Review:
"If you've got a geek in your family who needs a Christmas present, this should be it. They'll love you forever. If you've got a young nerd in need of corruption a kid who'd benefit from having their reality shaken and their head filled with impossible things this'll do the trick because, Tales has the magic. It's got the robots, the weirdness, the dinosaurs." - NPR.ORG"
Tales from the Loop is Sci-Fi Art Excellence: "Stalenhag was far and away my favorite sci-fi artist of 2015, and Tales From the Loop will show you why. His universe is a dystopia you wouldn t mind exploring, one that oppresses you with mystery and beauty rather than drab soldiers or vacuous you have this emotion, therefore you belong in this group regimes. The Loop is sophisticated sci-fi buried under snowy Swedish dirt. And I can t wait to dig deeper. --Kyle Hill, Nerdist"
Tales From The Loop Is A Stunning Book Of Alternate Nostalgia: We re enormous fans of Simon Stalenhag s artwork around here, ever since we first came across him in 2013. His work mixes high-tech futurism with scenes from every day Sweden. Now, he s released a brilliant --art book Andrew Liptak, io9.com"
"Simon Stalenhag did not forget the robots. More to the point, Simon Stalenhag can t forget the robots, because in his remarkable, beautiful new art book, Tales From The Loop, he has embedded them into our collective past, offering a vision of an alt-history Sweden in the late 80 s and early 90 s where they clack through suburban streets, lurk in the backyard trees, or lie, still and cold, abandoned in snowy fields. --Jason Sheenan, npr.org"
About the Author:
Swedish artist Simon Stalenhag burst onto the art scene in 2013 when his first series of paintings were shared on the Internet, and has since become something of a phenomena in the art and sci-fi communities. His original blend of naturalistic landscape paintings with science-fiction elements and a very low-key recollection of growing up in the 80s struck a chord, not just in Sweden, but all over the world. The Verge, Wired, IO9, Scientific American, and The Guardian have all praised his work. But until late 2014, the only place you could watch his art was in digital form on the Internet. Stalenhag splits his time between a small cabin at Malaroarna (the setting that inspires his work) and an apartment in Stockholm.
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