Did your interpretation come from the belief that it was Dali's? — Amity
And so, you viewed the 'insect' as a worm, instead of a chrysalis? — Amity
What we expect from a name or brand...see 'Apple', what do you think. The use of a symbol to 'sell'. — Amity
Are you referring to the insect on the down right? I honestly thought it was a worm, but now I understand why it is more technical to say chrysalis because Kush might have been thought on a pupa. — javi2541997
The problem which I see with philosophy essays on a forum such as this as they are too formal. Having written essays for courses, there is so much of having to go to source material and provide academically acceptable referencing. — Jack Cummins
...source material and provide academically acceptable referencing. — Jack Cummins
My only concern would be about its competitive nature and the war of egos. There has been so much of that in the creative writing competitions/activities. — Jack Cummins
Care to say more? — Amity
A bit harsh, no? We can all be prick-ish and think we're right. Difficult to let go of own ideas/beliefs when challenged. But wonderful to be surprised by an 'Aha!' moment when reading or listening. — Amity
My problem was that the more I got embroiled in arguments, the more I found myself saying things that... I didn't really mean. I did mean them to some extent, but the matters-of-fact here are... difficult, and the moment you put something into words, you can think of a few ways that could be wrong, and so on and so forth — Dawnstorm
Taken all together these sort of rules converge on a style. More then once I saw authors put up their writing for criticism, get a few predictable remarks (e.g. there are too many adverbs), then edit the excerpt, post it again, and then get better responses. I once asked one of those writers which version they personally liked better; they said they liked the new one better, though they might just be in the high of the moment. The thing is this: I almost always liked the original version better. The edited version might be smoother, but usually they lost voice. — Dawnstorm
It's like there's a set of industry standards slowly forming... taste. It's like these writing rules are slowly becoming true through... taste formation? — Dawnstorm
The 'show don't tell' - has a point but, of course, some telling is necessary. — Amity
"Show, don't tell," is one piece of advice that's... vague — Dawnstorm
So at the moment you say "The 'show don't tell' - has a point but, of course, some telling is necessary." you're already caught up in a rhetoric that stigmatizes telling and sets showing as the default, when what you really need is an understanding of how many details to use and when. It's not clear whether "show, don't tell," is helpful or harmful. That depends on (a) how you learn to interpret the line, and (b) what sort of style your intuitive voice tends towards. — Dawnstorm
For example, when I was still writing, I noticed that my characters were "turning their heads" a lot when something caught their attention. All of them. When I wrote "turned his/her head", that was usually me putting in a short cut. It's a physical detail, a sort of behavior-icon for some recurring type of events. It's not only repetitive, it's also not taking into account the character's body language. So I have this private little rule that says "beware of swivel-head syndrome." So... should I peddle this rule? Should I just assume that many people share the same problem? Should I stigmatize head-turning — Dawnstorm
it's just that people suddenly started put the same few stock movements in place of the same few stock emotions. — Dawnstorm
Like a cultural short hand. — Dawnstorm
Cultural shorthand refers to the use of brief, recognizable phrases or symbols that evoke specific ideas, emotions, or shared experiences within a culture. This concept allows people to communicate complex meanings quickly and effectively, relying on common cultural references.
So noticing this trend, I could abstract from my "swivel-head syndrome" personal rule, and say something like "Know the body language of your characters!" But if that caught on (I doubt it would; it doesn't tell you what to do), it would likely be distributed as a slogan, and it's context would eventually be lost, and it would create its own set of problems. — Dawnstorm
https://writers.com/show-dont-tell-writingWhat does “Show, don’t tell” mean? At its root, it means that rather than asserting something for the reader to accept, your writing transmits something for the reader to experience. The writer accomplishes this through a mix of vivid imagery, descriptive verbs, and immersive details.
One of the reason "know the body-language of your characters!" is useful for me is because I have aphantasia. I have no inner eye. — Dawnstorm
Understatement?!It's very involved — Dawnstorm
So it's all just telling. I suppose the reason they say show, don't tell, is when it's for plays and films, where instead of exposition---particularly awkward in this case because it has to take the form of dialogue or voice-over---you can show emotions, motivations and the setting with the acting, action, cinematography and set design, etc. — Jamal
In a letter to his brother, Chekhov actually said, "In descriptions of Nature one must seize on small details, grouping them so that when the reader closes his eyes he gets a picture. For instance, you’ll have a moonlit night if you write that on the mill dam a piece of glass from a broken bottle glittered like a bright little star, and that the black shadow of a dog or a wolf rolled past like a ball." — Wiki - Show, don't tell
So it comes down to attention to detail, important in realism. "It was a dark and stormy night" is a shorthand and therefore a cliché; it doesn't tell us exactly what is happening. — Jamal
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It_was_a_dark_and_stormy_nightWriter's Digest described this sentence as "the literary posterchild for bad story starters".[5] On the other hand, the American Book Review ranked it as No. 22 on its "Best first lines from novels" list.
Yes. But even so, there's something about getting right into it...a sense of familiarity. It doesn't have to be boring. The author can surprise by not following it up with expected horror but delight in candlelight. Or being wonderstruck by thunder and lightning...awesome nature. They stood at the window... — Amity
mega cool and hot stuff, baby! :wink: — Amity
Oh, yeah. Christian, Jewish or Muslim, that's clearly stated in The Book.To hell with this story :rage:
And the rotten, worm-infested fruit it still brings forth...
The idea that Woman=Sin. The opposite of 'Good'. The religious importance of birthing a child.
