Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Book review: Beautiful LEGO

Beautiful LEGO by Mike Doyle, 2013, No Starch Press

Please note that I'm posting this same review across my blogs, but I'm appending some blog-specific information at the end of each review.



A little while ago, Huw on Brickset noted the explosion of LEGO books in recent years. Some of those books are little more than catalogues of LEGO products (the 'here are all of the figures in the Harry Potter sets' type books), the really great thing about this trend is the great number of those books that are by, for, and about the AFOL community. The most recent addition to the growing bibliography is Mike Doyle's Beautiful LEGO, published by No Starch Press.

Beautiful LEGO is exactly what the title implies, a celebration of LEGO MOCs that are particularly gorgeous. The emphasis here is on the pictures - of the 266 pages in the book, only 17 of them have text. These text pages include a one page intro by Doyle about inspiring artistic MOCs and the creativity of the AFOL community, and a series of one to three page interviews with some of the builders. By my count 81 different builders contributed over 360 different MOCs. The subject matter is completely varied, from microscale buildings to full scale sculptures of everyday objects. The arrangement of MOCs is varied - in places Doyle gives several different builders' takes on the same subject matter, and in other places he places the spotlight on individuals, grouping a series of MOCs by the same person. The creations themselves run from humorous MOCs like some of Angus MacLane's Cube Dudes to some that are bright and fun like Thomas Poulsom's birds, to others that are dark and foreboding, like Doyle's own abandoned homes. As you can see from just those three examples, the builders include a lot of names that would be familiar to anyone who is active in the AFOL community - indeed most of the MOCs are ones I've seen featured on the various LEGO blogs. But just because I've seen them before, and by virtue of being someone reading my blogs you probably have as well, doesn't mean this isn't a wonderful book to own. It's a great collection of some of the best of the best, and perfect to peruse for inspiration, or just leave on your coffee table to amaze your non-LEGO friends. Indeed, I think this would be a great gift for a non-AFOL who just likes cool things (and it may even convert them into an AFOL).

Beautiful LEGO has one really nice thing that I think may be a unique innovation in this book. There is an index of contributors at the back, and for almost all of them Doyle provides a URL of where to find their work online (Flickr stream, personal site, a couple of MOCpages), and he includes the nickname they use on LEGO forums. This is great in a hobby where sometimes I only know people by their forum handles (indeed, since I've never been to a major AFOL convention, I still half believe that people look like their sig figures). I think this resource is a great tribute to the true heroes of the book, the community of awesome builders.

So are there any problems with this book? Sure. There's the unavoidable problem of selection. In the potentially infinite creativity of a worldwide community you'll always be able to ask "why not include this, or that?", a problem that Doyle recognizes in the preface. I'm a castle guy, and I would have loved to have seen more castles. I've been judging castle contests for a decade and could point to hundreds of castle MOCs that could easily sit alongside the other creations here. One critique that goes to No Starch rather than Doyle is that this really should be a hard cover book, in keeping with other coffee table books focused on beautiful pictures. A very minor critique is that two of the photos on the back cover are cut off at the top of the page. I think they were going for the effect of it looking like an endless collage of photos that keeps going, but if this were so they should have photos leading off all four sides of the page. My main critique, though, is with the presentation of the MOCs. Don't get me wrong, they are all high quality photos. Almost all of the photos are clear shots of the whole MOC in good lighting taken from the front, or with the MOC turned slightly to one side, with the camera looking slightly down. I guess in a book that was all about the creativity of the MOCs, I would have appreciated some more creativity of the photography - maybe some with different lighting effects, in silhouette, or with different filters on the camera, or some closeup details, or looking up at the moc from the base, that sort of thing.

On my blog ArtisticBricks I have several times asked the question "Is LEGO art?" or at least "Can LEGO be art?" Doyle answers that question with a resounding yes. One interesting thing I note is that while the minifig is ubiquitous in the world of AFOLs, there are almost no figs in this book. I wonder what that means? Is this just a reflection of Doyle's choices, or an indication that the fig is the distinction between playing and creating? That's something to think about, and I'd love to hear people's thoughts. Regardless, though, in this book Doyle has assembled a great portfolio of evidence that show that this thing we love is no mere toy, but a true medium for expression.



Blog-specific content: Several minilanders find their way into this book, including several of Lino Martins' cars, Iain Heath's Monty Python, and MisaQa's dress-up dolls.

Monday, September 23, 2013

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Monday, September 16, 2013

Happy birthday, Classic-Castle!

In addition to maintaining my little family of LEGO blogs, I'm also actively involved in Classic-Castle.com, the source for all your LEGO Castle needs. Classic-Castle just turned ten years old! In recognition of that, let's feature something appropriately themed. Here is Edinburgh Castle, from Legoland Windsor.


Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Fools and Horses

Sorry about the lack of blog posts for three weeks, life has been hectic. In the meantime I've bookmarked a lot of MOCs to put here. For instance, Ralph S built this Reliant Regal Supervan from the British sitcom Only Fools and Horses.


Thursday, August 22, 2013

Who?

Anthony Forsberg built the 11th Doctor.


Saturday, August 17, 2013

Mesoamerican Warlord

The Falworth brothers came up with this Mesoamerican Warlord in the current Iron Builder.


Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Gangnam style

Tim Inman brought Psy to Bricks by the Bay.


Monday, August 12, 2013

Hot cars and hot women

Lego911 has made all kinds of great cars. It's hard to keep up, so I'll just show a few.




Saturday, August 10, 2013

Iain

Steve Poulsen made this model of Iain from the Living Brick.


Friday, August 9, 2013

To Kill A Mockingbird

Dave Kaleta built this wonderful version of To Kill A Mockingbird. It actually went up on his site briefly a week or so ago, and I bookmarked it, but when I went back it had been set to private. It turns out it was a surprise birthday gift - several members of VirtuaLUG each built vignettes for Dennis Price. Looks like this was a pretty good birthday.


Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Mad Tea Party

Pasukaru76 made the Mad Tea Party as part of his recent Iron Builder face-off.


Monday, July 29, 2013

Emmelie de Forest

Laurids Nørgaard built Emmelie de Forest.


Saturday, July 27, 2013

Brute Force

Master Beef with Fries built this Brute Force.


Friday, July 26, 2013

Snoopy

Ian Spacek made this miniland scale Snoopy.


Thursday, July 25, 2013

George Alexander Louis

The Legoland parks have often highlighted current events, such as the Obama inaguration, a Papal visit, or even an environmentalist protest. Legoland Windsor has often highlighted the British royals, and here we see the new baby and eventual king George Alexander Louis. This video promises more LEGO renditions in the future as well.



Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Rest Angel

MisaQa built this angel in memory of a friend who passed away.


Monday, July 22, 2013

Friday, July 19, 2013

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Three Moosketeers

Three Moosketeers by _____(?) at Brickfete.