A very sweet 2004 video by Spike Jonze for Weezer,just because I'm in a very good mood!
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Happy in the Sun
A very sweet 2004 video by Spike Jonze for Weezer,just because I'm in a very good mood!
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Progressive Posters
The Great Depression was a very difficult period for many, and affected a large number of American artists
and graphic designers due to the lack of commercial work. In 1935 the US federal government
created the Works Progress Administration (WPA) with the aim to provide job opportunities
for the unemployed as part of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal.
The fall of the same year saw the launch of the WPA Federal Arts Project, which enabled visual artists,
musicians, actors and writers to support themselves and pursue their professional careers.
A poster project was included, and around 2,000 silkscreen, lithograph and woodcut posters were commissioned
to promote health and safety, cultural events, travel and tourism, educational programs and community activities.
The posters were produced across the nation, with the greatest output in California, New York,
Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
Two posters by Louise Welsh
Two posters by Carken
In many cases, the flat color of silkscreen combined with influences from the European avant-gardes
to produce strikingly graphic, bold Modernist designs that contrasted with the realistic illustrative style
prevalent in most American graphic communication of the time.
Mildred Waltrip
Sidney Jacobson
Frank W. Long
Two posters by Hugh Stevenson
Robert Munchley
Arlington Gregg
Frank S. Nicholson
Sidney Jacobson
J. Hirt
All of these posters were created between 1935 and 1939, when the Federal Arts Project was discontinued.
Fortunately, this great art series has recently been rediscovered and appreciated by many artists and designers.
And wouldn't it be great if governments could also be inspired to provide a similar opportunity
to survive and thrive in a time of crisis to the young talents of today?
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Monday, October 15, 2012
We Are Family

Jean de Brunhoff, Babar and Zephir,1936

Elizabeth Cadie, The Cat whose Whiskers Slipped

Garth Williams, Little Fur Family, 1946, thanks to Vintage Kids' Books My Kid Loves

Maurice Sendak, Alligators All Around, 1962

Leo Lionni, Fish is Fish, 1970

Saul Steinberg

Ronald Searle

Květa Pacovská

Matte Stephens

Louise Heugel, La Princesse Lâtchi Mà

Liz Mamont

Wendy Watson, Father Fox’s Pennyrhymes, via 10 engines

Yves Lecoq, Mad Bunny at daughter's wedding
Saturday, October 13, 2012
The Feather Collector
A big thank you to my student Federica for sharing with me this beautiful book
by the French illustrator Isabelle Simler. I really enjoy the elegant spareness
of the compositions, and the interesting balance between realism and stylization
of the illustrations. Together with a variety of birds and their feathers,
in each spread we get a peek at a mysterious black cat. This possibly dangerous
creature at the end turns out to be a feather collector, and his presence
is sure to make the reading more fun and exciting for young children.
Plumes was published last May in France by Éditions Courtes et Longues.
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