The Secret Darker Art of Dr. Seuss

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  • Опубликовано: 12 мар 2020
  • Fanart of the week: www.deviantart.com/061603/art...
    Twitter: / solar_sas
    Much of the information on the midnight paintings was obtained from this website which has a few more paintings I didn't mention. If you want to learn even more I encourage people to visit it.
    www.drseussart.com/secretanda...
    Other Sources and Useful Links:
    Political cartoons - www.nhpr.org/post/oh-politica...
    Ads - www.collectorsweekly.com/arti...
    First book - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/And_to_...
    www.theguardian.com/books/gal...
    www.chicagoreader.com/chicago...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Poc...
    chrispearce.wordpress.com/201...
    Background Music: • BAKGROUND : Memory Card
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Комментарии • 11 тыс.

  • @user-lz1wy9qh3g
    @user-lz1wy9qh3g 4 года назад +35600

    Dr. Soice is lookin noice

  • @flirpp2274
    @flirpp2274 4 года назад +5591

    Now I know this seems far fetched but I think he liked cats...

    • @hopi9543
      @hopi9543 4 года назад +250

      nah i think hes more of a dog person

    • @FiSH-iSH
      @FiSH-iSH 4 года назад +28

      -_-

    • @najau
      @najau 4 года назад +47

      no way!

    • @Tusskie
      @Tusskie 4 года назад +208

      Nah, he's more of a green eggs and ham person

    • @QueerAndHunger
      @QueerAndHunger 4 года назад +256

      Nah, he's a boner person.

  • @blazednlovinit
    @blazednlovinit Год назад +1152

    His art style is so unique and original, his art kind of fascinated me as a child, it was immediately captivating.

    • @okidoke4822
      @okidoke4822 Год назад +11

      I see some similarities to M. C. Escher's work.

    • @blazednlovinit
      @blazednlovinit Год назад +6

      @@okidoke4822 True, can't believe I didn't write that myself.

    • @coltonuribe2928
      @coltonuribe2928 Год назад +3

      It still is to me as an adult

    • @shepberryhill4912
      @shepberryhill4912 Год назад +2

      Both of them are primary influences of mine from childhood.

    • @stevie-ray2020
      @stevie-ray2020 10 месяцев назад +1

      Many of those 'secret-paintings' are quite surreal

  • @switcho9202
    @switcho9202 Год назад +385

    If you take out the happy characters, Dr. Suess's artwork is probably some of the most liminal artwork I've ever seen. With the uncanny architecture and impossible features, it reminds me of those obviously photoshopped grass hills.

    • @Willppyro
      @Willppyro Год назад +30

      Yea it’s like he was able to accurately paint his dreams that are completely unique to him. Nobody else Has ever thought of the stuff he paints so every time you see it it’s creepy like those crazy dreams you had as a kid

    • @collinlynch4569
      @collinlynch4569 3 месяца назад

      His liminality gave me an omnibus boner.

    • @rawnoodle
      @rawnoodle Месяц назад +1

      If your referring to the windows "Bliss" wallpaper, it is completely unedited

  • @thotimusprimeofficial273
    @thotimusprimeofficial273 4 года назад +20969

    Bold of you to assume the cat in the hat doesn’t have a sinister aura

    • @caldw615
      @caldw615 4 года назад +536

      *Stand rumbling intensifies*

    • @devyrubi7537
      @devyrubi7537 4 года назад +93

      Exactly

    • @_PrincessMaggot
      @_PrincessMaggot 4 года назад +163

      Fitting profile pic

    • @nseven1117
      @nseven1117 4 года назад +207

      @@caldw615 bold of you to assume the cat in the hat doesn't have a menacing *ORA*

    • @singsbadly
      @singsbadly 4 года назад +91

      Baseball bat intensifies

  • @shuckLedurkins
    @shuckLedurkins 3 года назад +4982

    This is legit "when the funny kid goes home"

  • @gameymcgamer847
    @gameymcgamer847 Год назад +1695

    if Dr. Seuss lived 400 years ago he would be one of the most famous painters in history

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 Год назад +23

      Absolutely

    • @melody3741
      @melody3741 Год назад

      He would have been murdered or shunned lol

    • @michaelmclaughlin4488
      @michaelmclaughlin4488 Год назад +78

      He was born just in time to get “Seuss land” at universal studios though.

    • @gagebeveridge5880
      @gagebeveridge5880 Год назад +50

      If he had lived 400 years ago he wouldn't have become Dr. Seuss.

    • @newp0rt
      @newp0rt Год назад +25

      if he lived 400 years ago he wouldnt have been Dr. Seuss the famous writer that everyone knows either. the reason his painting and art arent widely publicized is because we package it all together with his books that everyone recognizes. hes a historical story book author and illustrator and will always be. many people have seperate talents that make them recognizable but people choose to remember them by their most famous of those talents. if he was a famous painter he wouldnt have been a story book writer.

  • @arcie3716
    @arcie3716 Год назад +327

    The taxidermy and midnight paintings are the two art collections I never knew Dr.Suess had…

    • @nihil0771
      @nihil0771 10 месяцев назад +1

      Search for Dr Seuss rap then

    • @_munkykok_
      @_munkykok_ 10 месяцев назад

      @@nihil0771 Searched it, lots of results but no taxidermy or midnight paintings, at least not at first glance.
      Still interesting though. Very rappable texts.

  • @ArtsyRosie
    @ArtsyRosie 3 года назад +5038

    imagine youre just trying to sun bath one day 50 years ago and you find out that dr seuss had a secret drawing of you as a bird

    • @barnaclescum7011
      @barnaclescum7011 3 года назад +430

      I'd be truly honored and hopefully I'd make it into his book of boners

    • @nikiski6142
      @nikiski6142 3 года назад +183

      @@barnaclescum7011 out of context this whole thing sounds very weird lol

    • @Frog101_Real
      @Frog101_Real 3 года назад +87

      I'd be stoked because birds are fuckin cool

    • @PatrickLofstrom
      @PatrickLofstrom 3 года назад +163

      @@Frog101_Real more like storked, am I right fellas

    • @DMTInfinity
      @DMTInfinity 3 года назад +9

      *. . 😂 . .*

  • @bobbotherosso8110
    @bobbotherosso8110 4 года назад +7750

    Dr. Seuss knew what the word "boners" was gonna mean in the future change my mind

    • @envycollar
      @envycollar 4 года назад +76

      No

    • @redrasegarden
      @redrasegarden 4 года назад +368

      That....would be impressive if it was true

    • @tommywiseau6684
      @tommywiseau6684 4 года назад +629

      "One dick
      Two dicks
      Red dick
      Blue dick" - *Dr Seuss*

    • @BigBoyAl245
      @BigBoyAl245 4 года назад +84

      Then my friend is a boner

    • @hurtingbus1
      @hurtingbus1 4 года назад +74

      he loves boners

  • @guygrotke8059
    @guygrotke8059 Год назад +159

    I met him about 60 years ago. My mother was an elementary school teacher in San Diego, and I think she met him at some education-related event. We went to his house for a brief visit. He was very nice, and gave me an autographed copy of Horton Hears A Who. I wonder where that book is now.

