Magic Flowers by Analise Braddock, 8 (Katonah, NY) illustrating “In a Jar” by Hudson Benites, 11 (Excelsior, MN) Published in Stone Soup September 2019 A note from William Rubel Firstly, before getting into today’s feature story and art, I’d like to thank everyone who responded so quickly to our Refugee Project appeal. You almost completely met our $5,000 goal in less than a week! Wow! Thank you all! There are several exciting things happening with the project that just came up this week, but I will wait to report on them until details are more fleshed out. I was 20 years old in 1972 when I thought of the idea of publishing a magazine of writing and art by children. The first issue of Stone Soup was published the following year. I am now older than most of the parents of Stone Soup writers and artists. And yet, despite the huge amount of creative work I have seen by young people, I continue to be amazed by the artistic power of the works that many of you in primary and middle school produce. In the October issue, Editor Emma Wood paired the drawing Magic Flowers by Analise Braddock with the short story “The Jar” by Hudson Benites. Both are powerful works of imagination, and they share a theme: the passage of time. Hudson’s story of climate change and magic is well paired with Analise’s Magic Flowers. I haven’t written at length about a drawing for a while, so that is why I am going to focus on that today. Emma chose these two works to go together, so please look at the art and read the story. You will think about the world differently. Magic Flowers is an extraordinary work of art. It speaks to me. I could look at this drawing every day and not get tired of it. When my colleague Jane Levi selected this image for today’s newsletter, she told me, “It reminds me of your work.” Indeed, if you knew my work, you would see there is something Williamesque about it—but Analise’s drawing is more well-observed, more delicate, and has a greater dynamic range than my work. There is so much that could be said about this drawing. It obviously falls within the great tradition of the still life in Western art. If you know your flowers, you can identify each of them in the drawing: poppy-seed pods, bachelor’s buttons, peonies, and more. This work is not just a still life, not just a drawing of a vase of flowers. Emma selected it to illustrate Hudson’s story because it falls within another tradition of Western art: the memento mori. In the context of Hudson’s story, she could not have made a better selection. Memento mori is Latin. It means, “Remember you must die.” For hundreds of years, European artists made paintings and drawings that were intended to help the viewer think about the passage of time. We all get very caught up in the day-to-day. Analise’s still life, with its actively dropping leaves and poppy-seed casings, reminds us that life is dynamic. Even the beautiful flower dies. Life is about catching the moment, but you cannot hold on. Analise is the master of pencil. I want you to pay attention to the dynamic range she brings to the work. Wispy grey lines and heavy black ones. There are multiple layers of images to catch the eye. If you focus on line—the stems—then there is a dynamic crossing and recrossing of stem and leaves that almost makes the work vibrate with motion. If you look down at the two knobs on the table, then let your eye flow up to the first peonies, you find there are many directions to go. Analise forces us to follow shapes up and to the left, but it is easy to break away and move around the image, as one could a real vase of flowers. That this is a drawing about ideas—about the passage of time—is made clear by the actively falling leaves and the poppy-seed pod. The poppy petals are long gone. The seed pod will dry out, and the seeds will then be fertile. If spread onto soil, they will make new life. So there is something here that speaks to birth, death, and regeneration, which is also a theme in Hudson’s story. For this week’s project—and I am intending this for all of you newsletter readers, regardless of age—I want you to either write about this drawing or to make a still life of your own. If you write about the drawing, use it as a starting point for your thoughts. You may go in the direction that I have—into thinking about how life changes, shifts, goes through stages, and comes to and end that may actually suggest a new beginning. But this is me talking. What are your thoughts? If you decide to make a still life of your own, then pick yourself a flower arrangement and depict it in whatever media you like, including photography. As always, if you are age 13 or under, send your finished work to Stone Soup for Emma to review it for publication. I think in this case we’d be on the lookout for web-publication material. Until next week, Our Fall Fundraiser, 2019: The Refugee Project We are raising funds to support the production and publication of creative work by children in refugee camps around the world. We have almost reached our preliminary target of $5,000 to support a special issue of Stone Soup and associated projects—and we want to keep going! You have already helped us fund workshops in the Za’atari camp, Lebanon, and put us in touch with other organizations we can work with to expand our efforts. Please help us raise the money to continue this work. You can read more about this initiative at our website and help us by sharing the link with others. Thank you. Highlights from the past week online Don’t miss the latest content from our Book Reviewers and Young Bloggers at Stonesoup.com! We’ll be publishing a series of essays by Marco Lu, 13, on our blog on the subject of science fiction. Wednesday, we published Marco’s first post, which includes a short introduction and a discussion
