Two Women in One at a Dallas Starbucks – A Travel Napkin

I went to Starbucks early this morning to draw and get a cup of coffee before everyone else awoke. A woman was sitting in front of me and right as I finished drawing her head, she left and was replaced by a man. I continued drawing and she became a woman dressed in men’s clothing.

travel napkin - the reader 1

 

Can see the line about 2/3 of the way down her head where the napkin folds open?  I opened it up and drew the woman again on the inside, this time imaging where she had just come from or perhaps was just going. 

travelnapkin - the reader 2

Science and Art – ‘What Science Is’ #3

My neuroscientist daughter, Rebekah, is visiting this week. I am doing a series on science to honor her.  She writes an awesome blog called ‘The Cellular Scale‘ that will open your eyes about the amazing world of brain research. I hope you check it out.

science 4

 

The Difference

That’s the difference to me.  Both are creative, both are rooted in curiosity and love of exploration.  They just go about it different ways.

Science, Creativity and Courage

Science finds hidden treasures that were there all along. It takes creativity and courage. It can be in plain sight but if you are not looking and thinking creatively, you won’t find it.  And if you look for something others say isn’t even there, then you have to have courage to pursue the hunt.  The scientist has to withstand peer pressure to pursue in a well worn direction, not in a new area that has no history to it.

Art, Creativity and Courage

Art creates treasures, finding them inside the artist’s own brain.  The artist also needs creativity and courage.  Without creativity the artist is always derivative, a copier machine.  The artist needs courage because there will always be someone, often times plenty of someones, who say what you are pursuing, what you are creating, isn’t worth the time and effort. Whether it’s drawing a naked person or photographing the odd angles of a building, someone will say it’s a waste of time.  The artist has to have courage to continue pursuing their passion and vision.

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Drawing, Quote and commentary by Marty Coleman

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Morning Haiku

While the cat is on my lap,
I read baseball beaning news,
After I stretched my unlimber parts.

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The Ten Bodyless Ghirl Ghosts Dry Off – A Short, Short Story #12

 

Last we saw the Bodyless Ghirl Ghosts they were taking bubble baths in various hotel rooms.  This is what happened next.

ghirl ghosts 12

Drying off

After they snuck in and had bubble baths all over the hotel they had to dry off.  They aren’t very good with towels, having no hands, so what they do is fly underneath the towels on the racks and float up into them, turning round and round inside to dry off.  This is why humans find that towels are often wet on the inside. Humans have been fooled into believing it’s lack of evaporation, but that isn’t the truth.  It’s a conspiracy waiting to be uncovered.

The almost got caught when ten of them went in the women’s locker room in the gym of the resort.  A little ghirl who can see ghirl ghosts came in and walked past the towels. The bodyless ghirl ghosts acted frozen and stiff, hoping the little ghirl wouldn’t see them. The ghirl did see them but just thought they were the coolest towels ever with faces on them.  She even dried herself off with the one that Maranatha was floating in. Maranatha was not happy about that since she got all wet again and got very dizzy when the little ghirl pretended to be a cowgirl and whipped the towel around driving cattle. Maranatha was very dizzy.  The rest of the bodyless ghirl ghosts wanted to laugh but couldn’t. 

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Drawing and short story by Marty Coleman

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The Simple Brain – ‘What Science Is’ #2

science 2

Brain Mapping

The President recently proposed a ‘brain mapping’ research initiative. I think it sounds like a great idea but it would really be better described as not drawing a map of the brain but creating a key to the map of the brain. Why is that? You think the human genome was tough to catalog? Try doing that for 85+ billion neurons and 100 trillion or so synapses. In other words, there is a lot of ground to cover.

But that doesn’t mean we can’t get started on it, it just means it will take a while. And a lot of money.

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Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman

Quote by Emerson Pugh, American Physicist, 1929 – not dead yet

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Science + Truth = ? – ‘What Science Is’ #1

My eldest daughter, pregnant with my first grandchild, is coming to visit this week. She is almost finished getting her Ph.D. in Neuroscience so I thought I would do a few drawings about science this week in honor of her.

science 1

Late to the Party

I never had a huge interest in science growing up. But the 20 year influence of my ex-father in law, who was an engineer and had a huge knowledge of many scientific principles and Rebekah starting in on her studies of the brain, I found myself reading more and more books and articles on science over the years.

Leaving the Other Party

It coincided with a great dissatisfaction and frustration with religious stubbornness about science.  Evolution, cosmology, climatology, biology, neurology…you name it and it seemed that religion was dragging it’s intellectual heels in accepting what was being learned about life and the universe.  The fear that the discoveries of science could steal away power or faith or something else seemed to lead to a desperation of denial that I have found to be unacceptable for me to condone. 

When Comfort Leads the Way

I have figured out a bit of the reason why that is.  It seems to me that it is due to comfort being more important than truth.  You might think it is the opposite, since religion often stands on ‘truth’ as a pillar of the faith. There is talk of sacrifice and bowing the the will of God and all sorts of other supposedly uncomfortable efforts we are told need to be made to get in line with God and his truth. But the truth is that truth is not really pursued. What is pursued is comfort (which can also be seen as peace and happiness).  I am not talking about material comfort per se, though that is a big part of American life so is pursued by religious believers just as it is by non-believers. I am talking about comfort of intellect.  The religious believer is more concerned with the assurance of happiness and peace than truth. It might not be happiness and peace in this life, but it is critical to believe so one can have peace and happiness in eternal life.  Whether or not the theological construct they have believed makes any rational sense, is true, is not nearly as important as if it is just believable enough to allow for a feeling of peace and happiness. In other words, comfort.

When Truth Leads the Way

Here is my feeling about it.  Science, in all its messy and human pursuit of truth, actually gives me a much more genuine feeling of peace and happiness than theology does.  It does so because I trust it. I don’t mean I trust any one scientific discovery.  I mean I trust the process of truth seeking that comes with science. I believe it is moving towards truth and won’t be stopped.  Religion and theology meanwhile already has been stopped. It has it’s definitions and it isn’t interested in having those changed.  I can’t trust a process that is stopped like that.

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Science Trivia Question of the Day

The fixed point on which a lever moves is called:

 

  1. Fulcrum
  2. Anchor
  3. Pivot

 

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Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman

 

Quote is by Marty Coleman, adapted from one by Le Bon

 

 

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