These strange "talking heads" from the Flash Gordon
Sunday Comic Strip by Dan Barry
and Bob Fujitani dated 8-15-76.
They landed in my hand straight from the personal collection of Bob Fujitani.
Friday, April 27, 2018
Friday, April 20, 2018
VAROOM! Magazine Design
Looking
through the very impressive website of English designer, Fernando
Gutiérrez,
and to my astonishment, I came across his designs of VAROOM! Magazine, with my illustration,
which made me happy.
and to my astonishment, I came across his designs of VAROOM! Magazine, with my illustration,
which made me happy.
Friday, April 6, 2018
AIGA Eye on Head to Toe
"In the new book Head to Toe: Nudity in Graphic Design,
Mirko Ilić and Steven Heller chart the history of designers using the
naked body as a graphic device. The book documents hundreds of examples,
from the overt to the subtly suggestive. And in the process, it
explores how public perception of the nude body has evolved from a bold
provocation to an established marketing tool. We asked Heller and Ilić
to choose five of the most significant uses of the nude body in recent
graphic design history, and explain, in their own words, how it’s
changed the way we think about nudity, and by extension, ourselves." –Liz Stinson
"In 1968, Rolling Stone featured Yoko Ono and a nude John Lennon from the rear (the famed full-frontal image from the Two Virgins album was shown inside). This nudity was not new to the underground press of the ’60s but it was the first time actual celebrities appeared in birthday attire on the cover of a national publication. It was a shock—the magazine and the album. But this was an era of shocks. Once the first jolt of surprise was over, it became part of the cultural flow.”
You can read the whole article at AIGA Eye on Design.
"In 1968, Rolling Stone featured Yoko Ono and a nude John Lennon from the rear (the famed full-frontal image from the Two Virgins album was shown inside). This nudity was not new to the underground press of the ’60s but it was the first time actual celebrities appeared in birthday attire on the cover of a national publication. It was a shock—the magazine and the album. But this was an era of shocks. Once the first jolt of surprise was over, it became part of the cultural flow.”
You can read the whole article at AIGA Eye on Design.
Monday, April 2, 2018
Lecture "Symbols of Hate" in Ljubljana
The lecture, Symbols of Hate, at the House of Tolerance Film Festival in Ljubljana, Slovenia on March 23rd.
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