An Industrial Designer who wanted to “help people get along and have fun while doing it.”
Gorgeous album art.
Modern Mandala
The first solo show Swiss polymathist, Max Bill, opened in London at Annely Juda Fine Art on the 19th of May and will be up until July 30th. Max Bill’s 2D work has been a heavy influence and inspiration throughout my artistic career. I wish I were able to see his work in person.
“Bill’s work in practically every creative sphere puts him as a vitally significant modernist artist. His formative years were spent at the Bauhaus under the tutelage of Kandinsky, Klee and Joseph Albers; he exhibited work in Paris alongside Jan Arp and Mondrian; and also forged strong links with British modernists Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth. In 1953 he founded the prestigious Ulm School of Design with Inge Aicher-Scholl and Otl Aicher. Bill died in Berlin in 1994.”
I love when designers justify Branding through grids and it’s relationship to the identity.
Rouven Stucki is an unforgettable Swedish Illustrator / Designer. I am constantly gathering my jaw off the floor when I visit his latest silk screening pieces. The detail is ineffable.
This post is meant for those of you that like looking at cool stuff. Everyone else can ignore.
ENVISION : Step into the sensory box (by SUPERBIEN)
It’s really fascinating how geometry and mathematical composition can immediately justify a simplistic logo design.
(via pamdotyan)
“Since each bit (binary digit) can be represented only as either a zero or a one, pixels within a monochrome image can have only two states: black or white.”
Justin Blyth, I love your work. Simple geometry layered on top of retro-illustrations of nature or vintage photographs. How did this neo-futuristist /nostalgist design style become so popular over the past year or so? I like the ring of neo-nostalgist…
Crazy is a good thing. Crazy meaning dedication and patience.
(Source: vimeo.com)