Hosted by Analog Artist Digital World & MAD about Words
Crawling in 3D
Feb 12th
Crawling at the Peacock Room
Dec 30th
The Artist & Writer Crawl I hosted made for a very fun evening. I met so many new artists and writers. After all the Crawlers saw “The Singing Menorah” we headed up to the Peacock Room at 1321 North Mills Avenue. I reloaded my water brush in the men’s room an then sat at the end of the bar so I could get a good view down it’s length. Karrie Brown and Tod Caviness are shown in the sketch diligently putting images and words to paper. Tisse Mallon followed the Crawl taking photos along the way. I would estimate that there were about 20 Crawlers all together. People come and went throughout the night. After a while it became impossible to distinguish the Crawlers from the regulars. A large group of people showed up all of them coming from Bold Hype Gallery where they saw the work of Andrew Spear. I spoke with someone who was trying to get the bartenders attention. It turns out he is a web designer and fine artist and we discussed art while I continued to sketch.
The walls of the bar were covered with paintings of women with really large eyes by Patrick Fatica. The work was highly polished, surreal and haunting. The paintings had long titles which would make you pause and wonder like “The angels have slipped through our landslide and filled up our garden with snow.” This painting has a large eyed woman holding a towel over her bare breasts standing in front of a mist filled white landscape.
I had a beer at each bar we went to and after this sketch I focused a bit more on socializing than sketching. At the end of the evening only 5 artists remained. As we stumbled across the street from the Funkey Monkey towards Wally’s we were almost all killed when a police car came screaming down Mills in the center turn lane at 90 miles an hour. It really was a close and sobering near miss. With our crossing attempt thwarted we had to run back to the sidewalk to avoid the new line of traffic approaching.
In Wally’s I ordered my last beer for the evening from the sullen bar maid and sipped it while watching a man and woman who were rubbing noses and making out. When they left the woman tripped on a bar stool and could bairley keep her eyes open. Tod didn’t like the music playing on the jut box so he got up and remedied the situation. It was 2AM when we all decided to call it a night.\
-Analog Artist Digital World
Relic
Dec 29th
Relic
Soft lights of Newport. 100’s or box?
So many Marlboro colors to choose.
Parliament available for the usual taste.
Joe Camel comes in the hard pack.
Cigarette machine hidden from the concerns
Of parents and over zealous anti-smokers.
Welcomes for $7.50 in the exact change.
The bar-keep is happy to help.
The colorful temptation from the past
Unassuming under the television’s cries.
Place your drink on top of her,
Push her button and get the prize.
That satisfies.
Two Monkeys
Dec 17th
Silly me. On Saturday, December 12th at 6 pm, I arrived at the Drunken Monkey on Bumby Ave. looking for writers and artists. I spent two straight hours writing – which felt great - although I didn’t recognize anyone at the café.
When I turned in my tea glass before leaving, I asked the waitress if she knew about the writer/artist crawl event. Puzzled, she asked me whether it might have been at the Funky Monkey not there at the Drunken Monkey! Ooops. I realized my goof…
Anyhow, sorry I missed you all but I did get out of the house and cranked out some work on a chapter I’m sweating over for my memoir.
Hope to see you all next time!
Happy Holidays,
Charlene
Energizing Crawl
Dec 16th
Being a prose writer, with two projects seriously in progress, and a half dozen half-baked ideas, the Orlando Artists & Writers Crawl of December 12 wasn’t so much directly reflected in the writing I went home to do afterward, but the energy of talking writing, publishing, and editing with other creative minds definitely put the spark back into my pen. Thanks to all those involved in organizing.
The Singing Menorah
Dec 14th
Brian Feldman had been ribbing me for some time about all the Singing Christmas Trees sketches I have been posting here on Analog Artist Digital World. At an 8 AM Meeting of MOOM (Meeting of Orlando Minds) on Friday, Brian suggested he might stage a performance of the Singing Menorah at the Track Shack which is at 1104 North Mills Avenue right in the area where I planned to host an Artists and Writers Crawl. He pointed out that Track Shack had one of the few storefront Hanukkah displays in Orlando. The Crawl was only a day away but Brian managed to throw together a stellar performance. He had help from Omar Delarosa who co-wrote many of the lyrics and performed on guitar. Knowing the times of the stops along the Crawl route we agreed that he could start his performance around 8PM when the Crawlers were moving from the first stop, The Peacock Room to the Second stop, Wills Pub.
The Crawl developed a glitch from the start, when Tisse Mallon and I arrived at The Peacock room to find that it would not open for another two hours. I wrote a note and stuck it on the door so other Crawlers would know to go to the second stop, Will’s pub. Because I wandered around and introduced myself to all the people who arrived at Will’s, my sketch was not a very focused. When it was time to wander up to the next stop, I was still splashing watercolors on the sketch. Other crawlers headed out but I kept working. When I arrived at Track Shack where Brian was to perform, there were a crowd of Crawlers sitting in lawn chairs on the sidewalk looking into the storefront window. Omar was playing guitar. At the appointed time Brian walked out having to squeeze in the space between the plate glass and the display wall.
The performance was hilarious and fun. New Hanukkah lyrics had been written for a number of pop tunes. The Menorah that Brian was sporting consisted of cardboard tubes wrapped in tin foil. There were Hanukkah cards leaning up against the storefront window and for some reason a small Mickey Mouse sat watching the audience. Emma Hughes handed out dreidels to everyone in the audience when Brian sang a dreidel song. For the final number, Brian called in his back up dancer named Willoughby Mariano. It seemed most appropriate that she had a cast on her left leg from her foot up to the knee, but she still performed and gave a new meaning to the saying, “Break a leg”. Later, Emma handed out sparklers and when the performance was over everyone lit them up and the lights and sparks danced. Unfortunately, I didn’t get a sparkler since I was still scratching away in my sketch book.
Several times, cars stopped dead on Mills Avenue to see what the excitement was about and several cars honked. However, my attention was sharply focused on the show. This is without a doubt the greatest Singing Menorah performance I have ever seen. Well, yes, it is the only Singing Menorah performance I have ever seen. For the remainder of the Crawl I heard people commenting on how surprised they were that Brian had such a good singing voice. Brian truly gave the Singing Christmas trees a run for their money.
-Analog Artist Digital World
Share Your Work
Dec 12th

You’re invited — encouraged — to share your sketches, writing, commentary or photos here after the Crawl.
Contact us to receive login information.
The Itinerary
Dec 11th

Bring your notebooks, your pens, and your sense of adventure. Tap into the energy and go with the flow!
** Breaking News **
Dec 11th
Thor reports breaking news: “Brian Feldman will be staging a performance in the Track Shack store front window which is on the Artists and Writers Crawl route. The Track Shack is between The Peacock Room and Will’s Pub. I will probably stop and do a sketch. Brian’s performance will probably begin around 8PM.”
See “The Singing Menorah” A Brian Feldman production at the Artist and Writer Crawl.





Recent Comments