Archives for "March, 2010"
tim green / destroywerk
Tim Green is a british artist who employs both physical + digital materials + media to create his evocative collages, which he says are inspired by science fiction, South American psych rock + magical realism. Ya think? AWESOME.
tat one
Tat One is a Belgian illustrator + street artist whose work as of late has, to me at least, felt like a polished (+ more skillful) version of those intricate ladder + tunnel drawings so many of us made as kids. The work he creates for galleries + storefronts is also really impressive + fun [...]
3 questions: mark weaver
Q: What are your 3 favorite books from your book collection? A: Currently: 1. The Design of Dissent 2. Hand Job: A Catalog of Type 3. Catcher in the Rye Q: Which is more important to your work, real history or your ability to manipulate + reinvent history? A: In my collage work I like [...]
keith davis young
Photographer Keith Davis Young is good at capturing the middle. He photographs America as a place that revolves in + around itself. The middle he sees isn’t really dated but it’s certainly not modern; it’s difficult to place a time stamp on what happens in these places. They’re lonely spaces but the people in them [...]
aleksandra perovic
Serbian designer Aleksandra Perovic takes really stunning photographs. Her design site is under construction but her Flickr is full of awesome.
patrick hruby
In a few weeks, Patrick Hruby will be graduating from Art Center College of Design + he’ll enter the ‘real world’ one step ahead of the rest with this impressive suite of design work.
jimi skull
Artist Jimi Skull uses an intense, almost glowing color palette that conjures psychedelic visions, or at least, what I imagine you’d see if you ate mushrooms at an amusement park.
harley weir
light light light light light light light light light light light light light light light light!!!! photography by harley weir.
tommaso meli
Italian designer + illustrator Tommaso Meli (aka Tommy the Pariah) couples elements of tattoo culture with cartoony illustration + folk art references with recurring tadpole-esque characters that may or may not be ghosts or spirits or unconscious thoughts moving through the landscapes of his work. Very cool shit, for sure.
dylan lloyd
Dylan Lloyd (nice name, buddy) is that kind of photographer that makes you feel lucky for being able to steal a look at the calm pause of his days.


















