Legendary cartoonist Lynda Barry shows you how to keep a visual diary as a tool of creative observation. Barry recounts:
I began keeping a notebook in a serious way when I met my teacher Marilyn Frasca in 1975 at the Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington.
She showed me ways of using these simple things — our hands, a pen, and some paper — as both a navigation and expedition device, one that could reliably carry me into my past, deeper into my present, or farther into a place I have come to call “the image world" — a place we all know, even if we don’t notice this knowing until someone reminds us of its ever-present existence.
I wasn’t quite 20 years old when I started my first notebook. I had no idea that nearly 40 years later, I would not only still be using it as the most reliable route to the thing I’ve come to call my work, but I’d also be showing others how to use it too, as a place to practice a physical activity — in this case writing and drawing by hand — with a certain state of mind.
This practice can result in … a wonderful side effect: a visual or written image we can call “a work of art"; although a work of art is not what I’m after when I’m practicing this activity.
What am I after? I’m after what Marilyn Frasca called “being present and seeing what’s there."
Dive in here.