

The doodle is a casual, sometimes spontaneous, sometimes deliberate reaction that may or may not have anything to do with the spoken word or images on the page that initially inspired it. The lecturer's words or the letters and images on the printed page inspire, for reasons barely discernable, a doodling response. You may not even realize that your hand has rendered shapes on the page while your mind is occupied with other matters.

The curly cues morph into wild-eyed bats and the bunny rabbits mysteriously sprout long thick strands of hair against a backdrop of oddly shaped stars. "The whole house is real, everything is doodled, the doodles were all hand doodled for the animation, it’s not CGI," he said.Perhaps during an interminably long lecture or an engaging telephone conversation, you find yourself doodling bunny rabbits or six headed dragons or obsessively repeated curly cues. He showed off his creation with a stop-motion film, which was created with 1,857 photographs taken over a two-year period from September 2020. Scroll through the gallery above for more pictures of Mr Doodle's Doodle House For me, that’s what I create art for, to make myself happy and to hopefully make others happy along the way," Cox said on Instagram.


A DoodleLand filled with happy creatures that bring me joy when I see them. "When I was a kid I wanted to live in a property completely covered in characters of my own creation. It took 900 litres of white emulsion paint, 401 cans of black spray paint, 286 bottles of black drawing paint and 2,296 pen nibs to complete. British artist Sam Cox, more popularly known as Mr Doodle, has achieved his childhood dream of living in a house covered by doodle art.Ĭox, 28, unveiled his two-year project, having covered his 12-room home in Kent, England, with his signature hand-drawn doodles.
