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In our work, we love to create dialogues between people and their environments, through everything from signage and graphics to print and identity. We hope to create dialogues here too, by sharing things that inspire us, cool industry news, and our projects.
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Posts tagged “street art”

Weekly Roundup

Among the things we learned this week: how to make a stop-motion animation film with a tiny camera and why dust can be beautiful.

“A gathering of words about history, values, and the pleasures of social life,” from Barbara Kruger are installed at the Whitney’s future home. 

The world’s smallest stop-motion film (watch the “Making Of” video too—fascinating!).

Branding charts: by logo colors and brand value

Ten street artists you should know. 

Ashes to ashes, dust to art.

  • Posted 1 year ago
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Weekly Roundup

An awesome interactive site from the BBC, a potential Banksy copycat, crazy 3-D “speed bumps,” and other stories that caught our eye this week.

Life Is…Colorful (and so is this interactive website!). (BBC Earth)

Was Portland visited by Banksy or a copycat?  (via makdreams)

Let’s use branding expertise to do good. (Wolff Olins)

Watch out for that optical illusion in the middle of the road. (via @viaarchitecture)

Maybe it’s just us, but seven typefaces is an awful lot for one can. (Quipsologies)

  • Posted 1 year ago
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Weekly Roundup

Colorful murals, personalized music videos, and the other stories that caught our eye this week.

Thanks to artist Todd Lown and the kids at ArtsWorks (a great organization for at-risk youth), Fremont has a new brightly colored mural (above, photo by William Anthony).  (Unurth)

A German photographer/physicist uses slow shutter speed to capture cool images of fireflies. (Daily Mail, via @feltron)

New dynamic signage at Lincoln Center is a great integration of media and information. (New York Times)

Violators of Toronto’s billboard restrictions had their ads turned into art. (WebUrbanist)

Experience Arcade Fire’s “Suburbs” in a totally personalized way, thanks to Google Chrome & Chris Milk. (Core 77)

  • Posted 1 year ago
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Weekly Roundup

Sci-fi graffiti, Lego artwork, and the other stories that caught our eye this week.

Modern Lego art. (Inside/Out via ARTINFO)

The world’s oldest international stadium gets a sustainability makeover. (Inhabitat)

Graffiti from a galaxy far, far away. (WebUrbanist)

Think golf courses are bad for the environment? Think again. (GOOD)

Catch awesome local band Truckasauras tonight at SAM Remix. (Seattle Times)

  • Posted 1 year ago
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Round Up: Our Favorite Banksy Work

The pseudonymous Banksy is synonymous with street art. We recently rediscovered Banksy’s 2006 book, Wall and Piece. In a world that seems to promote near-constant visibility, he reminds us that “invisibility is still a superpower”.

LA, 2010

Banksy’s most recent pieces have been popping up all over Los Angeles with the premier of his new film. We love his nod to Koons’ balloon dog, above.

Village Pet Shop & Charcoal Grill, 2008

A departure from his traditional work, Banksy began experimenting with robotics for his first show in New York City. The Village Pet Shop & Charcoal Grill opened to the public as a pop-up “shop” in 2008. Devoid of graffiti or paintings, the show featured bizarre interpretations of household pets, from swimming fish sticks to security cameras nurturing their imaginary young. In the words of Banksy, “I wanted to make art that questioned our relationship with animals and the ethics and sustainability of factory farming, but it ended up as chicken nuggets singing.”

Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2005

In an ongoing effort to explore the boundaries of public art, Banksy installed modified canvases of his own work in museums around the world. At the Met, his piece hung for two hours before being removed. At other museums, some work lasted as long as three weeks. “I thought some of [the paintings] were quite good. That’s why I thought, you know, put them in a gallery. Otherwise, they would just sit at home and no one would see them.”

Israel, 2005 & 2007

Banksy created nine paintings on the Palestinian side of Israel’s controversial West Bank barrier in 2005 and again in 2007. Our favorite, above, depicts children digging a hole to paradise. Banksy describes the wall as the “ultimate activity holiday destination for graffiti artists.”

Needless to say, we’re excited to see Exit Through The Gift Shop, Banksy’s new street art manifesto-slash-documentary tracking his practices and pranks.

  • Posted 2 years ago
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In Toronto, potholes are turning cyclists into superheroes. The local street art collective Urban Repair Squad is responsible for the onomatopoeic stencils, which draw attention to imperfections in the road that are potential hazards to bikers.

The Urban Repair Squad has completed a number of projects around the city, including one raising awareness around Toronto’s indigenous underground rivers (similar to the Ravenna Creek project we blogged about here).

Visit Torontoist to see more photos of the project.

  • Posted 2 years ago
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Martin Sobey is creating art in unexpected places. A New York-based street artist with a background in photography, Sobey heals concrete imperfections with abstract photo collages. The temporary, site-specific pieces focus on sidewalk cracks, construction sites & drain pipes, bringing new life to otherwise forgotten details of Sobey’s daily environments.

The majority of our favorite pieces, above, reveal hidden worlds rising up from the pavement. We can almost imagine hopping off that curb, anticipating heat from the lava beneath us.

To see more of Sobey’s work, visit his photo blog.

(via The Wooster Collective)

  • Posted 2 years ago
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Brazilian artist Néle Azevedo creates temporary street art. Modeled after human figures, Azevedo’s miniature ice sculptures are delicately installed in large urban settings, lasting for less than an hour before melting into the landscape.

Reactions to the work vary, but most who encounter the tiny sculptures are moved to pause and engage with them. Azevedo writes:

The reactions are similar, but the intensity varies. In Tokyo, an old lady at Ueno’s food market was very anguished to see the sculptures melting and asked me to take them away, she then placed them on a tray and took them.

For one recent installation, Azevedo partnered with the World Wildlife Fund, using thousands of melting figures to symbolize the effects of global warming.

For more photos of Azevedo’s work, visit his portfolio here.

(via GOOD)

  • Posted 2 years ago
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