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communication

The end of a path

by Henk ter Heide on Sunday January 3, 2010

It’s a good thing that keeping a new years resolution is a process and not an act. Otherwise I would have failed it already. Yesterday I did draw for more then an hour but I didn’t come around to writing this article :(
Ah well. Here it goes.

As my regular readers will have noticed, I haven’t done anything for some three months.
I had found that I couldn’t make the pictures I wanted with color pencil and had decided that I would start painting.
I had bought oil paints, an easel, a pallet and the lights I needed to photograph my paintings. I had even painted a few test panels.
And then everything halted.
It just stop.
I didn’t feel like painting any more.

I assumed that I would start painting again at some point. So I just waited.

The thing is that I have had this happening before. Often even.
I have had a lot of times that I am in the middle of some activity and for some reason just don’t feel like finishing it.
It used to annoy the hell out of my mother. She thought it meant that I was too lazy to finish my chores. (Although I never quite understood why she thought that joining a tennis club would be considered a chore.)

Over the years I learned that halting some activity for no apparent reason and then picking it up again a few weeks or months later, or figuring out what is wrong with it, is just part of being me.
So I waited.

The only thing that had me slightly worried was this blog.
This blog is linked to drawing and I felt that couldn’t keep all of you just hanging there. Not knowing what had happened.
I hate it when I’ve followed a blog for a few months or even years and it just stops. And I never find out what happened to the author.
Did he move on to other activities? Did he die?

A few weeks ago I started thinking that I should write some kind of brief explanation about why I wasn’t writing anymore. But a funny thing happened.
While I was thinking about how I should explain that this happens to me some times. That I didn’t know why I had stopped and didn’t know whether I would ever continue. I figured out why I had stopped.

Even better.
After I had realized why I had stopped, new ideas started flowing. And before I knew it I was drawing again.

I thought it would be best to first do a few drawing, to see if it would stick, and then tell you about my developments. But the drawing I’m doing right now is taking far too much time to do it that way. Although I drawn for more then an hour a day for the last week. I’m still only at about two thirds.

But still I feel curtain that this direction is so rewarding that I won’t stop after just a few drawings. I don’t feel that I have to test myself by finishing yet an other drawing before talking about it.

Why did I stop painting in September?
When I started thinking about it, it turned out to be fairly obvious.
I had lost my direction. I had lost my purpose.

When I started drawing early 2007 and started with this blog I had a very clear purpose.
I wasn’t trying to produce beautiful drawings. I was trying to find a way to express myself via drawings.

Being autistic and having a visual thinking process I find that I have to work very hard at expressing myself.
Before I can tell anybody anything about the people I meet and the places I go. I have to translate from the pictures and movies in my mind to words I can speak.
Although I’ve become quite good at it over the years, it’s still a lot of work.
Which means that I can write an article like this one, which is perfectly understandable.

But sitting on a stool in a bar I can either relax or talk with people. And since I go there to relax I never talk very much.
Lately a few of the costumers of my favorite bar have figured out that I’m quite knowledgeable on some subjects and they question me about them. And when they do, I answer them.
But it always feels like an interview. Never like a conversation.
To me conversation are just to much like work.

Three years ago I thought that since I have this visual thinking process and a photographic memory, it should be very easy to find a way to draw those people and places that I wanted to show the world.

But it wasn’t.
Using color pencil I quickly found that the pictures I drew never looked like the pictures in my mind.
For two reasons.
One of which turned out to be very obvious, when I finally thought about it. The pictures in my mind are of a photographic quality. Pictures I draw never are. Which, I suppose, is the charm of drawings. But it wasn’t what I had in mind.
The other problem is that I have a field of vision of 180 degrees. Just by the size of the paper that I’m using, a drawing is only about 30 degrees. Which is probably why a guy like Stephen Wiltshire draws such detail on such big canvases. It’s the only way to get the world in your drawing.

When I moved to painting I just assumed that I would solve both problems.
Bigger canvas would mean drawing a bigger part of the world. And since you can layer with oil paint you can indeed get more photo realistic pictures.

The one thing I hadn’t counted on was drying time.
With oil paint you can layer different colors on top of each other. But after each layer you have to wait until it’s dry. Otherwise the different layers will mix and everything will turn a foul color of brown.
Drying time can be as much as two or three days.

So imagine what that means.
No doubt you have seen those beautiful portrait paintings where the artist has put a little dot of white paint in the pupil of the each eye to suggest life.
Those two tiny dots of white paint take three days to paint.
That is a few seconds for every dot. And then three days of drying time before varnish can be applied.
(And after that the painting has to dry out for several months before it can be used.)

There is no way that I can work that way.
Most painters work either from postcards or from sketches they have made.
I didn’t want to do that. I wanted to draw/paint the pictures and movies in my mind.
I started out with the pictures because it seemed easier to learn. But to really show the world what I’m all about I have to draw/paint the movies.
But of course they change over time.
There is no way for me to keep an image in my mind for the several months it would take to finish the painting.

