Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

The New Yorker: Behind the Cover

I enjoyed this look inside the making of a New Yorker cover with the magazine’s art editor Françoise Mouly, and artists Dan Clowes, Zohar Lazar and Mark Ulriksen.

From the Netherlands Architecture Institute

From the Netherlands Architecture Institute's website found on flickr.


J.M. de Casseres, Eindhoven city expansion map, 1930
Eindhoven city expansion - an expansion model based on a regional concept, J.M. de Casseres, 1930 [link]

Theo van Doesburg, De Stijl magazine, 1917
De Stijl magazine, Theo van Doesburg, 1917 [link]

Theo van Doesburg and architect Cornelis Van Eesteren, drawing,  1923
Contra-construction - Maison Particulière, Theo van Doesburg and architect Cornelis Van Eesteren, 1923 [link]


Piet Blom, Dwelling as an urban roof, collage, 1965
Dwelling as an urban roof, collage, Piet Blom, 1965 [link]

Design drawing for name stamp G.F. la Croix and J.M. van der Mey, 1906. NAI Collection
Design drawing for name stamp, G.F. la Croix and J.M. van der Mey, 1906 [link]

Emma Kunz


Emma Kunz was a Swiss telepathic healer, researcher, and artist who in the 1940's, channeled drawings for her patients using colored pencils, crayons, graph paper and a pendulum. I don't understand how these large-scale drawings were used to heal, but apparently they worked. She is also credited with discovering the healing properties of the stone AION A.

Emma Kunz Center
Emma Kunz Cave
Aion A

Katie Turner

I just re-discovered Katie Turner's work, and I really like it. She's a senior at Parsons and I can totally see The New Yorker hiring her regularly as soon as she hits the pavement.  She recently did her first Op-Ed for the New York Times (link). I especially like this boyfriend criteria series. Not only do we have similar tastes in guys, the subway, tattoo, and bike illos are making me very nostalgic for NYC.


Website
Flickr

Obssesive Consumption: Book Covers


Remember last year when I doted on Kate Bingham Burt's work? Well up 'til now her drawings were made into zines, but now it's in brand-new-book form. And it's real cool! Frank Chimero secretly organized a handful of illustrator friends to draw the cover, and gave them to her at her book release. Pretty sweet, huh?





See all of the covers here

Obsessive Consumption
Kate Bingaman-Burt



Pastings


I can't stop making collages. They are messy but so much fun.



The Cove


I watched The Cove last night. Jesus Christ. It was just about as intense and heartbreaking as I was expecting. I felt inspired to make the above paper cut this morning. (and join the cause page on facebook)

Highly recommended. (netflix link)

Milton Glaser for Seventeen Magazine


I try not to collect too much paper ephemera, but I couldn't resist this 1967 Seventeen Magazine with Twiggy & a kitten on the cover. I got it for 50¢ at a garage sale a few months ago, but yesterday was the first time I really looked through it. Inspired by Tadanori Yokoo's work, I was considering cutting it up to make a collage until I saw these Milton Glaser illustrations.









Glaser is best known for his iconic Bob Dylan poster and the legendary I ♥ NY logo but he's created what seems like thousands of other illustrations, typefaces, album covers, book covers, etc. Hearing him speak is really inspirational.





Tadanori Yokoo

From wikipedia:

Tadanori Yokoo (born 1936) is one of Japan's most successful and internationally recognized graphic designers and artists. His early work shows the influence of the New York based Push Pin Studio (Milton Glaser and Seymour Chwast in particular) but Yokoo himself cites filmmaker Akira Kurosawa and writer Yukio Mishima as two of his most formative influences. In the late 1960s he became interested in mysticism and psychedelia, deepened by travels in India. Because his work was so attuned to 1960s pop culture, he has often been (unfairly) described as the "Japanese Andy Warhol" or likened to psychedelic poster artist Peter Max, but Yokoo's complex and multi-layered imagery is intensely autobiographical and entirely original.









(These scans are from the ever-inspiring blog "A Journey Round My Skull." I highly recommend taking a gander at his flickr page and blog for more illustration and graphic design sweetness.)


Also of note is the Two LP picture disc "Opera from the works of Tadanori Yokoo" by Toshi Ichiyanagi which Mutant Sound has made available, and describes as:
"...an unique amalgamated mixture of lysergic demented psychedelic assault-like stunt rock, a aural whirlwind filled with acid folk ramblings, tape collages, field recording excerpts, radio commercial snippets, roaring jet engines, electronic music excursions into the vast unexcavated canyons and dungeons of your mind, squealing sound fragments of frogs mating in a nearby pond, drowned out enka escapades, kayokyoku excursions into no mans land, Takakura Ken nasal singing, spoken word fragmentation bombs by Kara Juro amongst others, traffic noises, sonic sound clusters of blistering fuzzed out psychedelic mayhem, stratosphericstatic electronic hissing, radio news broadcast flashes, vintage electronic tape music escapades, chirping cricket orchestras in a distant backgroundand so much more non-adaptive and deranged sonic activity."

(Jordan, I'm going to recommend it to you without even giving it a listen.)
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photo of Tadanori Yokoo

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I can't gather much about this, but I love this too:
Tadanori Yokoo & Bohemians ビッグバンダナ TATOO FRONT & TATOO BACK