February 2008

Johan Björkegren


Aside from having a last name that makes me want to cut my own tongue off, Johan Björkegren creates some amazing illustrations. There are lots of hatchings and cross-hatchings for me to get lost in. It makes all his pictures seem slightly hairy, which I’m groovin’ on. Yeah, I said groovin’. I’m taking that shit back from the hippies. You can’t have it, you dirty motherfuckers. I’m gonna sit here and groove on Björkegren’s work some more, because I can’t figure out how it’s dark and yet not at the same time. I’ll need a peanut butter and jelly sandwich to power through this enigma. What?

Johan Björkegren

Art
Illustration

Comments (0)

Permalink

Yes + Me


Why do I like the work of Yes + Me? Is it the color-packed, playful style? Is it the touch of oddness that gets sprinkled on every project? Is it the fact that it’s just some friends having a good time designing things? I’m gonna go with all of the above. Where do I sign up?

Yes + Me

Art
Design
Illustration

Comments (0)

Permalink

Daily Videos

1) What if…. Video for Pangaea Day.

2) BLF hits AT&T. An AT&T billboard in The Mission gets a more truthful makeover.

3) Favorite Color. Some great motion work from New York design studio Favorite Color.

4) AgainstAllOdds. More good motion, this time from AgainstAllOdds. Pay special attention to the Coke Zero spots.

5) The Edible Martini. Possibly the coolest kitchen technique I have ever seen, and that’s saying a lot.

6) Uganda Skateboard Union. This pretty much sums up the way I feel about skateboarding. Plus, I’ve found my new favorite charity.

Video

Comments (0)

Permalink

Tommy Guerrero Interview


One of my skate/music heroes, Tommy Guerrero, has a quick, but interesting interview over on SFGate. He covers a lot of ground in ten questions. If you get a chance you should check out his new album Return of the Bastard; there’s an online stream of some of the new tracks over here, or if you’re in the Bay Area you can drop by the release party at 12 Galaxies next Friday. I’m probably going to try and squeeze that one in. First Fridays are always busy.

Interviews
Music
Skateboarding

Comments (0)

Permalink

Science as Art

I know that I often have a strange mix of art and science posts throughout the week, even though I generally consider this an art/design site. That’s because I honestly can’t see the difference between the two. I love art and design because they allow me to see joy and beauty in the world, and I love science for the very same reason. Everything I learn, every new discovery I read about, just serves to make the world seem that much more beautiful and intricate. Did you know that bats create tiny vortexes on top of their wings? That was just discovered recently. I react to that in the same way that I react to the first Goya painting I ever saw in person. It makes me want to shout, because I don’t know what else would be a strong enough reaction to that kind of joy. I pretty much feel like shouting all the time.

The most amazing parts of my week are the moments when I find something that blurs the line of art and science in a way that everyone else can understand how I feel when I look at clouds. Recently I came across two such things, and I figured they warranted a nice long post to themselves.


The first is an image gallery on the website of Aqua Design Amano for Aqua Forest Aquarium (a Bay Area business that I’ll be visiting very soon). The images are all of simple, glass aquariums. The beauty comes from the design of the aquarium environment, an “amano” style. Each tank is designed to be a natural, aqueous environment for plants and animals. This is basically the aquarium version of bonzai. Each element, and there are never very many, is delicately placed with respect to its height, relation to other plants, and overall effect on the sense of perspective in the tank. Then fish are added, usually one species to maintain simplicity. The CO2 levels are very carefully maintained, and the light sources are designed for maximum plant growth, as well as light for viewing the environment. The photos are great, but imagine seeing the tanks in person. Tell me that’s not art.


The second item I came across is the flickr page of Reciprocity. He creates the most amazing images using shaped and textured plastics. Each image is shot using a focused light beam aimed through the plastic object. The lens of the camera is removed and replaced with the object so that the light pattern is captured directly on 35mm film. The images change with the shapes, textures and colors of the plastic, and the colors and intensity of the light. Each image comes out looking like some multi-colored photo of microscopic organisms or maybe the smoke from some Lewis Carroll caterpillar. Refraction and reflection, spectra of light, texture, all scientific realms, but here their captured as beautiful images. Tell me that’s not art.

