Just this month, the LightHouse MAD Lab worked with the Schulz Museum to create a tactile representation of a four-panel Peanuts strip first published on July 31, 1951. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa remains dedicated to making Peanuts accessible to all - including the blind and low vision community. It’s for its universality and renown that the Charles M. It is, fundamentally, a story of a dream not quite achieved - and how, even so, another day will come to pass. Schulz filtered his own dark irreverence into the trials and tribulations of Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus, Lucy, and the rest of the characters many of us came to know and love. Peanuts is universally human in its sarcastic, nostalgic, bittersweet, silly, realist and occasionally fanciful humor. By the time Peanuts’ creator Charles Schulz retired in December 1999, the comic strip had run for 50 years and been syndicated in over 2,600 newspapers worldwide, with book collections translated into more than 25 languages. Charlie Brown and Snoopy are some of the most well-known characters of all time.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |