came up with every doodle and ornament in Cathedrals, Roman architecture, Royal European palaces, etc.?

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came up with every doodle and ornament in Cathedrals, Roman architecture, Royal European palaces, etc.?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Are you asking how artists came up with their art?

Anonymous 0 Comments

Are you asking how artists came up with their art?

Anonymous 0 Comments

there’s a million tiny parts in each of a million buildings, so the question you’re asking has a trillion different answers. There’s info about how different architectural styles evolved on the wiki pages of those styles, though

Anonymous 0 Comments

there’s a million tiny parts in each of a million buildings, so the question you’re asking has a trillion different answers. There’s info about how different architectural styles evolved on the wiki pages of those styles, though

Anonymous 0 Comments

The same way people do now.

In Margalit Fox’s book *The Riddle of the Labyrinth*, which is about the decipherment of Linear B, there are some pictures of ancient clay tablets. One of them includes a doodle that the scribe had made while the guys in charge were presumably talking about nothing important that he was supposed to write down.

That doodle looks like the kind I do on paper during boring meetings. If he had been transported across 3000 years of time and dropped in a meeting, he wouldn’t understand what we were saying, he’d have no idea about electric lights and laptops, but when he saw me doodling in the margins he would know exactly what I was doing and why I was doing it. Because he did the same thing at his meetings. 3000 years, nothing has changed, people are still people.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The same way people do now.

In Margalit Fox’s book *The Riddle of the Labyrinth*, which is about the decipherment of Linear B, there are some pictures of ancient clay tablets. One of them includes a doodle that the scribe had made while the guys in charge were presumably talking about nothing important that he was supposed to write down.

That doodle looks like the kind I do on paper during boring meetings. If he had been transported across 3000 years of time and dropped in a meeting, he wouldn’t understand what we were saying, he’d have no idea about electric lights and laptops, but when he saw me doodling in the margins he would know exactly what I was doing and why I was doing it. Because he did the same thing at his meetings. 3000 years, nothing has changed, people are still people.