A bit late and reaaally bad drawn comic but it fits the theme I believe. This is from my journal so in french sorry about that..

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
sheepfilms

blake kathryn

roma★
occasionally subtle

ellievsbear
Not today Justin
art blog(derogatory)
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Kiana Khansmith
Game of Thrones Daily
Claire Keane

pixel skylines
Stranger Things
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

#extradirty
RMH
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

shark vs the universe

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@strawhatsandgrenadine
A bit late and reaaally bad drawn comic but it fits the theme I believe. This is from my journal so in french sorry about that..
Poem "prière aux vivants pour leur pardonner d'être vivant". Charlotte Delbo
This is an incredible and strong poem from Charlotte Delbo, a french "Résistante" who spent a few years in German camp after getting caught in 42.
Her writing is beautiful: here's another excerpt from one of her books (which I haven't read yet) after being freed in 44: "la vie m'a été rendue et je suis là devant la vie comme devant une robe qu'on ne peut plus mettre."
Finished this one after watching an inspiring vid from @oddartworks (check their YouTube channel it's very nice!). My son added colours and another yellow robot because of course there's never enough robot in a drawing!
Couldn't stop! after Wednesday I had to keep copying Charles Addams drawings. The kid with a sailor tattoo (other character not part of the Addams' family) really got me laughing!
Preparing Halloween by reading the first Addams' family comics (from 1939!). I quite like the dry humour and the very precise design of the characters!
The comics are available on archive.org.
Met K. O'Neil at a signing recently and thought of celebrating with a lil' Rooibos
See you in Eden by Fuyumi Soryo. Just finished this very short piece by the author of Mars or Cesare.
The story, from the words of the author herself, is an autobiography of her 3 years in art school just before university. It focuses on what motivates you in art, what makes it good or bad and follows her fellow students struggling to choose where to go.
Really enjoyed this one
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Ted Kooser - just now
ABOVE: Variations on our Daily Diary practice
“Concepts can never be presented to me merely, they must be knitted into the structure of my being, and this can only be done through my own activity.”
M.P. Follett , Creative Experience
Dear Students,
Which part of our mind chooses what we will remember about the day?
The daily diary practice, which is required for this class, is easily misunderstood as variations on a dry request to list things that happened in the last 24 hours. The top of the mind finds little value in this activity and dismisses it as tiresome task to be done quickly or not at all. Sometimes students will leave blank pages in their comp books with the intention of filling them in later – often with fake entries. These are very easy to spot, and they always make me sad.
The point of the daily diary exercise is not to record what you already know about what happened to you in the last 24 hours. Instead, it’s an invitation to the back of your mind to come forward and reveal to you the perishable images about the day you didn’t notice you noticed at all.
We began with the five to six minute diary drawn on a single page. On the left column we wrote down seven things we did. On the right, seven things we saw. In the bottom left box we wrote down something we overheard, and in the bottom right, we drew a picture of something we saw.
The point of this practice is to begin to notice when we notice something. It’s akin to a certain sort of ‘waking up’ – and becoming present in a different way than we usually are in our day to day lives. We catch ourselves noting something that has caught our eye or our ear. We begin to realize these flashes of awakeness –(which can oddly feel also like dreaming) , are happening to us all day long “whether from some object, scene, event, or memorable phase of the mind–the manifestation being out of proportion to the significance or strictly logical relevance of whatever produces it.“ (Morris Beja, Epiphany in the Modern Novel. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1971. P. 18.)
The top of the mind rarely values or conserves these moments, and certainly doesn’t see them as the unwilled manifestation of a different sort of attention, the attention of the part of ourselves I like to call the back of the mind, which is the image-using part of ourselves.
The second variation of the Daily Diary, which you’ve been asked to do during the last week, is to list six ‘scenes’ from the day before and to choose one to treat as an ‘X’ page image. I ask you to picture yourself in the scene and answer the ‘X’ page questions in complete sentences. The practice here is to notice how much you do recall about a certain circumstance once you begin to ask yourself about it. There is no place without a time of day, a season, a circumstance of light or lack thereof—the X page questions are intended to allow you to experience the difference between the answers provided by the back of the mind and the top of the mind. One provides the answers spontaneously, it’s almost a kind of ‘seeing’ the answer, the other reasons it out, thinks its way to an answer. The more you notice these two ways of receiving answers, the more likely you are to believe in this other part of you that is there and ever-there, riding along with you and noticing things it can present to you later.
The side-effect of this practice is the resulting diary page, but the diary page is not the practice. I’m interested not in the content of your diary, but evidence that you are gradually becoming aware of this other part of your mind that ‘speaks’ in images.
