Nathan Xavier

February 19, 2016 10:45 AM
The third challenge, like its predessors, had been preceded with a notice in each common room to inform the students they were to meet in front of the main entrance into the Gardens on Saturday morning and they were advised to wear 'clothing that would not be ruined by a bit of dirt.' No other clues were given as to what the third challenge would entail.

As the groups began to gather at the designated place and time, they found fifteen platforms lined up against the outside hedge of the labyrinth and Nathan Xavier standing on the one in the center, which was marked as belonging to group eight. The platforms were about five foot square, and gave the groundskeeper an extra foot of height so he could be seen easier by those at the back of the growing crowd.

Nathan did not wait much past the advertised 9:30 start time before beginning. "Hello, and welcome to the third and final challenge. As you may have guessed based on the previous themes and the mention of dirt, today will focus on Earth. We will finish off the elements when we announce the winning group at the bonfire at the end of the year. So far, our leaders are Groups Two, Five, and Three, so congratulations to them, and those are the teams to outdo today, if you can."

He took a brief pause, mostly to catch his breath and rub his sweaty palms on his robes (the weather was very nearly perfect today, but Nathan was unused to addressing so many people at once and he felt quite hot under so many gazes). "What we'll be doing is creating an art project using natural materials you find in the Gardens. Construct your sculpture on the platform labeled with your group number. Everyone should help contribute to your team masterpiece. You may use magic to help during material gather or construction if you'd like, but it is not required. I'd appreciate it if you don't cut down whole trees, but pretty much anything you find in the labyrinth is fair game to use in your project as long as it fits on your platform. Points will be awarded by a judging panel of staff members based on creativity and aesthetic quality. No need to rush. You have all day. Find me if you have any questions or concerns. Picnic lunches will be made available at noon. Now, go forth and create!"

Terminating the sonorus charm that had been making his voice easily heard by all, he stepped down off the platform and wiped his brow with his sleeve. He was looking forward to seeing what the students came up with, but he was glad his speaking part was over.

And he hoped the kids didn't tear up his Gardens too horribly.


OOC: As before, this will be Quidditch style posting in no particular order. Each team has a 5x5 platform to build their artistic creation upon. You can use anything in the labyrinth in your project: plants, rocks, dirt, park benches, gnomes if you can get then to stay put... whatever you can get onto your platform. Enjoy!
Subthreads:
1 Nathan Xavier Challenge 3: Earth's Majesty and Nature's Beauty 28 Nathan Xavier 1 5


Brandon Carey

February 25, 2016 10:27 PM
Brandon hadn’t known what Xavier had in mind for the third challenge when he’d seen the notice, but it had sounded promising enough that he hadn’t even gotten too mad at Diana when his sister had criticized the job he’d done of shrinking a pair of his pants down to her size – Di had worn his clothes all the time when they were younger, but she had sort of stopped growing, or at least slowed down a lot, about the time Brandon really got started, and now he was nearly a foot taller than her – and then changed the color of the stitching around the pockets and hems to make it match the blouse she had decided to wear. He didn’t know what had happened to her when he came to school first to make her start caring about things like that and never planned to wear those pants again as long as he lived, but it wasn't enough to completely ruin his mood. The notice had said the challenge was in the Gardens, which he knew inside and out, and that they should expect to be covered in dirt by the end, which to him sounded….

…Well, honestly, he couldn’t say why he thought it sounded like something that wouldn’t scatter his attention as far and wide as the second challenge had, but somehow, it just sounded like something that was going to go better for him than the air challenge had. He had a good feeling about it.

When he heard what it was, he wasn’t sure whether he still did or not. Brandon drew well enough that he was proud of it and didn’t feel he was giving himself too much credit to think he did it well – the fact he could draw really well was what had gotten him in trouble in his first year when Professor Skies had realized that he was a lot better at conveying his thoughts that way than with confounded written words – but he hadn’t done much sculpture, much less sculpture with natural elements. He had built things out of sticks and mud when he was a little kid, but that had just been for fun. It had not had aesthetic quality.

Still, though, it was better than flying around a maze, struggling to remember which turns he’d already taken while waiting for obstacles to suddenly fly up in front of him, plus the challenge lasting all day meant he had time to help Miss Araceli keep her hands clean if she was reluctant to dirty them and therefore to possibly win himself a few points in Anthony’s good books when he got home for the summer. Points with Anthony were points with the whole family at this point, at least their part of it, and that was the only part that really mattered to Brandon. This challenge was still okay in his book.

