How to make habit-making a habit.

We’re not talking nail-biting, hair-twisting, or bonbon-wolfing. We’re talking creative habits that make your life a better place to be.

In fact, we’re literally talking — me and my pal Ronnie Lawlor chewing over the subject, part of a series we recorded to get you (and me ) on track for 2017 and the launch of her new kourse, A Drawing A Day (click here to sign up).

What habit would you like to acquire in 2017?

My bastard blog

I am restoking my commonplace book, dogfood. It’s a tumblr blog I started ages ago so I’d have a place to just dump stuff I liked so I could come back and find inspiration when I need it.

Much of it consists of photos I take of cool stuff, but I think I’m going to start using it for writing stuff too, to collect all the ideas and quotes and factoids I glean here and there and have just been storing in my private Evernote notebooks. Most of it will appeal mainly to me but who knows, some of it might spark you too.

I’m adding the feed to the right hand column of this blog too, so you can see the latest when you come here.

The URL is dannybaba.tumblr.com/.  Danny baba is what our servants called me when I was a kid and lived with my grandparents in Pakistan. My grandmother used to sing me a lullaby in Urdu that went:

Ninny, baba, ninny.

Makan roti chini

Makan roti hogyah

Danny baba sogyah.

As a result, I called my grandmother “Ninny.”

Anyway, this may reinvigorate my desire to write and share stuff on the Internet again. I have entered this phase of late where I am doing stuff but am not sure what to share of it. As result, whenever I think of posting, I’m not sure if I can manage to craft it into something worth your while.

I also keep hearing about the death of the blog, which I actually find rather exciting. I started this blog 13 years ago, essentially to share jokes with my old pal Richard Bell, and never imagined it would become what it had over the decades. Maybe if I scale it back to just a bunch of jokes and discoveries rather than portentous, ponderous polemics designed to change the world, I and the world will be better off. Maybe that will be my resolution for 2017.

A Blunder a Day

Last week, I really wanted to tell you about how cool our new project with Veronica Lawlor is — but I made a mistake in my post. I inadvertently shared a (nice) interview with Ronnie rather than the (super-cool) trailer that gives you a vivid, compelling, intoxicating peek at what the kourse will be like.

So accept my apologies and watch this super-awesome video now instead:

 

Wanderers

I do my fair share of traveling (12 trips so far this year — and today I’m 3,000 miles from home again*) but I love to hear the tales of people who are truly committed peregrinators and who document and share their journeys.

I recently met one such soul, Genevieve, a nomadic artist and environmentalist who is creating a lovely document of the world on her site, regenevieve.com.  In a new blog post, she share recommendations of other traveling bloggers (including me). I hope you find some inspiration here.


*I’m in Los Angeles for a couple of days to film a new teacher for Sketchbook Skool.

 

Inspiration Monday: ‘Xplaining stuff

This week’s homework in Storytelling at Sketchbook Skool came from Koosje who asked us to make annual explaining a simple process.  Inspired by Ikea, I had loads of fun doing this:

 

Emptying my pockets.

I’ve collected a lot of inspiring bits and bobs recently  so I’m gonna share them all with you in one fell swoop.

 

I had a great time in Berlin, hanging out with Koosje, with Felix, and making new pals at the Beyond Tellerrand conference. One of my favorite things about the conference was the onstage DJ who sampled my words and then spun them into a new dance track. Crazy!

The onstage DJ at the Beyond Tellerrand conference.
The onstage DJ at the Beyond Tellerrand conference.

Conference attendees shared their sketchnotes on Twitter.
Conference attendees shared their sketchnotes on Twitter.

German friends said this lettering style was pretty much verboten these days as it evokes the old N*zi days.
German friends said this lettering style was pretty much verboten these days as it evokes the old N*zi days.

I came, I ate, I swam.
I came, I ate, I swam.

berlin-sketchbook-3
This bombed out church in the center of Berlin is a powerful peace monument.

fullsizerender-51
The Brandenburg Gate oozes with historical significance.

With Felix Scheinberger, Koosje Koene
With Felix Scheinberger, Koosje Koene
Koosje and I had a private tour of Sammlung Boros, the most amazing contemporary museum in an old Nazi bunker in Berlin.  Try to see it if you are in Berlin, but book well ahead of time.

img_8750-1

I got new wallpaper behind my desk. It is macabre and I love it. Even if you don’t.wallpaper

We went to Phoenix to celebrate the first wedding of the new generation.

