Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Tiger Lily Headpiece Exhibit

Yesterday I had the blessing and opportunity to share my headpieces and some select jewelry at Wild Woman "My Body is My Sanctuary".

Tiger Lily is a Wild Woman because she is in tune with nature and uses her surroundings and resources available to adorn herself.


The headpieces I’ve created are based on the whimsical world J.M. Barrie creates in Peter Pan crossbred with the urban fashion and style of young artists in modern-day Brooklyn. Her transformation from Native Princess to Pirate Queen is demonstrated through the headpieces. 



Native American headdresses and pieces are very distinct and each adornment, feather, bead signify an achievement. These pieces serve as a badge or award for bravery or overcoming great adversity. 


Each headpiece tells a story and is available upon request.



The Tiger Lily Project includes a series of handmade headpieces representing the growth and development of her character throughout her experiences.

Each piece deals with a major decision she has to make in order to overcome a situation, hardship or make a direct choice in life leading her onward. Some are quite simple, very obvious and came easy without too much fret while others came with many scars and tears. 

As she progresses in her journey, the pieces get more and more complex as her story and understanding of her self-growth progresses. 

Thursday, September 8, 2011

The Tiger Lily Project

     The story of Tiger Lily is adapted from what we know as the world J. M. Barrie created in the famous tale of Peter Pan. In my novel, the characters of Peter Pan exist in modern day New York City, where young artists strive to achieve their goal, to become a professional and working artist in a city where inspiration and stimulation thrive. 
Neverland is a conceptual state of mind, rather than an actual location. Neverland is still a state where those do no grow old. It is a magical place filled with mermaids, pirates and Indians, exotic wildlife, play sword fights and childlike wonder. This land exists within every artist’s mind. Artistic creations are born within this state.
Neverland exists throughout the city in small artistic communities such as communes and collectives. The ultimate goal of these communities is to reach a constant state of Neverland, the artist’s nirvana (free from suffering). Suffering, in this case, is withstanding society’s pressures to grow up, go to war, work for a corporate business, rely on an economy based on paper money. These communities strive to become self-sustaining, surviving and thriving off of as little as possible by selling artistic creations, coordinating community events or parties, planting green roofs etc. Some would describe this lifestyle as “living the dream”. However, achieving Neverland is not to be confused with “fame”. Fame is not a direct measure of success in the process of achieving Neverland. 
     
Tiger Lily’s Conception 
As a writer and performer, I have chosen method writing as a way to immerse myself as best as possible into the world of Tiger Lily. I chose to work with her character (as opposed to Wendy or Peter) because she is a strong female, a loyal friend and most importantly, she stays in Neverland. Wendy eventually succumbs to the pressures of society and leaves Neverland to “grow up” and become a mother and housewife. Tiger Lily is not so impressed by this complacent lifestyle in the “normal” world and instead becomes assimilated to the pirate culture within Neverland. The pirates teach Tiger Lily about survival as a “grown up” within Neverland. 
Buried Treasure 
Tiger Lily’s tribe, as many Native American tribes, believed in “waste not, want not”. Lily uses found materials, otherwise rendered as trash, to create jewelry, clothing and accessories. She adorns herself with feathers, old coins, toys, utensils, plastic yogurt containers, whatever she can find to transform resources around her into art and something of perceived value and beauty.
The headdresses I’ve created are based on the whimsical world J.M. Barrie creates in Peter Pan crossbred with the urban fashion and style of young artists in modern-day Brooklyn. Her transformation from Native Princess to Pirate Queen is demonstrated through the headpieces. 



Type-Casting

"Here, can you read for this role?" , he handed me the script.

"Sure, just let me take a look..."

I scanned the page. Just what I suspected. Another angry woman character, throwing things, throwing insults, screeching and cawing, biting and scratching and just being, well, bat sh*t crazy.

Ramona - 40s, female, an emotional ticking time-bomb, furious at her husband for blah blah something or other.

"No thanks." I pushed the script back into his hands

"You won't read for it?" he asked, stunned.

"I'll have to pass, is that the only role you have left?"

"Thanks, we'll call you". The casting director shooed me out the door.

Sigh. 

***

You know, some days you're just not in the mood to play that role. They expect you to because it fits, because you own it. You know it'd be a big hit, that's why they called you down.

Today, that's just not me. 

They even fed me the lines...all I needed was to just jump in. They set the scene, it's all ready. He wrote that role for me. I know he wanted me to play her, but I'm just too tired. 

Next time you write something for me, honey, cast me as the friend or the advisor. Hell, cast me as the house cat. 

I heard once before that we're only allotted a certain of number of tears per person. 

How can you expect me to cry real tears on cue for that? I got none left, baby.

Try another actress, she'll be happy to play that part. Not me.