“So,” he said to the group, when they were dismissed to work. “Does anyone have any experience with sculpture here? I can draw, but I’ve never done wood sculpting.”
0 Brandon Carey Heading back for the top (Group Fifteen!) 275 Brandon Carey 0 5


Tobias Reinhardt

February 26, 2016 7:53 AM
From first, to ninth. It was a change that would bother even those least competitive of people, Tobi thought as he arrived on time for the third challenge, but Liac’s team was fourth overall (although Arne’s was fourteenth) so he was happy for his cousin and happy his team was not in the bottom like Arne’s was. Arne had been so hot and cold lately with him that Tobi didn’t really know what to do. He was getting kind of tired of it, if he was going to be completely honest. At the beginning he had tried to be understanding and give Arne lots of space to figure out whatever it was he needed to figure out. However, at this point it was just irritating. His little brother didn’t know how lucky their family was, Tobi thought with an uncharacteristic scowl. Instead, he preferred to hang around with a group of entirely inappropriate kids, the sort that Tobi never would have dreamed of being around (should he ever have a wish to be around anyone) and snark at the family.

However, the art project challenge was exactly the sort of thing to bring Tobi out of his foul mood. It was as though the challenge had been created for them Reinhardts specifically. He had some decent good ideas for his team’s sculpture, but he was hesitant. The old Tobi wouldn’t have minded sacrificing a bit of ranking to help out his brother, but this was different. Not only did his contributions affect how his team as a whole performed (making it so that his actions reflected not only him but also Duncan Brockert, Brandon Carey, Araceli, Izrael Tizze, Sylvetta Vuong, and Joe Umland) but he also didn’t feel like catering to Arne’s whims anymore. His brother was only thirteen, but it was about time he grew up.

He looked towards Brandon Carey when he spoke. Brandon was one of those purebloods, one with a name and a place in society. The Reinhardts (aside from Liac’s branch) were purebloods too, but they had never really adhered to the stringent rules of society, making their living from craft and trade, prioritising skill over blood so that they openly welcoming Liac’s Muggle mother since she was a talented clock-maker. He and Liac had been raised to respect and use societal manners while in public, but their way of thinking was different, so much so that sometimes Tobi felt uncomfortable being labelled a pureblood. Sometimes he thought it would be easier to be Liac, be a halflblood, be someone that didn’t have to live up to expectations that society put forth because there were no expectations.

That was something that Arne never understood and Tobi didn’t think his brother were would understand either. It was all well and good to be the oldest and have an idea about the future, have a secure job waiting when graduation from school finally passed, but there was no room for dreaming, for another idea to pass the future, and that’s what Tobi wanted most of all, more than anything. If he did well on this challenge it would make his dad proud, it would hurt Arne, it would hurt Tobi, because doing well—giving his team some of his best work, it would show Father that Tobi was serious about the business, it would eliminate any chance for Arne to overtake him in later years, it would resign him to a life of charming when what he really wanted to do was work in a wildlife refuge.

But if he performed poorly, then he would have to face both Arne and Liac who would just know that the almost fifteen year old had thrown the competition. He would have to deal with the disappointed looks of his relatives, of his teammates who weren’t involved at all in the familial situation. He would make room for his father to question his ability, to perhaps change the future for himself, but it would hurt more people in the long run. What he wanted didn’t really factor in here, and so he answered Brandon Carey in the affirmative.

“Does a Reinhardt have any experience in sculpting?” Tobi asked with an easy smile to show that he wasn’t accosting Brandon for his remark but was rather playful saying that yes, he did have a considerable background. The Reinhardts were well-known throughout Europe, especially Germany, for their magnificent metal charming sculptures that were both aesthetically pleasing but also served practical uses at times (like a wonderful never-ending shelf with a constantly changing ocean he’d once seen in his grandfather’s workshop) but ever since Uncle Heinrich and his wife Aunt Raina, came to the United States all those years ago so that Aunt Raina could study American clock-making in Boston and his father had followed to study Pacific Northwest wood designs, the name was becoming known in the former colony too. Tobi himself had been carving ever since his parents had deemed him old enough to hold a knife, which meant seven years old in private with his dad when his mom wasn’t around, and eight years old in public when Kaili Reinhardt had relented on her husband’s birthday.

