After School Club posters

After School Club is a free week-long graphic design festival opening next month at the University of Art and Design in Offenbach, Germany organised by designer Alexander Lis and Eike König of studio Hort

While the festival at the Hochscule für Gestaltung (HfG) Offenbach am Main has just sold out its 150 places, we thought we would share some of the artwork that König sent our way. (König is a professor of at the university; his Klasse König illustration group has helped to put ASC together.)

ASC runs twice a year during lecture-free periods of the HfG’s terms where the school is turned into a “student-organised space”. For April’s edition, various workshops and talks will take place in the classrooms with speakers confirmed including Vier5, Mirko Borsche, Haw-lin, Fraser Muggeridge, Stefan Marx, and Niklaus Troxler.

Full details at afterschoolclub.de.

Imagine with Lego

German ad agency Jung von Matt has created this charming print campaign to advertise Lego. The ads feature minimalist interpretations of some of our best-loved cartoon characters, all created with blocks of Lego: can you guess who’s who?

Here’s a clue: The Simpsons, Asterix and Donald Duck all feature. We’ll let you work out the rest.

New stamps honour comic icons

The Royal Mail has issued ten new stamps celebrating some of the best-known characters from British comics. The stamps are timed to coincide with the 75th anniversary of The Dandy

The stamps were designed by The Chase. Each one features a well-known character with a front page from the comic in which they appeared – indeed some are still in print today.

The Topper was published by DC Thomson Ltd and ran from 1953 to 1990, when it merged with The Beezer. Mickey the Monkey was the original cover star. Beryl the Peril was created by David Law as a female Dennis the Menace (also created by Law). The strip ran from the first issue, taking over the cover in 1986

 

2000 AD was first published in 1977. It is most noted for its Judge Dredd stories, and has been contributed to by a number of artists and writers who became renowned in the field internationally, such as Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman and Grant Morrison. Judge Dredd is a law enforcement officer in a city of the future where uniformed Judges combine the powers of police, judge and jury

 

The Beano first appeared on 30 July 1938. The Dennis the Menace strip (now known as Dennis and Gnasher) first appeared in 1951 and is the longest running strip in the comic. Other iconic strips include the Bash Street Kids, Roger the Dodger and Minnie the Minx

 

Bunty was published by DC Thomson from 1958 to 2001. It consisted of a collection of many small strips, typically the stories themselves being three to five pages long. The Four Marys was the longest story. The comic ran from its creation in 1958 to its end in 2001. It centered around four young teenagers who lived in a girls-only boarding school in Elmbury

 

Buster ran from 1960 to 2000 and carried a mixture of humour and adventure strips. The title character, whose strip usually appeared on the front cover, was Buster. He was originally billed as Buster: Son of Andy Capp, the lead character of the Daily Mirror newspaper strip, and wore a similar flat cap to reinforce the connection

 

The first issue of Eagle was released in April 1950. Revolutionary in its presentation and content, it was enormously successful; the first issue sold about 900,000 copies. Featured in colour on the front cover was Dan Dare, Pilot of the Future, created by Frank Hampson. Other popular stories included Riders of the Range and P.C. 49. Eagle also contained news and sport sections, and educational cutaway diagrams of sophisticated machinery

 

The Dandy was first published in the United Kingdom by D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd in December 1937 and is the world’s longest continuously published comic. Wild-west hero Desperate Dan first appeared in December 1937. The world’s strongest man, he shaves with a blow torch ands eats cow pies complete with the tails and horns

 

Tiger was published from 1954 to 1985, and featured predominantly sporting strips. Its most popular strip was Roy of the Rovers, recounting the life of Roy Race and the team he played for, Melchester Rovers. This strip proved so successful it was spun out of Tiger and into its own comic

 

Twinkle, ‘the picture paper especially for little girls’, was published by D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd from 1968 to 1999. It was aimed at young girls and came out weekly, Nurse Nancy, who ran a toy hospital with her grandfather, was one of the most popular characters

 

Valiant was a British boys’ adventure comic which ran from 1962 to 1976. It was published by IPC Magazines and was one of their major adventure titles throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. Aside from World War II characters like Captain Hurricane, Valiant ran innovative science fiction strips like the Steel Claw, a scientist rendered invisible by his artificial hand

More details here

 

 

CR in Print

Thanks for visiting the CR website, but if you are not also reading CR in print you’re missing out. Our March issue is an illustration special with features on Clifford Richards, Pick Me Up, the relationship between illustrators and writers, the making of the cover of the New York Times Magazine and a powerful essay by Lawrence Zeegen calling on illustrators to become more engaged with the wider world and accusing the profession of withdrawing “from the big debates of our society to focus on the chit-chat and tittle-tattle of inner-sanctum nothingness”.

The best way to make sure you receive CR in print every month is to subscribe – you will also save money and receive our award-winning Monograph booklet every month. You can do so here.

Selexyz Library

Le projet Seleyx Dominicanen Maastricht est celui de proposer une bibliothèque dans une église de la ville hollandaise. Pensé par le studio d’architecture Merkx + Girod, le contraste avec le batîment datant de 1294 est saississant. A découvrir en images dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

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The Jompy Portable Water Heater: Good Camping for Some is Good Living for Others

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It’s a bit perverse that there are parallels between camping—a recreational activity for folk from wealthy nations—and the daily life of those living in developing nations. The upshot is that designers of camping gear have the potential to enrich the lives of millions of people living without first-world infrastructure. The Jompy portable water heater is a good example of this.

