me news

blow

…he calls them “Pen Blow” paintings, and not by accident. His method–developed after countless material experiments with everything from coffee to Elmers glue–goes like this: He opens ballpoint pen cartridges, yanks off the tips, then, with his mouth, blows ink through the tubes onto 12-inch-by-12 inch or 24-by-24-inch panels. When the ink flows out, it’s saturated with color and so viscous that, “Instead of turning to a mist, it blows out into sticky interconnected strings,” …that gives the paintings a spider web-like quality…

some beautiful ballpoint pen art from brooklyn-based artist ‘shane mcadams’ (text above quoted from a ‘fastco’article)

m / 09-12-2011 13:24 - tags: , ,  

timetable

the vpro magazine has an augmented reality cover this week, showing the dutch national train network running in one day, curious what it looks like? you’ll have to buy it or maybe try printing this image out… it might work
(not for ipads: requires flash)

m / 09-12-2011 11:44 - tags: , ,  

3.2 million ink dots

m / 06-12-2011 11:02 - tags: , ,  

heil humour

a tricky subject for amusement and not everybodys ‘cup of tea’… some new work from my mate martijn, in preparation for a small booklet i’m helping him with this week… it is my cup

m / 02-12-2011 08:44 - tags: ,  

russian criminal tattoo archive

…this unique archive documents Russian criminals’ tattoos and their coded meanings. Included in the collection are more than three thousand tattoo drawings made by Danzig Baldaev during his time as a prison guard between 1948 and 1986. Tattoos were his gateway into a secret world in which he acted as ethnographer, recording the rituals of a closed society. The icons and tribal languages he documented are artful, distasteful, sexually explicit and provocative, reflecting as they do the lives and traditions of convicts. The accompanying photographs by Sergei Vasiliev act as an important counterpart to Baldaev’s drawings, providing photographic evidence of their authenticity, and allowing us a glimpse into this compelling and extraordinary world. In these incredible images the nameless bodies of criminals act as both a text and mirror, reflecting and preserving the ever-changing folklore of the Russian criminal underworld…

another interesting project from the makers of the sainsburys book posted a few days ago: fuel

m / 29-11-2011 16:07 - tags: , , ,