“I can’t promise it will be perfect,” he added. “But I know enough.” He had helped his father finish a piece for a customer the previous summer, for the first time being let out of the back-workshop where he and Arne had always messed around as children, back before Arne had grown sullen, carving stupid trinkets to give Matti and Lukas. He knew that in the coming summer his father was going to expect him to complete his first full piece, despite wizarding laws on underage magic. “And I can show anyone who wants the basics.” But he wasn’t going to draft something up for them to make. No, he would save his ideas for the summer. If he was going to break the law under his father’s orders by working his magic into his carving, then he was going to do it fabulously.
10 Tobias Reinhardt So long as it's not <i>too</i> top... 289 Tobias Reinhardt 0 5

Joseph Umland

February 26, 2016 2:25 PM
When the results for the second challenge went up, Joe was deeply, truly happy – about the fact that he had not taunted his brother too much after the first challenge, that was. Team Fifteen’s new place did not exactly do as much for him as the knowledge that he had made a smart decision did. He had liked being at the top of the food chain. He had hoped John’s team would at least improve because it wasn’t at all fitting for one of the Umland boys to be in any way associated with such a low rank, but he hadn’t wanted Team Three to improve that much. If he had mocked John when Fifteen was on top, his brother would have gotten his revenge after their fortunes were reversed. Brotherly prerogatives went both ways.

Another day, though, meant another challenge, one where John probably wouldn’t be able to fly or (possibly far more importantly) be able to avoid Jamie Park during again. That alone wasn’t enough to allow Joe to get his hopes of thoroughly re-trouncing his brother up too high before the earth challenge – John had never mastered the mindset of the youth movement at all, but he had been pretty good at the technical aspects of scouting when they were younger and spent a lot of time in the Labyrinth Gardens these days, taking extensive notes on the bird populations and behaviors for something Joe suspected his brother might mean to turn into an actual scientific paper someday – but he allowed said hopes to rise markedly when he heard what the challenge actually was. An artistic whole-group challenge was something he thought his team could do. They had proved they were pretty creative in the first challenge and if anyone wished the spit upon the very ground on which another team member stood, that person was able to put it aside when they were in challenges. American pureblood dudes also didn’t seem very macho in general, especially not in front of girls like Araceli, and most seemed to have been educated in a way even more old-fashioned than Joe had been anyway, so they probably didn’t have to worry about anyone refusing to do art in public or anything like that, either. The only issue would be if the purebloods were fussy about getting their hands dirty and he didn’t think them using magic to move things around would slow them down that much. They might just have this one in the bag.

Of course, he’d thought they had a better chance than they really had the last time, too, but this one was similar enough to the first challenge that he didn’t allow himself to return to anything worse than his initial balance of optimism and pessimism, instead continuing to favor optimism. They could do this.

Tobias Reinhardt, and to a lesser extent Brandon Carey, seemed to agree with him. Joe was relieved that he’d been right about them, though Brandon drawing and Tobias having a background in sculpture were things he found mildly surprising. He had just assumed they wouldn’t think of the whole thing as girly, not that they were actually accomplished in the arts. It was good, but kind of unexpected. He wondered if he should feel bad for being surprised.

No time, he decided. “I’ve only ever made a few bowls and a fish out of clay,” he admitted freely, “but that made me think – we don’t have to just rely on wood, either.” He didn’t blame Brandon for thinking along those lines since Mr. Xavier’s comment about not cutting down the trees did seem to point toward wood sculpture, but they had other resources and Joe thought that was an important thing to keep in mind. “This is the earth challenge, right? We’ve got a lot of dirt and gravel, way more than we do loose branches.”
16 Joseph Umland All or nothing, my friend. 329 Joseph Umland 0 5

Duncan Brockert

March 03, 2016 3:59 AM
After the second challenge, their team ranking had plummeted and Duncan felt awful about it. He blamed himself, felt he'd let everyone down. He knew that they weren't a team of flyers, of athletes, but he couldn't help but think it was his fault anyway rather than just the nature of the challenge not playing to their strengths. He was supposed to be their leader. What had he done wrong?

He just hoped they didn't think less of him now, especially Araceli.

Duncan tried to keep a positive attitude-and happy face- though as Mr. Xavier announced what they were to do for the next Challenge. It sounded more fun than the last one admittedly. There were people who weren't good at art but most people never seemed to object to doing it the way some did to flying. Plus art was a much more subjective thing and even those who couldn't draw or sculpt something specific could at the very least make something abstract and random. In fact, from what he understood, he had a relative who specialized in random works of art.

His expression became a lot more genuinely pleased when Brandon mentioned he could paint and downright thrilled when Tobi mentioned that yes, as a Reinhardt, he did know how to sculpt. "Fantastic!" Duncan exclaimed. Of course, the sixth year had heard of the Reinhardts' metal charming business. His parents owned some of their pieces as did his grandparents and a lot of his other relatives.

