Designing a large banner for public display
Myself and a small group of artists were tasked with the job of creating a text based artwork or poem, we were paired with other artists with the intent to collaborate and create something unique inspired by the poems that they would create.
Early stages planning and fleshing out the concept. The general idea was based around nomadic traveler who had fallen on hard times, seen holding a cup of soup. We had to incorporate as much of the poem as possible. It seemed fitting the text would be weaving and circling around the man as if the thoughts and poem were circling his mind, almost haunting.
The Civic arcade, the building in which the artwork would be displayed was built around the 1960's, I designed the artwork drawing influence from gig posters in the same era and the narrative would be a metaphor for the building. The narrative is also based on an event that happened when Cheryl was volunteering at Andy’s Place (Uniting Church soup kitchen) 15 years ago. She was the waitress.
By Cheryl Ratcliffe
*Would you like tea, coffee? Sugar? Your meal will be served shortly. Help yourself to any of the free groceries. It’s best to get in early. He hesitated, fidgeting, watching the family at the table opposite; the children boisterous, oblivious to their circumstances.
He was cold – empty within. He wanted to declare – I’m not homeless, not a junkee, just alone, lonely, broke and hungry. He was born a child of the 60s –that new modernity. So much promise fulfilled and lost - marriage – a business – kids – gone – divorced – bankrupt – estranged – new modern times.
He came north looking for work, an opportunity to make himself, a better self, ready to be the superhero men are supposed to be. A fresh start, like new paint, a fresh facade.
How has your week been? A segue, she sat down – ready to listen. He told his short story. No work. Too much rain. Rent to pay, a caravan park. Cigarettes - the only comfort. No income. He enjoyed the charity, free food - the respite – imagining another time – a different restaurant with a polished terrazzo floor and comfortable familiarity. Embarrassed by his desperation, he smiled inwardly - grateful to Bundaberg and the kindness of strangers.*
Huh, why did you flag your own post? Flags are not positive! It's not a "star" or "favs" or "like" like on other media.
A flag means you find it offensive, stolen/plagiarism, your have whatever else bad feeling about that and you want to express a negative vote for that post. In terms of 'vote $', a 'flag' also means lowering the payout, but that's the least problem here - many flags also lower your reputation score, and so on, you get the idea.
See it here in action:
https://steemd.com/elegance/@jeremyray/designing-a-large-banner-for-public-display
You can still retract that flag, just click on it again, although I'm not sure if the penalty will be removed.
That was a mistake, thanks for the heads up and clarification. I simply wanted to remove the post but I assume that's not possible.
Yeah, I don't know of any way of really removing. Once it's sent to blockchain, it stays there. However, you can still "edit" it. Once you edit it, the API is smart enough to now show the previous versions (unless someone specifically digs in for that). That way, I think the 'deletion
is currently handled by manually editing the post, removing all content, and changing the title to "deleted".. so far, I've not seen a better option than this.
Congratulations @jeremyray! You received a personal award!
You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking
Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness to get one more award and increased upvotes!