Every structure, every pattern, every tiny scientific fact that I encounter in the world adds depth to my life, and the way that I view the world. Art and science enrich everything around me to a degree that is indescribable. I hope I’ve managed to capture a small part of that here.

Art
Photography
Science

Comments (1)

Permalink

Perpendicular Dreams


Perpendicular Dreams is the work of Collage artist Julien Pacaud. It seems like a cross between a more subtle Terry Gilliam and Henry Darger. I have never been a huge fan of collage, but these make my nose tingle like static electricity. I just kinda want to stare at them until my eyes go crossed.

Julien Pacaud

Art
Collage

Comments (0)

Permalink

Daily Videos

1) Estelle feat. Kanye West - American Boy. I think I might have posted this already. I like it enough taht I don’t mind it being a repeat.

2) A History of Evil. Good animation.

3) Cart Whisperer. No cart left behind.

Video

Comments (0)

Permalink

Kelly Vivianco


I’ve been going through a bird phase recently. It started when I was walking back from the park and I noticed a canary in a cage on someone’s windowsill. It sang as I walked by, and that made me really want to let it out. Maybe that’s what it was trying to say to me, or maybe it was trying to tell me that “hey, I’m a bird I’m a bird I’m a bird!” Then I started noticing how many different prints and paintings there were cropping up with birds as their subject. Is 2008 the year of the bird? I was hoping for year of the giraffe, but that one has let me down the last five years running. Birds are everywhere lately, and so it was a big drop in the bucket when I found the artwork of Kelly Vivianco. I liked them at first, then I saw that the first bird’s name was Russell. Now I love them. If I had $150 to spend on anything other than food and rent I would gladly put Russell in the center of, what I have begun building in my head as, bird wall. It’s an imaginary collection of prints and paintings, culled from the internets, that would go in our living room. That imaginary wall makes its blank, real-world counterpart an eyesore. Kelly, your work is great. My imaginary wall wouldn’t be as good without it.

Kelly Vivianco

Art
Painting

Comments (0)

Permalink

Lindsay Lohan and Bert Stern


Most of us are familiar with the iconic last photos of Marilyn Monroe shot by Bert Stern. You might not know that Bert Stern was the photographer, but you’ve seen at least one of those photos if you’ve been alive for more than 4 years.

WARNING: Children four years of age and younger should not be reading this site. Go outside and play you angelic little fuck-trophies.

The photos that Stern shot were of a drunken, downward-spiraling Marilyn Monroe. Though she’s smiling and playful, she seems to have lost the sparkle and sultriness that once made her a national sex-symbol. It seems fairly fitting then that Stern has re-shot the Monroe set with Lindsay Lohan, who is about as seductive as 2×4. All of Lohan’s recent partying and various media fiascoes draw a nice parallel between her and Marilyn, and I think Stern emphasizes the similarities by caking on the make-up. Lohan trying to recreate Monroe’s poses and sultriness is laughable, but that only magnifies the irreplaceable loss of an icon like Marilyn Monroe.

I never saw Marilyn as a sex symbol. She seemed to overwork what would have been attractive in a simpler form. But she was an alluring, and beautiful woman who was coming into her own as an actress when she took her own life. I’ve never seen Lindsay Lohan as a sex symbol either, more just a pretty girl with a nice rack. She could be a very sweet person, but she mostly just seems like the kind of girl that says “We should totally do that” a trillion times a day, but never does anything. I wonder if she even realizes the subtle tragedies that Stern is recreating with her as the model.

Bert Stern Shoots Lindsay Lohan

Art
Photography

Comments (0)

Permalink

Daily Videos

1) Project Grizzly. Sometimes it amazes me that Canadians even survive to breed.

2) Retna. A nice profile of graffiti artist Retna. Too bad it’s by Boost Mobile. Via Juxtapoz.

3) Bullfrog Ballet. The most ungainly predator alive. Via Boing Boing.

4) Sound of Color. Five great videos for five different colors. You were right, Matt.

5) Todd Francis. A look at Todd Francis, designer for Element Skateboards. He’s been in the game for ages.

Video

Comments (0)

Permalink