Dada Magazine
Talk about "visual junk." If your notion of Dada is no more than a Duchamp urinal then please click on over to UbuWeb (with your French-English dictionary) and peruse their Dada Magazine archive. Founded by Tristan Tzara in an attempt to broaden the reach of Dada's core ideas throughout Europe, Dada (the magazine) published works of art, prose and poetry and survives as a wonderful example of early DIY subculture publishing both in content and form. Of the three issues available online, Dada 3, published in December of 1918, is the most striking of the titles sporting some innovative page layouts and a terrific cover design (inset). Notable contributors over the years included Giorgio de Chirico, Robert Delaunay, and Wassily Kandinsky just to name a few.Labels: Art, culture-jammer, Dada, Drawing, Duchamp, ephemera, graphic design, Kandinsky, self-publishing
Publikum Calendar
Okay, so I'm a few months late posting this, but here it is nonetheless. The 2008 version of TheBrainDesign's Publikum Calendar is a socialist nightmare of graphic design and visual anarchy somehow corralled into a website, downloadable calendar and video documentary--just to name a few of the outlets for this inspiring international effort. The designers and artist represented hail from all over Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas. If nothing else, it's visually interesting stuff. And, yes, these images to the right are each different months of the Publikum Calendar.Labels: Art, Drawing, graphic design, self-publishing, Typography
Dreams of Space
Dubbed "Space Art in Children's Books," this very simply presented website is a treasure trove of pre-space era through post-Apollo mission illustrations which appeared in astronomy and science books beginning as far back as 1883 with Agnes Giberne's romantic visions in Sun, Moon and Stars : A Book for Beginners. As a child of the Apollo era, just barely old enough to remember the famous lunar touchdown, I'm thrilled to see such a collection of wondrous images available online. To the moon...and beyond!
Bicycle Paintings
Pedal on over to Taliah Lempert's unique collection of bicycle "portraits" and see if you can find your own...model that is. The bikes in her artwork belong people she knows and, she claims, represent an extension of their personalities. She has a loose painterly style that fits the portraiture concept and clearly has developed a mastery of capturing her subjects' likeness. Oh, and check out her coloring book, while you're there.Labels: Art, bicycles, Drawing, environment, hand-painted
The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora

Labels: album covers, Art, Drawing, Jim Flora, music
Sketch Swap
Can't afford an over-priced masterpiece? Then get a virtual drawing by a potential art star in exchange for one of your own at Sketch Swap, where it's "Draw 1 to get 1." As the site's description reads: "you draw something on the screen, and when you're finished, you hit "Submit drawing"... to receive a random drawing from someone else." All submitted drawings require approval before being added to the pool of available drawings to be swapped, so get those dirty thoughts out of your head.Labels: Art, Drawing, outsider art
Alesha Sivartha: Visionary Typographer
Though it may not have been his intention, Dr. Alesha Sivartha's masterpiece of mysticism and typography, The Book of Life: The Spiritual and Physical Constitution of ManLabels: Art, Drawing, folk art, outsider art, visionary art
Vitamin D
Vitamin D: New Perspectives in DrawingLabels: Art, Drawing, Ellen Gallagher, Phaidon, Raymond Pettibon, Simon Evans, Tacita Dean, William Kentridge
They Called Her Styrene
This tome of Ed Ruscha's word drawings should satisfy both lovers of contemporary art and designers alike. They Called Her StyreneLabels: Art, Drawing, Ed Ruscha, hand-painted, Typography




