October 17, 2007

Taschen :: Contemporary Graphic Design

Cover_mi_contemp_graphic_design_070 I just received my Taschen Contemporary Graphic Design book.  It's fabulous, as most all Taschen books are. 

"This compendium showcases the extraordinary cutting-edge work of 100 of the world's most progressive graphic designers, from the hard-hitting political messages of Jonathan Barnbrook to the lyrical digital compositions of Peter Saville to the iconoclastic imagery of Stefan Sagmeister. Alongside the array of visually stunning and thought-provoking advertisements, CD covers, posters, packaging, websites, and corporate identities are texts by each designer expressing his or her individual approach to graphic design practice as well as personal insights into the motivations that lie behind the work. An accompanying introductory essay highlights the current issues surrounding graphic design practice, from the ascendancy of digital tools to the amorality of consumerism. By presenting a provocative survey of the latest, most experimental and forward-looking graphic design from around the globe, this exciting book provides a unique and totally unforgettable snapshot of where the discipline stands today and hopefully offers directions for its future."

September 06, 2007

Dave Werner :: Inspiring, amazing, creative

Whew! After nearly 4 weeks of non stop 16-18 hour days working on client accounts, I'm back to blogging (I hope.) I had planned on writing something of value over the weekend for my readers here at ArtLOOK, but having just seen the site I'm about to share with you....well, a look at this guy's creative portfolio is worth more than any of the words I could write.

Amazing, creative, inspirational...this 25 year old designer is truly a brilliant mind and seems to be a pretty darn nice guy to boot. Things that I especially loved were Impact, Reflect/Respect, and the Mondavi wine bottles. Dave Werner just makes me want to work harder, learn more, read more, see better...

Please check out Dave Werner's Portfolio.

Davewerner_sc

November 22, 2006

A Winter Redesign - How a designer designs herself

Alas, Thanksgiving and the holiday season is upon us.  I have been looking forward to this four day weekend for a month. It signals the time when I imagine my clients cuddled up and cozy with family and friends, surrounded by candlelight and a feast of food.  When preparations for a wonderful holiday season are gearing up and despite the rush...a joyous and festive mood prevails.  Yes...I'm a die hard holiday lover!  This four day weekend also signals a time when I too can spend a day or two cozied up with some good books and more importantly the luxurious bliss of being able to let my mind rest. Creativity does not work well when your life is always coming at you at 100 miles an hour.

Being that this blog has posted much about art lately, I want to post something focusing on design. Not about designing websites, graphics or interiors but my idea was about design in life and how being a designer doesn't necessarily stop when she shuts down the computer or puts the pencils away.

Leftalone

Springtime usually brings with it some kind of renewed spirit for reinventing one's life.  Spring cleaning, new love affairs, tiny buds on the trees all seem to bring the notion that life is starting over.  A new leaf is being turned.  But for me, I always seem to reflect and find new life during the winter. I guess I'm not alone. I just stumbled upon Evelyn Rodriguez's blog, Crossroads Dispatches - A neo-renaissance, eco-epicurean savors, curates and shares slices from the surf's edge on innovation, design, marketing, the art of living and anything that screams Life. I discovered this tsunami survivor (yes yes...the December 26 2004 tsunami), word weaver also finds solace in these winter months.  Read her Fasting for the Winter of My Content.  One of the more beautiful passages that she quotes from Emptiness Dancing by Adyashanti reads as follows:

"If trees were like humans, you would see them reaching down with their branches and raking up all the leaves to hold onto them for security. Wouldn't you feel bad if you saw the trees doing this, holding all their leaves to themselves as if they were in an existential crisis? This is our tendency, to pick up the pieces of our pet beliefs and theories, and hold on for dear life."

"In a real sense, self-inquiry is a spiritually induced form of wintertime. It's not about looking for a right answer so much as a stripping away and letting you see what is not necessary, what you can do without, what you are without your leaves. In human beings, we do not call these leaves. We call them ideas, attachments, and conditioning..."

It is with ideas such as this that I embark upon my four day weekend and the start of the winter season. It is the time to reflect and begin again the redesign of myself. As I wrote here on Sept 8, designers like artists are those incredible people who are compelled to live every day designing. They can't help themselves and there is nothing else in this world they would do other than design. It's an honor and a privilege. They work for it. They live it, breathe it, talk about it, dream about it, sacrifice for it. It's in their kitchen, their living room, their hallways, it's in the clothes they wear. These self fulfulling things should be chosen carefully and deliberately.  Just as when we choose a photo image to compliment our design...if the photo is lovely but not relevant, what's the point? Design is an attitude, a lifestyle and it translates to almost everything we do.

Over the summer I read Design Yourself by Karim Rashid.  It's quite a wonderful book.  Rashid's section on Dematerialization is a winter notion. Rashid says "I believe we can add to our lives by subtracting" And when the clutter is cleared out we can begin anew. We will have fresh thoughts and ideas. He goes on to write, "By no means am I advocating that we should not be buying or having things. I firmly believe that we should be hyperconscious of the things we surround ourselves with - either love and enjoy them or do without them."

I will find myself, this weekend, tossing out the old stuff.  Recycling old magazines, clothes, shoes, handbags.  Organizing papers, photos, music, my office...and taking the time to think about how different I am from the person I was this same time last year.  Where do I want to take myself in the future and how will I get there? I'll even take the time to simply think about nothing and just let go.