He had to feel a little bit bad for those whose families had a business that way though. What if someone had something else they wanted to do? Or weren't at all skilled in the family trade. He was glad his family, with their large size, wasn't that way and they could choose for themselves what they wanted to do. Duncan personally had decided to become someone who helped ghosts adjust to becoming ghosts. Something he didn't think anyone in his family had ever done.

However, right now, he had to admit that he was pretty pleased that the Reinhardts were like that. Or at the very least that they gave their children training in this particular area even if he did rather hope Tobi got to do what he wanted too, if he did want something else. Not that Duncan knew either way. Right now, he just wanted to go up a few places, even if they couldn't regain their first place spot.


"I haven't done any sculpture at all either, just drawing lessons." Some were typical of those in his position. "And gravel is a fantastic idea. Like maybe we could mainly use that." Duncan suggested. "Or like, make something out of mud and coat it with gravel. We should also incorporate magic somehow. Maybe make some kind of animal and use an animation charm to have it move. Since Joe has done a fish, maybe even an aquarium scene? With actual plants?"
11 Duncan Brockert All might be asking a bit much. How about something? 271 Duncan Brockert 0 5


Araceli Arbon

March 04, 2016 6:12 AM
The final challenge. Delphine breathed a sigh of relief. Although things had gone relatively smoothly, she still wasn’t a fan of surprises, or disruptions to her routine. She didn’t really care that their position had dropped so far after the second challenge. The less attention there was on her now, and Araceli if and when she returned, the better. Even though she didn’t like the challenges themselves, she greeted her team brightly - she liked most of them as people, and had no wish to make Duncan in particular think that she wasn’t happy about this situation, lest he either feel her feelings towards him were luke warm or that she was unhappy with him about their place in the rankings.

The last challenge sounded relatively pleasant. Art was not an area where she and Araceli differed greatly, having received the same basic lessons. Effie had always been more talented than both of them, although perhaps that was merely a product of her always having been a year ahead. Delphine had given up artistic pursuits well before their age difference would have ceased to be a factor.

“I learnt basic drawing and painting skills - water colours, that sort of thing,” she contributed. “It’s good to know we have at least one experienced sculptor though,” she smiled at Tobias. Given that she wasn’t the leader, she didn’t feel it was her place to suggest the role be handed to him, but she would be more than willing to follow his directions. “I’d be happy to learn,” she offered instead. “I think sticking charms will be handy,” she added, in response to Duncan, “That way we can more easily work things like gravel into pleasing and artistic shapes.” Without magic, she wasn’t sure that gravel would be very artistic at all.
13 Araceli Arbon Better than nothing 290 Araceli Arbon 0 5

Joe Umland

March 10, 2016 3:25 PM
Joe was glad to have his input acknowledged by the team leader, even gladder to have Duncan acknowledge it without any particular degree of condescension that he could hear, but he hadn’t meant to steer the team in an aquatic direction and hoped the others were not under the impression he was some High Master of Fish Sculpting. His mom had thought the fish was nice and it had a place in the curio cabinet with her collection of Alice tea things (he had painted white loop-the-loops on its head in imitation of a wig and painted the tail fins black for shoes in the hopes of making it somehow vaguely resemble a footman for that very reason; the art director hadn’t seemed amused, but then, that particular art director had been very difficult to amuse in general), but though he was still a little proud of how he’d done with the tail, Joe was old enough now to see that the whole project looked more like a hollowed-out burrito with fins and frog eyes than like any common species of fish. Summer camp projects were not exactly the gateway to a life in the arts. He had never even laid eyes on the kiln, much less acquired a clue about how to use one.

Since his first suggestions had been received pretty well, though, he decided to hazard a few more thoughts. Sculpture might not have really been his thing, but highly energetic make-believe had been a very popular pastime in his house until John started school, enough that he was kind of surprised that he and John had escaped early childhood with four functioning eyeballs and most of a brain between them. Improvisation he could do.

“Dry earth and plants are stuff shapes can be made from, too,” he offered. “Cut into shapes, anyway. Mr. Xavier might not like it too much if we cut out huge chunks of the ground, but some smaller pieces…stretch them out with magic? Or – I don’t know – is there a way to fuse things together to get bigger pieces of rock? I don’t know how to do it, but, you know, first year.” He shrugged ruefully. At this point, most of what he knew about magic was just how much he didn’t know about magic. “I’m sure branches could be cut and bent into shapes and animated, but that might not have enough contrast if there are plants that are just supposed to be…plants in the picture, too.”
16 Joe Umland Well, there is that. 329 Joe Umland 0 5