I was sad to read of this today. I was already a big fan of his work in high school.
During my freshman year at college he visited my school as a guest lecturer. I was a painting and drawing major. His very first visit when he arrived was to our art class.
He visited with us and looked at whatever we were drawing that day. He and I talked about talents as he was looking at my drawing. He related how he used to draw, but he lacked any real talent for it. He admired that other people could see something and translate that to paper. I said it was obvious he found where his talents were hidden. I asked him to draw something and sign it in my sketch book. He drew a funny little dragon and signed it for me. He said he was only ever good at drawing this monster. We had a good laugh and he visited with some other students before going on with his schedule for the day.
I'll have to locate that sketch book and a photo that was taken of us. That day is among my favorite experiences ever.
Ray Bradbury dead at 91
Re: Ray Bradbury dead at 91
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Re: Ray Bradbury dead at 91
that totally rules and i am genuinely envious.c0wb0y wrote:I was sad to read of this today. I was already a big fan of his work in high school.
During my freshman year at college he visited my school as a guest lecturer. I was a painting and drawing major. His very first visit when he arrived was to our art class.
He visited with us and looked at whatever we were drawing that day. He and I talked about talents as he was looking at my drawing. He related how he used to draw, but he lacked any real talent for it. He admired that other people could see something and translate that to paper. I said it was obvious he found where his talents were hidden. I asked him to draw something and sign it in my sketch book. He drew a funny little dragon and signed it for me. He said he was only ever good at drawing this monster. We had a good laugh and he visited with some other students before going on with his schedule for the day.
I'll have to locate that sketch book and a photo that was taken of us. That day is among my favorite experiences ever.
Steam / PSN / Twitter: aaronjohnmiller
Re: Ray Bradbury dead at 91
Waaaaay late but I finally found the photo I mentioned after his passing...
I'm handing him my sketchbook in this photo.
I'm handing him my sketchbook in this photo.
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Systems: Pong, Odyssey2, Atari 2600, NES, CDX, SNES, N64, Saturn, DC, PS1, PS2, PS3, Xbox, GCN, Wii, Xbox360, OUYA
Handhelds: GB, GBC, GBA, DS lite, DSi, Virtual Boy (<< is that even a portable?)
EM Pinballs: Bally Dixieland, Gottlieb Flying Carpet
SS Pinball: GTB Circus, GTB Count-Down, GTB Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Stern Lectronamo, Stern Galaxy, Bally Black Pyramid
Handhelds: GB, GBC, GBA, DS lite, DSi, Virtual Boy (<< is that even a portable?)
EM Pinballs: Bally Dixieland, Gottlieb Flying Carpet
SS Pinball: GTB Circus, GTB Count-Down, GTB Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Stern Lectronamo, Stern Galaxy, Bally Black Pyramid
- Key-Glyph
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Re: Ray Bradbury dead at 91
Wow, that is cool. Can I ask what sorts of drawings were in the sketchbook? And did he comment on them?c0wb0y wrote:Waaaaay late but I finally found the photo I mentioned after his passing...
I'm handing him my sketchbook in this photo.
Re: Ray Bradbury dead at 91
I was 18 and listening to Nine Inch Nails constantly, so there was plenty of angst-y figures in there.Key-Glyph wrote:Wow, that is cool. Can I ask what sorts of drawings were in the sketchbook? And did he comment on them?
We also had 2 Chinese artists visiting, so I practiced and received lessons in still life and landscape from them - that was pretty cool. We didn't share a language so it was a lot of pointing, charades and handing the charcoal back and forth to show what we were trying to do. It was very collaborative in a way that artists usually don't experience.
And I was starting to do self portraits and portraits of friends.
Mr. Bradbury drew a simple comic strip dragon - like Disney's Elliot from Pete's Dragon. He did take a look at some of my drawings. He said we was always envious of people that could draw and that he was never very good at it. But he always wanted to be able to draw better. My opinion: He was really good at painting with words.
Systems: Pong, Odyssey2, Atari 2600, NES, CDX, SNES, N64, Saturn, DC, PS1, PS2, PS3, Xbox, GCN, Wii, Xbox360, OUYA
Handhelds: GB, GBC, GBA, DS lite, DSi, Virtual Boy (<< is that even a portable?)
EM Pinballs: Bally Dixieland, Gottlieb Flying Carpet
SS Pinball: GTB Circus, GTB Count-Down, GTB Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Stern Lectronamo, Stern Galaxy, Bally Black Pyramid
Handhelds: GB, GBC, GBA, DS lite, DSi, Virtual Boy (<< is that even a portable?)
EM Pinballs: Bally Dixieland, Gottlieb Flying Carpet
SS Pinball: GTB Circus, GTB Count-Down, GTB Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Stern Lectronamo, Stern Galaxy, Bally Black Pyramid
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Re: Ray Bradbury dead at 91
Damn I thought he died a long time ago.
They have escaped into the mansion where they thought it was safe, yet.
Re: Ray Bradbury dead at 91
"They knew how to live with nature and get along with nature. They didn't try too hard to be all men and no animal. That's the mistake we made when Darwin showed up. We embraced him and Huxley and Freud, all smiles. And then we discovered that Darwin and our religions didn't mix. Or at least we didn't think they did, We were fools. We tried to budge Darwin and Huxley and Freud. They wouldn't move very well. So, like idiots, we tried knocking down religion.
"We succeeded pretty well. We lost our faith and went around wondering what life was for. If art was no more than a frustrated outflinging of desire, if religion was no more than self-delusion, what good was life? Faith had always given us answers to all things. But it all went down the drain with Freud and Darwin, we were and still are a lost people."
I re-read The Martian Chronicles recently and I found that passage to be incredibly poignant.
"We succeeded pretty well. We lost our faith and went around wondering what life was for. If art was no more than a frustrated outflinging of desire, if religion was no more than self-delusion, what good was life? Faith had always given us answers to all things. But it all went down the drain with Freud and Darwin, we were and still are a lost people."
I re-read The Martian Chronicles recently and I found that passage to be incredibly poignant.
Thy ban hammer shalt strike 
