CL!CK: A LEGO Short Film

Posted by Fabio 29 January 2010

A little stop-motion piece Lego put together to promote their new Cl!ck project.

www.legoclick.com

Polly Morgan

Posted by Fabio 29 January 2010

Polly Morgan is British and lives and works in London. She was born in 1980 and began working as an artist in October 2005. A love of animals and desire to preserve them led her to learn taxidermy, under the tutelage of taxidermist George Jamieson. Since then she has gravitated towards making still lives with the animal as subject.

www.pollymorgan.co.uk

Nathan Skiles

Posted by Fabio 29 January 2010

In Black Forest / White Lightning, Nathan Skiles presents a collection of densely adorned cuckoo clocks, ranging from the intricately elegant to the over-the-top outrageous, as a means to invigorate his method of associative image making and feed his interest in the incongruous. read more

Light Forms

Posted by Fabio 29 January 2010

A short experimental floaty and aimless animation by Malcolm Sutherland.

www.animalcolm.com

Kam Tang

Posted by Fabio 29 January 2010

One of my favorite illustrators Kam Tang has recently worked his magic on some Visa cards for EPOS.

Kam Tang

Cleo Chauret

Posted by Fabio 28 January 2010

Paris based art director and graphic designer Cleo Chauret has gathered a good selection of work from his collaborations with fashion designers, magazines, galleries and photographers.

www.cleoburo.com

Emilie Grubert

Posted by Fabio 28 January 2010

Meticulous positioned patterns of vibrant colours, graphic and sleek pattern cutting topped off with gorgeous knitwear was womenswear designer Emilie Grubert’s graduation collection Rainbow Safari S/S 09 from Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in 2008. read more

BREAKING THE MIRROR

Posted by Fabio 28 January 2010

The British public were told that the new information technology, heralded by The Sun’s move to Wapping, would bring a greater variety of newspapers and a more diverse media. But it produced a contracted press controlled by ever fewer proprietors. John Pilger describes the downfall of his old paper and the all-pervasive influence of Rupert Murdoch.