Joey Ellis: 4 INK (Pemuteran Abstract)

If I had to convince someone why the sea is a place to save I might have to turn to Jules Verne to say it for me… “On the surface, they can still exercise their iniquitous laws, fight, devour each other, and indulge in all their earthly horrors. But thirty feet below the (sea’s) surface, their power ceases, their influence fades, and their dominion vanishes. Ah, monsieur, to live in the bosom of the sea! …. There I recognize no master! There I am free!”
This is probably somewhat what brought me to Pemuteran, for some reason that I don’t even fully know, the sea is just me. The office to the left was mine for the month. I came here to work at a community coral restoration project that uses a mineral accretion process to turn metal into limestone which in return evolves into a living coral reef. Basically because once coral is introduced into the equation by attachment it begins to grow five times faster and the threshold of temperature it can withstand is increased enough to protect it against bleaching.
It sounds quite novel, but in fact its a science thats been around for about 30 years. There’s lot’s of people doing it, famous designers like Tom Dixon and other TED Fellows such as Colleen Flanigan, even scientists in Mozambique are in on it. One of the reasons why I’m drawn to it is because its a very active way to get people physically involved in protecting the ocean. My own work has this personal motto it constantly says to itself, “impossible by one, attainable by many”. I try to cultivate a collectives creativity, combine it with my own and turn it into something new.
However it’s not just the community outreach that intrigues me, you get to be in some way an alchemist that performs seeable magic. For a material junkie like myself, it’s a dream worth living.
The place I was at ran this quite ingenious “Support a Baby Coral” program where they get people to donate 35 euros for a name that they make out of metal and turn into tiny biorocks. They take pictures and then a year after send another when it’s grown and transformed. We would get a sponsors name every couples days and attach it.
I came as part of the kungfu4coral project I’m working on right now. It’s a project based on my belief that the traditional methods of environmental activism are dated and what needs to happen is a retooling of how environmentalists reach out to the public. From PC to iPhone, from Email to Facebook, from QQ to Weibo, we have constructed a new spectrum of communication tools. We use social media to engineer a new form of self but how do we use it to construct a new definition of environmentalism? How can we relate the ever-growing digital world to the ever-shrinking real world?
From the beginning of my arrival I searched for the material that my culminating sculpture would be made out of. The ones in the past were made of rebar and had to be to welded together. However since I’m a terrible welder and terrible perfectionist this time it just wouldn’t do.
Needing to find something that was common, something that people had and might possibly donate I chose bikes. A totally cliche form for sculpture, but it’s cliche probably for a reason. I bought one to use as an example and then sought out locals, explaining the process while asking for old bicycles. Soon after I had gotten in total 5 bikes, three were from local kids, mine and one other from a nearby home-stay.
There was one problem with the bikes in that there were parts that weren’t metal, so if hooked up they wouldn’t mineral accrete. I decided that I would wrap them in metal and have the limestone envelope it in the end.
I told the guys that here is a puzzle. How do we construct it without electricity? How do we make it with the least amount of bought metal? How can we make the process dictate the design? I came up with the idea of making it out of pipes and using a metal thread maker to make parts connectable and screw into each other. We would probably have to do some welding but it wouldn’t have to be done on site. In the end what it became was beyond my expectation and what it becomes will be far beyond my imagination.
What I think I learned at INK is something similar to what my idol Jacques Cousteau once said “When one man, for whatever reason, has an opportunity to lead an extraordinary life, he has no right to keep it to himself.” That in my own understanding means all of us. So to finish my piece I want to share it with anyone that wants a part of it. It’s nothing grand, compared to my other work that ends up in museums this looks more likely to end up in a dump. But it’s an experiment to make the work and process I do better.
So I have around 80 spots on the structure to attach a name of anyone that wants to donate 35 dollars. Of which will go towards the cost of me buying the anode, cathode and power converters. Basically your name would be made out of wire and over the years will become part of the structure. Coral will grow on it and it will slowly disappear and evolve into a reef. I made one for INK already so that next year at the conference I can show others the transformation.
I thrive off the byproduct of learning about your own culture by participating within another. It can be as simple as the way we perceive materials or as complex to the way we comprehend the arts. However it is that dialogue, the transitional pull, that I feel can provide new insight into our own intimate history and contribution. While as in the past I have felt I controlled the variables of my art too much this time I feel I succeeded in creating something that wasn’t just mine. The organization I was at flourished because people gave them the trust they needed. Yes the locals destroyed most of their environment and that bringing it back to its original glory might never happen but I feel it doesn’t mean they have lost their chance to try.
By Joey Ellis, INK2011 Attendee
http://www.joeyfosterellis.com/
http://kungfu4coral.com/
If you are interested in sponsoring a coral name (each name costs $35 USD), please click here.