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Saturday Newsletter: September 28, 2019
“Give Me Your Hand”Ziqing Peng, 11 (Nanjing, China)Published in Stone Soup September 2019 A note from Jane Levi Last week I arrived in Santa Cruz, CA, the home of Stone Soup. There are lots of reasons to be happy to be here, but one of them is slightly unexpected: I get to live with four baby chicks. They are so cute! Well, that much is pretty obvious, I suppose, but the ways in which they are cute are so interesting. They are big enough now to be living outside in an aviary (not yet with the bigger hens, but with a rabbit and a parakeet), so they have lots of space to move and we can observe their behavior. And it is amazing to see: they do absolutely everything together. If one runs across to the little pond to have a drink, the rest will follow. If one climbs up on a pile of straw to peck at a bug on the fence, they all climb up to have a go. If one stays on the pile in the evening sun to sit down, nesting-like, and look out at the world, guess what happens next? Each one is an individual bird, but they move together as one fluffy group, cheeping the whole time—even when they are eating. How do they do that? Seriously, if you know, please write and tell us! When I re-read Una Dorr’s story from the September issue, this week’s featured story, it made me think about these chicks (and not just because I am currently obsessed with them). The reason the chicks are not yet living with the older, bigger hens is that they are too small to defend themselves. When they do eventually move to the hen coop, they will be junior newcomers joining an existing team that’s already worked out how to live together and who comes where in their pecking order. I guess the move will be their equivalent for us of moving house and going to a new school, or switching from elementary to middle school. Even though they will still have each other, the chicks’ lives and relationships will get a lot more complicated, and they will have to work out who their real friends are or could be—just as Kiera does in “The Hello Kitty Shirt.” I hope for the chicks’ sakes that there will be a claw of friendship stretched out to them, like the kittens’ playful paws captured in Ziqing Peng’s lovely photograph. Have you moved house recently, or switched to a new school? If you have, and you are having a similar experience to Kiera’s (or a completely different one!), why not take some time this weekend to write about it? Or, perhaps you are in the same school as before but you are noticing changes in your groups of friends, or you have seen how people respond in different ways to the new kids that have arrived this semester. You can write about that too, or take a picture that sums up the experience of the new school year and its new people and challenges. We always love to see what you produce, so don’t forget to submit anything you are happy with! Until next time, Highlights from the past week online Don’t miss the latest content from our Book Reviewers and Young Bloggers at Stonesoup.com! On Monday, we published Alicia’s blog post “Thoughts on Jewish Refugees in Shanghai.” Did you know that China welcomed Jewish refugees during World War II? Read Alicia’s piece to find out more, and how she thinks it relates to the refugee crisis today. From Stone Soup, September 2019 The Hello Kitty Shirt By Una Dorr, 12 (Brooklyn, NY) Illustrated by Ziqing Peng, 11 (Nanjing, China) From afar, Kiera fit in perfectly at MS 452. Watching her pick at her peanut butter and jelly sandwich while fanning herself with her homework folder on this late September day, an unsuspecting onlooker might give her a glance and deem her an average seventh grader, not particularly interesting and far too obsessed with clothes, hair, and makeup. This onlooker, seeing her talking naturally with the group of girls surrounding her, would suspect that this was simply an ordinary day for Kiera, that she had known these girls for years. In assuming this, the onlooker would be entirely wrong. While it didn’t show, this may have been the most important moment Kiera had experienced in the 11 years that she had been alive. Ever since her family’s SUV had finally pulled up in front of her new house in Brooklyn after the drive from New Jersey early that summer, Kiera had waited for this moment. Finally, after nearly a month of relentless effort, she had been accepted by the popular kids at their lunch table, and therefore into their group of friends. If she were to embarrass herself in front of these people, this new friendship she had formed would crumble in front of her eyes—something that she wouldn’t let happen, no matter what. Every day of being thought of as the quiet one, the friendless one, the lonely one who sat with a book in the corner of the playground during recess, vanished from Kiera’s mind. Now she was speeding down the road to what she had only dreamed of in years before: popularity. …/MORE Stone Soup is published by Children’s Art Foundation-Stone Soup Inc., a 501(c)(3) educational nonprofit organization registered in the United States of America, EIN: 23-7317498. Stone Soup’s Advisors: Abby Austin, Mike Axelrod, Annabelle Baird, Jem Burch, Evelyn Chen, Juliet Fraser, Zoe Hall, Montanna Harling, Alicia & Joe Havilland, Lara Katz, Rebecca Kilroy, Christine Leishman, Julie Minnis, Jessica Opolko, Tara Prakash, Denise Prata, Logan Roberts, Emily Tarco, Rebecca Ramos Velasquez, Susan Wilky.