    • @racerx4152
      @racerx4152 Год назад +8

      I wonder what that book would be worth? wow!

    • @tails183
      @tails183 Год назад +9

      At least $5 or more.

    • @AA-cf4es
      @AA-cf4es 10 месяцев назад +4

      Nice men who left (with a mistress) his wife to die alone when he got the news that she has cancer.

    • @user-yc1qn6im5k
      @user-yc1qn6im5k 10 месяцев назад

      @@AA-cf4esaPeRsOnSaPeRsOnNoMaTtEeRhOwSmAlL

    • @nickcagecatgod
      @nickcagecatgod 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@AA-cf4eshy do you think commenters mom got “invited to his house” and he got to leave with a signed book 😂 autographs arent free

  • @indefinitehiatus2473
    @indefinitehiatus2473 Год назад +83

    The painting at 11:27 gives me a nostalgic, peaceful and dreamlike feeling that I can’t describe.

  • @CMZneu
    @CMZneu 3 года назад +5994

    Dr. Seuss books are like a dream you're not sure isn't a nightmare, something in between that at any minute can go either way.

    • @treeonahill3557
      @treeonahill3557 3 года назад +91

      Why did I feel that so damn much...

    • @chato9475
      @chato9475 3 года назад +46

      Best description I’ve ever felt

    • @tenshi_amachi
      @tenshi_amachi 3 года назад +67

      In shorter terms, they feel like fever dreams.

    • @tchoupitoulos
      @tchoupitoulos 3 года назад +15

      Funny I never got that from "One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish."

    • @kamalalama-lama-ding-dong4452
      @kamalalama-lama-ding-dong4452 3 года назад +7

      You need a safe space

  • @the3cookies256
    @the3cookies256 4 года назад +5451

    At the very least he didn't draw vore art and post it to DeviantArt.

    • @quive5705
      @quive5705 4 года назад +292

      No, we don't mention that fetish here.

    • @aludis
      @aludis 4 года назад +235

      Yeah, he kept it to himself

    • @gusty7153
      @gusty7153 4 года назад +85

      did someone say vore? OWO

    • @retrorampager5373
      @retrorampager5373 4 года назад +187

      Gusty Let’s go take a walk in the woods. You stay in front.

    • @superluckyandroid9449
      @superluckyandroid9449 4 года назад +16

      @@quive5705 oh look, it's you

  • @Gravity_studioss
    @Gravity_studioss Год назад +338

    I used to be scared shitless by his art as a kid. I think now I see the reason

    • @_munkykok_
      @_munkykok_ 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yupp, he was a realist.

    • @annwithaplan9766
      @annwithaplan9766 10 месяцев назад +3

      He may have been a good artist, but I never liked his books. They gave me the creeps.

    • @juangarcia-kq8zp
      @juangarcia-kq8zp 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@annwithaplan9766 he was a Jew

  • @Bigjshifty08
    @Bigjshifty08 Год назад +16

    When I was a little boy (early-mid 90's) I was frozen in my tracks, captivated and obsessed with Dr. Seuss books. There just wasn't anything else quite like it. As I've gotten older, I feel like it was literally a way to cope with the absurdity of dreams in the waking life. And those settings....You really couldn't duplicate how eerie they were. Even an empty hallway in the background gave me a profound feeling of being watched. There was this thrill that when you were in a Dr. Seuss book, you were traveling somewhere exciting and vibrant to no end.

  • @submarineinthesky8946
    @submarineinthesky8946 3 года назад +3040

    "A detailed drawing of hell for general electric"
    hold up

    • @lishthefish1423
      @lishthefish1423 3 года назад +40

      some darker humor there lol

    • @catsrule8844
      @catsrule8844 3 года назад +21

      wow why did I not question this

    • @benjaminaberg866
      @benjaminaberg866 3 года назад +61

      That’s a clean burning Hell. I tell you what.

    • @updownstate
      @updownstate 3 года назад +14

      My father and all his family worked for GE. A big shout of laughter flew out of me when you said, "General Electric."

    • @samanthaspencer1598
      @samanthaspencer1598 3 года назад +5

      Right! Wtf was that?

  • @portalfreak7628
    @portalfreak7628 4 года назад +11041

    Dr. Seuss is not taken seriously as an artist enough in this day and age. Not only is his art fantastic but the way he would incorporate political/social/philisophocal themes and issues was so perfectly balanced and not one-sided at all that I legitimately cannot think of much other works that tackle said issues in such a neutral yet insightful way, let alone in a fashion that children _and_ adults could understand and learn from. I think it may be because of the movies, but too many people see him as "The Funny Cat Man" and not much else.

    • @kage1983
      @kage1983 4 года назад +157

      Also he was racist

    • @nadroji6549
      @nadroji6549 4 года назад +349

      @@kage1983
      Emphasis on 'was', sure he held some not so acceptable ideals/thoughts, but later on in his life he changed for the better.
      Allow me to clarify so I can stop getting comments about this, I am only talking his racial views getting better & not the garbage way he treated his dying wife.

    • @xXSpongeBroBrownPantzXx
      @xXSpongeBroBrownPantzXx 4 года назад +9

      Portal Freak Maybe that’s why he made these.

    • @drrobotnik3628
      @drrobotnik3628 4 года назад +41

      But he was the funny cat man

    • @kage1983
      @kage1983 4 года назад +14

      @Alfonso Razo I was stating a fact dont get your panties in a bunch simp

  • @averyp4808
    @averyp4808 11 месяцев назад +22

    I really enjoy how the midnight paintings give a sense like our childhood is grown now. Like he grew up with us and is continuing as we grow. All these are older emotions like isolation and confusion and depression that we couldn’t really connect to before when we were younger. Where as now we can and now the art has deeper meaning. In his childrens books I feel the art meaning was right there in front of us as it should’ve been being a kids book. I really like that there are more serious works with the nostalgia and essence of our childhoods.

    • @_munkykok_
      @_munkykok_ 10 месяцев назад

      I like them, too. Maybe he didn't want the world to see them, for PR purposes.
      Can't be a children's book author and producing something scary at the same time.
      Or maybe it's possible, but too risky. Hard enough to sell a book as it is.