Talavya at Fireflies

Talavya playing at Fireflies Music Festival 2012

Talavya playing at Fireflies Music Festival 2012

Quite possibly the country’s most eclectic lineup of musicians played to a highly appreciative and energetic audience at the Fireflies Music Festival 2012 last weekend in Bangalore. Fireflies is one of India’s few all night music festivals, and regularly features top artists from across the country. Despite the fact that the festival was packed with amazing performers and performances, it seemed to me that Talavya was the top act of the event for the majority of the audience.

Talavya, a 5-person tabla group that was a crowd favorite at INK2011, closed the entire Fireflies festival as the grand finale. The crowd was left begging for more after Talavya dished out taals that defined speed and accuracy. One of the compositions, Gati, imitated the sound of a train with precision and creativity. Talavya ended with a tandav that was so fast-paced and intense, that people could not help but get up and move to the captivating rhythm. Their performance sustained such high energy and excitement that the entire crowd of 2000 continued to shout for encores even after the artists were ushered off the stage.

After the concert I bumped into Heena Patel of Talavya at the food court. She was as enthusiastic about Talavya’s performance and the Fireflies festival as I was, saying that it was an amazing opportunity for Talavya to be performing for an audience with such varied musical tastes. I couldn’t agree with her more. One thing is certain – Talavya was a highlight of Fireflies, and I’m going to make sure I get myself a nice front row seat for their next gig.

Talavya at Fireflies

By Nikhil More, INK Visual Communications

March 5, 2012

Talavya’s INK performance will be uploaded soon. To read their bio for INK2011, click here.

Simon Lewis: One Year Post-INK

To quote from my Introduction to Rise and Shine, I wrote it, “…with the information I used to achieve my recovery, in order to share the knowledge that I wish someone had given me.”

But after publication of my inspirational memoir, and as is true with most new books, there was almost no publicity for it. Connie Martinson, member of the National Book Critics Circle and host of Connie Martinson Talks Books on local public television, recognized its merit and interviewed me. There was praise on a couple of blogs and newspaper websites. But my goal for Rise and Shine—to reach and inspire people with the possibilities of our minds, bodies and souls—fast faded before the reality that I had little access to media or the Internet, beyond websites I might create but few would find. The barriers seemed insurmountable, my book and its message of hope destined for obscurity.

Then, Lakshmi Pratury read my book, and came to LA to meet me for a lunch I’ll never forget. She enthusiastically invited me to the INK Conference, to talk about the role that technology played in my recovery, to show science-based treatments designed to yield measurable and repeatable results, that are not widely known or available.

With Lakshmi’s invitation, everything changes, bringing my ideas to a world forum for the first time. TED honors my INK talk with upload to TED.com, and Deepak Chopra invites me to his Foundation’s Sages and Scientists Symposium, with first reactions from children:

Dear Simon, I really enjoyed your talk! I am really inspired. I learned so much. Thank you so much! K. (Age 13)

And adults alike:

Please keep telling your story. It transforms all of us! T.

Almost two hundred comments post from the TED Community, with volunteers translating my talk into many languages, and hundreds of thousands finding it at TED.com, the INK Community, and Internet sites around the world.

Because knowledge in the medical world tends not to flow but instead pools around centers of excellence, and because I wrote Rise and Shine to release some of that information, INK and TED’s online audience inspire me to create a unique book website to illustrate some of its technologies and ideas: to add to the information in my talk and my book.

To build the site, I work with clinicians and others, who generously provide annotated 3-D reconstructions and PowerPoint presentations about our brains, our teeth and jaws, our pelvis and feet, to show the power and beauty of technology to those in search of the hidden path to self-knowledge.

It’s because of INK and TED that people can find my website, and thousands now browse it from every continent, and state in the USA.

More support, and a chance to interact directly with people with questions about my ideas, comes when TED enables me to offer an online Conversation on my topic, How do we make the most of our Consciousness?

This is scheduled for two hours and extends for two days because so many participate, from countries including India, the USA, South Korea and China. A TED viewer and reader of Rise and Shine is inspired to rise at 2:00 AM in Singapore to participate.

Another viewer and reader recommends my book to a journalist, to whom I give more materials and interviews for The Atavist, so I can use that online magazine’s multimedia capabilities in combination with my talk and book, to communicate aspects of consciousness from multiple perspectives.

Following this, I’m interviewed on National Public Radio’s Snap Judgment and KCRW’s Unfictional and The Business, available on SoundCloud or my website.

