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Ink/goretober day 5 - Brain Splatter

This got dark real quick...

(2019) Plastic Love II - Plastic Love

This is the updated Plastic Love (1984) tribute to singer Takeuchi Mariya (竹内 まりや), with cleaned vector text created to mimic the original album cover.

In this version I changed the pink text "Sweetest Music" to "Plastic Love" for the heck of it. :D

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#dailyart #illustration #pendrawing #portrait #portraitart #takeuchi #mariya #takeuchimariya #mariyatakeuchi #plasticlove #plasticlovers #sweetestmusic #citypop #jpop #竹内まりや #hinxlinx #ericlynxlin #elynx #instaart #artofinstagram

 

Doodle

A doodle is an unfocused or unconscious drawing made while a person's attention is otherwise occupied. Doodles are simple drawings that can have concrete representational meaning or may just be abstract shapes.

 

Stereotypical examples of doodling are found in school notebooks, often in the margins, drawn by students daydreaming or losing interest during class. Other common examples of doodling are produced during long telephone conversations if a pen and paper are available.

 

Popular kinds of doodles include cartoon versions of teachers or companions in a school, famous TV or comic characters, invented fictional beings, landscapes, geometric shapes, patterns and textures.

Etymology[edit]

The word doodle first appeared in the early 17th century to mean a fool or simpleton.[1] It may derive from the German Dudeltopf or Dudeldop, meaning simpleton or noodle (literally "nightcap").[1]

 

The meaning "fool, simpleton" is intended in the song title "Yankee Doodle", originally sung by British colonial troops prior to the American Revolutionary War. This is also the origin of the early eighteenth century verb to doodle, meaning "to swindle or to make a fool of". The modern meaning emerged in the 1930s either from this meaning or from the verb "to dawdle", which since the seventeenth century has had the meaning of wasting time or being lazy.

 

In the movie Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, Mr. Deeds mentions that "doodle" was a word made up to describe scribblings to help a person think. According to the DVD audio commentary track, the word as used in this sense was invented by screenwriter Robert Riskin.[citation needed]

Effects on memory[edit]

According to a study published in the scientific journal Applied Cognitive Psychology, doodling can aid a person's memory by expending just enough energy to keep one from daydreaming, which demands a lot of the brain's processing power, as well as from not paying attention. Thus, it acts as a mediator between the spectrum of thinking too much or thinking too little and helps focus on the current situation. The study was done by Professor Jackie Andrade, of the School of Psychology at the University of Plymouth, who reported that doodlers in her experiment recalled 7.5 pieces of information (out of 16 total) on average, 29% more than the average of 5.8 recalled by the control group made of non-doodlers.[2]

Alexander Pushkin's notebooks are celebrated for their superabundance of marginal doodles, which include sketches of friends' profiles, hands, and feet. These notebooks are regarded as a work of art in their own right. Full editions of Pushkin's doodles have been undertaken on several occasions.[3] Some of Pushkin's doodles were animated by Andrei Khrzhanovsky and Yuriy Norshteyn in the 1987 film My Favorite Time.[4][5]

 

Notable doodlers

 

Nobel laureate (in literature, 1913) poet Rabindranath Tagore made huge number of doodles in his manuscript.[6] Poet and physician John Keats doodled in the margins of his medical notes; other literary doodlers have included Samuel Beckett and Sylvia Plath.[7] Mathematician Stanislaw Ulam developed the Ulam spiral for visualization of prime numbers while doodling during a boring presentation at a mathematics conference.[8] Many American Presidents (including Thomas Jefferson, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton) have been known to doodle during meetings.[9]

 

Some doodles and drawings can be found in notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci.

Doodle

A doodle is an unfocused or unconscious drawing made while a person's attention is otherwise occupied. Doodles are simple drawings that can have concrete representational meaning or may just be abstract shapes.

 

Stereotypical examples of doodling are found in school notebooks, often in the margins, drawn by students daydreaming or losing interest during class. Other common examples of doodling are produced during long telephone conversations if a pen and paper are available.

 

Popular kinds of doodles include cartoon versions of teachers or companions in a school, famous TV or comic characters, invented fictional beings, landscapes, geometric shapes, patterns and textures.

Etymology[edit]

The word doodle first appeared in the early 17th century to mean a fool or simpleton.[1] It may derive from the German Dudeltopf or Dudeldop, meaning simpleton or noodle (literally "nightcap").[1]

 

The meaning "fool, simpleton" is intended in the song title "Yankee Doodle", originally sung by British colonial troops prior to the American Revolutionary War. This is also the origin of the early eighteenth century verb to doodle, meaning "to swindle or to make a fool of". The modern meaning emerged in the 1930s either from this meaning or from the verb "to dawdle", which since the seventeenth century has had the meaning of wasting time or being lazy.