How dare women even think of abortion...they are still seen as being 'owned' by males. — Amity
Ignorance, coupled with the threat of punishment, is obedience. That was the point. Also, Adam got off lightly, because he said: "The woman tricked me." He rules by Righteousness; she, in league with the Serpent, corrupts him with Guile.How dare people want to know more? Knowledge is Power. Ignorance is bliss?
Those exquisite crucifixions are worth checking out. Also several madonnas, a ghostly last supper and a lot of Christian symbolism. Catholic themes, as far as I recall, not the Old Testament.No, no. The Dali's apple is not Biblical, and I think he never painted something religious. The point was to be surrealist or even dreamy. — javi2541997
Also, Adam got off lightly, because he said: "The woman tricked me." He rules by Righteousness; she, in league with the Serpent, corrupts him with Guile.
(And you may have given me an essay topic.) — Vera Mont
There are green apples without butterflies in a couple of the large pictures, though he seems to have preferred pears. (Dali is my all-time favourite Painter.) — Vera Mont
Fourteen original Salvador Dali watercolour fruit studies, unseen by collectors until now, are being sold at Bonhams, London, on Tuesday. They were commissioned in 1969 and 1970 but have since only been in private hands. The series is expected to make close to £1m.
Kush is no slouch, either. Amazing stuff! He likes butterflies and apples. There is one explicitly about the biblical apple.
Thanks, Amity; I'd never heard of him. — Vera Mont
Well, we can thank javi2541997 for that!
He, unwittingly, introduced him as 'Dali' in his profile pic — Amity
Nothing about Dali was average. He turned things inside-out and merged them with other things.They are not the average paintings of Murillo or the ones that hung in the Vatican. — javi2541997
It's also floating in space. Here's a slightly more traditional one.For example -- the amazing crucifixion that you shared in your post. No blood, no image of Jesus Christ, the floor is mysterious, the cross looks like cement blocks, the crown of thorns is missing, and the famous nails are substituted for perfect cubes. — javi2541997
Here's a slightly more traditional one. — Vera Mont
Still not Murillo, but a little closer to Vermeer, one of his early influences. — Vera Mont
All over the place. It's Called Christ of Saint John of the Cross.Do you have its title and I can search elsewhere? — Amity
Christ of Saint John of the Cross is a painting by Salvador Dalí made in 1951 which is in the collection of the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow.
It depicts Jesus Christ on the cross in a darkened sky floating over a body of water complete with a boat and fishermen.
Although it is a depiction of the crucifixion, it is devoid of nails, blood, and a crown of thorns, because, according to Dalí, he was convinced by a dream that these features would mar his depiction of Christ. Also in a dream, the importance of depicting Christ in the extreme angle evident in the painting was revealed to him. — Wiki - Christ of Saint John of the Cross
I have a couple of books, since about 1970. Anecdote; the second year I was working, I saw a pair of minor Dali prints in a Toronto gallery. #175 of the run, they were little things, about 10"x7" and came as a set for $200. That was two thirds of my monthly pay after deductions. I could have swung it, with some economies in my not-so-lavish lifestyle. But I lived in a small rented room with hardly any wall space and zero security. But I loved them! But... Common sense won. The damn things would be worth about $4000 today.Do you have a few Dalis hanging in your kitchen? — Amity
Shudder!Imagine floating in Dali's dreams... — Amity
I don't know that I'm caught up in a stigmatisation of telling. Or that I agree with a default of showing. — Amity
I could have phrased it better and I could have expanded...
I was trying to say that both were needed. — Amity
A message-board experience in creative writing sounds like my idea of hell. I guess some forums are more helpful than others. — Amity
Hmm. I'll have to take your word for that. — Amity
So, a quick way to connect and evoke. A short-hand without the need for detailed explanations.
Handy, especially when words are limited as in a micro/mini story.
The repetitive use of 'Turned his/her head' isn't the same kind of short-cut. It's just unimaginative. — Amity
Goodness. That is quite an obstacle for anyone, never mind a creative writer. I can't imagine how difficult that must be. Having no inner eye means not being able to visualise. This is key to imagination and perhaps links to empathy? — Amity
Why did you stop creative writing? Don't you miss it? Have you considered taking part in TPF's Literary Activity - either as a writer or reader, both? — Amity
I read that Chekhov is the culprit who inspired the concept of 'Show, don't tell'.
"Don't tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass." — Amity
Maybe "show don't tell" is more like "tell the effects, not the fact." For example, instead of saying it was a dark and stormy night you describe indistinct shadowy movements, the trees swaying, rain pounding on the conservatory roof, and a door being blown open. — Jamal
This I find difficult to talk about. — Dawnstorm
None of that would matter much. What really matters in the end is the text — Dawnstorm
If I go online to talk about writing, I'll always go into rule-blaster mode - and it'll never quite come across how I want to (if I even know how I want to come across). I've built up a lot of frustration that way, and that's why I've been bowing out of writing forums. — Dawnstorm
Really, it's good not to trust me too much. — Dawnstorm
I sort of space out, then. If I want to see stunning scenery, for example, narrative is never going to cut it for me; I prefer the visual arts - where I actually have something to look at. — Dawnstorm
No, no. The Dali's apple is not Biblical, and I think he never painted something religious. The point was to be surrealist or even dreamy. — javi2541997
Those exquisite crucifixions are worth checking out. Also several madonnas, a ghostly last supper and a lot of Christian symbolism. Catholic themes, as far as I recall, not the Old Testament. — Vera Mont
I used to just put it down to taste - which it still might be, who knows? — Dawnstorm
There was a time when the very word 'religion' would have me turn away. My Christian faith had vanished and I despised anything to do with it. I would not have been attracted to Dali's religious paintings. Fortunately, things change. — Amity
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