For about a week now, I've had soot dropping down the chimney and kept thinking "We'll have to get that cleaned." At seven this morning, I walked into my front room to open the curtains and found the culprit, Santa the Pigeon. I was considering getting it stuffed to add to the collection...
Some really interesting work by Miru Kim, including the Naked City Spleen, a series of shots taken around the world with nudes in unconventional places. Probably quite cold, damp, dangerous, unconventional places by the look of it. That's probably the point, so I won't get to artsy about it and let you decide for yourselves.
I seem to be seeing more and more knitted stuff as time goes by and I'm starting to like it. In a totally manly way, of course. These knitted Converse are by Dutch fashion designer, Daryl van Wouw. Check out the series of five Converse Extensions over at the Virtual Shoe Museum, which is worthy of a blog entry all of it's own when I get a sec.
"Street Art" as a term has probably seen it's day. For now anyway. But there's still merit in a lot of work and I'm a fan of Paul Insect, who's in amongst the bunch who have contributed to the auction to raise awareness about the Cochlear Implant. It's all in aid of the Cochlear Unit at Great Ormond Street Hospital. Get in touch with The Paradise By Way of Kensal Green for tickets and info.
8th March saw the end of the Pulse Art Fair in New York, where the Glue Society had their latest art on show - a role reversal where there's a very small man and a larger than life pigeon. The rest, I'm sure, you can guess.
A bit of a late spot, but this animation for Electrabel's Happy New Year ad is stunningly simple and beautiful. After 4 weeks of testing, it took director Raf Wathion 5 days to shoot 1600 photographs with the help of 20 animators using 288 thousand tealight candles.
This font is based on the quill pen strokes of the Spanish poet and playwright, Federico Garcia Lorca. Designed by Russian type designer Olga Umpeleva in 2007, it was released by Paratype in 2008.
In celebration of the arrival at the Whitehouse of Mr Obama, here is my favourite Obama based print (from the vast sea of designs produced in the run up to this day). It's by Ron English and is a mash-up of Obama and Lincoln. Quite apt also, as Obama was sworn in using the same bible as Lincoln and it's the first time that bible's been used since Lincoln was sworn into office.
I can't put it into words, but I know I want one of these Milk desks, designed by Soren Rose. They're perfect. I want two. No, I want to buy a bigger studio so I can have seven of them.
Susanna Hertrich has design this working prototype of a calendar that shreds each day. It takes 24 hours for it to shred one day and doesn't have an off button so never stops, leaving you to simply contemplate your days and "...as the seconds pass by, the tattered remains of the past pile up under the device."
John Wringe is a thoroughly nice and very talented advertising and marketing chap. We worked with him recently on Winergy and, after knowing him since I was in short trousers, I can't believe I've only just found out something about him.
Barry Norman (yes, of "Film 80-something-or-other" fame) says John is "...very possibly the world’s leading aficionado of pickled onions."
I hope someone says something like that about me one day.
Almost a hundred artists from around the globe have submitted artwork for inclusion in Sarah Magazine. It's on sale for 15 Euros and all proceeds go towards paying for a cochlear implant for Sarah, a 23 year old girl from Antwerp.
Her myspace site says:
"Sarah was born almost deaf and recently got a cochlear implant in her right ear, which helps her hear sounds she never realized existed. The second implant in her left ear has been scheduled for 2009, but since medical insurance will only cover one operation, she'll have to pay the full 25,000 Euro bill all by herself... To help her out, 100 artists join forces to realize a publication and donate the full proceeds to her operation."
It's from ages ago, but I spotted this entry to Sculpture by the Seaby The Glue Society. It's from back in 2006 but I'm not ageist and besides, I love it. It's called "Hot with a Chance of a Late Storm" and is made from polystyrene and urethane and it's a fair size. Check out their website, they have the equally brilliant acts of God captured by satellite imagery which have to be seen.
I love these sofas made from recycled coffins. Unused, 18 gauge steel coffins, to be precise. These guys at Coffin Couches collect them from local funeral homes, mainly in Southern California. I don't know if I'd dare to lie down on one.
Just found these guys, Bompas & Parr, who are Sam Bompas & Harry Parr and are jellymongers - curating jelly events and designing bespoke jelly moulds and other wobbly activities for clients like Habitat, Innocent and the V&A. And they even do glow in the dark jelly. There's not many things I see and really want to do, but this is definitely one of them.
Hailing from California, I love Jeff Soto's striking work. The Turning In Circles exhibition at the Riverside Art Museum in California runs til 21st Feb 09.
After the sale of artist's proofs of four lino cut designs like "Skullscillator" pictured above, the next lino print by Pete Fowler is a "...Little Bittern/Human mutant playing the soprano uke..."
The inside track from Pete is he'll probably release something like a limited run of around 30 prints, so keep your eyes peeled and snap one up quick sharp when they're released.
First day back after the new year is normally a shock to the system, but I've had a pretty calm Christmas break as we (almost) completely closed for the festive period. The result? An enthusiastic start to the next year of Trap 5, with a lot of good stuff planned for 09.
It's snowing outside but I'm happy working (although the lure of catching snowflakes on my tongue is pretty strong). If you haven't tried doing that since you were five years old, you really need to.
New years resolutions are to be more organised. To back up my work more often. To be more organised with how I back up my work (spent a lot of time over Christmas trying to rid my various drives of duplicate files and I just don't trust Time Machine yet). To keep on top of my finances better. To keep running. To cook more. To cook more varied dishes than cheese on toast. To drink less tea. To drink more water. To clean my teeth more thoroughly. And the staple NYR in most people's arsenal... To stick to the NYRs for more than a week. Oh, and to be more optimistic.
Work wise, we've uploaded our little YouTube animation for Winergy Equilibrium, which was great fun. If you own a horse, you have to feed them this stuff - it's catered specifically for your kind of horse and they love it. It's just a bit like eating a weird cereal and a fistful of hay. Apparently.
I'm off to drink tea and eat cheese on toast while randomly backing up some files into the first TO SORT OUT folder of 2009... Happy New Year.
The face of a certain Messiah has been spotted numerous times in anything from tomatoes to naan bread to the leftover-gluey-bits-of-wallpaper-that-won't-come-off-by-regular-means. So it's time to start evening up the score for the every day man on the street. Here's a face I spotted in the top of a new pot of Skippy. It just appeared in front of my eyes as I was making my breakfast. Admittedly, it's not much like any actual people I've seen. But it counts.
I generally don't seem to find time to follow architecture per se but, while working for a client in London, I stumbled upon this by pure accident while strolling through Bedford Square on my way to the British Museum. I took a few snaps, investigated when I got back to HQ and, for those like me who didn't know, it's the Architectural Association Summer Pavilion. This year it was the Swoosh Pavilion, taken from design to completion by the 2nd and 3rd year students to coincide with the London Festival of Architecture. It joins the [c]space Pavilion and both, for my mind, are an amazing feat and my quick happy snaps do them nowhere near enough justice.