Onfim's world: Child artists in history
6 comments
·May 15, 2025macintux
Related from a month ago, including discussion of this post's submission at the time.
pavel_lishin
> For every unique survival like these, there are many millions that are lost. Children are continually making creative marks (as any parent with young kids knows all too well — cleaning them up has been a central preoccupation of my life over the past couple years).
When mine started producing art in large amounts, as children are wont to do, I started photographing them all and putting them into an album to preserve them, instead of being buried under mountains of papers.
I hope some day in the future, my kid will be able to go through the artwork and get something neat out of it.
lovegrenoble
Nice. Novgorod is a gem for those who are into history and culture, sometimes they call it Russia Florence. I wish one day I could visit it.
jayrot
If you've got 12 minutes to spare, I highly recommend this video about Onfim by Trey the Explainer. [https://youtu.be/H_nT6EFUZmI?si=RcFJeGjzcjkoVlh8]
But only if you wish to experience sonder.
ljf
I love falling into sonder - on a bus journey or in a plane, or just people watching in a pub - life of this around us (and before and ahead of us) is just as wonderfully complex and interesting as our own.
So thank you, I'll watch the video now.
> "[His drawings] force us to see childhood not as something that takes place in an eternal present, but as something with as deep a history as anything else that is a central part of what it is to be human."
Absolutely love rediscovering Onfim's drawings thank you for submitting this.
Cool site from with more birchbark records: https://web.archive.org/web/20250114034538/https://gramoty.r...
Previous discussion (of Onfim's Wikipedia): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23089343