Monday, November 21, 2011

Mahabharata

I meant to close the previous post with this quote from the Mahabharata, translated by William Buck:

Then the Universe is water; water
without end or beginning; without
Earth or sky; without space or light;
without sound or movement. Then
the dark waters lie still and silent
and waiting, touching nothing.
What shape shall I take to rescue
the Earth from this flood?

Commercials rock!

I've been freelancing for the past several months as a post-production producer at Respond2 here in Portland. The first several projects I worked on were infomercials - they are 28 minutes long, and extremely time consuming. For the past week or so, I've been working on short commercials; 60 and 30 seconds, and they are really fun so far. It's a pleasant change of pace, and I'm looking forward to some of them airing.

There have been just a slew of ASIFA events - the one I'm most recently proud of is that I moderated an animation panel as part of the Northwest Filmmakers' Festival. It's the first time I've ever moderated a panel, and I think everyone had a good time. The conversation was geared much more heavily toward process than I anticipated - all the animations we were discussing were handmade and intricate, so the process gave us a lot of fodder for conversation. I especially liked that our panelists seem to click with each other, and hope that they stay in contact.

(By the way, the films in question were: Old Time Film, Meta Aberratio, and Laszlo Lassu. Fascinating work, all of them.)

Next month, ASIFA is also partially sponsoring the Rose City Animation Showcase. I've been to the previous two years, and it's a fun event.

I'm reading some Nietzsche and dabbling in learning French in my free time, and still writing for the Oregon Creative Industries blog, although not as much as I'd like - I just don't have the time to do a good job of it. I was also invited to participate in the Creative Economy Council: we have our second meeting in a couple weeks, and I'm very interested in what we can do together. It's a real pleasure to be at the table with that group of people- creative, involved, competent leaders all of them, and I feel privileged to be there.

On a larger note, what a crazy year it's been. I'm just now starting to catch my breath and wrap my head around everything that has happened. Most unexpectedly, a lot of the ambitious goals I named in my annual report have come to pass. I'm looking forward to the next one.