Sunday, November 20, 2011

Vince Michael

I went to listen to Vince Michael speak about sustainability and preserving community Thursday evening. A lot to think about.

A few points:
• He said there are four factors that play into sustainability: environmental, economic, cultural and social.
• It's better environmentally to update old building than to tear them down and build new ones. It's more efficient than hauling old material away and bringing in new stuff.
• The trend has moved from preserving old buildings to preserving communities.
• Sustainability is not just about preserving buildings or landscape but keeping them in use, not museums.

Seems like every time an old building is vacated, someone suggests turning it into a museum. How many historic museums can a city have? Las Cruces wanted to preserve its old railroad depot. It ended up some kind of railroad museum that no one goes to. The old Amador Hotel is being turned into some kind of museum. J. Paul Taylor's home in Mesilla is supposed to become a museum after he dies. Preservation is good, but it would be nice if the building were more sustainable.
I think NMSU is better at sustainability than the city. The old YMCA building, built in 1909, was once nearly unsalvageable. But today is the Honors Center. The original president's home is today used as the Center for Latin American Studies. Williams gym, where the Aggies played basketball before the Pan Am Center was built was turned into the Art Department.

• Historical districts are a kind of community planning – the community deciding what it wants to be – what is worth keeping.
• Sometimes a community means the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. It's not just a few select buildings that are worth preserving. It's the whole area.
• Historical districts were a reaction to urban renewal.
• A community is an organized sense of place. Democracy of built environment.

Examples of preserving communities: the old Alameda district, downtown Main Street and the Mesquite district.

• Georgetown was one of the first historic districts that wasn't about tourism. It was a community deciding it has the right to be beautiful.
• National Heritage Areas were developed as a way to preserve special areas. They are locally driven and not owned by the federal government.
• There are 40 plus National Heritage Areas in the U.S.
• NHAs involve four factors: historic preservation, natural beauty, recreation/tourism and economic development.
• Authenticity can't be re-created. If an old building is torn down. Rebuilding a duplicate doesn't work. It's not authentic. You can't fake authenticity.

I'm reminded of the log cabin that was erected in Las Cruces for the nation's bicentennial or something like that. I don't know whose bright idea that was. But it was moved here from the mountains a hundred miles away. There were never any log cabins in Las Cruces. I never got the connection.

I saw new city councilor Greg Smith at the Vince Michael talk, which I was glad to see. It would be nice if other city leaders could have heard the message.

Something that bothers me about Las Cruces is it is growing so fast, it is losing the sense of community. When I drive along Sonoma Ranch Blvd, I regret the loss of open space and wonder what these neighborhoods will be like when they are no longer brand new. Will there be anything worth preserving? Will we regret filling up our open spaces with ticky-tack houses? But it's hard to get elected on a no-growth platform.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Job Fair

I went to the government job fair at NMSU yesterday. Kind of felt like I was crashing a party. I'd tell people I was a graphic artist, and they would look at me like "Why are you wasting my time?" The Defense Department said they were looking for people in accounting. They told me to check their website, usajobs.com. The USDA also recommended that I try usajobs.com. I learned from the USDA that they have about 55 employees in Las Cruces, and one person does the graphic design work for publications and such. I was told that's about the ratio for the national USDA scene. The Peace Corps told me they could use me to teach English.
I took a few pictures while I was there.


Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Nov. 9

I woke up thinking about the freezing temps forecast for tonight. Realized I haven't winterized my air conditioner and there that annoying leaking pipe out back. Hope a freeze doesn't turn expand the drip to a gusher.

Today:
8-9:40 Video editing. Review for test
10-Noon  Finish tri-fold brochure for InDesign
12-12:30 Lunch
12:30-2 Fix logo. Needs transparent background.
2-3:40 Illustrator. Work on still life
4-5:40 InDesign. Unveil brochure. Review for test
6-7 Winterize air conditioner. Check leaky pipe.

Things to do:
Still life
Look Who's Dancing flier
Portfolio website
Job fair. There's a government career fair Tuesday, Nov 15.
Intern paper
Professional meeting

Nov. 17 Vince Michael talk will cover seminar requirement

When school's over or maybe Thanksgiving week, I'll get the flat tire in the back of my pickup fixed and a plumber to fix the leaky pipe. I did make time to vote yesterday.