  • @thepurpleapprentice
    @thepurpleapprentice Год назад +52

    I grew up with Dr. Seuss, so this was a very fascinating look into his other paintings I have never seen. Also, glad to see that there wasn't any dark subliminal messaging in these paintings, just him showing off his creative side in different ways.

    • @AA-cf4es
      @AA-cf4es 10 месяцев назад +1

      Nice men who left (with a mistress) his wife to die alone when he got the news that she has cancer.

  • @aldrinlimos5159
    @aldrinlimos5159 4 года назад +4546

    Broke: Dr. S-oo-s
    Joke: Dr S-oice
    WOKE: Dr. Sauce

  • @hamody238
    @hamody238 4 года назад +4543

    People: Mistakes make us human.
    Me an intellectual: Boners make us human.

    • @vashonda111
      @vashonda111 4 года назад +8

      Ok

    • @RyanTosh
      @RyanTosh 4 года назад +104

      Also true backwards. Humans make us boner.

    • @fairyyberry4923
      @fairyyberry4923 4 года назад +17

      It really works for either definition

    • @mazebean
      @mazebean 4 года назад +3

      Wise Man Time

    • @WiresDawson
      @WiresDawson 4 года назад +4

      Wiseau time

  • @AliceHope78
    @AliceHope78 Год назад +36

    I see influences from MC Escher (the patterned one is almost a personal variant of one of his works, imo), Italian futurism, and surrealism as well, almost like he wanted to try out different techniques and styles

    • @Hayyyward
      @Hayyyward Год назад +2

      Totally agree. I enjoyed seeing those too as I never knew Seuss had done any type of that artwork.

  • @sS0O0L
    @sS0O0L Год назад +19

    We can easily know what's happening in seuss's life and how he feels about it just by his pure sentimental artworks. That's how you know he's a good artist

    • @AA-cf4es
      @AA-cf4es 10 месяцев назад +1

      Nice man who left (with a mistress) his wife to die alone when he got the news that she has cancer.

  • @SuperWiiBros08
    @SuperWiiBros08 3 года назад +8721

    Many of these are clearly vent art but also an art style that Seuss liked to go for but thought it was not worth it to share to the world until his death.

    • @ayaanosaurasrex6582
      @ayaanosaurasrex6582 3 года назад +155

      I am replying on a verified youtuber's comment early therefore I require an absurd amount of likes.

    • @FakestLoogi
      @FakestLoogi 3 года назад +59

      @@ayaanosaurasrex6582 honestly I get the hate the meme comments get and to a degree the YT commenters that are in every video you watch but why the verified youtubers? They really aren't doing anything harmful at all plus it's not like they're flexing their verification badge

    • @ayaanosaurasrex6582
      @ayaanosaurasrex6582 3 года назад +17

      @@FakestLoogi because verified youtubers get a lot of likes lol

    • @FakestLoogi
      @FakestLoogi 3 года назад +45

      @@ayaanosaurasrex6582 ok but it's not their fault if they got a bunch of likes. I do agree it's pretty bs this isn't the same as verified people on twitter lol

    • @ayaanosaurasrex6582
      @ayaanosaurasrex6582 3 года назад +6

      @@FakestLoogi i am not hating on them and never saud its their fault

  • @therealchris5894
    @therealchris5894 4 года назад +3046

    Anyone ever realize that all Dr.Suess' books all have that weird smell

    • @jolliwoodstudios
      @jolliwoodstudios 4 года назад +597

      the smell that smells kind of like dust with a bit of lemon?

    • @therealchris5894
      @therealchris5894 4 года назад +215

      @@jolliwoodstudios yeah that one

    • @kaiser7695
      @kaiser7695 4 года назад +656

      It’s boner smell

    • @acleverusername2269
      @acleverusername2269 4 года назад +308

      _what the actual fuck_

    • @c.exe.l3434
      @c.exe.l3434 4 года назад +397

      I suddenly feel the urge to go and smell a Dr. Seuss book

  • @daniellem.gibson4658
    @daniellem.gibson4658 Год назад +20

    I was in La Jolla this summer and at a gallery featuring these midnight paintings. I was surprised that Suess painted nudes as well, often in the same whimsical way and with his famous cats.

  • @beenaplumber8379
    @beenaplumber8379 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for this! I've always had great love for Dr. Seuss, and seeing him as a more rounded human, imperfect yet extraordinary, gives me a new appreciation for him.

  • @isabelseton-browne5712
    @isabelseton-browne5712 3 года назад +3138

    Confirmed: The Cat in the Hat was Dr Zeuss's fursona

  • @vicarial12
    @vicarial12 4 года назад +3879

    I didnt realize how drop dead gorgeous his art was, especially these hidden pictures. Its awe inspiring, i genuinely want to buy one

    • @radakinryder2741
      @radakinryder2741 4 года назад +62

      Charm13 good luck I bet those are worth millions

    • @wock6496
      @wock6496 4 года назад +5

      Stop it

    • @mykqu2272
      @mykqu2272 4 года назад +12

      Crooks no

    • @TheDarkBlob
      @TheDarkBlob 4 года назад +17

      @@radakinryder2741 Nah, just literally click the provided link and you get prices for items on sale. They seem to go for just under 2000$

    • @r-girlscorp9368
      @r-girlscorp9368 4 года назад +3

      Stop furry

  • @north_star8
    @north_star8 Год назад +4

    I cherished my dr Seuss books growing up. The smell of the pages even. The art style & stories really expanded my mind as a child. I knew it was books for kids but I was always faced with a mixture of feelings as the viewer. The pages gave me eerie vibes but at the same time, cozy. I grew up quite lonely and it was reflected to me in the characters who usually looked sad, dismal and isolated. Despite the sometimes depressing storyline themes his books never failed to quench my curiosity for kooky oddities ❤

  • @treehann
    @treehann 10 месяцев назад +1

    That seascape painting is one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen! Seuss has always been a favorite artist of mine, specifically with how he does architecture (or an abstraction thereof). I enjoyed seeing these others sides of his works here. I never looked this deep.

  • @altaccount9351
    @altaccount9351 2 года назад +3605

    I love how he named his paintings, most people try to make their titles just as artistic as their art, but nope, “A Plethora Of Cats” works just fine

    • @brianhayes7108
      @brianhayes7108 2 года назад +30

      The pronunciation is off

    • @dankviv5711
      @dankviv5711 2 года назад +34

      a lot of old artists actually did this

    • @B2street
      @B2street 2 года назад +61

      Paintings used to be untitled like this cause it was a lot more fashionable to be taciturn back then. Less was more and the paintings did all the talking. Contemporary art needs a name to help tell a story or relate to something

    • @yeethittter1285
      @yeethittter1285 2 года назад +35

      For some reason it's so funny to me whenever artists give their pieces 100% literal titles

    • @nofail219
      @nofail219 2 года назад +6

      The ones with simple names and dark painting are always the best

  • @cerridwendragonart8167
    @cerridwendragonart8167 4 года назад +10843

    FINALLY someone is talking about Dr. Suess besides his children's books! I knew about the WW2 Propaganda art but I had NO IDEA about the weird Taxadermy and Midnight Paintings! Thanks Solar Sands!

