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~ Brown and Gray ~
Struggle for Existence
Artist: Christian Krohg (Norwegian, 1852-1925)
Date: 1889
Medium: Oil on canvas
Collection: The National Museum, Oslo, Norway
PCM October 1986
The cover stories of this issue provided a type-in "recipe box" program (calling back to the earliest attempts to answer "so what do you do with a computer in your house?"), looked at the revision of Tandy's simple integrated software package DeskMate sold with the Tandy 1000EX (it included a paint module and was judged superior to the revision sold with the more "serious" Tandy 1000SX), and improved the image on a monochrome monitor by hacking some of the colour information out of the composite video output. Lonnie Falk's editorial springboarded off reading Stephen King's It to proclaim that Tandy had to be scaring people at IBM; it was remarkably similar to his editorial in the November 1986 Rainbow, which proclaimed the Color Computer 3 had to be scaring people at Commodore and Atari. (Falk did mention he was coming up against his deadline writing the editorial, anyway...)
Return from the Market (Retour du Marché)
Artist: André Fougeron (French, 1913–1998)
Date: 1953
Medium: Oil on canvas
Collection: Tate Britain, London, United Kingdom
Description
Fougeron was the leading artist associated with the French Communist Party in the early 1950s. This is a portrait of his wife. By surrounding her with the details of their own modest domestic interior - the loaf and vegetables, the standard tiling and utilitarian sink - he indicates a simple life of material struggle.
POV: You're ƎNA
I was inspired by @pukefactory after all her amazing work. So what did I draw? Her favorite character? ENA (after they wrote so many commissions for me)? No. A one-sentence character.
I have no regrets.