These 4:30 a.m. stress checks are becoming a habit.

My latest work of art, a perspective assignment for Illustrator:

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Nov. 2

The end-of-the-semester rush is starting early. If I was in retail I would hire some seasonal employees.

Yesterday:
8:30-10 Updated Media Productions log

10-noon  Organized "Look Who's Dancing" (LWD from now on) material and sketched ideas for flier.
I'm thinking ribbons of music.

Noon-noon:30  Media Productions class. Passed out posters

12:30-1:30  Perspective assignment for Illustrator class. Gradient mesh of sculpture.

2-3  Job Squad. Not as many changes as I expected. Little things like, don't capitalize Website. Generic cover letter nixed. She said it should be job-specific and for job fairs cover letters aren't necessary.

3-4:30 Stopped by my house for lunch and read one story from Elmore Leonard's collection of westerns
I'm falling behind on my New Year's resolution to read 50 books in 2011. I'm on 38 with 8 weeks to go.

4:30-8  Perspective. I'm doing an art museum interior. I was too ambitious in the beginning – 3 stories, with stairs and balconies and a cafe. I basically started over and downsized to one room with about a dozen paintings, one sculpture and a couple of people.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Vince Michael poster

I think the Vince Michael poster is done.

Friday I registered on LinkedIn.

I've been swamped
Today's schedule:
8-10 a.m. - Video editing project
10-? - Talk to Matt about printing poster. Possibly print it.
11-11:30 - Lunch
11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. - Finish interactive InDesign project
1-2 Illustrator perspective project
2-4 Illustrator class
4-6 InDesign class
6-6:30 Eat something
6:30-8:30 Work on cover letter and resume for Meeting with Job Squad tomorrow

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Portfolio presentation II

I announced the results from my portfolio survey too soon. It turns out I'd only looked at about half of them. I found some more at the bottom of the stack, under some blanks.
The final results are, from most popular to least:
1. Seurat
2. Oz
3. Grackle
4. Grad Card
5. Calendar Snake
6 (Tie) Photoshop House, Rudolph
8. Los Muertos
9. (Tie) Ethics Chess, FiloSofia
11. Protesters
12. Chupacabra

I take three things from this:

1. I ought to drop Protesters and Chupacabra from the portfolio. They finished in the bottom two by a sizable margin.

2. For PowerPoint presentations, simple and clean trumps complex. The top four are all relatively simple compared to 5 through 9. (I would put Rudolph in the simple category, though). Photoshop House was 20 times more difficult than Seurat. But I think pieces like PS House and FiloSofia have details that are hard to see on a projector screen. Also the survey group only had about 15 seconds to look at and comment on each slide. Again, I think that favors the simpler, cleaner works.

3. It helps if you can show steps involved in the process. If I'd shown Seurat on it's own, it wouldn't have worked as well. But by showing the original painting and the original photo of the girl I inserted in the painting, it guided the viewers through the process. That can't be done with every work, but it's something to keep in mind.

Ethics Chess drew the most diverse comments. Some picked it as their favorite. Some picked it as their least favorite.

Last week, I finished a Butterfield Stage map and a how-to on how to hit a golf ball from a sand trap. I think they are both portfolio-worthy, especially given Matt's comments about demand for informational graphics.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Portfolio Presentation

I gave my portfolio PowerPoint presentaion today. It went well. No embarrassing snafus. When I tallied the scores from the surveys, there were a few surprised but nothing that offended me. I was shocked that "Oz" finished No. 1 in the polls. It was a late addition and I considered it a candidate to finish last. And my favorite, "Photoshop House" finished 8th. Shows how much I know. I realize it's not a scientific poll. Still, it's interesting.
Here are the survey results:
1. Oz
2. (Tie) Rudolph, Seurat
4. Grackle
5. Grad Card
6. (Tie) Calendar Snake, Chess/Ethics
8. (Tie) Photoshop House, Muertos
10. Protest
11. FiloSofia
12. Chupacabra

 Oz



Rudolph




Seurat