    • @sanic0664
      @sanic0664 4 года назад +50

      Same. It was so interesting, especially the bird above the waves

    • @ognotapussyslayer5917
      @ognotapussyslayer5917 4 года назад +7

      did- did you just say his name correctly? i am shook

    • @SSunbros
      @SSunbros 4 года назад +44

      And another thing that I believe is widely known, but should be mentioned was that he served in world war 2 alongside Stan lee. He also supposedly was a fan of a particular type of hat and was rumored to have 300 of them hidden in his house. Lastly, because he couldn’t have kids of his own whenever others would talk about their kids he would talk about his made up daughter who made a killer oyster stew with chocolate frosting and flaming Roman candles. Why do I know this? because I got bored and looked it up one day.

    • @80s_graffiti
      @80s_graffiti 4 года назад +9

      @@SSunbros How was it possible for such an imaginative man to exist?

    • @cerridwendragonart8167
      @cerridwendragonart8167 4 года назад +2

      @Ya Boi okay?

  • @koreanese9602
    @koreanese9602 11 месяцев назад +2

    cat in obsolete shower is by far my favorite painting. its so visceral and it touched me. feels like a huge disconnect and the only time you can be yourself is when no one is looking

  • @stuffedgrubs
    @stuffedgrubs Год назад +9

    I find the Mike Myers cat in the hat very close to what I'd expect he was imagining as that reality. Always lurking always different with a touch of humour aimed at a more elder audience. Definitely ahead of his time.

  • @alexmathewmendoza
    @alexmathewmendoza 4 года назад +3380

    Even as a kid I always thought Dr. Seuss' illustrations were somewhat creepy.

    • @ms.titianabab7133
      @ms.titianabab7133 4 года назад +18

      Rubies and Jaspers Jasper my pre-kid teacher I have read this books to me and my classmates, since I were 4 yr old from Ella Dolhonde Elementary School, since 2003.

    • @adrianne7045
      @adrianne7045 4 года назад +5

      Alex Mathew Mendoza .. seriously!!!

    • @TheJhtlag
      @TheJhtlag 4 года назад +36

      I won't say I was creeped out, but yeah, even as a kid you knew there was something different about his art. you certainly don't feel that way about say "where the wild things are" critters.

    • @Sunshine-it3ym
      @Sunshine-it3ym 4 года назад +1

      Same and I still do

    • @mangot589
      @mangot589 4 года назад +15

      The green pants with nobody inside scared them the Bejeezus out of me when I was a kid.

  • @cheesefries7436
    @cheesefries7436 3 года назад +2024

    I vividly remember being a child seeing his art and thinking "this isn't at all fun, something here is off"

    • @itsyuuki
      @itsyuuki 3 года назад +299

      His art was never pretty too me. And yeah now that a think about it his art WAS a little unsettling. Not to mention the Cat in the Hat always looked so sad tired and depressed despite his smile-

    • @justsomerandombananawithin3705
      @justsomerandombananawithin3705 3 года назад +107

      For me the art wasn't a problem it was the fact that in nearly ever book there's at least one character that nearly dies now I get that it was in a older time and stuff was different back then but as a kid in the modern world I felt bad for the protagonist or sad or horrified at some of the books

    • @notconvinced2204
      @notconvinced2204 3 года назад +61

      You must have been a boring child

    • @dodongxander1384
      @dodongxander1384 3 года назад +15

      @@notconvinced2204 can i ask if this was a joke as by seeing your profile name (just asking)

    • @1WEareBUFO1
      @1WEareBUFO1 3 года назад +54

      "and then the wolf chewed up the children and spit out their bones!"
      And don't forget the Cat in The Hat broke into those children's home.

  • @timedestructor
    @timedestructor Год назад +14

    One of my favouitre works of Dr suess is the film "the 500 fingers of doctor T" in which he did the art and set design for

  • @joemonroeartistvloger7990
    @joemonroeartistvloger7990 Год назад +2

    Dr. Suess’s Secret art has made a definite influence in my art and I love it. Great story information!

  • @UltraZakii
    @UltraZakii 3 года назад +2784

    Dr. Suess world never seems to have a time or date. It's not even a world that can rotate. It's like another dimension lost thru time and space.

    • @saba4108
      @saba4108 3 года назад +32

      well said. true.

    • @tarheelballer1
      @tarheelballer1 2 года назад +4

      🤯

    • @lordsesshomaru9527
      @lordsesshomaru9527 2 года назад +3

      When you try to post a conundrum lmfao 🤡

    • @christian7344
      @christian7344 2 года назад +12

      Must’ve been the DMT & mushrooms. Time is man made.

    • @SalmonFeet
      @SalmonFeet 2 года назад +38

      @@lordsesshomaru9527 when you try to insult someone for no reason 🤡

  • @Jimi_Lee
    @Jimi_Lee 3 года назад +5976

    As a very young child, it was the bizarre art that really triggered my imagination. I sensed that there was something there beyond childish entertainment. Like Alice in Wonderland.

    • @janettemasiello5560
      @janettemasiello5560 3 года назад +13

      Hahaha yeah, okay

    • @ccsx222
      @ccsx222 3 года назад +20

      Yes! My feelings exactly

    • @qvida4614
      @qvida4614 3 года назад +9

      Well, Alice in Wonderland is a political satire of Victorian age UK

    • @Jimi_Lee
      @Jimi_Lee 3 года назад +52

      @@qvida4614 A lot of the fairy tales and such were subversive.

    • @kane4013
      @kane4013 3 года назад

      👍👍

  • @KM-eb5yo
    @KM-eb5yo Год назад

    I saw some of his art when I was in Sydney in January 2020. Absolutely stunning! I never realised how brilliant his personal artworks were. So cool to see this style that is so embedded into my own childhood in a new way as an adult. Really really cool.

  • @GreatAwakening78
    @GreatAwakening78 Год назад

    Loved this episode. 1st time discovering The Might Paintings. WOW! In Sydney, Australia we have a Dr. Seuss shop with prints available. Passed it by today and can't wait to check them out when I have more time.