After writing the ‘X’ page version of the diary, I also asked that you spend three minutes doing a non-photo blue quick sketch of the scene and then spend seven minutes or more ‘inking it in’ — (by inking it in I mean clarifying it. You can use black color pencil to ‘ink’ it in).
In this way you’ve ‘spoken’ this scene in two languages. One in words, the other in picutures.
Our new variation on this daily practice, the “Four Scene” diary, is somewhere in between the original one page six minute diary, and the single scene ‘X’ page.
You begin by drawing a rectangle on the comp book page about half an inch from each edge. Write yesterday’s date at the top. Divide the page into quarters. Begin with the first scene that comes to you from the day before. It doesn’t matter if it’s interesting or not. Think of it as a snapshot of that moment in time and begin by telling me where you are, writing in the first person present tense. Let me know what time of day it is, and write a line that helps me know what season it is, what kind of light you’re in—fit what you can into that first quadrant. You won’t be able to get all of the X page questions answered in that spot so you’ll have to pick which are the most important to the scene.
As soon as you finish, start the next box with another scene. It can come before or after the scene you just finished. Don’t try to figure out what was the most important scene of the day. The back of the mind might ask you to write about a 30 second ride in an elevator, or about standing in line somewhere, –something that on the surface seems mundane. Give it the opportunity to reveal itself. What is ‘nothing interesting’ to the top of the mind can be something very different to the back of the mind.
Repeat this two more times, then draw the same rectangle divided into quadrants on the next page and draw each of the four scenes. You can go straight to ink here if you like. Take at least three minutes for each quadrant. The idea is to ‘speak’ the scene in both languages, writing and drawing.
If you regard this assignment as a dull task and give it to the top of the mind to complete, it will stay just that: a dull task with dull results that you dread and seldom complete. And I will feel sad for you at the end of the semester.
If you regard this practice as a not-yet-understood means of deepening your experience in this mysterious, sad, hilarious, beautiful and terrible world, one that creates increasing conditions for insight and intuition, then you may find ‘reason’ enough to convince the top of your mind to let you give it your time, even if the value of the exercise remains unclear for now.
Sincerely,
Prof. Hebdo
En 1985, André Franquin accorde une série d’entretiens qui feront l’objet d’un livre-référence : Et Franquin créa la gaffe. Découvrez ces en
Interview made in the mid 80s ( in french) of one of the great artist in french bandes dessinées.
Rose, Kobori, and @checkok‘s awesome Simran and Sage, cheering you on! <3 <3 <3
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Good news. My webcomic, On a Sunbeam, will be coming out in print next fall from First Second Books. It’s going to be one massive, beautiful volume.
And even after the book comes out, the comic will remain online, free to read any time.
This comic is really great! Looking forward to add it on my shelve. Tillie Walden is an incredible artist!
Phew! This one was difficult for me! I tried to draw from memory in the style of Noelle Stevenson. Started with ink directly but it was impossible so I had to use a pencil. I’m not really prepared for this so I don’t even have an eraser… Need to buy one for tomorrow! I wanted to draw the same face but from two different angles so the theme of today gave me a good opportunity! It’s pretty obvious that I spent less time on the character on the right though and I still have a lot of proportion error to work on. Obviously I’ve exploded the time constraint that I had set for myself also but I really wanted to finish it. And technically, it’s two characters right?
Still I’m glad I did something, that’s two more small drawings out! Going to look at what others have done now ! (And buy an eraser)
I’ve always admired people “who can draw” and how they can use the medium to tell stories and message. I’ve always wanted to take time for myself and learn how to draw so this year I’m trying the inktober challenge for myself with additional rules. Hopefully it will help me save a bit of time each day or week to draw some funny things. The rules I set myself are the following:
0. inktober2017 rules
1. 20 minutes/drawing. I want to learn how to draw quickly
2. The drawings don’t have to be original and can be copied from another artist. For instance, this one is copied from the great Noelle Stevenson (@Gingerhaze)
I messed up the proportion on this one and nothing doesn’t really fit very well... I guess it shows that I have a lot to learn!
Brother Dege @ Gallimaufry
Last Tuesday, I bravely fought the weather to attend Brother Dege’s concert at the Gallimaufry. After a couple of Milk Stouts while listening to the great Tom Portman (Great music but not very practical to listen to in a crowded atmosphere), the bearded dude finally appeared and delivered a great show for more than an hour. I had never seen the guy on stage and knew only the song “Too old to Die young” that Tarantino chose for his Django Unchained. Seated in his chair and accompanied by his Steel Guitar and a Loop Recorder, the songs are powerful, sad and funny, Despite being definitely unique, if anyone would like a comparison, think powerful blues like the white stripes but rooted deep in the south banks of the mississipi. It reminds me also of some of the best songs from the BRMC’s album “Howl”.
A great night with the Brother!
Super Science Friends: Episode 1 by Tinman Creative Studios
Join Tesla, Freud, Marie Curie, Darwin, Tapputi and Einstein on their first daring adventure!
So proud to work at Tinman <3
Take that league of extraordinary gentlemen!
Prodigy Enchanter, Vivan Parrish
Previous Friday Knights are here– 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6