Showing posts with label Graphic Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graphic Design. Show all posts

NewsFusion | 028

NewsFusion for June 2016

Science...


Design...
Culture...

Design Idol | David Tartakover

David Tartakover is an Israeli graphic designer, artist, educator, and activist.

Tartakover studied at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem and later graduated from the London College of Printing in 1968. He has lead his own studio in Tel Aviv since 1975 and has been a senior lecturer in the Visual Communication Department of the Bezalel Academy since 1976.

Tartakover's work has focused on culture and politics and frequently is in response to provocative events. Among his many accomplishments, Tartakover is well known for degigning the logo for Peace Now in 1978, the Israeli two-state solution NGO.

Tartakover served as president of the Graphic Designers Association of Israel, is a member of Israel's Culture & Arts Board, and continues to be an active member of Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI). He has curated many Israeli design exhibitions and international poster exhibitions and his own work has appeared in exhibitions around the world including France, Japan, China, Germany, Poland and Russia.

Tartakover also has works that are part of permanent collections in museums including MOMA in NYC and the Musée de la Publicité in Paris. Tartakover has won many exhibit prizes and in 2002 was awarded the Israel Prize for design.

Tartakover was added to our PISA List in 2013.

Data Candy | Catalogtree

The staff at Future-ish just stumbled upon Catalogtree, the Dutch graphic design studio lead by Daniel Gross and Jori Maltha. We gathered around a big iMac screen and just looked at all the pretty pictures. We were - and still are - just big kids in a data candy store. But seriously, if you need a break from your daily grind and want to look at pretty things, Catalogtree's website is the perfect landing spot. Images range from published infographics to photos of current and past projects but all of them make want more, More, MORE.

Stylized State Flowers

Combine gardening, graphic design, and geography and what do you get? The State Flower Collection print by artist Kristen Ley. Inspired by the wildflowers of Texas and a quote from Lady Bird Johnson, "Where flowers bloom so does hope", Ley created the illustrations herself and used the colors form the State flowers themselves to define the colors of the images.

Salish Superheroes

Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe, Suquamish, and Duwamish graphic designer has Jeffrey Veregge has combined his love for Sci-fi and comics with his formal training in Salish form-line to re-imagine some of pop culture's favorite superheroes. Veregge's goal is simply to express himself and "make a little mischief" with his art along the way. He's clearly succeeded at that and the fact that he's won several awards and prizes along the way isn't just another plot twist or surprise ending...its well deserved and we expect to see many more accolades for Veregge in the future.

Finnair-Marimekko Collaberation Takes Flight

In Autumn 2012, Finnair and Finish textile company Marimekko announced a new design partnership that would re-imagine the in-flight experience. Actually, the experience was to begin outside the airplane with a special livery design for Finnair's planes. The new livery presented Marimekko's famous unikko (poppy) print in larger than life format (see above). It is fantastic to see the culture and tradition of great design in Finland is represented so well in this collaboration.

Learn more about the collaboration in the video below:



The partnership continued on to include linens, tableware, and more (see below). We LOVE every bit of it.


**Update**
In Spring 2013, Finnair released the 2nd livery design,'metsänväki' (forest dwellers). love, Love, LOVE!



You may also like: Ohana Aircraft Infused with Culture and Tradition

SeanChron | Occupy Design

Even movements need good design. Check out some of the creations in the Occupy Design gallery.

SeanChron | DJ Spooky in Seattle

Arie Schachter, part of a Seattle Symphony quartet playing Miller's "Sinfonia Antarctica" in front of dynamic digital snowflake projection

9.25.11. It's Sunday night and I just got home from Night School...Night School hosted by Seattle's historic Sorrento Hotel that is. I just got lectured on the science of Antarctica by a DJ...it was the best lesson I've ever had. Created by curator Michael Hebb and hotel co-owner Barbara Malone for the Sorrento's 100th birthday, Night School is a series of diverse events that engage the community in innovative cultural and intellectual discussions. Tonight's event was Penthouse Symposium No. 14. Being the huge science, design, and culture geek that I am, the event was MINDBLOWING! The guest was Paul D. Miller, aka DJ Spooky, That Subliminal Kid...DJ, composer, producer, multimedia artist, author, professor, and philosopher. Miller was in Seattle promoting his latest creation, The Book of Ice, an information, packed, graphically stunning book on the environmental and political challenges facing Antarctica.

Below is a YouTube video of one of Miller's presentations (posted by acclaimed science writer Andrew Revkin):

Link: DJ Spooky's Antarctic Music



Taking inspiration from the vast landscapes of Antarctica to the tiny geometry of snowflakes, Miller's complete project (the book, audio tracks, video, etc.) is an interdisciplinary opus and magnum mashup that spans the best of past, present, and future science, design, and culture. A synthesis of sound and science, the work is sure to engage new demographics and a new generation of learners into the topic of climate change, as well as demonstrate new modalities for engaging the public in the pressing social and environmental challenges facing the world. Per Miller, "Imagination is the only renewable resource".
Paul D. Miller sits down with good friend Charles Mudede of "The Stranger" to take questions following the presentation

Nuclear Testing Tableau


A picture is worth a thousand words but an infographic may be worth many more. Japanese artist Isao Hashimoto created short video that chronicles the number of nuclear explosions conducted around the world from 1945 to 1998. Find more on Hashimoto and the video here.

Wallpaper's Couture Cover

Wallpaper Magazine recently brought design to the masses by partnering with Kin Design to enable their subscribers to create their own covers for their Handmade issue. Read more about the project here and/or watch the video below.