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Mormon Artist Issue 5

Guess who forgot to blog about releasing Issue 4 of his magazine back in March? Whoops.

Anyway, Issue 5 of Mormon Artist is now available for your reading pleasure. Just hie on over to http://mormonartist.net and either read it online or download the PDF.

Mormon Artist Issue 5

We’ll have our special contest issue coming out in the next month or so, too. (And hopefully another contest shortly after that.)

You know, it kind of blows my mind that the magazine is still around. It’ll be a year next month since I got the idea for Mormon Artist, and here we are five issues later, with eighty-five volunteers helping out. Hard to believe.


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Comet crash

A couple days ago I took an old illustration I did and added some much-needed texture. I’m calling it “Comet Crash”:

Comet Crash

The initial illustration was pure Illustrator, and the textures (six or seven layers composited together) were added in Photoshop.


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Latin declensions chart WIP

I’m starting to do some more language-related design work and thought I’d post a sample. This is part of a Latin declensions chart:

Latin Declensions WIP

The colored part prints out darker, by the way, so it’s not quite as bright as it seems here.

Anyway, there’ll be more soon. I plan to focus on basic grammatical charts, though I might do some simple vocab lists and short texts as well. We’ll see — if you have any ideas or requests, let me know. The final charts will be released for free in PDF.

Update: I’ve finally finished the chart. It’s available on the Latin charts page. Enjoy!


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Selected sermons

I’ve been working on a new book for the past little while, and it’s almost done. The book is called Words of the Prophets: Selected Sermons from the Book of Mormon and is (as the title makes pretty clear) a compilation of sermons from the Book of Mormon — twenty-two, to be exact. I’ve pulled out the verse and chapter numbers and reparagraphed the text, so it looks like this:

Selected Sermons

Once it’s done, I’ll release it on my website (in PDF and EPUB) and put it up on Lulu as well so people can get hard copies (both paperback and hardcover) if they want.


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Beyond dabbling

I found this quote a long time ago in a festschrift for Thomas O. Lambdin and absolutely love it:

…Prof. Lambdin simply does not dabble in his languages. He attacks them, not only with zeal (though that is always present), but with a plan, to conquer them.

First, learn the basic grammar as it is commonly understood (or misunderstood), some basic vocabulary; read some texts. Then, like a linguistic pathologist, take the language apart: scrutinize the lexical bones, particularly those idioms, usually associated with the most common verbs, that present obstacles in every language; analyze the morphological muscles, render them unformidable; track down the syntactical tendons, overlooked by others. Meanwhile, put most of the dictionary on flash cards and commit it to memory. Now read the best of the literature like a native, until boredom sets in from lack of challenge, and it’s time to move on.

The number and range of languages that have been subjected to this process is remarkable: there are the Semitic languages, of course; but also Berber, Finnish, Turkish, Swahili, Hindi, Chinese, and some fifty or sixty others, it seems….

And when called upon to transmit his knowledge and understanding, another side of his extraordinary linguistic ability came into play; as a teacher of language, he is simply the best. It is one thing to be able to learn languages; it is quite another to describe them with such clarity that others are able to gain a similar understanding.

Occasionally, an available grammar would meet with his approval and be used. But more often, he would find the grammars too frustrating; if he did not feel comfortable with a language after going through a given grammar, he would not expect his students to. So he would write his own, a clear report of the dissection process described earlier, the morphology and syntax broken down into easily comprehended lessons, the vocabulary glossed in such a way that the words really do have meaning, and exercises, lots of exercises, written to ensure that the grammar and vocabulary make sense and are remembered, so that by the time the first texts are encountered, the language is an old friend, not a dimly perceived, refractory set of vaguely familiar forms.


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An eye single to the glory

Hugh Nibley’s got a riveting bit in “Zeal Without Knowledge” on our ability to only think of one thing at a time:

What would it be like if I could view and focus on two or more things at once, if I could see at one and the same moment not only what is right before me but equally well what is on my left side, my right side, what is above me and below me? I have the moral certainty that something is there, and as my eyes flicker about, I think I can substantiate that impression. But as to taking a calm and deliberate look at more than one thing at a time, that is a gift denied us at present. I cannot imagine what such a view of the world would be like; but it would be more real and correct than the one we have now….

Why this crippling limitation on our thoughts if we are God’s children? This puts us in the position of the fairy-tale hero who is introduced into a cave of incredible treasures and permitted to choose from the heap whatever gem he wants—but only one. What a delightful situation! I can think of anything I want to—absolutely anything!—with this provision: that when I choose to focus my attention on one object, all other objects drop into the background. I am only permitted to think of one thing at a time; that is the one rule of the game.

…It is precisely this limitation that is the essence of our mortal existence. If every choice I make expresses a preference, if the world I build up is the world I really love and want, then with every choice I am judging myself, proclaiming all the day long to God, angels, and my fellowmen where my real values lie, where my treasure is, the things to which I give supreme importance. Hence, in this life every moment provides a perfect and foolproof test of your real character, making this life a time of testing and probation.

Fascinating. I think he’s right, too. (Thanks to Jeff Thayne for the heads-up.)


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Mormon Artist Issue 3

I’m pleased to announce that Issue 3 of my magazine Mormon Artist is now available:

Mormon Artist Issue 3

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Mormon Artist Issue 2

After pulling two twelve-hour days on Friday and Saturday and working on the magazine since 2:30 this morning, I’ve finally finished Issue 2 of Mormon Artist:


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Mormon Artist on Twitter

My magazine, Mormon Artist, is now on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mormonartist. I’ll be posting relatively frequent updates on how the magazine’s going, so if you’re interested in keeping up with it, follow away.


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Mormon Artist: print edition available

We’d like to announce that the print edition of Issue 1 is now available via the print-on-demand magazine publisher MagCloud.com. And it costs $10.25 ($8.85 plus $1.40 shipping):

Order Issue 1 from MagCloud

Note #1: MagCloud.com will eventually allow you to subscribe to the magazine the way you subscribe to an ordinary magazine, but for now subscribing simply means that you’ll get an email when the next issue is released.

Note #2: While 20 cents per page for print-on-demand is a really good deal, we do hope to someday be able to charge only a few dollars for the magazine, like other magazines. But it’ll take a while to generate that capital, so for now we have slightly higher prices.

Note #3: During MagCloud’s beta period, they’re only shipping to U.S. addresses. If you’d like to buy a copy but live outside the U.S., email us and we’ll work something out.


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