Sunday, March 14, 2010

El Circo de Lucas



Argentinian cartoonist, illustrator and comic book artist Lucas Nine was born in 1975 in Buenos Aires, where he studied Fine Arts and Cinema. His comics and illustrations have been published in numerous magazines and exhibited in shows in Argentina, Spain, Brazil and the Bologna Book Fair. His latest book El Circo Criollo, a revisitation of the Argentine popular circus tradition, was published by Ediciones del Eclipse in 2009. I am really impressed by the bold, spontaneous style and expressive brushwork of Lucas' illustrative work.



Quick sketch

Illustration for the book Para escuchar a la tortuga que suena by O. Califa


Three illustrations for the book Andanzas de Olegario by Gabriela Chiocca

Illustration for the magazine Caras y Caretas

Cover illustration for Leyendas de la Selva
Cover illustration for Latinoamérica en Voz

Illustration for the newspaper Clarin

Page from the comic book Cabaret del Diablo (the English title is Joe's Inferno)

Still from Les Triolets

Lucas is the son of the multitalented and very imaginative artist Carlos Nine. The two collaborated in the production of Les Triolets. This wild animated short was shown at various international festivals, including Annecy and Castelli Animati. You can watch a compressed version of it here.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

An Antique Treasure Chest



Illustration from medieval French manuscript

I love how I can always rely on the web for interesting discoveries and pleasant surprises.
 From awesome artists I had never heard about, to wonderful blogs and information 
resources, I can find it all in the comfort of my studio, at any time I please, for the small
 price of an ADSL connection. I try to remember not to take this for granted, and to be 
grateful to the countless people who in their personal way contribute to this incredible 
and ever growing public repository of knowledge and art. Having worked in the past as an
 iconographic researcher in the publishing field, I know well how hard it used to be to 
find images for specific projects without having to pay high prices to agencies or spend 
hours looking around in dusty bookstores (by the way, I do enjoy dusty bookstores).

Medieval illustration from beekeeping manuscript

Blue kingfisher and lilies from Livre de Fleur, 1620

Illustration by Mark Catesby from History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands, 1780

This morning, when thanks to Tumblr I came upon vintageprintable.com, I reacted with 
the classic "How come I haven't seen this before?". The website, as the name implies, 
hosts a huge collection of downloadable and printable public domain images. The animal
 section alone contains hundreds of variously catalogued images, from medieval
 bestiaries to Buffon, from Japanese prints to 1960s stamps. The kind of stuff one can 
usually find in Dover books, great for collages, crafts, and overall inspiration, but in a 
free digital format. The project is the brainchild of Swivelchair, a biopharma professional
 with the hobby of curating out-of-copyright scientific illustration.

Elephant and Zebra from Infants cabinet of Birds and Beasts, 1820

Echidna from Complements de Buffon, 1838
Ink wash illustration from Jean Baptiste Vérany's
Mèmoire sur deux nouvelles espèces de Céphalopodes trouvées dans l'océan, 1839

Butterflies from Oriental Entomology by J. O. Westwood, 1848

Indian snake charmers, 18th-19th century

Plate from Haeckel's Kunstformen der Natur, 1904
(one of my favorite illustrated books ever)

Cover of A Cat Alphabet by Louis Wain, 1910

Brothers Grimm German stamp, 1963

All images in this post are a semi-random selection of things found at vintage printable.
Go take a look and try not to get lost; there's a lot more to see.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Carnival Animals



As mentioned in a previous post, I recently visited my hometown of Viareggio 
on the Tuscan coast to participate in the local Carnival festivities. The main events 
of the month long extravaganza are five parades of huge allegorical papier-maché floats
 (up to twenty meters tall) and masks accompanied by musical bands along the large
 beachside promenade known as "La Passeggiata". At the end of the festival, a jury awards
 prizes to the best floats. Started as a local celebration in 1873, the Carnival gradually
became one of Italy's most famous. Nowadays it attracts over 1.000.000 visitors every year.


This year's winning float, the ecological Earth, the only mother by Roberto Vannucci

Detail from Stolen love by Massimo Breschi, thanks to Luciano Castro on flickr

The themes represented on floats and masks range from political satire and social 
commentary to caricatures of celebrities and pure flights of fancy. This year's subjects
 included Obama, a variety of Berlusconis, a Metropolis-inspired automaton, a spooky 
Michael Jackson, and the monster above symbolizing violence against women. 
The characters are animated by various workers hosted in their complex wooden structures. 
A number of singers and dancers in costume also contribute to the floats' lively appearance.

Second place was awarded to Dance of the Dragon by Verlanti and F.lli Bonetti,
an allegory of China's rising power. I especially enjoyed the special effects: glowing eyes
 (a popular feature this year) and smoke coming out of the dragon's mouth.



A group of masks that really caught my eye was Fish and Plastic by Roberto De Leo, 
7 papier maché aquatic creations decorated with plastic cups, straws, cutlery, 
bottles and other materials.

In recent times there's been quite a bit of experimentation with new forms, techniques
 and materials. Last year my dear friends Gilbert Lebigre and Corinne Roger, a couple 
of artists who moved from France to Viareggio thirty years ago to follow their passion 
for papier maché, built a float featuring an awesome group of geese covered in feathers
 made of plastic bags. Their latest production, inspired by Italy's growing 
government-fueled anti-immigration paranoia, was also insanely great.


Tuesday, March 9, 2010

A World Apart

More goodness from Russia, in tune with the chilling Siberian winds blowing through town.
Enter the bizarre worlds created by Ivan Maximovic's imagination and meet the funny, surreal creatures that inhabit them.



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