sequence: I hope these little sketches motivate you to read the book, please let me know if you do and tell my your impressions.

A Miracle Story: We sing the Creation Hymn, sing the song to call up the Wild Soul

Today the old one inside me is collecting bones, she is my soul self, builder of the soul home- My muse is my toy poodle Basil, he has an overbite which gives him a permanent smile.
It's always time for the Wild Woman To Emerge -
She who dares to dance fully conscious we live forever.
She thunders after injustice. Seer, deep listener, loyal heart, patroness to artists.
When El Duende is present one senses more is present, used to describe the ability to "think" in poetic images.
La Que Sabe, The One Who Knows- Live what we perceive- anyplace where she breathes upon us changing us. Our work is to show we have been breathed upon- to share it, to give it out, sing it out, to
live it out-
dance with life, dance with death, dance into life again
Find the two million year old woman, she sings the creation hymn over the bones,
A failed satanic magician desires power over others.
The tiny key opens the door to where all the destruction lies.
Of course in the last picture the failed magician is Charles Manson, an apt image for Blue Beard and the compromise a woman makes to a social structure that undervalues her.

It is said that Halloween is the time when the veil between the worlds is thinnest, when spirits roam the earth and magic is afoot.
The transition between summer and winter is a special time when our thoughts turn to the impermanence of life. It's a good time to find comfort in the old stories of our ancestors, stories that explained a world filled with wonder. Time to learn the deeper meanings of these stories which have the ability to transform our lives with their depth and wisdom. So curl up in the evening this fall to a great book: Women Who Run With The Wolves, take the journey.

October 6, 2011

Steven Paul Jobs, In Memoriam: Girl With Apple

 We bought our first Apple Computer in 1987 when our daughter Leela was only two years old. She loved drawing on that computer. Now as an adult she is a Computer Graphic Artist working in the video game industry where she specializes in environments especially trees and plants.

Here is Leela with her apple,
I sketched this from life.

Leela received her Master Of Science Degree in Interactive Entertainment (FIEA) at the University of Central Florida, Orlando
Master Of Science Degree in Interactive Entertainment (FIEA)
  the University of Central Florida Graduation
This is a sketch I drew of the graduation ceremony while viewing from the upper balcony of the stadium. 

Here are a few sketches of Leela as a baby. I like drawing the perpetual motion; girl drawn from life when she was asleep.


And here she is recently caught sleeping.

My husband Gaetano, AKA Guy and I named her Leela after a character from the popular British PBS program Dr Who. But later we found out her name is a sacred Hindu name meaning, Cosmic Play or Divine Creation, interesting coincidence now that she is involved with creating video games. 
Leela and Dr Who

So I was thinking how Steven Paul Jobs has influenced our lives and the lives of so many with the top of the line graphic art computer.  I send my blessings to you Steven Paul Jobs, as you continue your journey into that cosmic play, AKA divine creation, which you and all of us are a part of.

Best wishes
Aleada Siragusa

  Here is an extended version of my memorial post, published by Ezine Articles.

Steven Paul Jobs, Memoriam: Girl With Apple, a 

Video Game Artist
Born in 1950, I don't remember our first TV, but my older sister and brother do. It seems every generation has its inventive milestone that helps form the next generation's world. As large as the Television was in creating the world we live in perhaps Plastic's plays a larger role.

My father, Thomas Henry Rogers, became a Chemical Engineer working with Polymer Chemistry for Goodyear Tire and Rubber in the early 1940's when plastics were just beginning to be invented. He told me once the chemists at that time thought plastics would save the world by producing an inexpensive readily available way to make goods in a burgeoning population. My father held many patents but was most known for a major patent in the development of Polyurethane.

I compare the excitement the WWII generation had in the development of plastic with my generation and the development of computers. If you are around my age 61, you will remember the popular movie The Graduate, which gave stardom to Dustin Hoffman. Dustin was told by the father of his girlfriend; Plastics, that is where the future lies, in Plastics. Now I'm sure many people in my generation would give and has given this advice to their children; get involved with computers because that's where it's all happening, in computers.

I remember seeing my first computer in 1969, it was at Dartmouth College in Hanover New Hampshire and it was housed in a large building. It really couldn't do much of anything. In the late 1970's with personal computers beginning to be, "user friendly" and families started buying computers for personal use.

We bought our first Apple Computer in 1987 when our daughter Leela was only two years old. Even back then there were child friendly educational programs we could buy for her and a few art related programs that she loved. She loved painting on that computer.

Now as an adult she is a Computer Graphic Artist working in the video game industry where she specializes in environments especially trees and plants.

Three years ago Leela received her Master Of Science Degree in Interactive Entertainment from Florida Interactive Entertainment Academy,(FIEA) at the University of Central Florida, Orlando. The three semester intensive program offers a project based gaming education that allow the students to be part of a team as they would in real video game production. They work with fellow students who work as producers, programmers, and artists on real world projects all overseen by some of the best gaming faculty in the world. 

Since then, until last month, she was working for Electronic Arts in Orlando Florida in environments, mainly trees and shrubs for the Tiger Woods PGA Tour Video Games.

My husband Gaetano and I named Leela after a character from the popular British PBS program Dr Who. We love this character Leela because although she was considered a "primitive" by the Doctor's standards she would outsmart Dr Who (that is Dr Who #4) time and again using her intuitive knowledge, much to the Doctor's chagrin. A few years later we found out her name Leela, is a sacred Hindu name meaning, Cosmic Play or Divine Creation, such an interesting coincidence now that she is involved with creating video games.

So I was thinking how Steven Paul Jobs has influenced our lives and the lives of so many with his top of the line graphic art computer. I send my blessings to you Steven Paul Jobs, as you continue your journey into that cosmic play, AKA divine creation, which you and all of us are a part of.


Aleada Siragusa
View this article published by Ezine Articles.