Simon Lewis with a fan from Malaysia

Simon Lewis in a handmade, pure silk batik shirt from Malaysia

Word continues to spread. A viewer of my INK talk on TED, and then reader of Rise and Shine, flies from his home in Kuala Lumpur to Los Angeles to ask questions about my book and discuss a speaking tour in the Far East, for he feels its ideas are so relevant in Malaysia.

Another reader in Switzerland who found Rise and Shine only because of my talk at INK and TED is so interested by my book’s ideas that he just posted seven chosen paragraphs from it to a support forum of which he’s a member for their discussion, and wishes I would visit to speak and answer questions.

In another INK and TED connection, LA Philharmonic first violin and TED Senior Fellow Robert Vijay Gupta who presented at INK2011, feels so passionately about Rise and Shine and its message of hope about music and the mind that he donates a beautiful performance at my most recent Book Talk at Westwood Library.

Simon Lewis with a reader at the Westwood Library (photo: Maya Dinan)

INK2011 Speaker Robert Gupta plays at the book talk in Westwood (photo: Maya Dinan)

I’ve come to understand that we have the tools to develop a coherent program that optimizes learning from infancy to old age, and at this Book Talk I shared my goal to start a nonprofit to conduct a long-term international study, to explore new approaches to the processes of learning, to see how many in society may benefit from treatments and protocols I describe in Rise and Shine, that changed my mind and changed my life.

It’s been a busy first year since INK. My quest to give people more ideas beyond my talk continues. It’s a challenge each day to find advocates to continue my efforts to reach people, and the support of the INK and TED Community over the last year—including this blog—makes a world of difference. I feel so very fortunate to be offered these chances, on this journey that began with my book about a single shared moment in my life, and that continues through the INK and TED Community around the world.

Thank you all.

By Simon Lewis, INK2010 Speaker and author of Rise and Shine

Los Angeles

To share comments about Rise and Shine, please visit its Amazon page or Barnes & Noble page.

Please “Like” Rise and Shine on its Facebook page if you would like updates.

Fellows Insights: Selene Biffi and the Village Changemakers

Four days full of inspiration, innovation and a renewed sense of purpose. But also four days of fun, friendship and hope.

This – and much more – were my days at the INK Conference in Jaipur, this past December.

I arrived in Jaipur excited, curious and yes, a bit anxious too. It’s not every day that you get selected to become an INK Fellow out of a pool of hundreds of applications; much less so if what you do is comics.

The inspiration for Plain Ink, my non-profit, came from my participation in the UN mission to Afghanistan. In 2009 I spent six months writing a textbook for Afghan children, which soon turned into a comic book. In a country where the literacy rate is approximately 23%, comics seemed a more promising choice than a standard textbook for communicating vital public information. I wanted to use comics to circumnavigate the stumbling blocks of poverty – illiteracy, failing public health, poor livelihoods and the like.

After avoiding a Taliban attack due to sheer luck, an evacuation, and five more months of work in Afghanistan, my UN contract came to an end. What came next? I decided to invest everything that I had in creating Plain Ink, a non-profit storytelling organisation that produces educational comics for children in emerging countries, such as Afghanistan and India.

After one year in the making and several rounds of piloting in Jalilpur – a slum of 10,000 people on the outskirts of Varanasi – I was proud to show my comics for Indian children at INK. ‘The Village Changemakers’ – that’s the title of the first book – received a lot of interest and curiosity after my talk, and many people in the audience approached me to find out more and browse the sample copies that I had.

Plain Ink managed to print and distribute the first 2,000 comic books a few days after leaving INK, involving schools, clinics and children in Jalilpur as much as sorrounding areas. Educational activities involving songs, readings and demonstrations were also carried out at various locales in order to show children and their families that comics can be a lot of fun, but also very useful in teaching basic notions of communicable diseases prevention, food security and clean water access.

Plain Ink is now getting into its second reprint, and I have been in touch with all those that showed interest at the INK conference. But Plain Ink is also looking forward to broadening its reach thanks to the opportunity and visibility that INK – before anyone else – gave us to showcase our work.

What is more, Plain Ink is also hard at work on some ideas generated by our participation at INK, including children dramas, an education/livelihood program and further stories now being developed.

Being selected as an INK Fellow made a whole world of difference for me and Plain Ink and, I am sure, for many others. May this momentum keep growing, and show that another way – of living, acting and dreaming – is indeed possible.

By INK2011 Fellow Selene Biffi
February 6, 2012
You can reach Biffi at info@plainink.org
Biffi’s talk from INK2011 will be uploaded to www.INKtalks.com soon.
Check out the Village Changemakers at http://issuu.com/plaininkbooks/docs/the_village_changemakers