Continue reading "A Winter Redesign - How a designer designs herself" »

August 11, 2006

Weekend Reading :: Art and Design

I just received my new Taschen Book.  I'm addicted to Taschen and today's received item has been back ordered for some weeks. So in celebration and because the weather here is so beautiful, almost perfection summer weather, I've decided not to sit in front of my computer this weekend favoring instead to head outside and spend the weekend reading with a cool drink, a pack of smokes and some sunshine.

My reading list:
Collecting Contemporary
Lindemann, Adam
Softcover + elastic ribbon, 16.8 x 22.6 cm (6.6 x 8.9 in.), 300 pages

Va_collecting_contemporary_1 The main body of the book brings together tell-all [I always get a kick out of the "tell all" phrase] interviews with the biggest players in the global art market: the Critic (Rimanelli), the Dealer (Boesky, Brunnet/Hackert, Coles, Deitch, Fortes, Gagosian, Gladstone, Glimcher, Hetzler, Lybke, Perrotin, Rosen, Shave, Wirth), the Consultant (Cortez, Fletcher, Heller, Segalot, Westreich), the Collector (Brant, Broad, Habsburg, Joannou, Lambert, Lehmann, Lopez, Paz, Pinault, Rothschild Foundation, Saatchi), the Auction House Expert (Cappellazzo, de Pury, Meyer), and the Museum Curator/Director (Dennison, Eccles, Heiss, Lowry, Peyton-Jones).

You can burn a whole career on a failed sale
Amy Cappellazzo, International Co-Head of Post-War and Contemporary Art, Christie's, New York

Advertising Now! Print
Wiedemann, Julius (ED)
Flexicover, 19.6 x 24.9 cm (7.7 x 9.8 in.), 640 pages

Mi_print_adv_now_1 The world's sharpest creative minds are in high demand in the advertising world, because making effective ads takes a whole lot more than just marketing know-how. A great ad grabs the viewer’s attention and gets the point across in an original, surprising, funny, touching, or even shocking way. Because ads reflect global and regional mentalities, studying them is interesting not only for their selling points but also for what they have to say about their clients and target audiences. This mega-roundup of the world's best contemporary advertisements highlights the work of agencies in over 40 countries.

"I like words too much."
Interview with Neil French, Creative Director of WPP



Communication Arts
Current Issue: 2006 August Photography Annual

Commarts_1 The Photography Annual highlights the best photography of the last year, by both established professionals and those new to the field. In addition, the August issue offers insightful articles on brand transformation, design leadership, global typography, creating meaning in photography and much more.

May 25, 2006

Art and Design-Reading Books

The rest of today and tonight is dedicated to reading. I have quite a pile system going on here of stacked volumes I'd like to get through. One of the books in question for tonight and this weekend is Revealing Art by Matthew Kieran. I've been reading quite a bit in the blogs these last few days about the nature of art, galleries and how they respond to visitors, what is art, talking and teaching to collectors, art blogging and so on...  There is so much relevant information and so many conversations going on these days that I have too much to think about...and write about.  So I thought I'd take some time this weekend to read and think.

Anyway...The back cover of Mr. Kieran's book reads in part as follows:

"Why does art matter to us, and what makes good art?  Why is the role of imagination so important in art?...Revealing Art explores some of the most important questions we can ask about art.  Matthew Kieran clearly but forcefully asks how art inspires us and disgusts us, whether artistic judgment is simply a matter of taste, and if art can be immoral or obscene, should it be censored?"

"He also suggests some answers to problems that anyone in an art gallery or museum is likely to ask themselves: what is a beautiful work of art, and can art really reveal something true about our own nature?"

Have any of you read this book?  If so what is your thought on it?  If you haven't read the book I believe that the above summary might open up some thoughtful discussion.

April 15, 2006

Good Reading for the Weekend

Tasch_newmediajpgTaschen books, one of my favorite art book publishers, has several new releases out. New Media Art, looks at art in age of digital communication. Artists have always been early adopters of emerging media technologies, from Albrecht Dürer and his use of the printing press in the 16th century to Nam June Paik’s experiments with video in the 1960s. In 1994, the advent of the Internet as a popular medium catalyzed a global art movement that began to explore the cultural, social, and aesthetic possibilities of such new communication technologies as the Web, video surveillance cameras, wireless phones, hand-held computers, and GPS devices. This book addresses New Media art as a specific art historical movement, focusing not only on technologies and forms but also on thematic content and conceptual strategies.

Igor Polyakov's Nordic Design Blog, posted the release of the new Phaidon Design Classics Book.
Phaidon Design Classics features the 999 ultimate design classics
- Meticulously researched and selected after wide consultation with designers and design-world insiders
- Incomparable, a resource without parallel, the final word
- 3-volume set, more than 3,000 images and 500 drawings

Phai_3booksjpg‘An extraordinarily absorbing, enticingly packaged and comprehensive collection of design classics that will, ironically, become a design classic itself.’ Jeremy Langmead, Editor-in-Chief, Wallpaper*

‘…makes good design accessible to all — and is sure to provoke many a “substance versus style” dinner party debate!’ James Dyson, Designer

‘The battle of design is almost won, but a good book like Phaidon Design Classics can help to finish the war.’ Philippe Starck

You can read more about the book at the special feature website.

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