Archive | March, 2012

Pick Me Up Graphic Design Fair 2012

25 Mar

Saturday was a fabulous day spent at Pick Me Up, a Graphic Design and Illustration Fair, at Somerset House. It’s the third year of the fair, but my first to attend, and is running until April 1st. It was a brilliant visit, most art fairs can be stuffy and a chore to walk around, with one suffering from visual indigestion after countless artworks. But Pick Me up is centered around being accessible to everyone, from art collectors to lovers, with a hands on/make your own element being key to the fun. The fair is a mix of picks from the print and illustration scene, and a variety of studios and print houses exhibiting, including Nobrow, Nelly Duff, YCA and Print Club London. There were so many visual gems at the fair, but here are some of the works that caught my eye. (And apologies for the awful phone photography – check the artist websites!)

Zim & Zou

Zim & Zou

It has been impossible not to notice these bright paper camera doing the rounds on the blogsphere recently. Based in France, the Zim and Zou studio make paper sculptures and photograph the objects in made enviroments. Exhibiting works from their Back to Basics and Cabinet des Curiousities projects, the detail and precision that goes into these works is a brightly coloured triumph.

Zim & Zou 2

Owen Gildersleeve

Another paper artist that caught my eye is the below work by Owen Gildersleeve – Pixel Piracy – which is a follow on work from an illustration in Wired. Anything with pixels, bright colours, and skulls and I am sold. I can’t imagine the patience that went into putting together all of these individual slices of paper to make the finished image.

Owen Gildersleeve - Pixel Piracy

Mimi Leung

Mimi Leung studied at Central St Martins but is now based in Melbourne, her zany and colorful illustrations take surreal anatomy past a gross-cute level. In the past she has worked for clients such as Nike, AOL and The Guardian, and won the Central Australia Art Society Excellence Award in 2011.  The expressions are worth viewing alone, as is her brilliant blog.

Mimi Leung

Mimi Leung

 Tim McDonagh

I was instantly drawn to the dreamy linear work of this Brighton based artist Tim McDonagh. Working in brush and ink with a hint of digital, animals and lost objects are intertwined and maze of memory and unease, with only the slightest hint of colour. The largest work on display – Petrichor – was by far the most interesting, and is available as a free desktop background on his blog.

Tim McDonagh

Sarah King

For those that like their type, look no further than Sarah King. This wordy jungle scene is both sophisticated and smart, and deserves a closer look.

Sarah King

Ciara Phelan

There was a bit of collage knocking around, but the best that caught my eye was from the craft desk of Ciara Phelan. Collecting and hand cutting images from old vintage-like images, they are applied into a montage of amazingness. Her work is a part of the Many Hands show, an artist collective she co-created, which contained lots of other exciting works that I will be investigating another time.

Clara Phelan

Clara Phelan

And the final spot, was actually in the entrance hall, a cute little artwork by Street artist Pablo Delgado, who I’d recently read about in VNA magazine. Usually spotted crawling the pavements of the East End, Blink, and you’ll walk past it.

Pablo Delgado

I also bought my first proper piece of art at the fair. By which artist? That will have to be a blog for another time…

Crafty word of the day

18 Mar

I love word of the day, especially creative ones. About 6 months ago I discovered the typographical gem Beautiful Swear Words, but the latest wordy blog doing the rounds is And Sew For Today. This tumblr features hand embroidery by Emma Ruth, who stitches a random word every day, in a variety of ways onto a variety of fabrics. Listing the dictionary definition of the word, Emma’s interpretation can be both literal and creatively interpretive. There was even a ‘five days of fonts’ where Emma stitched typographical suggestions, from American Typewriter to Webdings. Brilliant stuff.

Yolk - And Sew for Today

core - And sew for today

Experimental - And sew for today

mosaic - and sew for today

Webdings - And sew for today

More at http://andsewfortoday.tumblr.com/

Cross stitch fantastic,very Bombastitch….

16 Mar

I have a new addiction. Two months ago it was mobile phone Sudoku. Now I spun into the crafty web that is cross stitch. And I am hooked… It all started with the desire to do something with my craft hands while relaxing in front of the telly – which I have been watching a lot more of since a) starting my new job working on web-pages for tv programmes and b) we bought a 42″ inch flat screen electric box. I’ve been doing quite a few crafty things, making paper flowers, collage, but I’ve been looking to start a cross stitch project for ages. And then, while browsing Etsy looking for my first starter kit, it was love at first sight with this item from Etsy seller Bombastitch.

