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Showing posts with label Artwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artwork. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Joe Faris, Project Runway Alum, Designs Artwork For Cabot Guns' American Joe 1911 Pistol (PHOTO)

If you watched "Project Runway" (which, yes, is still on the air) back in in 2008, you might remember Detroiter Joe Faris. The designer was quite different than the youngish, Portland-based Leanne Marshall, whose feminine designs brought her the win . At the time, Faris was in his early 40s, had an established career and dressed in black t-shirts and jeans, playing up his "tough" metro Detroit roots.

Since placing sixth on the fifth season of the fashion reality competition that now airs on Lifetime, he's had his hands in several different projects, like Motor City Denim, a line Faris helped launch before leaving in 2011. He's still making his own designs, is one of the creators of the annual Fashion in Detroit event and endlessly cheerleads for the small but growing fashion industry in the city.

And now he's taken his aesthetic to Cabot Guns. The apparel designer lent his stylings to the gun manufacturer's American Joe 1911 pistol, emblazoned with an American flag:

joe faris gun american joe 1911 pistol

The gun evokes Detroit, both through Faris' connection and a tire tread design in the USA lettering that calls to mind the city's auto industry. It's a bit of a controversial symbol to choose for a city that marked its highest murder rate in nearly two decades last year.

The signature handgun's release also comes while a debate over gun control dominates the national political conversation following the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting.

According to the Detroit Free Press, Faris didn't approach the project from a political angle:

“I see a gun as a fashionable item, as crazy as that sounds," he told the paper. But he's not oblivious to the fact that it could provoke strong reactions, telling the Free Press he loved "the controversial aspect of it."

Here's the sweeping description Cabot Guns gives for the limited-edition firearm:

This gun is a symbol of “American exceptionalism” at it’s finest. The tire tread “USA” represents the speed of the bullet leaving barrel as well as the Detroit Automotive innovative spirit which is at the heart of America. The wings embody a burst of Freedom as the tire peels out shifting into a Web pattern that is traditionally Tattoo on the elbow and is fitting as the pattern on the slide. (the elbow of the gun) A spiders web in nature is one of the most complex patterns and is broken-down everyday but built back up every night. In America we continue to build just as our forefathers did for generations. The American Flag hand grip represent the strength of this country as the hand wraps around the magazine with fortitude and resilience. This gun is built purely in America and shaped out of the finest block of steel. The American Joe is a true Red, White and Blue representation of the Glory, Romance and Legend of the 1911.

Alrighty then.

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Friday, June 7, 2013

Hi guys, made some framed artwork, tell me what you think?

They look great, good job. Do you make them yourself?
Thanks comanche82! Yep, I created all this artwork from the ground up. They go went from a sketch to a full blown artwork brought to life through Adobe Illustrator.

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

LP Cover Art: Robert Penney Reimagines Modern Songs Via Vintage Vinyl Artwork (PHOTOS)

Vinyl records have certainly been making a comeback in recent years, with fans and musicians alike returning to the retro medium. But there's still something special about the records of decades past, with their crinkled surface and brown-tinted paper inducing nostalgia in the heart of every music lover.

Graphic designer Robert Penney knows just what we're talking about. The artist has taken modern songs by Lady Gaga and Interpol and turned them into vintage vinyl artworks. Adorned with faded designs and the signature 45 R.P.M marking, the reimagined records are convincing, aren't they?

robert penney album art


Here's what Penney had to say about the project in an email to The Huffington Post:

"As a lover of record collecting and great sleeve artwork, I’ve often found it a shame that CD/Vinyl singles have almost completely vanished while album art has largely been reduced to a tiny picture on an iPod screen. Coupled with a love of retro design, I fashioned some mock designs of current artists and cleaned up their image to fit a more innocent time."

We're especially taken with Thom Yorke's squinting profile on the cover of what looks like a 30-year-old copy of "The Eraser." Scroll the slideshow below for all of Mr. Penney's designs and let us know your favorite in the comments section.

