TED Talksのインスタグラム(ted) - 7月27日 03時01分


You’re looking at the world’s biggest connect-the-dots drawing (seriously — it broke the Guinness World Record). 52,901 little dots make up this image of photographer Edward Curtis’s 1905 portrait of a Native American man named Big Head. Artist Phil Hansen and his team spent more than 300 hours finishing the piece, and it took a total of 19 hours to actually solve the puzzle. But what started as a semi-playful mission to beat a world record turned into a greater reflection on Phil’s relationship to Native American culture. “There I was making the piece, when I read that Edward Curtis was looked on poorly by some people because he would edit his photographs to make native people look more ‘native,’” Phil says. “I found myself thinking about all the little things in our culture that slowly built this image of who Native Americans are. So many of our beliefs and perceptions are taught to us — we never really sit down and question them.” To learn more, visit go.ted.com/connectthedots
Gif courtesy of @philinthecircle


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