Star Wars and Batman Meet a Child's Imagination in 19 Pieces of Art | |
Star Wars and Batman Meet a Child's Imagination in 19 Pieces of Art ![]() Artist Craig Davison captures the wonder of a child's imagination in drawings depicting Star Wars and Batman. When you were a kid, you probably had a vivid imagination. (Those of you that still have a vivid imagination as an adult, don't spoil the moment). Who didn't play make-believe with the favorite sci-fi or fantasy characters they saw on TV or in movies, or even the comics? Thinking back to those moments of creativity has prompted artist Craig Davison to come up with a fascinating look into the world of child's play. Davison has plenty of galleries depicting childhood. But two that stand out to the geek in me were the Star Wars and Batman images. And the Batman shots are from the 60s TV show, not the Dark Knight we know today. Take a look at these Star Wars paintings, featuring the likes of Han Solo, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Princess Leia and Darth Vader. Now take a look at these images of the caped crusaders from the days of Adam West and Burt Ward (the POW! and ZLONK! give it away), and even an appearance by Batgirl and Catwoman for the girls. If you want to see more of kids as cowboys, and even one as Bill Bixby's Bruce Banner and the Hulk, check out Davison's site. And while you're at it, who did you imagine you wanted to be as a kid? Source: Craig Davison Art, via Nerd Approved | |
I've done the exact same thing as that stormtrooper kid in the first image with a tennis racket. In fact, I usually love to pick up objects and pretend I'm welding weaponary against invisible mooks coming through the windows. I've outgrown those days now... Oh who am I kidding, I still do that whenever I'm alone in the house. | |
Weird kids, going outside, playing together, having imagination and all that. | |
That Boba Fett painting was amazing. | |
Couple of Batgirls in there to | |
I love how these are all pictures of children's imaginations, but somehow they don't actually feel childish. Especially in the Star Wars ones they look and feel heroic, exactly how they'd feel themselves. Very very cool art that doesn't talk down to children's imaginations.
I actually prefer that, it means the focus is still on the child which is what it's actually about. If the personas would be a lot more detailed that focus would shift. Plus, these characters are so iconic, we all know what they look like. I think that's sort of the point as well. | |
For a second I thought someone had done fan art crossing over Batman and Star Wars, but I think this might be even better! | |
This is amazing. | |
A few of those illustrations are particularly reminiscent of the art style used for the Gorillaz characters. Interesting stuff. It also reminded me of some of the most memorable scenes from Calvin and Hobbes. | |
I did a drawing of Batman vs Darth Vader once. Batman won, natch. | |
Oh to be young again, playing pretend until all hours of the day. This was back when your parents wouldn't let you sit inside all day. | |
Those are some awesome images :) | |
Love it. These are fantastic. Serious kudos to the artist for capturing the genuine feeling of a childlike imagination without making them feel "childish".
Maybe it's just me, but a Force-powered Batman sounds like one of the scariest fucking things imaginable... | |
I love the ones with Batgirl. | |