My nephew, James and his bride, Melanie.
My nephew, James and his bride, Melanie.

Jack came to the wedding, the first time we've seen him since the LA migration.
Jack came to the wedding, the first time we’ve seen him since the LA migration.

My bro-in-law Lenny made it to the wedding, after a horrible summer in the hospital.
My bro-in-law Lenny made it to the wedding, after a horrible summer in the hospital.
While we were in Phoenix, we spent two consecutive nights watching the Supermoon rise.  It was amazing and unphotographable.

supermoon
Our family waiting for the Supermoon to rise on Margie’s front lawn.
Saw this on my street.  Check out both sides.

img_8585 img_8584

I found this in a used bookstore.img_8876

And this is a Berlin bookstore:img_8809

I love Javier’s journals. Check ’em out.

screen-shot-2016-11-20-at-12-02-25-pm

Listening to Badly Drawn Boy after a long hiatus.  He’s always been one of my favorites but he made me too sad after Patti left. (That was the case with a lot of my other favorites too. Time to reclaim them as well.) Three years ago, he played a block form my house so I had to go. He got drunk, belligerent and stormed off stage.  I thought it was the end. But it turns out he was in the middle of a divorce and felt a million mile from home. Now it seems he’s coming back. I’m ready.

Found a new band to listen to: .

messages-image777949326
Mac Sabbath. Raw and hilarious.
Got this when I was listening to the Philosophy Bites podcast.

img_8734

Berlin meetup

On Sunday, November 6 at 5 PM Koosje Koene and I will be hosting a meetup in Berlin at Hops & Barley, Wühlischstr 22/23, 10245 Treffpunkt Berlin, Alt-Berliner Kneipe:  Mittelstraße 55, 10117 Berlin, Germany

Join us if you’re around for chinwagging and beerswilling.

It’s all on this Facebook event.

Back to 7th grade

Last week, I did an artist-in-residency at the United Nations International School here in New York.  I haven’t spent time in a school since my trip to Vietnam last spring and it was nice to hang out with young creative minds again.

I talked with a few groups of high school students, kids who were serious about art and preparing their portfolios for college.  I told them about Jack’s experience at RISD and let them page through a big pile of my sketchbooks. But most of the time I worked with 6th-8th graders — doing fun drawing exercises, talking to them about the purpose of art in their lives, showing them how to make comics out of their everyday lives, explaining how they could use journals to explore the world.

This age is a crossroad for creativity as tweens (ages 10-12) change so quickly from children into teenagers. In 6th grade, they are still interested in drawing and imagining and reading comics, still unselfconscious enough to plunge into any new activity with enthusiasm. A few months later, as puberty begins to roil their brains, they are focussed instead on how others see them, entwined in group dynamics, masking a loss of confidence with cynicism. It’s harder to get through to kids at this age, to get them to sink into the pleasure of drawing without constantly kibitzing with their friends, to listen to directions and suggestions, to avoid self-flagellation and choruses of “I’m no good at drawing.”  When the dust of preadolescence clears, former crayon artists will have divided into those who will continue to paint and draw and those who will never try it again.

I try to step into that fray to show that drawing can still be fun, still matter, still have a degree of cool and that  it’s not just for a select few who think they have talent. I ask the kids who say they can’t draw if they do draw. How often do they draw outside of art class? I ask them if they can remember drawing with crayons every day when they were 4 or 6. I tell them drawing is like learning to play a video game or shoot a basket, that failing is part of how you learn your way. I show them my own failures, how I improved, and all that drawing has brought to my life.

It’s an interesting challenge and increases my respect for middle-school teachers all the more.

Oddly, this was the first time I had ever worked with kids in New York, but many shared my perspective as a “third culture kid” who had grown up in lots of different countries. I explained that living on four continents and going to a dozen and a half schools before I was thirteen had shaped me into the person I am and had forged my perspective as a writer and an artist, my interest in investigating the things most people take for granted. Growing up as an outsider is the best perspective for an artist to have. New York is a city of outsiders, the perfect place for an internationalist to put down roots.

I have visited a dozen schools in the past year or two. I always come home exhausted and a lot smarter.

Workbooking – make some money

I love making money. And it’s easier than it seems. Just crumple up a bill or spread it out — and then open your workbook and dive deep into the details with your pen.

The art of change

The way I approach this little bit of counterfeiting is the same way I draw anything complex.  I’ll take you through the steps in this video.

It’s a lovely subject for meditation. Spend a half hour doing this and you’ll emerge much richer. And so will your workbook.