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"New York ‘miserablists’ Interpol had a Beatlemania facelift as they’re pursued through the streets by admiring fans." -Robert Penney Interpol - Obstacle 1 (1964) 7" Single Grading: G- (Torn sleeve)

"Shedding their grungy image, The Libertines are pictured alongside their first names as if a publicity-hungry record company was coaxing young audiences to memorise them and pick a favourite." -Robert Penney The Libertines - What A Waster (1965) 7" Single Grading: G- (Mild surface noise)

"In a rare photograph without heavy make-up, Lady Gaga was transformed into a true diva, styled as a big ballad performer in the vein of Connie Francis." -Robert Penney Lady Gaga - Poker Face (1957) 7" Single Grading: G+

"Outspoken philanthropist Thom Yorke dropped his interest in social activism and caved to the materialistic ‘80s lifestyle by embracing synth-pop in the only LP album of this series." -Robert Penney Thom Yorke - The Eraser (1986) LP Album Grading: P (Skips during Black Swan)

h/t Retronaut

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

CAPTION THE ARTWORK: Sandro Botticelli's 'Portrait Of A Youth With A Medal' (PHOTO)

In 1475 Renaissance favorite Sandro Botticelli took a break from painting goddesses and muses to capture a particularly chiseled youth and his bling medal.

botticelli

"Portrait of a Youth with a Medal" depicts haughty looking youth bearing a Cosimo de' Medici medal and some Renaissance swagger. While his identity remains unknown, one thing is for certain: this youth is a badass with a bob.

If the anonymous youth was able to post his glamour shot on Facebook, what do you think would be his snarky comment? Go on readers, caption it!

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Henri Matisse Birthday: Celebrating The Master Painter With A Survey Of His Artwork (PHOTOS)

Today is the birthday of French painter, printmaker and sculptor, Henri Matisse. The Fauvist painter, famous for his mastery of expressive color, would turn 143 years old if he were miraculously still alive today.

herni matisse birthday


Matisse began his artistic career in 1891 when, after abandoning his job as a court administrator in northern France, he enrolled in Paris's Academie Julian to study traditional still lifes and landscape painting techniques. At the turn of the 20th century, the budding painter became involved with Fauvism, a style of painting that involved wild and discordant color schemes that rarely reflected the subject's natural appearance. Masterworks like "Open Window" and "Woman with the Hat" are highly regarded examples of this daring movement.

Despite the fact that Fauvism began to lose traction after 1910, the work of Matisse remained popular. Many of his paintings were grounded in classical French figure work, mixed with elements of Primitivism and Islamic art, amounting to an aesthetic most often compared to Pablo Picasso. In fact, Matisse and Picasso met at Gertrude Stein's Parisian salon, and embarked on a decades-long friendship and artistic relationship. In his later years, Matisse dabbled in collage, creating simpler, cutout works. The series "Blue Nudes" and art book "Jazz" originated during this period, demonstrating the artist's self-professed style -- "painting with scissors."

The beloved French artist died in 1954, leaving a wealth of artwork in museums like New York's Museum of Modern Art, London's Tate and Paris's Pompidou Centre. To celebrate his birthday, we've put together a slideshow of some of his best works. Scroll through the collection below and let us know which Matisse is your favorite in the comments section.

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Henri Matisse, "The Dessert: Harmony in Red (The Red Room)," 1908, oil on canvas, 180.5 cm x 221 cm, The Hermitage Museum

Henri Matisse, "Woman with a Hat," 1905, oil on canvas, 31 1/4 x 23 1/2 in. (79.4 x 59.7 cm) San Francisco Museum of Art, Bequest of Elise S. Haas, ©Succession H. Matisse, Paris / Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Henri Matisse, "Les toits de Collioure," 1905, oil on canvas, The Hermitage Museum

Henri Matisse, "Crockery on a Table," 1900, oil on canvas, 97 x 82 cm, State Hermitage Museum

Henri Matisse, "The Conversation," 1908-1912, State Hermitage Museum

Henri Matisse, "Vase of Sunflowers," 1898-1899, oil on canvas, 46 x 38 cm, State Hermitage Museum

Henri Matisse, "Madras Rouge," 1907, oil on canvas, Museum of Modern Art, Paris

Henri Matisse, "Vase, Bottle and Fruit," 1906, oil on canvas, 73 x 92 cm, State Hermitage Museum

Henri Matisse, "La danse," 1909, oil on canvas, 8' 6 1/2" x 12' 9 1/2" (259.7 x 390.1 cm), Museum of Modern Art

Henri Matisse, Self-Portrait, 1906, Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen, Denmark

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