a view of maddy's various visual idiosyncratic ideas and inspirations - as requested

Click image below to access www.bloglovin.com/blogs/drawing-dont-ask-why-12906885

Tuesday 22 January 2013

Give it a l'ddle wiggle

Try out this site for some wonderful, disturbing, funny, vintage, baffling images..


A subsidiary of the brilliant original Square America website, which was sadly getting hacked.


They do have an ArseBook page:

  http://www.facebook.com/pages/wwwsquareamericacom/ 


Friday 18 January 2013

* The Dot and the Line * The Phantom Tolbooth: 2 big faves






These two very different books made a huge impression on me as a child. Their quirky, sophisticated style somehow sneaked into my subconscious and surreptitiously inspired me to aim to do something creative with my future - in many different areas. 
And quite ridiculously, I only realized a few years ago that they were written by the very same person...
............................................................................

Margaret Perry is an avid reader and collector of children's literature. When she was young, at the Children's Library, she would start at "A" and work her way through the alphabet, 15 books at a time.
She started Little Lamb Books in January, 2009, in honor of her grandmother, to promote children's books that contain exceptional beauty in both narrative and illustration, a sense of wonder, and hopefully a touch of whimsy and silliness. 
She tells us....

"Norton Juster is best known in the Children's Book world, as the imaginative author of The Phantom Tollbooth. I never got into it as a child (though I love it now)--my favorite of his books was but his charming little "romance"-- 
-- The Dot and the Line..
It concerns a red dot and the blue line who loves her and is determined to win her.  She is, however, smitten with a squiggle. The Line is so saddened by her rejection that he is determined to do something about it [and win her over]. 

I saw this at a very young age and fell in love with the graphics. 

Chuck Jones' brilliant little gem of an animated version is perfect. I would say it is as good as reading it aloud yourself, but I don't have as nice a voice as he did.



..the book is funny, and light--but it is also profound.  In this little tale of love we learn about direction, determination, love, and its pursuit. And I don't suppose that is a lesson we can learn too early."   Margaret Perry

"You are as meaningless as a melon," the Dot said coldly. "Undisciplined, unkempt, and unaccountable, insignificant, indeterminiate, and inadvertent, out of shape, out of order, out of place, and out of luck."  Dot to Squiggle

...with the Squiggle...
............................................................................................................

The Phantom Tolbooth is the other, very different, inspirational book from my childhood. The story can be dark and unpredictable, the characters surreal. Jules Feiffer's illustrations are sometimes simple and fresh, yet can be macabre, almost mesmeric.

Tock


Milo

A map of the Lands Beyond
Rhyme and Reason
the Doldrums
"Then one day someone discovered that if you walked as fast as possible and looked at nothing but your shoes you would arrive at your destination much more quickly"



Terrible Trivium














I highly recommend you get a copy of each as soon as possible...

Thursday 10 January 2013

2013: all those resolutions...


   from Zen Habits by Leo Babauta:                                

  • Change 1: Meditate
  • Change 2: Unprocrastinate
  • Change 3: Walking
  • Change 4: Flexible Mind
  • Change 5: Identify Your Essentials
  • Change 6: Mindful Eating
  • Change 7: Most Important Things (MITs)
  • Change 8: Clear a Shelf
  • Change 9: Start Saving
  • Change 10: Yoga or strength training
  • Change 11: Floss
  • Change 12: Pay a small debt
  • Change 13: Mindful Exercise
  • Change 14: Budget Simply
  • Change 15: Create a support crew
  • Change 16: Eat some veggies
  • Change 17: Gratitude
  • Change 18: Clear counters
  • Change 19: Slow down
  • Change 20: Play
  • Change 21: Flow
  • Change 22: Let go of a vice
  • Change 22: Don’t wish things were different
  • Change 23: Clear a closet
  • Change 24: Let go of TV
  • Change 25: Get more sleep
  • Change 26: Value time over money
  • Change 27: Replace opinions with curiosity
  • Change 28: Read
  • Change 29: Cut out shopping
  • Change 30: Learn that you’re good enough
  • Change 31: Create
  • Change 32: Eat real food
  • Change 33: Explore work you love
  • Change 34: Help others
  • Change 35: Breathe
  • Change 36: Enjoy the habit
  • Change 37: Solitude
  • Change 38: Unclutter a room
  • Change 39: Iterate the habit
  • Change 40: Less busywork, more impact
  • Change 41: Disconnect
  • Change 42: Let go of a goal
  • Change 43: Treat failure as a learning opportunity
  • Change 44: Reduce commitments
  • Change 45: Turn problems into opportunities
  • Change 47: Savor
  • Change 48: Clear your inbox
  • Change 49: Teach
  • Change 50: Compassion
  • Change 51: Reflect
  • Change 52: Realize you’re not missing out                                    http://zenhabits.net/