Marco Perego




Marco Perego new exhabition show in Paris.
Have always been interested in creative work that shows a strong irony in the art / design.
As this one by Marco Perego, what is Snow white and dwarfs doing in the room?

Vincent Laforet

A New York based commercial and editorial photographer.
He is recognized for his striking aerial shots.
Things look like toy models.






http://www.laforetvisuals.com/main.php

Lord and Taylor

"As the logo was bent, curved, and angled in response to the illustrations, the familiar stacked format began to emerge" - Print Magazine

Matthew Langford

Photograph is like exploring someone else's eye of the world.
Matthew's work expose some nice sites of Vancouver Canada.

  • Canon EOS 40D
  • Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6
  • Canon EF 28-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
  • Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II
  • Sigma AF 10-20mm f/4-5.6 HSM EX DC
  • Giottos HD124 Tripod
  • Apple’s iMac - 20” monitor, 2 GHz Intel Core Duo, 512 MB, Mac OSX Version 10.4.10





www.mcxlphotography.com

Jeff Koons

The artist best known for his kitsch style.



http://www.jeffkoons.com/

Blip Boutique



Tons of Balloons was created by Hollywood-based Blip Boutique and won Best Web Film at the first annual Swerve Festival. See more of Blip Boutique's latest here.

from ComputerLove

Matt Lee

Matt Lee is an illustrator living and working in London.





http://www.matt-lee.com/

Chad Robertson

Born 1965 in Los Angeles
The process of developing Chad Robertson's paintings involve both a video camera and a computer. The subjects are first videotaped with a digital camera during an “interview” session with the artist. The digital footage taken from this experience is downloaded into the computer where Robertson examines frame-by-frame looking for the “moment between moment” gestures that lie behind the façade of external projections. These chosen moments (subtle nuances such as a blinking eye, a hand brushing the face) are layered in Photoshop, juxtaposing different expressions to complete a rough “video sketch”. This digital composition is then used as the reference for the final execution of the painting. Because a work of art can be digitally created within the confines of the computer, the actual physical remains untouchable in cyberspace. It can be printed but still there is no human physicality in the original artwork. Therefore, when Robertson creates the finished piece of work, the oil paintings, now imbued with a human touch, become the physical representations derived from the arranged pixels. Just as the paintings strive to show a truer self in their subjects, the process itself, from physical to digital to physical once more, play its part in finding a deeper sense of significance.





http://www.chadrobertson.com/

Picnic in Central

"Enjoy Right Now. Delay No Mall"
I personally think that the 1 minute short clip tells the audiences of the lack of social environmental space in Hong Kong.http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=MzH-orX0nDc

Additionally by the same group of people is a creative catwalk at one of world's most crowded street.
http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=-mfo1tBIVbQ

Kaws

OriginalFake 08 SS series with the help of Mark Dean Veca

Wonderwall

Wonderwall Inc. always surprises me in every new store design like the bape and uniqlo store.
This one is the A.P.C. Daikanyama Homme store located in Daikanyama, Tokyo.
Creating an impression of a space that had some big changes to the interior without actually making changes was an important factor in this project. The space has been restructured while revering the fact that it was cherished for a long time, with a garden as the entrance, with different rooms and space each with it's own scenario of the A.P.C. world.





http://www.wonder-wall.com/space/

Ben Tour

a local Vancouver talented artist




http://www.thetourshow.com/

Terry Richardson's 'Rio, Cidade Maravilhosa'

Terry Richardson's book Rio, Cidade Maravilhosa, a collection of photographs shot in the city back in April.
Yashica T4 point and shoot film camera







ttp://rgvogue.ig.com.br/guia/2007/12/17/terry_no_rio_1122457.html

Noriko Ambe








After getting aware of the viewpoint of an "empty self," I started in 1999 a series of works using paper, titled "Linear-Actions Projects by Drawing and Cutting." It looks like annual rings of a tree or topographical map or waive, but it isn't. It is absolutely the traces of actions of a person, which is me.

So to speak, I have been mapping the mysterious land between physical and emotional geography. I want to attain something sublime. The entrance of the way is detail. The detail is the key point of nature, and we are part of nature. Even though the actions are simple, I do not try to draw / cut mechanical or perfect lines in my work, for subtle natural distortions convey the nuances of human emotions, habits, or biorhythm. For this reason, I take care to make all works by hand.

When I am drawing or cutting lines, I am interested in observing the power of the changing growing shape. This dynamic shape becomes an entity in itself, "Another geography." In a sense, the empty space is myself, and the materials represent the present world. Cutting book work is like collaboration for me. And it is important to choose the materials carefully because printed matter conveys a message automatically. The relationship between the linear actions and the materials is like the relationship between human beings and their restricted environment, a connection that is interested in me, too.