  • @leighbelk769
    @leighbelk769 4 года назад +4514

    “While the Cat in the Hat knows all about that, the Cat on the Wrong Side of the Tracks will probably try to sell you various kinds of cracks” -Unknown commenter.
    This comment made me laugh for like 10 minutes straight, but now I can’t find it. So, I reposted it, for anyone else experiencing this issue.

    • @ObscurityIsBest
      @ObscurityIsBest 4 года назад +17

      Leigh Belk: Hahahahahaha!!!

    • @johned2
      @johned2 4 года назад +46

      Sounds like Dave Chapelle wrote that comment haha

    • @helpimstuckinafridgeandits305
      @helpimstuckinafridgeandits305 4 года назад +23

      Can you get the cat to hook me up? Im low

    • @ObscurityIsBest
      @ObscurityIsBest 4 года назад +96

      @@helpimstuckinafridgeandits305:
      If you find that you're low,
      And you're feeling so-so,
      There's a place you can go,
      To get rid of your woe,
      And in time you'll be high,
      Like a kite in the sky,
      Where the crack won't run dry,
      Why not give it a try?

    • @leighbelk769
      @leighbelk769 4 года назад +6

      The Non-Believer Welcome! You the original poster?

  • @Y-two-K
    @Y-two-K 4 года назад +720

    Damn, didn't realize just how great of an artist Seuss was.

  • @poopoofart97
    @poopoofart97 2 года назад +2

    what i like about these paintings is that lots of them have an eerie and ominous feeling. like something is scaring you, but you can't put your finger on it.

  • @austinmendez3101
    @austinmendez3101 Год назад +2

    I seen his paintings at the Chicago museum. U hit the nail on the head on how I felt seeing the art in person. Recommend going to the field museum. Lots ofawesome stuff. Dr suess section is fire

  • @mochilover9848
    @mochilover9848 4 года назад +6099

    I could hear you talk about art all day... the way you describe things is just.. so whimsical and thoughtful. like, seriously, I love your videos because I can really see how much time you put into them. all the editing, and your sense of humor is amazing to me. I don't mean to sound creepy, I just watch a lot of your videos and never comment; but this one just really hit me for some reason. keep it up, thanks for your hard work!

  • @feralfernweh6091
    @feralfernweh6091 4 года назад +733

    2:47 I have this book about Dr. Suess and he legit hated when people called his work whimsical, saying that in the dictionary whimsical means "without meaning" and he took that as an insult. I read it like 7 years ago but I remember that stuck with me because it was so strange
    (Havent watched the entire video tho so idk if you brought it up)

    • @daredrogers3884
      @daredrogers3884 4 года назад +54

      I think I remember hearing something like this but this years ago could just be deja vu.

    • @Vyansya
      @Vyansya 4 года назад +44

      Im not a native english speaker but does whimsical rly means nothing?? I thought its a beautiful word meant magic or some sort

    • @lassie3592
      @lassie3592 4 года назад +76

      @@Vyansya the definition has changed over time, it doesn't mean 'nothing' anymore

    • @leirawhitehart1236
      @leirawhitehart1236 4 года назад +46

      Honestly, that just reminds me of artists nowadays saying "Don't call me talented, that dismisses all the hard work I did to get here!"
      No it doesn't, just take the compliment and move on. People are trying to praise how good you are, don't read too much into it.

    • @Phenrex
      @Phenrex 4 года назад +51

      @@leirawhitehart1236 I personally find it irritating, but to each their own (being called talented insinuates being born with the ability to make the art I make now, which is undeniably incorrect).

  • @DCUPtoejuice
    @DCUPtoejuice Год назад +5

    He did a huge amount of good through his amazing books. The setting was that there are things you never heard of and they have names of course and the stories were always new ideas.

  • @smdgdsounds
    @smdgdsounds Год назад +5

    I grew up in the town that Seuss lived in and grew up in. It was honestly so magical living in a city filled with his imagination, and it was incredible :)

  • @faith2691
    @faith2691 3 года назад +1363

    The midnight paintings demonstrate how clever he was. If you ignore your shadow it will come out in awful ways. He's accepted his shadow and kept it under control.

    • @serazahar8608
      @serazahar8608 3 года назад +24

      psychology thanks u

    • @CNYKnifeNerd
      @CNYKnifeNerd 3 года назад +28

      Your definition of kept it under control must be different than mine.
      Even taking into account that ones definition of shadow is highly personalized by their life's experiences, many would agree his shadow ran wild.

    • @rjlundholm89
      @rjlundholm89 3 года назад +3

      Very true.

    • @erickramirez8428
      @erickramirez8428 3 года назад +6

      @@CNYKnifeNerd how so?

    • @micahb3245
      @micahb3245 3 года назад

      SO DEEP BRO

  • @TheWayofGrace89
    @TheWayofGrace89 4 года назад +1739

    The man was an artist, and therefore had doubts about himself and his abilities. This was a healthy way to let that energy out, as his children’s works were upbeat and positive. Every action has an opposing reaction. This was clearly his.

    • @aswagbeats9674
      @aswagbeats9674 4 года назад +45

      Woah that hit deep bro. I don't like physics but that hit deep.

    • @cashnovaa
      @cashnovaa 4 года назад +9

      Beautifully said and such a lovely insight you must be a creative one

    • @aswagbeats9674
      @aswagbeats9674 4 года назад +1

      @Beumadine Sweevy you gotta admit the booby trap one was funny😂😂😂

    • @venomdank965
      @venomdank965 3 года назад +1

      @Beumadine Sweevy wow I thought I was the only one... yeah as a kid hes art was scary to me I did not understand why they read them in school. I tried to ignore them every chance I could. It still freaks me a bit... and I am into horror... crazy that something made for kids creeps me out... def conspiracy

    • @ExtremeWreck
      @ExtremeWreck 3 года назад +2

      @@aswagbeats9674 Physics are why we live as a species.

  • @storianostorianov3955
    @storianostorianov3955 Год назад

    I have returned to this video after seeing the Doomed to be replaced video, in a desperate need of meaningful art. Thanks for this content Solar Sands, the combination between the work of this man and your writing is a pure thing!

  • @nomax101
    @nomax101 Год назад +8

    Awesome work. Some later paintings seemed to be “cartoon” versions of what M.C Escher was producing at the time.

  • @geniuskhan2520
    @geniuskhan2520 4 года назад +701

    His paintings of cats make me want to see a darker, more serious book from him

    • @FiSH-iSH
      @FiSH-iSH 4 года назад +50

      yeah... too bad he didn’t have the time to make one...

