Sunday, June 24, 2012

Drawings Made of Thousands of Cartoon Doodles | Bored Panda

When viewed from a distance,  the works of Sagaki Keita may look like another attempt to recreate classical paintings and sculptures, but when you come closer, you start to notice that his drawings are all made of thousands of cartoon doodles. Tokyo-based artist draws in ink, usually with a 0.38mm pen, and, amazingly, all of his works are completely improvised without being drafted first.

“All things are composed of whole and part. For instance, The human body is built from 60 trillion cells. Moreover, Every matter is formed by an atom or a molecule. When all people live in this world, everybody belong to some organization such as a family, school, company and nation, even if we are unconsciousness. Let’s broaden your horizons. your country is part of nations all over the world. And, The solar system including our planet is a part of the Galaxy. however, the concept of “ whole and part” is not fixed. it’s in flux. If we interpret from a different viewpoint, the wholeness which we defined is converted into the partialness. Domain in the relations of both, it never ends. The concept of my creation is the relations of borderless “whole and part”. As I draw a a picture in this concept, I want to express conflict and undulation from relations of “whole and part”, cannot be measured in addition and subtraction (The whole in the grand total of the part. and the Part by the whole division)”

Website: sagakikeita.com

Posted via email from qwerty98311's posterous

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Hypocrisy In Hollywood: The Infographic

We spend some serious time outlining Hollywood hypocrisy around these parts, whether it be why SOPA is the worst, or why PIPA is the worst, or pretty much anything Dan writes. But it’s often difficult to get all the information necessary to be informed on the topic in one easily digestible place. Enter: The Infographic.

After the jump — via Paralegal.net and our friend Greg Voakes — we have a super informative graphic outlining Hollywood hypocrisy dating back to 1889 and Edison, when New Jersey (Seriously? Jersey?) was the center of the film industry. The more you know.

Created by: Paralegal

Posted via email from qwerty98311's posterous