Angel Ceballos

A photo of a sketchbook page. I made those notes last week. Just quick notes, thinking about giving proper shape of a thing that has been bugging me for quite some time. I’ve decided to let it go, but first I want to try a thing or two with it. News about this should come probably in the next two weeks.
Off I go. LJ Doesn’t let me post anything, and I’m gonna chew his internetic soul for this.
I remember seeing them on William Gibson’s blog:

But now I’ve found the place where they’re sold.
Hieronymus Bosch action figures. I find them plainly wrong on more than one level. But on the other, I just can’t stop thinking that I’d love to have a full set (or two) of them.
(Thanks, Table of Malcontents)

Robots are the new kittens.
Made for R. Stevens‘ site that won the internet: Lolbots.com
(Yes. That photo is mine)
Anyone that speaks russian over there? I need to know how to write the words “Iron” and “Red” in that language. I mean how to write them not in cyrillic.
Thanks in advance.
Comments are open for this entry. Already solved. Thanks!
(Yes, yes. I’m such a fanboy sometimes)
Found here, via Metabunker:
During their excavations in Burnt City in 1983, Italian archeologists found a 5000- year-old goblet in a grave with the design of a goat and a tree. Further studies by archeologists on this goblet revealed that there is a unique characteristic about this discovered goblet. What has made this one distinguished compared to the other ones unearthed so far is that the painting on this goblet has been repeated in a meaningful manner which shows the movement of a goat towards a bush during different positions. The artist who created this design used the goblet as his canvass to show the movement of the goat towards the tree for feeding itself in 5 movements.
And lays out another of his rules:
“This was way back in August 1997, when he was five and the news was coming through about the tragedy of Lady Diana Spencer. The lad was getting pissed off because he wanted to watch his superhero animations, and the adults had taken over the television, and eventually he complained loudly and said what was on his mind. “I don’t think she’s really dead anyway, because you didn’t see the car hit the wall”.
This would become one of Eddie Campbell’s RULES*.
RULE #5: In a visual medium, an event has not occurred unless it can be seen to have occurred. Thus, you can’t refer back to something that only happened in a word balloon. Technically it didn’t happen at all. (Well, of course you can do it, but you must recognise that your reader will probably be doubting your veracity. You may wish to use that to your advantage, but now we’re getting complicated.)”