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Glyphix for Visual Journaling: Drawing Out the Words Within
 
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Glyphix for Visual Journaling: Drawing Out the Words Within [Paperback]

L. J. C. Shimoda
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Shimoda shows you how to draw your own feelings instead of writing themthis book will have you creating your own, personal language in no time. Discover the different meanings in the words you write, and learn to use them more precisely with Glyphix.- Personal Journaling October 2002

Product Description

A provocative new approach to journaling the self . . . Glyphix are what words look like when they are "felt and drawn" instead of spelled. Each person's Glyphix are a unique key to personality. Taking inspiration from Asian pictographs and using a Japanese shodo brush, L.J.C. Shimoda explains how using 66 ordinary English words as prompts for meditation, writing, and drawing Glyphix can help you examine your feelings and relationships to achieve personal and artistic growth. Creating Glyphix is fun, too, a great way for kids and logophiles alike to discover how words work on different levels of meaning. L.J.C. Shimoda is an artist, illustrator, and graphic designer whose work includes the acclaimed drawings in 365 Views of Mt. Fuji.


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3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating Concept With Some Problems In Presentation, Jun 21 2002
By 
Ruth Edlund "dark goddess of replevin" (King County, Washington:) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Glyphix for Visual Journaling: Drawing Out the Words Within (Paperback)
This book describes briefly, in several passages scattered throughout the book, and demonstrates amply, a technique for exploring ideas that the author has dubbed "glyphix."

The first step in creating a glyphix is to represent a chosen word through a drawing. For example, the way the author describes the glyphix for the concept "glyphix" itself (the drawing that appears on the cover of the book above) is that it is the "profile of an eye, open wide with curiosity; the projection from the eye signifies true seeing/understanding." The author uses a _shodo_ brush and _sumi_ ink to produce elegant characters with an Asian feel, but the editor's introduction encourages readers to use tools on hand. The glyphix is somewhat akin to the symbolism used in American Sign Language and the Word Sculptures of Gabrielle Lusser Rico.

The second step (the author is not particularly rigid about the order in which these steps should be followed) is to create a "string," which is a list of the denotations of the word.

The third step is the "exploration" of the word's associations and connotations.

There are two problems with the way the above information is summarized and illustrated in this book.

The first, which is minor, is that the explanatory text is scattered throughout the book. For me to understand the artist's method required a lot of paging back and forth in the book aside from looking at the illustrations. It struck me as odd that a book about a method of integrating drawing and text wasn't successful in doing so in a didactic fashion. This is an organizational issue, however, and not unusual.

The second problem I had with this book is more significant: a flaw in the way the publisher chose to display the glyphix. Many of these truly exquisite drawings are spread across two pages, which means that a good part of the drawing runs into, and is cut off by, the bindings in the center of the book (I think this is called the "gutter" in bookbinder's terms). This seriously diminishes their impact, and the ability of the reader to enjoy and absorb them. Those glyphix that appear on a single page, with explanatory text on the facing page, are much more pleasing to the eye.

The choice to make the book smaller, and the glyphix larger, while it may have decreased the cost of the book, impairs the visual value of the art portrayed as well. It's a shame that such a business decision was made in production, because the concept is truly useful.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A new approach, Jun 14 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Glyphix for Visual Journaling: Drawing Out the Words Within (Paperback)
This book suggests an approach to writing that begins with drawing your own artistic rendering of what a word looks like. The author's illustrations are Zen-like, simple Shodo brush drawings that encourage a meditative approach to language. I have no artistic ability at all and was astonished both at the ways I found to interpret a word through form and shape, and at the deepened relationship with it that emerged as I encoded my own interpretation.
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5.0 out of 5 stars a tool for life balance, May 29 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Glyphix for Visual Journaling: Drawing Out the Words Within (Paperback)
Shimoda's book is a wonderful tool for exploring your emotional side and bringing balance into your life. In a culture where life balance is rarely encouraged, spending an hour doing glyphix journaling in the morning could make your whole day go better. (The simple act of centering yourself enough to make the drawings will give you a sense of inner peace.) You don't have to be an artist or writer to enjoy this book. Even if you think it's slightly wacky, give it a try and you might be surprised at your new inight.
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