Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Max Ernst, A Week Of Kindness Or The Seven Deadly Elements


Here is my attempt at deciphering icons

Created by Max Ernst in
  A Week Of Kindness Or The Seven Deadly Elements
 Thursday
Element: Blackness
Example: The rooster’s Laughter


-There is a rooster on a sphere; there is a man at the bottom of a staircase and a woman up in arms next to a bowl of food?

-A rooster shows up again on the bottom right of the image with a giant winged creature standing over some I believe to be dead.

-Now we see the same winged creature standing over a woman in a coffin. I’m starting to think this is all about someone that had an accident when they feel down the stairs and this is the after math.

-The rooster and creature are dressed as men in some type of mausoleum, and there is a body that appears to be lifeless denoted by the skull at its feet.

-Yet again there is a rooster and a dead body, maybe the dapper rooster in men’s clothing represents a homicide detective? 

-Possibly the rooster or anything assimilated with the rooster icon means death. Everywhere there is a rooster there is some element of death, sometimes more obvious than others.

-They’re a lot of scenes depicted that might have correlations with Death expressions, such as death sneaking around the corner, and skeletons in the closet.

But, what do I know I just like drawing cool pictures and this is just my extremely rough personal interpretation.

Monday, January 16, 2017

The Arrival By Shaun Tan



 


The Arrival By Shaun Tan was totally radical; it’s a very bizarre experience and I loved it. There is an obvious theme and message to the narrative that most people will understand on their first read through; even though there is no reading. The Arrival is a story completely absent of words but has no issue telling a very intricate narrative. It tells a story with sequential images showing a progression of events in mostly chronological order, there are non-linear elements when the protagonist meets an old solider and a flashback sequence is shown.
  The story is about a man that leaves his family to travel to a new foreign land in hopes of a better life for his family. The Arrival uses many strange symbols and images to make the viewer feel disconnected from normal environments. It uses the images to portray the foreign world as something else other than anything on this earth. I believe it’s to give any viewer the same experience, regardless of their country’s customs. It paints alien scenes in hopes of making the viewer understand what its like to be an immigrant in a truly foreign land. Technically there are words and a language in The Arrival, but its not any known language in our current world. Even the protagonist resorts to using images of what he wants, and even then he is shown alternatives to his choices further broadening his horizons. 
I had a very eye opening experience when reading The Arrival because although I am an immigrant I wasn’t the one that had to take the leap from comfort for a brand new world. This story really made me understand what my father must have felt when he left our homeland to come to America. My father came to this country very much like the protagonist of The Arrival, just the clothes to his back and what he could carry in some luggage.  I can only imagine the amount of determination he needed to go out and try to find a job in a place where he understood nothing about their language or customs.