 

In the movie Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, Mr. Deeds mentions that "doodle" was a word made up to describe scribblings to help a person think. According to the DVD audio commentary track, the word as used in this sense was invented by screenwriter Robert Riskin.[citation needed]

Effects on memory[edit]

According to a study published in the scientific journal Applied Cognitive Psychology, doodling can aid a person's memory by expending just enough energy to keep one from daydreaming, which demands a lot of the brain's processing power, as well as from not paying attention. Thus, it acts as a mediator between the spectrum of thinking too much or thinking too little and helps focus on the current situation. The study was done by Professor Jackie Andrade, of the School of Psychology at the University of Plymouth, who reported that doodlers in her experiment recalled 7.5 pieces of information (out of 16 total) on average, 29% more than the average of 5.8 recalled by the control group made of non-doodlers.[2]

Alexander Pushkin's notebooks are celebrated for their superabundance of marginal doodles, which include sketches of friends' profiles, hands, and feet. These notebooks are regarded as a work of art in their own right. Full editions of Pushkin's doodles have been undertaken on several occasions.[3] Some of Pushkin's doodles were animated by Andrei Khrzhanovsky and Yuriy Norshteyn in the 1987 film My Favorite Time.[4][5]

 

Notable doodlers

 

Nobel laureate (in literature, 1913) poet Rabindranath Tagore made huge number of doodles in his manuscript.[6] Poet and physician John Keats doodled in the margins of his medical notes; other literary doodlers have included Samuel Beckett and Sylvia Plath.[7] Mathematician Stanislaw Ulam developed the Ulam spiral for visualization of prime numbers while doodling during a boring presentation at a mathematics conference.[8] Many American Presidents (including Thomas Jefferson, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton) have been known to doodle during meetings.[9]

 

Some doodles and drawings can be found in notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci.

Daily #Art - Day 05-06-19

(2019) A Symbol of Hope

Here's an illustrated tribute to Superman and actor Henry Cavill (May 5, 1983) who portrayed him in three recent DC superhero films.

(#15,593 / #183 / #85)

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#dailyart #illustration #pendrawing #digitalart #portraitart #characterart #superman #manofsteel #clarkkent #kalel #hope #henrycavill #henry #cavil #actor #dccomics #dceu #superhero #hinxlinx #ericlynxlin #elynx #instaart #artofinstagram

Daily #Art - Day 06-13-19

(2019) Rainbow Bison II

This is an abstract illustration of a masculine bison, a redraw from my younger year.

The original bison was a pure fabrication from my imagination, and this version resembles an American bison, or the American buffalo.

(#15,631 / #221 / #123)

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#dailyart #illustration #pendrawing #abstractart #rainbow #animalart #creatureart #mammal #bull #bovinae #bison #buffalo #americanbison #americanbuffalo #hinxlinx #ericlynxlin #elynx #軒 #instaart #artifinstagram

Daily #Art - Day 08-15-19

(2019) Royalty

Here's an illustration of a police german shepherd named Royalty, simply being royal at his duty.

Support and praise all the law enforcement of the world who maintain law and order with their hearts and souls to serve the public.

 

每日藝術 - 2019年8月15日

(2019) 忠誠

這是一幅名叫忠誠的德國警犬畫,讚揚其單純盡忠職守。

支持並讚揚世界上所有盡心盡力去維護法律秩序,來服務大眾的執法人員。

(#15,694 / #284 / #180)

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#dailyart #illustration #pendrawing #creatureart #animalart #canine #dog #policedog #germanshepherd #警犬 #犬 #hinxlinx #ericlynxlin #elynx #軒 #instaart #dogofinstagram #artofinstagram

Daily #Art 11-13-20

靜息的蝴蝶

Resting Butterfly

(#16,150 / #740)

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#dailyart #pendrawing #animalart #creatureart #insectart #butterfly #resting #蝶 #蝴蝶 #靜息 #hinxlinx #ericlynxlin #elynx #軒 #靖軒 #林靖軒

5.125" x 7.75"

Pentel EnerGel pen and Derwent Watercolour pencils on paper

(Handmade sketchbook)

Daily #Art - Day 06-30-19

(2019) Flying High with a Black Swan

This is a redraw of an abstract loose blue pen drawing of a flying bird back in 1992.

Visualized an inverted black swan edition, then created a yin-yang mixed edition.

(#15,647 / #237 / #139)

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#dailyart #illustration #animated #pendrawing #abstractart #lineart #animalart #creatureart #birdart #bird #swan #blackswan #flying #flyingswan #flight #flyhigh #yinyang #一飛衝天 #黑天鵝 #hinxlinx #ericlynxlin #elynx #軒 #instaart #artofinstagram

 

With pigment liner and water colors...

 

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