The first painting I wanted to do was a simple one of an apple tree in bloom in an English landscape.
I’ve been wanting to do a picture like that for as long as I’ve been drawing. I could never find a way to do it with color pencils.
But even such a simple idea keeps changing:
Will I put the tree in the foreground or the background. On a hill? Against a blue sky or a stone wall?

And that are only the questions I ask myself.
The color arrangement also changes. But that isn’t something I consciously think about. It’s just the way the world around me changes.
When the sun shines the pictures in my mind have all kinds of bright colors. When it’s an dreary day the pictures in my mind change to low hanging fog. And then at night I “see” a lot of greys and blues.

There is no way I can show my world using paint.
But even if there was. It’s far the much work. I was looking for an easier way to show my world then by translating the pictures in my mind.
This is far to difficult.

So without realizing what was wrong, I had reached the end of this path.
 
 

This is turning into a very long article.
Tomorrow I will tell you about this new direction I have found

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1053

by Henk ter Heide on Thursday December 11, 2008

This is a very frightening drawing to do.
When I did something like this last year, I thought it had something to do with the chaos. I tried very hard the figure out were the next dot should come and what size it should have to create the right feeling of chaos. But of course you can’t fake chaos.
This time around I don’t take as much time thinking about where the pencil stripes should come. I just draw them where ever the pencil lands.

Since it’s still a frightening drawing there must be something else that makes it frightening.
Thanks to my involuntary stay in hospital last week I now know that I’m afraid of something having to do with communication. Only thing is I don’t know what. I was thinking that it might have something to do with people catching my off guard. But it could also be that I’m afraid of offering my insights.

The kind of drawing I want to make for this site, the pictures in my mind, make it a very personal form of communication.
The funny thing is that I don’t really know what this drawing is about.

Everything I think about starts out with a picture or a little movie in my mind. Next I translate most of those pictures and movies into words. But by doing so I always lose a lot in the translation.
What I end up telling people is only a fraction of what I was actually thinking. I never quite understood why people understood so little of what I was trying to tell them

The thing is that I’m not always able to translate every picture and every movie that jumps up in my mind. Sometimes I’m distracted (because people are talking) and sometimes the images are so complicated that I can’t translate them
This picture is such an image.
1053

Yesterday morning after I scanned my drawing I realized that I was doing something wrong.
Instead of scanning my work for the day I should be scanning a drawing when I reach an interesting point in the development of a drawing.

I was thinking about what I should do with the outer edge of the paper. I was thinking of working from the yellow/orange color in the middle via greens to blue at the edge. But I’ve now decided that it would give a much more interesting picture if I went from light colors to dark colors.

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Why auties don’t represent themselfs (drawing: Nose mountain)

by Henk ter Heide on Tuesday June 12, 2007

Joel over at “NTs are weird” writes a lot about why auties don’t represent them selves. That was one of the first questions I asked the first time I visited the Autie club in Rotterdam (in the Netherlands). This club is established and run by Neuro Typicals and although there are some auties on the board the NT’s have a big say in the running of the club.

The second question I asked is “why don’t we?” Although, as I understand it Joel has a lot of difficulty in dealing with NT’s, I don’t. I’ve have nearly twenty years experience in organizing clubs with the mentally impaired and with children. It’s a lot of work to start but after a while you share the load and it becomes easier.
Nose mountain
Nose mountain

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But after going to the club for a while I’ve decided that I won’t even try. For several reasons. Some of which have to do with autism, some with my personal live.

For one thing to establish a club you have to talk a lot with a lot of people and I don’t like talking. It might be that it will become easier after my big examination but for now it’s not something I would want to do.

But most of the reasons have to do with my feelings for my fellow auties. Or rather the lack of feelings. Auties should be “my kind of people” but they’re not. I feel more alike with my mentally and physically impairmered colleagues at the sheltered workplace then with other auties. I do have the feeling that I don’t have to prove myself. I presume that when I sit quietly in a corner people will know that’s not because I don’t like them but because I don’t like talking.

Not talking to each other also is a point. I’ve been watching the conversation over at Wrong planet for a while and it seems to me that auties don’t really talk to each other. Someone thinks of a subject and hundreds of auties react with a story of there own but nobody reacts to stories of the others.

I see the same at the Autie club. People going round telling there stories. They come to me and I react with something like “oh”, “ah” and “that’s great!”. But I don’t feel the need to pursuit the matter so they go on to the next person to tell the same story. Auties tend to flock round the NT’s because the NT’s do have the need discuss the story. Conversation between auties on the Internet at large also seem to go along these lines. As far as I’ve seen auties are great at announcing something but the NT’s are discussing.

Isn’t that the biggest difference between auties and NT’s? NT’s need to do things together with other people and will go to great lengths to get a lot of people in one room. Where as we auties like to pursuit our own projects, sometimes together with other people but we don’t have the need to be together.

Does this mean that we will never be able to represent our selves?

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