Nike Sister One

Posted by Fabio 20 April 2010

London based Ilovedust recently finished this animation spot for Nike’s South East Asia market in collaboration with AKQA. “Once we finished the spot we decided to tweak it here and there for our own portfolio and what was once a 45 second piece featuring a girl dancing turned into a 1:20 epic about a girl-turned-superhero outsmarting an enraged robot through the centre of a Tokyo-inspired Metropolis.”
www.ilovedust.com

Josh Cochran

Posted by Fabio 20 April 2010

Brooklyn based illustrator Josh Cochran graduated with honors from Art Center College of Design, CA in 2005.

www.joshcochran.net

Derrick Santini

Posted by Fabio 19 April 2010

Derrick Santini is a London based photographer with a broad portfolio in fashion, reportage, music and advertising photography.

www.derricksantini.com

Kumi Yamashita – Dialogue

Posted by Fabio 19 April 2010

Video of Dialogue by Japanese artist Kumi Yamashita from 1999. Light, motor, styrene, 60 rotating profiles.
The quality of the video is not the best, but its worth watching.

www.kumiyamashita.com

Fra Angelico to Leonardo

Posted by Fabio 18 April 2010

Fra Angelico to Leonardo
Italian Renaissance Drawings

22 April – 25 July 2010

British Museum
Great Russell Street, London, WC1B 3DG

La Paresse

Posted by Fabio 16 April 2010

This small masterpiece of Nouvelle Vague dates back to 1961 and was directed by Jean-Luc Godard. The film is almost unobtainable, both in VHS and DVD. read more

Frédéric Poincelet

Posted by Fabio 16 April 2010

French artist Frédéric Poincelet worked as a graphic artist for ten years before turning to comics. With already some underground publications to his credit, he joined the publishing house Ego Comme X in 1998. There, he created such comics as ‘Une Relecture’, the ‘Le Périodique’ series and ‘Essai de Sentimentalisme’ (in cooperation with Loïc Néhou).

Frédéric Poincelet

GADAJACE GLOWY

Posted by Fabio 14 April 2010

Gadajace Glowy (Talking Heads) is a serious documentary film which features people from different age groups, backgrounds and professions. Kieslowski starts his film by asking three simple questions to a boy aged 1 year. read more