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Going West

Using around 3,000 still images, Andersen M Studio has animated an extract from Maurice Gee's novel, Going West, for the New Zealand Book Council...

Colenso BBDO commissioned Andersen M Studio to create the stop-frame animation, which took around eight months to complete. The film was designed and animated by the studio's Line Andersen (one of CR's Creative Futures from 2006) and photographed by her brother, Martin, who set up Andersen M Studio in 2000.

"The entire film is handmade, using only 10A scalpel blades and paper," explains Martin Andersen. "It was photographed on two SLR cameras and lit using Dedo lights."

The film is currently showing as a cinema ad in New Zealand and has been released on DVD as part of a promotional pack for the upcoming film, Under the Mountain.

Design and animation: Line Andersen / Andersen M Studio. Photography and lighting: Martin Andersen / Andersen M Studio. Sound design: Mikkel H. Eriksen / Instrument Studio.

 

Filed under  //   animation   art   books   design   literature   video  
Posted December 8, 2009
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Series of Posters for the Guimarães Jazz Festival 2009

Atelier Martino & Jaña

via

                     
Click here to download:
Series_of_Posters_for_the_Guim.zip (2837 KB)

Filed under  //   design   jazz   music   photography   typography   word  
Posted December 8, 2009
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Karel Šourek 1928 Jazz

Karel Šourek, Jazz, 1928. Source: Tschechische Avantgarde.

via calypsospots

Filed under  //   art   books   collage   design   jazz   music  
Posted December 5, 2009
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Josh Gosfield's Gigi, The Black Flower

Josh Gosfield's GIGI, THE BLACK FLOWER
The definitive Archive of Gigi's Life
On view October 22 to November 25, 2009
Steven Kasher Gallery 521 W. 23rd St., New York, NY 10011

Josh Gosfield

Follow Gigi on Facebook + Twitter

From WFMU:

What words would you use to describe 1960s French pop sensation Gigi Gaston? With a growing cult discovering her through the dozens of photos, periodicals, songs and videos assembled by Josh Gosfield, some adjectives describing the chanteuse nicknamed the "Black Flower" include "sultry," "elusive," "scandalous," "murderous" and "misunderstood."

To that you must add the word "fictitious" — Gigi Gaston is wholly and entirely a creation of Gosfield, an artist and designer whose exhibition at the Steven Kasher Gallery in Manhattan closes on Wednesday, November 25th after a monthlong run. Not only did he cast Gigi, shoot the period-perfect photos and created the meticulously rendered versions of the covers of actual magazine of the era along with a staggering variety of her record sleeves, he's also responsible for the putative Jean-Luc Godard film short for Gigi's haunting song "Je Suis Perdue," which is presented here for your viewing pleasure.

via WFMU
 

Filed under  //   art   design   film   music   video  
Posted November 23, 2009
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American Romances

American Romances | Essays by Rebecca Brown

Publisher:  City Lights

This collection of mordant, poignant and playful essays shows Rebecca Brown at the height of her imaginative and intuitive powers. A wry and incisive social and literary critique is couched in a gonzo mix of pop culture, autobiography, fiction, literary history, misremembered movie plots and fantasy that plays with the notion of what it is to be "American."

The impulse to tell our worst to a bunch of strangers in order to be accepted into the community has been fueling American self-hood for 300 years: There's a direct line from the Puritan confession narrative to all of our seamy, lurid cultural voyeurism. Whose stories are ours to tell and whose are not? Despite the collection's mostly playful and entertaining tone, what's being discussed quite seriously are the ways in which America has tried and failed to craft and tell its own story.

Fully embracing the theory of the literary Romance as a place where the probable opens up into the impossible, Brown lets her imagination run wild and envisions unlikely meetings and fantastical connections that span the course of America's cultural history: the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson and Nathaniel Hawthorne intersect as representatives of west coast hedonism and east coast Puritanism; Gertrude Stein presides over a same-sex religious movement; John Wayne and Shane stand in for the author's father who may or may not have been JFK's wing man during the Cuban Missile Crisis; a mad Finnish-American painter turns Seattle's Hooverville into heaven; H.G. Wells' Invisible Man reveals his/her secret sex life.

Praise for American Romances:

"Everything and nothing is sacred in Rebecca Brown's essays. Tongue, word, thought, and intellect all conspire in a free language love of living history, divination, sex, solitude and amusement. She is America's only real rock n' roll schoolteacher. Lessons layered with profundity and protracted parallels. Where old world religion, Gertrude Stein and Oreo cookies co-exist in an actual and mystic world of wonder."
–Thurston Moore, Sonic Youth

"If Rebecca Brown's talent for prose were any tighter, it would be a lyric – to a pop standard. An homage – a menage – to America, exposing what's laid bare in a comic tragic redux. I laughed till it hurt."
–Van Dyke Parks, composer/arranger

"Anyone who can get from the Eucharist, to a Necco Wafer, to the goo between the wafers, to the Inquisition to the goo between the legs of excited young women is a distant sibling of mine. She can dash and she can drift and she is not much interested in the really bad parts that might qualify as confession. She likes the float of quotidian living and I like to read the words upon which she floats."
–Dave Hickey, author of Air Guitar

An excerpt from Rebecca Brown's American Romances (PDF)

Filed under  //   books   design   essays   literature  
Posted November 14, 2009
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The Catena Wall Clock

The Catena Wall Clock ($2,338) by Andreas Dober for Germany’s Anthologie Quartett. This clock uses copper numbers attached to a bike chain that circles around a single motorized gear.

Filed under  //   design  
Posted November 12, 2009
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Another Rem

         
Click here to download:
Another_Rem_tag_architecture_a.zip (734 KB)

Rem Koolhaas, unbuilt proposal for the Parc de la Villette in Paris.

This project reminds us that there was once a Rem Koolhaas quite different from the corporate starchitect we see today. His work in the 70s and early 80s was radical and innovative, but did not get built. Often he didn't seem to care—it was the ideas that mattered. However, his scheme for the Parc de la Villette begs to have been built and we can only regret that it never was. (via Lebbeus Woods)

via Who would want to be an architect? | BLDG BLOG | LW

Filed under  //   architecture   art   design  
Posted November 6, 2009
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Uruguayan Book Covers

Flickr: sección áurea: portadas de libros uruguayos (60's y 70's)
via El Burlador | Martin Klasch

                       
Click here to download:
Uruguayan_Book_Covers_tag_book.zip (1364 KB)

Filed under  //   art   books   design   literature   vintage  
Posted November 4, 2009
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Mikey Burton

Thesis Project

An integrated branding campaign based around the illustrative reinterpretation of classic book covers directed toward junior-high-school students. You can check out more of the bits and pieces here. Done while at Kent State.

Mikey Burton

       
Click here to download:
Mikey_Burton_tag_books_literat.zip (243 KB)

Filed under  //   books   design   literature  
Posted October 29, 2009
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George Giusti: Civilization...

George Giusti (Oct. 10, 1908 - 1990)

"Civilization is a method of living, an attitude of equal respect for all men.”—Jane Addams, Speech, Honolulu, 1933.

From the series Great Ideas of Western Man, 1955 - India ink and gouache on paper (Smithsonian)

via Ordinary Finds

Filed under  //   art   design   inverted commas  
Posted October 12, 2009
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