The Public Domain Review and Medium are hosting a Mad Hatter’s mashup party in celebration of the 150th anniversary of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland this month. We’re starting today and continuing…
Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There—the second installment of the most famously nonsensical adventure in literary history—is “full of seemingly nonsensical words that somehow manage to make sense,” says narrator Jack Cutmore-Scott in the animated reading above from TED-Ed Animation.
When you think of Disney, you always imagine those beautiful, deeply emotional fairy tales where everyone always lives “happily ever after”. Well, this Mexican visual artist José Rodolfo Loaiza Ontiveros has just destroyed it for us. Specializing in pop culture, Rodolfo measures his viewer’s tolerance levels by putting our beloved characters in unorthodox context and showing them in dark, tough situations to explore the general theme of “loss of innocence.”
Discover the art of Delfina Pérez Adán, Cartoon Brew's Artist of the Day.
latest Illustration, animation, and claymation news and information.
Montreal based illustrator Carolina Espinosa has produced some truly imaginative zodiac drawings, which are just enchanting! The whimsical creatures are like something out of little Alice in Wonderland, and also remind me of the old Winsor & Newton Ink pots, if you remember them… I love the way the zodiac glyphs are incorporated into each […]
Sir John Tenniel, English illustrator and satirical artist, especially known for his work in Punch and his illustrations for Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1872). Tenniel attended the Royal Academy schools and in 1836 sent his first picture to the exhibition
Forgiveness is the most powerful tool we have - aside from unconditional love, itself - for creating lasting success & happiness in our lives.
Self-forgiveness is critical to well-being—but it needs to be balanced with responsibility-taking, when appropriate. Here are four steps to healthy self-forgiveness, based on recent research.
Illustrations by Marta Zubieta that explore the madness of 2020 and the global pandemic.
These illustrations for the unabridged version of 'The Wonderful Wizard of Oz' cast a new light on the tale.
Evening cattails
The Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong was built gradually—building on top of building—over time. Without a single architect, the ungoverned and most densely populated district became a haven for drugs, crime and prostitution until it was demolished in 1993. Photo documentation of the site exists but for the most part much of the inner-workings of the city remained a mystery. Perhaps due to its proximity, Japan, in particular, developed a keen interest towards Kowloon. Its demolition in 1993 was broadcast on national television. More
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