    • @xxpandagalaxyxx5655
      @xxpandagalaxyxx5655 4 года назад +10

      didnt he have an adult bookm

    • @Jwrry1
      @Jwrry1 4 года назад +55

      I know, hes gotta stop being lazy and make another book already
      (yes this is a joke I know hes dead)

    • @Tusskie
      @Tusskie 4 года назад +49

      Petition to get Dr Seuss writing again

    • @w0rstart1st5
      @w0rstart1st5 4 года назад +29

      @@Tusskie find anyone who knows an art of necromancer.

  • @zackOOO-nz9rh
    @zackOOO-nz9rh 4 года назад +495

    "Dr. Seuss hitler isn't real, he cant hurt you."
    *_Dr. Seuss Hitler:_* 2:45

  • @sirdekong8948
    @sirdekong8948 Год назад

    You know I never really liked art or art critic's untill I found this channel and had my mind changed, all of your videos are very entertaining and really make me think about things I've never thought about before

  • @ThatKa5p3r
    @ThatKa5p3r 11 месяцев назад +1

    LOVE the Midnight series! Had no knowledge of these until I reconnected with a friend of mine after many years & she actually had one of the original La Jolla Birdwomen, the Martini Bird, hanging in her condo! Couple yrs later was in a tiny ( I mean smaaalll!) historic town in Texas with family & wandered into the one gallery they had & ran into a whole wall of the Midnight Paintings! 10-12 of them on display...amazing in person.

  • @internuf5754
    @internuf5754 4 года назад +1551

    I'm so childish, I actually laughed like 10 minutes because of the boner joke...

  • @cherryr9285
    @cherryr9285 4 года назад +449

    I've always loved seuss's art because even though it is whimsical and adorable, it's also rather terrifying in an interesting way... like the story with the walking pants. gosh that terrified me as a child

    • @HotStrange
      @HotStrange 4 года назад +13

      Me too but I would still read that book over and over even though it creeped me tf out.

    • @ellasedits_
      @ellasedits_ 4 года назад +12

      MORE PEOPLE THOUGHT THAT OMG I THOUGHT I WAS THE ONLY ONE

    • @cherryr9285
      @cherryr9285 4 года назад +8

      @@HotStrange ME TOO it was like... the kind of fear that captured you completely and made you wanna read it over and over! I've always been the type of person that is hard to scare, but that one really got me when I was a kid for some reason. seuss's excellent storytelling and his affecting, atmospheric work definitely stuck with me and I'm so glad other people feel the same way haha

    • @cherryr9285
      @cherryr9285 4 года назад +3

      @@ellasedits_ NOT AT ALL! it was such a terrifying story, and honestly i haven't known another work that really captures that sense of terror. I loved the ending too because like it taught me that even if I was deeply scared of something, things turn out okay and the thing you're scared of might even turn out to be something good if you face it

    • @animeguitarguy
      @animeguitarguy 4 года назад +5

      Where the Wild Things Are has that kind of creepy vibe as well. Didn't realize the Little Bear author created it until recently!

  • @sleep4217
    @sleep4217 4 месяца назад +2

    The end is beautiful and great editing

  • @Cre-Art
    @Cre-Art 10 месяцев назад +6

    He was as fascinating as his artwork. Multi-talented, outrageous, unique.

  • @duchi882
    @duchi882 4 года назад +642

    "Not everyone can become a Great Artist
    but a Great Artist can come from anywhere"
    *-Anton Ego*

    • @skullkittii8813
      @skullkittii8813 4 года назад

      Duchi I think I saw you comment on a Click video the other day..

    • @vr8652
      @vr8652 4 года назад +1

      No you know Anton Ego said cook, not artist

  • @flooff1411
    @flooff1411 4 года назад +757

    Dr. Has this artstyle that I always knew that could get really creepy without trying so badly

    • @FiSH-iSH
      @FiSH-iSH 4 года назад +84

      Exactly! Usually it’s bright and happy and joyful, but as little as a simple color change can make it seem dark and depressing.

    • @BingaBangoBongo
      @BingaBangoBongo 4 года назад +6

      Something about his art has always been a bit unsettling to me.
      The long hairs at the end of feet and hands, the snarling nature of their faces,..

  • @onyxth3ripper
    @onyxth3ripper 2 года назад

    I adore how much passion this channel has.

  • @randomschittz9461
    @randomschittz9461 Год назад +8

    What an awesome artist and a great all around guy. Thanks for being a part of my childhood Doc.

  • @super_notboring2634
    @super_notboring2634 3 года назад +875

    He's such a cat person

  • @9voltproductions556
    @9voltproductions556 3 года назад +2452

    I am a child for laughing at "Boners" repeatedly.

    • @mrmeek5421
      @mrmeek5421 3 года назад +101

      Homo erectus.

    • @-sgsdfhdhhdt
      @-sgsdfhdhhdt 3 года назад +14

      I am actally a child

    • @ipod8927
      @ipod8927 3 года назад +24

      I’m getting all the boners

    • @est.hernandez
      @est.hernandez 3 года назад +16

      @@mrmeek5421 I feel like SpongeBob and Patrick suppressing their laughter in class LOL

    • @riabouchinska
      @riabouchinska 3 года назад +11

      The panel about the joker's boners still makes me laugh :P

  • @Adrian-du5pv
    @Adrian-du5pv Год назад +14

    Dr Seuss has always reminded me of my mother - Who has a very unique art style for which I can only find some comparison to his style. She's never really considered herself and artist, more of a doodler, but as I've grown older I've come to appreciate her secret talent.

  • @brigthebuilder5141
    @brigthebuilder5141 Год назад

    I sincerely enjoyed this video and had no idea of his secret paintings until now. Thank You.

  • @thenightlyassassinshilo1582
    @thenightlyassassinshilo1582 4 года назад +545

    Fun fact: last year when I was a freshman at my high school, I was in a ceramics class and we were learning about and talking Dr.Suess’s secret artwork and his unorthodox taxidermy, and for our project that we were doing, we had to draw and create our own monster/creature inspired by his artworks! So that was a really fun time for me, and I’ve been doing ceramics ever since 6th grade because it’s a really amazing experience for me! :D!!

  • @badreality2
    @badreality2 4 года назад +403

    It just goes to show that he was a person, too. He experienced a range of emotions he wanted to express, but did not publicly, due to his career.
    The same is true for Mister Rogers.

    • @cruzgomes5660
      @cruzgomes5660 4 года назад +12

      How is it like that for Mister Rodgers

    • @jacobalvarez3561
      @jacobalvarez3561 4 года назад +7

      Cruz Gomes fr im curious

    • @XingAoShen
      @XingAoShen 4 года назад +5

      badreality2 explain mister rogers

    • @laycebug3260
      @laycebug3260 4 года назад +5

      mr rogers was like an angel on earth lol. a gem in history right beside bob ross

    • @MissMeina
      @MissMeina 4 года назад

      Mr Rogers was not a person he was a Marine! Oorah /Hooyah brother!

