Excellent initiative with the numbers. Question marks can also work.
I like the fortuitous bricks, just the right height for him to reach his mark. Reminds me of one of Tex Avery’s cartoons, where an animal is trying to see something, so he puts a box on top of another box. It’s not high enough yet, so he pulls out the bottom box and puts it on top of the higher box, and that does the job nicely. As critic Joe Adamson notes, they’re held up by artistic necessity, and once they’re no longer needed, the boxes tumble to the ground. “For a couple of boxes,” he says, “They have a lot of personality.”
Excellent initiative with the numbers. Question marks can also work.
I like the fortuitous bricks, just the right height for him to reach his mark. Reminds me of one of Tex Avery’s cartoons, where an animal is trying to see something, so he puts a box on top of another box. It’s not high enough yet, so he pulls out the bottom box and puts it on top of the higher box, and that does the job nicely. As critic Joe Adamson notes, they’re held up by artistic necessity, and once they’re no longer needed, the boxes tumble to the ground. “For a couple of boxes,” he says, “They have a lot of personality.”