
...his fursona would prolly look something like this.
I love it when things get lost in light, or shadow, or chaos, but the brain still somehow manages to comprehend it. The brain is the most advanced pattern recognition device on the planet, no computers even come close.
Lost things add to the picture... Look at Rembrandt's paintings, or Goya's - it's fascinating how much simple uncertainty can add to the athmosphere of the work. No need to spell everything out.
I love it when things get lost in light, or shadow, or chaos, but the brain still somehow manages to comprehend it. The brain is the most advanced pattern recognition device on the planet, no computers even come close.
Lost things add to the picture... Look at Rembrandt's paintings, or Goya's - it's fascinating how much simple uncertainty can add to the athmosphere of the work. No need to spell everything out.
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>>I love it when things get lost in light, or shadow, or chaos, but the brain still somehow manages to comprehend it.
It helps comprehension when something is there, and recognizable... as in this drawing. :)
What also fascinates me is our tendency to find patterns of meaning where none exist: when we see a face (or even a rabbit) on the moon, or when we tell ourselves convoluted stories to connect and to explain random events.
Mark
It helps comprehension when something is there, and recognizable... as in this drawing. :)
What also fascinates me is our tendency to find patterns of meaning where none exist: when we see a face (or even a rabbit) on the moon, or when we tell ourselves convoluted stories to connect and to explain random events.
Mark
Yep, the ways in which this patter recognition device misfires is also fascinating. Like the Martian cannals - there were no lines there, but astronomists "saw" them.
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