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And for a buffet of illustrators, "A three-headed giraffe" by
Maurice Sendak
Edward Gorey
Arthur Rackham
Ralph Steadman
“That very night in Max’s room a forest grew
and grew – and grew and grew until his ceiling hung with vines and the walls became the world all around and an ocean tumbled by with a private boat for Max
and he sailed off through night and day" - Sendak
#14DayPBChallenge #Setting
16. Maurice Sendak - the one-two punch of Where The Wild Things are and In The Night Kitchen left an indelible mark on me as a little kid, and I got told off more than once for trying to turn my bedroom walls into a forest via crayons.
1. maurice sendak - have to start with the best of the best of course 💕 the little bear books are so dear to me, and everything he did was so genius; i adore his color but also really love his simple line drawings!
And the wild things roared their terrible roars and gnashed their terrible teeth and rolled their terrible eyes and showed their terrible claws.
—Maurice Sendak
#WyrdWednesday
#dontgointothewoods✨
Soy el rey de los monstruos 👑
#Simpsons #Lisa #Monstruo #Homero
#WhereTheWildThingsAre #MauriceSendak
Btw, this could be would Sendak the Elder would look like had he had taken magic, similar to Lord Tirek! He looks AMAZING! :D! This is drawn by the very talented @AleximusPrime! :D
Funny how Tirek betrayed him in the end too, making Sendak the first he's ever betrayed. He was captured by Vorak and his kingdom and sent to the mines for his crimes. It is unknown what happened to him afterward.
This cloaked Centaur is Sendak the Elder. Though he is not related to Vorak and his family, he was the former mentor to Lord Tirek when he was younger. This guy is the one responsible for teaching him how to drain magic from other creatures, even introducing him to ponies!
Kids don't know about best sellers. They go for what they enjoy. They aren't star chasers and they don't suck up. It's why I like them.
- Maurice Sendak
My apologies for not posting any new work as of late. I have a bunch of stuff ready to roll out before year end. But for now, here is something a little different from my usual stuff... A tribute to the great luminary M. Sendak and his seminal book Where the Wild Things Are!
I wanna see/make a film adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s Nutcracker with Taika Waititi as Drosselmeyer the mad clockmaker
Maurice Sendak's The Nutcracker (1984). He did not care for the bland, smoothed out tale most people are familiar with through the ballet but was drawn to the weird, darker elements of Hoffmann's original.