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Developed by Scottish inventor David Osborne, the Jompy consists of lightweight metal tubing that has been bent into a flat coil, with the ends joined together side-by-side, resembling a frying pan shape. The user attaches a water source to one end of the tubing—in a camping situation, this could even be a water bladder–and the water then flows through the coil before exiting from the remaining end of the tubing. This allows the user to maximize the value of heat: If they light a fire or burn any type of fuel, the Jompy can be placed over it. Water flowing through it begins to rapidly boil, heating the coil up, which allows it to be used like a stovetop burner for cooking. And most importantly, that water is purified in the process. The hot water exiting the Jompy can be used for bathing, food washing, additional cooking tasks or laundry, or simply allowed to cool and used for drinking water.

The Jompy will come in three different sizes, and Osborne is hip to the fact that it can help more people than campers—in fact, the developing-nation use was the prime motivator, with the camping market intended to prop them up. That’s why whenever you buy one, the manufacturer sends a second unit for free to a family in Kenya.

We applaud Osborne’s type of thinking, though there is one area in which the company could use a little more foresight: Correctly anticipating demand. Overwhelmed by demand, their website has exceeded their bandwidth limitations and was down at press time. With any luck they’ll have it rectified soon.

via gizmag

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The Architect Bag

Leather bag suitable for A3 documents or as a Laptop bag. Opens flat to act as a Portfolio. Includes 5 inside pockets for iPhone, Digicam,Ruler, busin..

The AMG V12 Turntable

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The letters “AMG V12” probably make you think of a Mercedes supercar, but in this case the AMG stands for Analog Manufaktur Germany, and the V12 has nothing to do with cylinders, but a platter instead.

The Viella 12 is a gorgeous, largely CNC’d turntable produced by Werner Roeschlau, whose Bavarian machining operation has been producing precision turntable parts for other manufacturers for years. AMG is Roeschlau’s newly-launched independent line, with the V12 being their first product.

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NANOOK – Armchair

NANOOK is the master of bears, the one who decides the luck of the hunters in the Arctic regions. This armchair blends the beauty and grandiosity of t..

Church in La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Slideshow: the concrete walls of this church in Tenerife are roughly lined with crushed volcanic rocks.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Completed in 2008 by Spanish architect Fernando Menis of Menis Arquitectos, the church comprises four chunky concrete volumes separated from one another by sliced openings.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Two overlapping cracks in the building’s end wall create a large cross-shaped window that is visible from within the nave.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Gabion walls inside the building also create partitions between rooms.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

This is the second concrete church we’ve featured in recent months – see our earlier story about one on the side of a mountain in China.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Photography is by Simona Rota.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Here’s some more text from Menis Arquitectos:


Church in La Laguna

This is a project located in the city of La Laguna on the Island of Tenerife. It is a place that encourages reflection, a meditation space, an intrinsic space where a person of any condition can go to find himself in the temple or join with others in the cultural center.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

The building exists as a large piece of concrete split and cut into four large volumes, at these separations movement occurs. This space creates light, allowing to enter and penetrating into the space, they exist as if to signify a higher meaning inspiring a spiritual presence and sense of tranquility.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

The building stands stark, stripped of superfluous elements that involve distractions far from its spiritual essence. The void has been sculpted to the same extent. The balance of proportions of void and building was vital to developing the identity of the project.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

We chose to exploit the properties of concrete, based on its isotropic nature energy efficiency is optimized by the thermal inertia of the walls. The building also gets a better acoustics result; thanks to a combination of concrete and local volcanic stones called picón, which is chopped afterwards and acts as a rough finish that has a degree of sound absorption that is superior to conventional concrete.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Exterior, interior, structure, form, material and texture are joined inextricably by a complex study of the concrete.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

The volumetric impact of the building and its use of essential materials, treating concrete as if it were liquid stone capturing waterfalls of light, create the temple while also optimizing economic resources. The space reflects timeless emotion.

Church In La Laguna by Menis Arquitectos

Location: Los Majuelos, San Cristóbal de la Laguna, Tenerife, Spain.
Use: Social Center and Church.
Site Area: 550 m2
Total Constructed Area: 1.050 m2
Cost: 600.000 €
Structure: Reinforced concrete
Materials: Reinforced concrete, local stone, golden sheet.
Status: completed Social Center (2005-2008); under construction Church (2005-..)
Client: Holy Redeemer Parish.
Architect: Fernando Menis
Office: Menis Arquitectos
Project Team: Juan Bercedo, Maria Berga, Sergio Bruns (2005-2010), Roberto Delgado, Niels Heinrich, Andreas Weihnacht
Support Staff: Andrés Pedreño, Rafael Hernández (quantity surveyors), Pedro Cerdá (acoustics), Ojellón Ingenieros, Milian Associats, Nueva Terrain SL (services)
Construction: Construcciones Carolina
Cliente: Obispado de Tenerife

G5 Stool

A stool made from discarded scrap wood found in the G5 postal district of Glasgow. Bound together with a ratchet strap.