We're not getting enough snow for me, but I am sure some of you who are would rather not be. I just like seeing it fall, mostly. I have to be careful that I myself do not fall, so I barely get to go out in it when we do have it. But I'm still hanging onto some old cross country skiis as I remember how fun it was to create a little run around the block one year. I suppose I should let them go, like my rollerblades. Anyone want a nice pair of rollerblades, size 9? I wish I had kept my quads instead. But that's how it is to let go, you don't always do it in a sensible way.
I pulled out all my Jell-O pieces planning to make some flowers but just haven't been able to get started. I tried making a big sheet of gelatin but forget how I did that before...guess I can scroll on down to 2012 and figure out how I did it then. It's down in that stack somewhere.
Yes, all of my Jell-O Art Secrets are down in this blog somewhere. If you are wondering how to do a thing, it is fun to discover on your own but there is also some benefit to what has come before you. This will be our 33rd show I think. I'll have to check. We've tried a lot of things.
The photo is from my 2012 piece, where I tried making flat sheets that could be used like paper and it turned into a kind of autobiographical artist's book. I screenprinted and drew on them. I had a broken heel at the time and couldn't do much else, so I did some serious Jell-O Art. It was hard to photograph but it's generally at every show to marvel at in person.
The fun news is that we finally got together for a great brainstorm, which is hard to do on zoom because we are an enthusiastic group of people who all talk at the same time, with guitars going and people looking up songs on the internet and singing them in full voice. It's fairly hilarious for us but probably painful for people who can't take much chaos.
Our narrative is lined out, but we will be embellishing and changing it a lot over the next few weeks. By the end of the month we have to have it mostly pinned down so we can rehearse dances and harmonies and get the props together.
I have vowed to make way simpler sets this year...last year I got carried away. I love making the sets and props. I love working on art with a purpose that no one can direct me in and does not have to make money. I spend so much of my artistic effort on making things to sell, Jell-O Art is just a huge relief. It can be so fun!
For the performance we brainstorm ideas in a pretty disorganized way and I write them all down as fast as I can and we try to make them cohere into a narrative and drama, generally a musical of some sort with parody songs relating to Jell-O. It can get super silly and borderline offensive but we try to stay family-friendly and appeal to our varied audience. We have a lot of people who come just for the performance and an earlier set of people who come for the art. Some people may come for the Tacky Food Buffet...there's rarely anything that is actual food but some people eat it.
The whole thing is such a cathartic counterpoint to the serious drama of life that we are all depending on it this year as usual. There's always somebody experiencing grief or illness, family complications, work issues, or more, but we get together for a couple of hours, sing and make jokes, and enjoy our connections. The show itself is the same thing. Viva the Jell-O Art Show!
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