Adam@Home by Rob Harrell for March 24, 2010

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    alviebird  about 14 years ago

    …and a child shall lead them.

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    COWBOY7  about 14 years ago

    The child has get them doing what he wants.

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    lindonc  about 14 years ago

    some days no comments would be cool too

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    cdward  about 14 years ago

    There’s a time for everything.

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    grampaspot  about 14 years ago

    They seem to be in an “Art” museum.

    Compare panel 1 and panel 3.

    Which one would you consider “Art”?

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    fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago

    Considering that panel 3 is a window, I would have to say “panel 1.”

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    grampaspot  about 14 years ago

    For those considering panel 1 as “Art” in preference to panel 3, I imagine you would prefer observing pictures of what some people call “Art” instead of a picture of the natural outdoors.

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  8. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago

    But panel 3 is a window, not a picture. That’s not “art”, that’s “nature.”

    And even if panel three did show a painting, yeah, I prefer conceptual abstracts to landscapes.

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    celeconecca  about 14 years ago

    Culture? Fresh air and children’s laughter? WHich makes the better memory?

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    grim509  about 14 years ago

    Might be different if it was a history museum, me and my family love learning about history. But it’s hard to beat the outdoors! That’s why I love Colonial Williamsburg, learning history in a museum outdoors! Best of both worlds.

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    bald  about 14 years ago

    panel 3 is natures art…

    nuff said

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    cleokaya  about 14 years ago

    A little art and a little nature added to your day is a good thing.

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    dante.deangelo  about 14 years ago

    delightful

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    poppy1313  about 14 years ago

    Mom is taking a photo in last panel… A photograph of a happy time. One can look back on at a later time… A handy time machine

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    benbrilling  about 14 years ago

    Little Nick has grown about 6” since a week or so ago!

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    fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago

    Look, I like the strip and everything, and I CERTAINLY don’t think that playing with your kids is a bad thing, but placing culture and recreation in opposition, like it’s an either/or proposition, is not useful.

    When I was a kid (around Katy or Clayton’s age, not Nick’s), my Dad would take us to the local art museum a couple of times a year. Yeah, we’d look at the paintings for a bit and then go out and play on the lawn. But I also first learned of Impressionism and Cubism and Surrealism and so on from those museum trips, and 40 years later those are more important to me than memories of swingsets.

    The photo Mom is taking is a handy time machine, in that they can look back of that day at a later time. They are your memories in hard copy. An Art Museum is also a handy time machine, in that you can look back on days from long before you were born. They are the WORLD’S memories in hard copy.

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    mrslukeskywalker  about 14 years ago

    Is there an art gallery next to the zoo?

    Those kids are too small to “appreciate” “culture”. Play with them now, since that’s what they chose over the “art”, and culture them later on a different day. You never know how much time you have to play with your kids.

    Good choice today.

    I do get that they are nice people in this strip, and that they love each other. I like that about this strip, because most comic strips are the opposite of that.

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    erwinbert  about 14 years ago

    Kids play outside all the time (or should), and family time at a park is a treat. Doesn’t have to exclude museum trips, where learning can be fun. For art museums, remember the kids ages – collections of Western art (i.e. Old West and cowboys) keeps my son’s interest, certainly more than abstracts (which he doesn’t get) or still life, which to a 9-year old is as boring as the description.

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    Ooops! Premium Member about 14 years ago

    Is the first panel a painting or a display of artifacts?

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    fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago

    If you wait until the kids are much older before you introduce them to culture, they’ll reject it. Most museums these days (city museums like the Milwaukee Museum of Art and such) go out of their way to be kid-friendly, with interactive play galleries, touchable exhibits, coloring books of famous paintings, and so on. Certain aspects of art, like color theory, optical illusion, and (let’s face it) naked people are fascinating to kids. Their minds are developing as quickly as their bodies, and need exercise just as much.

    As a kid I got visual arts and literature mixed into my life (in an age-appropriate way, of course) early on. On the other hand, we never had much music around the house. As a result, to this day Classical music is pretty much terra incognita to me, and I wish I had more of a taste for and understanding of it.

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    FDNY  about 14 years ago

    Good to be exposed to both.

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    Karen345  about 14 years ago

    wonderful work today

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