This is Carl Barks, one of the most celebrated Donald Duck drawers, and maybe comic artists of all time.
He's a legend.
His most famous story is probably "Lost in the Andes" from 1949.
In this story, Donald and his nephews discover the "square people" and their land in the Andes. Everything in this place has the form of a cube. The eggs, for instance.
I've grown up with this story, and I always find it very fascinating. I had to do something with it.
So I took this one page from the story: (Page 12)
![utgangspunktet.jpg]
(
)
...And erased off the heads and the text like this:
And started to send it around to friends and other people, just to see what they could get out off that one page.
After a while, people started to send me really weird stuff. I got surprised of how many different interpretations you could get from the exact same starting point. I decided to make a book out of it, a book with only one page, page twelve.
I'll post a little extract from the book here:

This is the cover I designed, by simply putting all the responses over each other.

Henrik Nordahl
Ylva Greni Guldbrandsen
Øistein Bergli
Viktor Gjøvåg Khoury
Ylva Greni Guldbrandsen
Tim Ng Tvedt
Saralinn Hembre
Herman Breda Enkerud
Audun Lønning Gjerdi
Alan Mackenzie Robinson
Audun Lønning Gjerdi
Audun Lønning Gjerdi
My steemit friend @Rohtie
Thanks for reading this, and have a nice day.
And if you haven't read "Lost in the Andes", I would highly recommend it.
http://home.earthlink.net/~copaceticcomicsco/CBL1-Lostinthe%20Andes.html
-Erlend