Sugar Skull Cross Stitch kit

This cute and beginner friendly, Day of the Dead sugar skull cross stitch pattern was my first foray into cross stitch and has very much got my hooked. From the moment the box arrived I have been therapeutically stitching away every spare moment that I had, in front of the telly, in the car, even in bed. There was many a moment where I was tempted to take it on the tube, but I stopped myself for fear of early grannyhood and took a book instead. But even then I longed to stitch.

Cross stitch in progress

The piece took me just over two weeks to complete (I am a very slow stitcher) and I’m just a little bit chuffed with it. I am now scouring the internet trying to find a plain black Oval frame (can’t find any ANYWHERE) and I have already bought my next pattern, again from Bombastitch’s shop, all of which are her own designs. So if you are looking for a fun evening pastime (and not that expensive compared to something by Emily Peacock) I’d recommend buying one of Kristy’s starter kits. The kit comes with everything you need to get started, needle, thread, hoop and adia cloth, with a bit of additiveness thrown in for fun. This this lady is so nice, she is even giving patterns away for free on Flickr!

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7176/6840813348_c610c39b31_z.jpg

Now to start my next adventure in cross stitch…

Thoughts of an Apple Hater

7 Mar 171398958_e03a923309_z

Today Apple are releasing another product, probably an iPad 3. While everyone is making their predictions, I penned this piece about my hatred for anything mac. This post has also appeared on The Huffington Post.

Mac in the Bin - by nathan makan via Flicker

Mac in the Bin - by nathan makan via Flicker

It’s no secret to my friends and family that I loathe Apple and their products. From the evangelical store openings, to the product rumor mill dominating the online space prior to launches, their extremely smart PR campaigns promote Apple as probably the best at what they do. Which is, in my honest opinion, producing shamefulmoney pits. Once you buy an iSomething, you have to buy compatible accessories, you can only buy certified apps, and you better hope water never meets your new baby so you don’t have to kiss goodbye to your warranty. But they do look so good. A lifestyle lubricant for the 21st century, no self facilitating media node would be such a fashionable dickhead without one.

I am fully aware that they are well designed and technically brilliant machines. My boyfriend and I argue about this religiously. ‘Your life would be so much better if you had a Mac!’ he wails. My life would be so much better if people stopped telling me I need a Mac. You want doesn’t equal I need. I now get introduced in social circles as ‘The girl who hates Apple’, which as you can imagine as a lively conversation opener as mentioning the BNP.

“Why do you hate Apple?! What’s wrong with you?” I am met with a look of confusion and terror that I have seen many times before.

“I don’t feel need to prove my importance by walking into Starbucks with an iPad under my arm. There are much less expensive ways to look like an idiot.” This comment is always generally agreed with. One person has once unashamedly confessed to me that he has stuck a Apple logo sticker over the top of a Dell logo to maximise his respect points.

“But you work in online? How can you do your job without working on a Mac?” This generalisation never fails to stagger me.

“I work perfectly fine on a PC thank you.” This statement is always particularly hard to admit, as I do curse repeatedly about working on Windows. But I would rather say this than rant for the next 10 minutes about how fast it is, or shown off my latest Scorsese digital masterpiece on Vimeo, or produced some sound that when processed through some digital synth sounds like an elephant farting, and before you know it I have had my ear bent on how I am totally wrong and they are very right. An unsuspecting loiterer (probably a mac user too, as they always hunt in packs) ask to join the conversation. “Rosie was just trying to convince me how a PC’s are better than Macs.” Errrr, WRONG! I can’t get a word in edge-ways in between your big head and your even bigger Apple shaped ego!

I know crap PC’s can be, and I am not defending them. But when you buy an Apple product, you also buy a special pair of apple-tinted spectacles, that makes you believe that there is no other digital product worth having. I refuse to buy into that cult. They get cracked, they break, and they get bugs and viruses just like any other technological object. It is also bad for people to assume that everyone else as bought into that cult. It’s very painful for digital marketers to admit teenagers phone of choice is the Blackberry for it’s messaging system, not the iPhone. If people are creating content with one demographic in mind, they will run the risk of bypassing certain minorities and alienating in favour of another product that fits their needs better.

So in short, I probably will one day buy a mac book pro. When the market has bottomed out, the price-tag has been slashed in half, and the hipsters have levitated to the next big thing. But until then, show off your Apple love to someone else, cos this Apple-hater don’t wanna know.

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