Thursday, August 31, 2017

A Noteworthy Prompt

by Ruth Dell

Recently Erin, one of my talented granddaughters, took a sheet of her sister's manuscript paper and doodled with a pencil. She created this exquisite piece of art which expresses her love for ballet. She pours all her emotions into her dancing and, apart from one or two exceptions, each little ballerina on the paper represents a ballet pose. She added several quotes to border her work.

Erin's Art—My Writing Prompt
At first I wondered if a musician could see these ballerinas as notes and play them on an instrument, thus translating them into real  music. But no, I learned that this wouldn't work as, translated into writing terms, the notes were like random words written on the page, with no punctuation.

A friend looking at the picture commented that she saw freedom—nothing was bound and everything flowed. As I looked at the tiny figures, I realized that they could portray Jacinta, one of my heroines, at the end of her story. At the beginning, she is chained by her fears and all tied up in knots, like a stiff jerky ballerina with aching limbs, but over time she learns to stretch, move forward and leave her fears behind, until she is free to dance with the same joy and happiness that emanates from Erin's ballerinas.

And so this picture, soon to be framed and hung in my writing room, has become a prompt to keep my goal for Jacinta in sight as I pen her story. I aim to leave my readers with a sense of hope and joy as Jacinta achieves her freedom and happiness.

Friends and family contributed their insights and ideas when asked to look at the picture as a prompt to make or do something creative if they had unlimited resources.  Here are some of their responses:
  • It makes me want to fly across the world on a rainbow and find the pot at the end. A pot filled not with gold, but with joy and happiness.
  • I'd create a multi-ballerina 3D ice sculpture and use special lighting effects so that it's at its most awesome at night.
  • I see ballroom dancing in bygone eras, elegance and music, lavish venues decked out in mirrors and beautiful drapes, girls in wonderful dresses and guys in tuxedos twirling in a Viennese waltz. . . 
  • Guitars and music. Dancing. A happy song played with musical instruments and dancers in the background.
  • I would make a beautiful garden in shades of green and silver. There would be a waterfall flowing over rocks and falling in time to the rhythm of the music. Light would glitter and glint in the spray of waterfall.
  • Figurines in boxes to show that you can become whatever you want if you move and go with the flow.
  • Pictures on bookends.
  • A clock or watch with ballerinas representing the numbers.
  • A great way to develop visual discrimination skills in children as they identify and match identical ballerinas in the picture.
  • This looks like something that could be embroidered, either as blackwork embroidery or with the ballerinas in color against black and white sheet music. Or it also reminds me of a fabric from a line called Tiger Lily by Heather Ross (which is now hard to find) and I'd make Tabitha (my daughter) a quilt with it! 
I haven't met Tabitha yet, but I do know she is the sweetest little girl ever and I would love to make her a patchwork quilt in shades of pink, lilac and lavender with each block featuring a ballerina . And if I had the know-how, I'd make a set of wind chimes—either pottery or glasswork—with a little ballerina on each chime to hang in her room to make music for her.

Now it's over to you as I go back to Jacinta, who's waiting off stage, waiting to dance through my novel. Please leave a comment after the picture and tell me your response to Erin's work.


15 comments:

  1. I absolutely love Erin's piece of artwork, Ruth. So amazingly creative. Her drawing makes me want to stop the two books I'm currently writing, and write that story of the blind Spanish dancer that's been playing at the back of my mind for about three years now. I'd love to see the final framed version...what a stunning addition it'll make to your writing room.

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    1. Thank you, Marion. I agree, Erin's artwork is really creative. I'm looking forward to reading your new story in the future.

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  2. Awesome,Ruth, such a fun and creative post about an amazing expression of her passion for dancing.....the design would make the cutest gift wrapping for a present for a little girl but I think it definitely needs to be framed and hung somewhere special...good luck with your new writing idea as well.

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    1. Thank you, MIZZT. I love your gift wrapping idea.

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  3. As the musician who said it wouldn't sound like a melody if you tried to play it, I'd like to add that I think it's a fabulous piece of art. It inspires me to realise music isn't just a string of random notes. Note values, musical punctuation if you like, are there to turn the notes into something beautiful. So too, our writing needs to be more than a series of words. They need the correct punctuation and flow so that we can bless others. Thank you for a clever blog and I look forward to seeing this framed on your wall.

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    1. Thank you for your musical input, Shirl and for your comments today. Lots to think about.

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  4. Although you haven't met Tabitha, you have her tastes down to a "T"! Lovely blog.

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  5. Thank you! I'm looking forward to meeting Tabitha one day.

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  6. This is so beautiful. I love the tiny ballerinas. They remind me of the quote "dance as if no-one is watching". It would make the most adorable embroidered quilt.

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  7. This is a BEAUTIFUL picture, absolutely stunning! It really touches my heart. Perhaps because I feel like Jacinta at the beginning of your story...? I would love to read it when it is finished! To me the picture also represents the ups and downs of life itself...and gives it such a happy appearance. Great blog!

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    1. Hi Sue,many thanks for your kind insightful comment.
      It is indeed a beautiful picture.

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  8. My response is "Wow - that's fantastic!" What a creative granddaughter you have. :-)

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    1. Thank you! Needless to say, I agree with you 100% :)

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  9. Thanks Ruth do for sharing this. I missed the clever title till you drew my attention to it, Shirley! I love Erin's art work!

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