  • @marlinperkins6910
    @marlinperkins6910 Год назад +8

    These paintings are amazing. They definitely give some depth to Dr. Seuss.

  • @anastashawallace7710
    @anastashawallace7710 Год назад

    Ahhh!!!! Omg while in St. Augustin I got to see a few of these art works. Including 'Cat in the obsolete shower bath'

  • @Slamboni4k
    @Slamboni4k 4 года назад +1601

    There’s more books about boners than there are people correctly saying Dr. Seuss’ name

    • @maebandy
      @maebandy 4 года назад +2

      🤨🤔😦😂🤣🤣👍

    • @vibing6530
      @vibing6530 4 года назад +1

      @@maebandy why those emojis?

    • @maebandy
      @maebandy 4 года назад +12

      @@vibing6530 I have to count on my fingers after midnight.

    • @feeluvsyou
      @feeluvsyou 4 года назад +5

      Doctor soose

    • @vibing6530
      @vibing6530 4 года назад +3

      @@maebandy alrighty

  • @cilantromcghee3092
    @cilantromcghee3092 4 года назад +280

    I would *love* to see a horror game in the seuss style. It's so surreal and alive.

    • @galaxydoes8034
      @galaxydoes8034 4 года назад +35

      That would be hard to do, but not impossible. It could be named something like "Sketch" and focus on a much darker Dr. Seuss world. More realistic.

    • @galaxydoes8034
      @galaxydoes8034 4 года назад +2

      WHERE ARE ALL THESE PEOPLE COMING FROM AND WHY DO THEY KEEP PRESSING MY BUTTON? STOP! STOOOOOOPPPPP!!!

    • @brodyfrable4250
      @brodyfrable4250 4 года назад +23

      Oh my god. Imagine if your walking through a hallway. Its badly lit, only silhouettes are visible. The entire place is damp and puddles cover the floor. You then hear what sounds like mops slapping against the ground approaching from around an upcoming corner. Your breathing slows as you subconsciously try to make as little noise as possible. A head that looks like cross between a deer and a human head pokes out from around the corner with glowing eyes. The head is on a impossibly long paper-thin neck that seems to break and violently change direction in ways that don't seem naturally possible. The entire thing is coated in damp, dirty, dark orange-brown fur. Two identical heads follow the first, their necks intertwined in ways that make it seem as if it's gonna crumble if the heads move too much, yet it trudges towards you, it's six legs attached to a dog-oxen body. You get a feeling that its eyes can't see you, yet it knows where you are at all times. It stares at you, as if calculating every possible way it can make sure you die from its claws. It suddenly charges at you, making a wail that sounds like a whale combined with the souls of _hell_ . The scene goes black, you lose consciousness, knowing that going out without knowing what happens is the best thing you can do.
      God why did I take the time to write this nobody's gonna read the whole anyway. If you did, however, thank you for having the same appeal to creepy, disturbing, dumb stuff as me.

    • @galaxydoes8034
      @galaxydoes8034 4 года назад +8

      @@brodyfrable4250 Congratulations! You made what I was thinking seem tame! You nightmarish person! *_BUT WHAT IF... THE FACES... THEY HAD EMPTY EYE SOCKETS, AND FLESH A SICKLY YELLOW, ALONG WITH RAZOR SHARP BEAKS STAINED DARK RED AND CRUSTY._*

    • @brodyfrable4250
      @brodyfrable4250 4 года назад +2

      @@galaxydoes8034 oh hell yea dude.

  • @christinetran551
    @christinetran551 2 года назад

    So beautiful, a peek into a fertile mind! Thanks for sharing this. I am, like many, a long time Seuss fan but had never seen these before.

  • @garyoz1821
    @garyoz1821 Год назад

    I really love these paintings. The one of the green shower curtain in the dark dingy room is so striking.

  • @whimsicalwyvern2851
    @whimsicalwyvern2851 4 года назад +608

    All of his art has been unsettling to me to a certain degree, especially when I was a lot younger. It's something about the empty horizon, the abstract-ness, or the flat colors. I feel the same about a lot of art now that I think about it. It makes me anxious or unsettled.

    • @goodbonezz1289
      @goodbonezz1289 4 года назад +10

      Whimsical Wyvern yes. Well said.

    • @giddycadet
      @giddycadet 4 года назад +22

      I don't get any feelings of creepiness or discomfort from any of his works, but I agree there's a profound isolation in many of them that only comes to a head in the deco paintings.

    • @hetecks1385
      @hetecks1385 4 года назад

      Thats why I do hills and clouds or pictures and style on the wall

    • @bottledpoe
      @bottledpoe 4 года назад +7

      Yeah same lol, I remember going into art class in elementary school and my teacher had various small copies of works of art and most of the creeped me tf out

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache 3 года назад +3163

    Adultery really changes one's perspective on a person

    • @serelii3606
      @serelii3606 3 года назад +106

      WHY ARE YOU EVERYWHERE

    • @gloriousnationofzacistan8930
      @gloriousnationofzacistan8930 3 года назад +20

      Wow you don’t have like 11k likes

    • @skullchords
      @skullchords 3 года назад +25

      Why do I see you literally everywhere-

    • @MrDeanmfitz
      @MrDeanmfitz 3 года назад +229

      Its important to be able to seperate the public sphere and personal sphere. For example, MLK Jr was abusive towards hid wife, but this shouldn't diminish his achievements in civil rights. Or there are many hollywood stars who abuse drugs but that shouldn't diminish their ability to entertain.

    • @nickf4318
      @nickf4318 3 года назад +76

      The greatest minds have dark secrets

  • @rawforyou5514
    @rawforyou5514 10 месяцев назад +3

    Such an enormous pleasure to learn about the Art of Dr Seuss, my all time favorite!!!

  • @Superhermit
    @Superhermit Год назад

    Amazing, I love his abstract work, surprised I've never seen them before!

  • @theFrench1111
    @theFrench1111 3 года назад +1940

    Imagine living through WW2, seeing Dr.Suess' political art, then post war seeing your child read his story books- how confused I'd be😂

    • @angellozano1938
      @angellozano1938 2 года назад +30

      Not really, the war nearly crippled the animation industry at the time, so many studios (including Disney and Warner Bros) were commisioned by the government to create war propoganda. Alot of it included making fun of Hitler and the Japanese

    • @raymondflagstaff2919
      @raymondflagstaff2919 2 года назад +19

      all too modern... buckle up

    • @socksleeve
      @socksleeve 2 года назад +39

      @@angellozano1938 "making fun of" is a bit of a understatement, especially in regards to how they portrayed the Japanese

    • @hubertberrum6242
      @hubertberrum6242 2 года назад +10

      @@socksleeve didn't he and the people who did Looney Tunes made cartoons only for the military during WW2?

