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todays bird
Sade Olutola
Acquired Stardust
cherry valley forever
wallacepolsom

Product Placement

titsay

izzy's playlists!
Three Goblin Art
Misplaced Lens Cap

#extradirty
Cosmic Funnies

Janaina Medeiros
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Stranger Things
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸

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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
One Nice Bug Per Day
Not today Justin

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@teresagrimaldi
SPLICE
Animatic = video storyboard
Online Video, TV & Film Production Management Software and Screenwriting. Manage cast and crew, create and share call sheets, script breakd
Watch the most innovative storiesâDocumentary, Comedy, Sci-fi, Horror, Experimental, Animation, Inspiration, Student films, Award winners &
getting to grips with After Effects
Aubade
Playdate M & C
Interpretation of the Spirit of Sandown
fixed story verses freedom. Does one story tie you down?
The Janet story would work as is as a book. Perhaps work on mini stories as vignettes.
The tigerâs voice. What if only the tiger spoke? the only voice
The tiger had been there before - in many incarnations
sand- layering of patternÂ
carehome verses zoo (zoo being problematic)
ISSUES
heritage
natural history
human
narrative
Reflecting on my playdate with collaborators Michele O Brien and Colin Philimore
sandplay as part of this morningâs playdateÂ
Home of Moving Parts: Newcastle Puppetry Festival, the Moving Parts Scratch Space and Moving Parts Puppet School. UK
lovely shorts here.Â
The Waves - Virginia Woolf
The round-headed clouds never dwindled as they bowled along, but kept every atom of their rotundity. Now, as they passed, they caught a whole village in the fling of their net and, passing, let it fly free again.
Human     -     Tiger research
courtesy of National Geographic
The transformation from human to striped feline is described in various fables: It usually began with the feet turning into enormous paws, equipped with sharp, sheathed claws. Legs and arms, chest and back expanded, rippled with muscle, and then the skin was blanketed in russet fur, slashed by black stripes. A tail appeared between the man-catâs long rear legs. Finally, an enormous tiger head appeared. Back in human form, these people appeared normal, except for one tell-tale physical anomaly: They lacked a groove in their upper lip.
Tigers were widely believed to carry the spirits of the ancestors. Captain Henry Bandesson, who traveled in Annam (modern-day Vietnam) at the turn of the 20th century, recounted a case where a woman was killed by a tiger that was thought to be inhabited by the soul of her dead, cuckolded husbandâand acts of infidelity in her village instantly became very rare.
But tigers were most commonly worshipped as powerful protectors. Many believed that when a tiger slayed a human, their soul entered the animalâs body, transforming it into an everlasting protector that would forever watch over them in time of crisisâso few dared to kill them, even the man-eaters. The Javan tiger, before it went extinct in 1980, guarded the Tree of Life.
Indian mythology is filled with tigers: the tiger fights dragons, brings rain in time of drought, brings babies to the childless and then keeps those children safe from nightmares, and has the ability to heal. In a creation story from the northeast state of Nagaland, the mother of the first spirit, the first tiger and the first man emerged from the earth together through a pangolinâs den.
But worship continues to this day: Vaghadeva, the tiger god, is honored as guardian of the forest, propitiated with offerings of flowers and incense placed on simple rock shrines. In Central India, the Baigas, or Tiger Clan, consider themselves the catâs descendants. North of Mumbai, the Warli tribe erects wooden tiger statues for use in fertility rites: At harvest time, they decorate them with images of entwined snakes, trees, the moon, stars and the sunâand donate part of the yearâs harvest to the tiger as a symbol of life and regeneration.
This early 18th century image shows the Hindu Goddess Durga
fighting Mahishasura, the buffalo-demon, astride her tiger.
(Wikimedia)
These cats also watched over the dead. As far back as the 13th century in China, tiger imagery was etched into tombs and monuments to ward off the malevolent spirits that tormented the deceased. In Chinese folk tales, the cat killed the evil and guarded the good. And in pre-colonial Indochina, the forest-dwelling Moi people endowed them with supernatural powers that required extreme deference: They called the cat âhis eminenceâ, âlofty oneâ, âthe masterâ, âmy lordâ, or âthe gentlemenââbut never âtigerâ.
Bandesson also discovered a belief that the soul of a tigerâs victim is carried around on the tigerâs backâand they carry deities, too. The warrior Hindu goddess Durga, slayer of demons, rides a massive tiger. A tiger helped Chang Tao-Ling (whoâs considered the founder of Taoism) to vanquish the king of the demons and amass enough power to ascend to heaven; he, too, rode a tiger.
In art, tigers have been depicted with wings or drawn conjoined with a streaking white star amidst the Milky Way, protecting Earth from above. With their ancient legacy as givers of life, mediums, gods, and guardians, itâs no surprise that for millennia, medicine men of the East have imbued tigers and their parts with untold healing properties. Itâs a belief system that has proven deadly, with growing demand for tiger parts pushing tigers towards the brink of extinction.
folk tales for local folk
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/nov/01/fairy-stories-folk-tales-climate-change-refugees