A bit of foreshortening going down.
Pencil 13 x 21cm. Click to enlarge.
A bit of foreshortening going down.
Frame one from The Cuckoo Memorandum. Another from Turning Japanese.
Be prepared is my motto.
My latest page of Memoirs. It's all true, I swear it.
I'm REALLY glad that the mural is being painted on panels which allows me to work in the garage around my schedule during odd hours! I don't feel rushed, yet I feel like I'm still getting things accomplished (even with daytime demands).
This evening, I played around with the grape colors, bringing them closer to what I want. I still need to build up layers and values.
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A to Z Challenge Day 15: O . . 4 Stars Ollie Tuloolah Tubithah Dethoolah Ardellis Devadisl is one very lucky girl. Her wondrous name comes from not one relative. No, Ollie (for short, just today), is named after SIX aunts. This story is about what is like to be Ollie for one day. What does a little [...]
Add a CommentI was frustrated yesterday at lunch so took myself, my sketchbook and my iPod and sat in a park by the water. The combination of those four things are a winner for bettering one’s frame of mind. There are two right-brain activities, along with being physical (walking to the park) and being outside in the [...]
My friend Rose's foot is an activist, hard working, long walked, well loved appendage. But Rose went snowboarding to Tahoe and came back with Foot broken.
Since the doctor said immobilization was required, we gave Foot a new healing outfit.
Here is Foot with its new flying luchadora boot.
both by Susan Goldman Rubin
Chronicle 2007
Board books are funny things. On the one hand they make perfect sense if you are trying to get kids used to the idea of books and reading at a very early age. They have sturdy coated cardboard pages that withstand throwing, food spills and the gnawing and chewing that comes from young pups.
But board books didn't always exist. They were invented, much like the term teenager was invented to suggest a difference between child and adult, probably more like the way the tween demographic was identified by markers and advertisers in order to better capture income from a growing consumer demographic. Somewhere in between the social science of presenting kids books at the earliest possible age and the capitalist goal to build a loyalty and brand recognition from the cradle, that is soupy mire from which board books arise.
Board books are not evil but there is a whole lot of cute mixed in with the good. It saddens me, for example, that publishers make board book versions of classic picture books, often abridging texts or images to fit the format. And there are those books that have "cute" spred all over their intents, proving that their true market is parents and grandparents for whom the book is going to have a greater appeal; they aren't buying for the child so much as they're hoping to impress their opinion of what is cute onto soft minds.
But sometimes people get that a board book can be more, and here we have two examples. Author Goldman presents classic Andy Warhol illustrations from the 1950's and 60's with short bits of rhyming text that are linked to their predominant colors. For those who only know Warhol's iconic factory-produced screenprints these fresh ink and watercolor illustrations may prove that, when he wanted to be, Andy was a talented artist. Featuring a typical assortment of animals -- cat, butterfly, lion, monkey, &c. -- Rubin fuses the color concept board book with a mini primer on a modern art master.
In the Thiebaud book Rubin offers us some of the artist's food paintings with a counting rhyme. That Thiebaud's paintings are done in a very thick application that makes them look as if they'd been composed with cake frosting is an added benefit. Consisting mostly of deserts -- pie, ice cream cones, cupcakes, candied apples -- the fact that they are well-known paintings from a still-living master is almost completely overshadowed by their tempting yumminess. Yes, I said that. The counting aspect of this book is practically lost but not in a bad way. It feels more a casual counting book, among a collection of food illustrations that, oh, just happen to be famous paintings hanging in museums.
Yes, okay, so these books are intended to appeal to adults on some level (did I not say yumminess?) but for those, parent and child alike, who might not be as familiar with these artists or their works, what a delightful little introduction. I noticed that there's no modern art master alphabet book from Chronicle but I hope they're considering it. In fact, I think this sort of art history could make for a very good series of board books.
After all, if Major League Baseball can produce board books (building that brand/team loyalty in the cradle again) then why not do more of the same for the arts and sciences? Just a thought.
Eyelips remind me of daisylions and kangaroosters.
I believe it it's true. A kind of Adams clan...:)
Impressive family!