“Visual storytelling of one kind or another has been around since cavemen were drawing on the walls.” –Frank Darabont
Wall painting
With paper rollers
Show and tell
The words of the prophets are written on the subway walls and tenement halls —Paul Simon
In the dime stores and bus stations, people talk of situations, read books, repeat quotations, draw conclusions on the wall —Bob Dylan
It looks you in the eye mister It’s time we stand up tall Go see and understand the writing’s on the wall —George Harrison
Follow your bliss and the universe will open doors where there were only walls —Joseph Campbell
The walls between art and engineering exist only in our minds —Theo Jansen
Nothing kills creativity faster than a wall —Eric Weiner
An art book is a museum without walls —Andre Malraux
The most important thing in art is the frame. For painting: literally; for other arts: figuratively – because, without this humble appliance, you can’t know where The Art stops and The Real World begins —Frank Zappa
What do you hang on the walls of your mind? —Eve Arnold
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There is probably a lot of cave art that we still do not understand and yet got big big laughs back then. And as always, fine work to the Leduc/Sum dynamic duo.
That’s an interesting idea. We imagine cave men bashing cave women with clubs and dragging them off to their caves, but we dont’ imaging them laughing. They must must have laughed. Thanks, George.
What a creative post! I am so impressed with your unexpected takes on a simple idea. No walls, just frames.
A picture frame hanging from a tree limb in the woods could be a visual hauiku. Thank you, LuAnne.
And a lovely visual haiku at that!
Thank you, LuAnne. A lovely avian tree sculpture, in a garden without walls viewed through a window frame,, inspired that visual haiku. ;^)