Nigh? What kind of language do I think I’m speaking? I blame end of year debilitating virus for that.
Anyway….
…it’s a strange time of the year when you jump off the spinning School Wheel and onto the Christmas Shopping and Everything Else Wheel.
I love this time of year in Edublogland when the Edublog Award winners are announced in all the delectably diverse categories. It’s a time to revere winners, to rejoice with friends, to expand the old Google Reader with more blogs, to bookmark best podcasts, virtual worlds, social networks and PLNs. It’s a time when you wish you had more time to explore, and a magical way of keeping up with everything.
I’m proud that our Australian educators have made the Edublogs honours list: @brightideasblog @edtechcrew @mrrobbo. Congratulations!
The end of the school year, I think some would agree, is a bitter-sweet time of letting go and refocusing on the multi-faceted holiday period.
I try to balance the stresses of everyday life with things of beauty. I need things of beauty; I think we all do. Sometimes music, sometimes art, sometimes literature. Today I’m sharing a beautiful Russian animation, The Seasons, by Yuri Norstein. Despite all his awards for animation, he was fired from Soyuzmultfilm in 1985 for working too slowly on his latest film, a feature-length adaptation of Gogol‘s Overcoat.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jnvuw29Tc28]
I was interested in reading about the technique which enables him to evoke such ‘magical’ landscapes:
Norshteyn uses a special technique in his animation, involving multiple glass planes to give his animation a three-dimensional look. The camera is placed at the top looking down on a series of glass planes about a meter deep (one every 25–30 cm). The individual glass planes can move horizontally as well as toward and away from the camera (to give the effect of a character moving closer or further away). (from Wikipedia)
Best wishes to everyone for the holiday period; stay healthy and productive, focus on what’s essential, and I’ll save my Christmas wishes closer to the date.
Thanks for the mention. Have a happy and restful Christmas and New Year and I hope you’ll be feeling great once Christmas arrives.
Same to you, Judith. I’m feeling better now, thanks.
Thanks for the mention, hope you enjoy jumping back on the school spin wheel in 2011.
I hope so too. All the best to you for 2011 too.