    • @weom1536
      @weom1536 Год назад +2

      @@socksleeve Japanese army were animals

  • @ValueNetwork
    @ValueNetwork 3 года назад +6161

    “Dr Seuss, what does this painting represent”
    “It represents the capitalist system and how workers are trapped in a inevitable and infinite loop of work”
    “And what does this one represent”
    “CAT”

  • @adambejarano1592
    @adambejarano1592 10 месяцев назад

    I love his art in general, always. I remember I’d read his children’s books but then I would have dreams the looked like his midnight paintings. It’s dark and relaxing at the same time. Little else captures the feeling

  • @JackieApril
    @JackieApril 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hoping to save this to a playlist...subscribed!

  • @nothingbutcontent2000
    @nothingbutcontent2000 4 года назад +953

    My neighbor actually owns what I think to be a copy of “The cat from the wrong side of the tracks”. I noticed while house sitting and never got to ask if it was an original

  • @iCarlysmom
    @iCarlysmom 3 года назад +2123

    THE OMINOUS BONERS I feel so immature for laughing at that one

    • @billysinge8977
      @billysinge8977 3 года назад +103

      *Omnibus.

    • @Vits2001
      @Vits2001 3 года назад +51

      @@billysinge8977 Im sorry but that just makes it even more immaturely funny

    • @justiceofbook
      @justiceofbook 3 года назад +24

      The omnimatrix boner

    • @guyinthecorner0
      @guyinthecorner0 3 года назад +16

      @@justiceofbook The Onomatopoeia Boners *insert door stop shigga-digga-doo*

    • @makcuja
      @makcuja 3 года назад +7

      @@guyinthecorner0 *SHIGGA-DIGGA-DOOO*

  • @adrienbrody6778
    @adrienbrody6778 Год назад

    I love the design of the buildings in the midnight paintings in the deco period. Especially with the blackness making it look like night time. They all look so cool.

  • @joehughes5177
    @joehughes5177 Год назад

    Really enjoyed the black works. Surly cat and continuum seem connected. Nice work

  • @sadistfurret4205
    @sadistfurret4205 3 года назад +912

    The phrase "Whimsical Hitler" is something that I never expected to hear

    • @laggingdragons
      @laggingdragons 2 года назад +36

      Good name for a punk band

    • @sadistfurret4205
      @sadistfurret4205 2 года назад +23

      @@laggingdragons I'll play the viola

    • @mrdrprof99
      @mrdrprof99 2 года назад +9

      Dibs on the spoons.

    • @CrusaderSports250
      @CrusaderSports250 2 года назад

      @@laggingdragons do we even still have them? I remember they were a bit on the challenging side when we first saw them, but has not the unconventionalaty of them been lost to time?. They were fun times though😊.

    • @TampaDave
      @TampaDave 2 года назад +3

      Wasn't it "... Hitler in his [Seuss's] whimsical style.."?

  • @MotionlessKnight
    @MotionlessKnight 3 года назад +739

    Honestly, a lot of Seuss's artwork really has always creeped me out since I was a kid. Even now some of the creatures he illustrated are actually kind of terrifying.

    • @DuffMcDraw
      @DuffMcDraw 3 года назад +13

      I think those of us who had this reaction were also part of the G.A.T.E. program. It’s interesting to see what was chosen as part of the curriculum for young children during the 80’s and 90’s.

    • @aphyngodiva2551
      @aphyngodiva2551 3 года назад +22

      I felt that way when I first saw it too, it was just so unusual and nonsensical that I wanted to understand what I was looking at but couldn't because it's not something you're meant to understand I think. I kept thinking "What is that? What kind of animal is that?" And I had no way of finding the answer, it bothered me a lot. I'm also autistic and my special interest is animals, might have something to do with it.

    • @MotionlessKnight
      @MotionlessKnight 3 года назад +7

      @@aphyngodiva2551 Heh. I am too, actually. Asperger's. I'm also the same way with the interest in animals. Especially cats! Video games are also included in my small circle of interests... lol

    • @Hello_Gorgeous
      @Hello_Gorgeous 3 года назад +6

      I remember feeling creeped out as a child when first reading "one fish two fish red fish blue fish." The illustrations and creatures like the one that drinks ink were weird and dark.

    • @zenfy5814
      @zenfy5814 3 года назад +1

      Haha yeah some of them where terrifying

  • @suzannecarter445
    @suzannecarter445 10 месяцев назад

    This was a wonderful analysis of the mystique of Dr. Seuss' art. I really loved it - thank you!

  • @cordellsenior9935
    @cordellsenior9935 Год назад +2

    As a kid, reading Doc Seuss books was the first experience of expanding your mind. It was akin to a acid trip or an encounter with The Toad' all without external stimuli. It was wild, fantastical, but accessible stuff. He was in touch with things and places that lie beyond the 5 senses. All of his collective work leads me to believe he must have experimented with psycho drugs. Clearly he was taking whatever Picasso and Steve Ditko were into. What an expansive mind. I was never aware of how expansive his work was. It looks like great stuff.

  • @ladynorth3512
    @ladynorth3512 4 года назад +165

    Ive always felt a bit anxious looking at his art. ive always got a sense of lonliness and despair

    • @pcarrierorange
      @pcarrierorange 4 года назад +18

      Woah, me too! It’s so unsettling to me yet noone else I talk to seems to agree on such a fundamental level.
      Even the “positive” and “cheery” images, like that shown at 9:02, make me uneasy.

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 4 года назад +10

      The painting at 9:02 was the most ominous to me. It was the only image that seemed to represent a potential threat. It's interesting how people interpret art differently.

    • @legallypumpkin
      @legallypumpkin 4 года назад +3

      Bruh you got a JoJo pic so like

    • @ladynorth3512
      @ladynorth3512 4 года назад

      @@legallypumpkin 😂😂😂

    • @richardsilva-spokane3436
      @richardsilva-spokane3436 4 года назад +8

      Feelstoro Star Pepe ...I’m 67 years old, and I always thought it looked kinky, weird and devilish in some way (not innocent or childish)

  • @addysooon
    @addysooon 4 года назад +145

    I never realized how gorgeous Dr. Seuss's art is

  • @RageAye
    @RageAye Год назад +2

    I never knew he had so much art that isn't well known! This is mindblowing

  • @msannthrope1863
    @msannthrope1863 Год назад

    Thanks for putting that together. It was very interesting and informative.