Thursday, November 4, 2010

Happy Birthday

Welcome!

This is the first-ever post on Transforming Tradition, my blog devoted to artmaking and writing for children of all ages.  Transforming Tradition will be part chronicle and part agony aunt, the place where I'll log projects and research while sharing cool books, writers, artists, stories and, no doubt, numerous watercolor disasters.  (Is anyone else as abysmal at watercolor as I am?)  I've christened this blog Transforming Tradition to reflect the nature of my work: I use text and image to give fresh, creative expression to the themes and motifs found in fairy tales, folklore, customs and rituals. 

And then there's Victorian children's literature.

Transforming Tradition has a rather auspicious birthday.  For all you Lewis Carroll fans out there, November 4 is the day that Alice steps through the parlor mirror in Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There.  When the story opens it's late afternoon, and Alice has been at the window "watching the boys getting in sticks for the bonfire."  This suggests the bonfires set ablaze for Guy Fawkes Night (or Bonfire Night), celebrated in Britain on November 5, as does her remark to the black kitten, "we'll go and see the bonfire to-morrow."  Pretty cool, right?

When I learned the true significance of Bonfire Night my first year in England, I was...a little freaked out.  JK Rowling and Lewis Carroll make it sound rather jolly in their books, and the festival I attended in Ottery St. Mary - which includes a carnival and flaming tar barrels carried through the streets by burly, completely insane men - was fantastic.  Bonfire Night in fact commemorates the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605 and the execution of the surviving conspirators, including Guy Fawkes.  The Brits traditionally burn an effigy (not necessarily of Fawkes) at the top of the fire.  I enjoy traditions, of course, but that smacks a little too much of 'The Wicker Man' for comfort.

Anyone have a good Bonfire Night story?

Thanks for reading.  Have a lovely day.