Mina Perhonen thoroughbred sweater / Peterboro Basket Co. pet carrier / Annette Ferdinandsen fly wing earrings / Robert Allen for Dwell Folkland fabric / Stubbs and Wooten fox-print flannel slippers / Tassie gem 'Excuse Haste' intaglio seal / New York Review Books bird lovers' collection / rabbit-print tablet case / Sgrafo pottery bear.
Showing posts with label bears. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bears. Show all posts
first steps
Last weekend I slipped, fell and managed to break both of my elbows. Everything is turning out better than expected, but it has made for a wobbly start to 2014. I'm feeling a bit like this little guy – a little uncertain on my feet, but eager to get moving.
honey thief
Illustration by William Mulready (1786-1863) for William Godwin's Fables Ancient and Modern, 1807.
Also: what quantities of honey.
Labels:
art,
bears,
bees,
william mulready
this weekend
Roaming. Also:
Happy weekend.
Pictured: Inuit ivory bear from Cape Dorset, 1925. Inuit Art: An Anthology, Watson & Dwyer, Winnipeg, 1988. Found at stopping off place.
who are you? what are you?
The thing I remember most vividly about the bear is that it is a dangerous animal for many reasons, but principally because its face is always concealed. Its face is enduringly expressionless. It's not like a dog that will raise its hackles, not like a cat that will sort of narrow its eyes and flatten its ears. It has this huge head and a furry face and very small expressionless eyes that don't change. Its eyesight is very poor so it's always sort of squinting at you (he squints) and its sense of smell and its hearing are very keen, so it always has this expression the most terrifying aspect of which is: "Who are you? What are you?" And the judgment of what you are can suddenly change. Because it doesn't see you clearly. It doesn't know what you are.John Irving
(He has a thing about bears - check the recurring themes chart.)
Labels:
bears,
charismatic megafauna,
john irving,
pretty words
captive
Dancing Bear by Julianna Swaney: reminds me of this book, and a million (well, three) John Irving stories.
Labels:
art,
bears,
charismatic megafauna,
julianna swaney,
prints
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