Bridgeman Studio Award: Tips from the experts

CR has partnered with Bridgeman Studio, a new online platform representing contemporary artists, to launch the Bridgeman Studio Award 2014. To help you with your submission, Bridgeman asked creative professionals to give their insights into what’s important when selecting licensed artwork…

Entrants will be assessed on their ability to translate up to five images on the theme of ‘joy’ to an album cover, a book cover and fine art print, ensuring they reflect the demands within the global image-licensing industry. You could win £500 and a year’s subscription to Bridgeman Studio offering professional representation for your work. 

CD/Album Cover

“When choosing the perfect image for your CD cover, don’t forget to consider the physical and practical confines as well as the purely aesthetic impression that it creates.”

Cass Cassidy, designer/director of Cassidy Rayne Creative

Book Cover

“Book covers need to lead a reader to want to pick the book up in the first place, so a bold image with strong composition is essential.”

Lily Richards is Picture Researcher for Vintage, at Penguin Random House

Fine Art Print

“Images depicting gardens, flowers and seascapes and British wildlife are enduringly popular and suit many rooms. I have also recently noticed more demand for graphic art and illustration.”

Georgina Angless, Bridgeman Account Manager, London office

Advice from Bridgeman Marketing

“With book cover design, album artwork and a stand-alone piece of art you are looking at very different formats. My advice would be to craft your idea into its simplest form and be true to yourself rather than trying to create something you think people will like. An emotional response is what you are trying to gain from the audience, and in the case of the Studio competition, it is the very specific emotion of ‘joy.’

I remember a quote by Fairfax Cone (a legend in the advertising world) who was once quoted as saying, “Speak to millions and you reach no one. Speak to one individual and you reach millions.””

Alan Firmin, Bridgeman Digital Marketing Director, London office

Advice from Bridgeman Studio Team

1. Look at what is trending in the licensing world. For top tips visit our monthly Studio wish list of subjects/areas that our sales team have identified as being ‘in demand’.
2. Consider anniversaries and annual celebrations. There will always be a licensing demand around celebrations like Easter, Christmas and sporting events etc.
3. Clear use of colour and medium. A clear, bold image has more chance of working across multiple types of licensing deals.
4. A good number and range of works within your portfolio. You never know, a client may be struck by an image they see of yours, and then on visiting your artist page, decide to license multiple images or ‘book mark’ you for future use. We therefore encourage our artists to submit work with a good range.

 

To enter, submit up to five single pieces of original artwork on the theme of joy, which will be assessed on their ability to be licensed on all three of the following products: Book Cover, CD/Album artwork, standalone piece of art. Deadline: May 20. Send entries to competition@bridgemanstudio.com

Licensing example of Bridgeman Studio artist for calendar: The directors of multinational food and shopping corporation Lotte Co. chose Rebecca Campbell’s artwork as the face of their 2014 calendars for clients.

 

Prizes and judges

Judging will take place on 21 May. The winner will receive £500 and one year’s free subscription to the Bridgeman Studio portal, offering professional representation for your work. Five runners-up will each be given a free one-year subscription on Bridgeman Studio or £100 (at Bridgeman discretion to decide which). Results will be announced in the CR’s July Issue and across all Bridgeman social channels, website and newsletter.

Victoria Bridgeman – CEO (Bridgeman)
Lucy Innes Williams – Bridgeman Studio Manager
Patrick Burgoyne – Creative Review editor
Pixie Andrew – Curator at Will’s Art Warehouse
Jenny Wen – Director of Merchandising at Art.com

Details
• Maximum of 5 entries per artist.
• All artwork entered into the competition remains 100% copyright of the artist.
• All artwork can be used in marketing and advertising the competition from Bridgeman and third parties (Creative Review) .
• Entrants must give permission for their names and photographs to be used for publicity.
• The entry can be photography, illustration, digital art or fine art.
• All artwork must be 100% original copyright owned by the artist and not use any third party copyright material.
• Entries must be supplied as two files, one high resolution .jpeg sized between 3MB and 5MB, and one low resolution version, sized between 250KB and 500KB.
• By submitting an entry, each entrant agrees to these terms and conditions.

Further details here

Comme des Garçons Collaborates with Raw Vision Magazine

raw vision coll

raw visionRaw Vision turns 25 this year, and the UK-based outsider art magazine is marking the quarter-century milestone in style: by collaborating with Comme des Garçons. As part of the partnership, which officially kicks off next month at the Outsider Art Fair in New York, Raw Vision has allowed Comme des Garçons to delve into its vast archive of images and layouts to create 20 to 30 mini-magazines that will be dispersed around the globe. Get a first taste of Rei Kawakubo and co’s picks on the Comme des Garçons website, which has been wallpapered with outsider art by the likes of Howard Finster and Anne Grgich.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Galeries Lafayette by Bonsoir Paris

Le studio de design Bonsoir Paris vient de concevoir la série d’installations Quoi de Neuf pour les Galeries Lafayette. Cette saison, sur le thème de la littérature, voici une imagerie basée sur le principe de la page blanche, avec 16 vitrines mettant chacune en avant un détail ou une caractéristique des produits.

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Black house in Tokyo by Level Architects reveals little to its neighbours

Japanese studio Level Architects squeezed this all-black house onto a narrow plot in Tokyo‘s Fukasawa district, adding sloping offset walls around the lower floors to protect residents’ privacy (+ slideshow).

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

Confronted with a long, narrow site measuring 4.6 by 17.3 metres, Level Architects‘ main concern was to create a sense of spaciousness and introduce natural light to the four-storey interior of House in Fukasawa. But this had to be done without allowing other people to see inside.

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“Rather than allowing the constraining width of the plot to be felt, the goal was to create the illusion of an open connection with the surrounding area while still instilling the sense of privacy desired by most home owners within Tokyo,” said the architect.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

Privacy is achieved through the windowless surfaces of the two long facades. Walls also extend from the lower storeys on the building’s shorter sides to restrict views of the interior from the surrounding streets.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

The sloping roofline at the rear of the property was dictated by local building regulations, while an inclined wall above the garage allows eastern light to enter the open-plan first floor and blocks direct light from the setting sun.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

A skylight at the centre of the house creates a bright area over a white-painted iron staircase that extends between all four storeys. Featuring suspended treads and minimal balustrades, it allows daylight to permeate the lower floors.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

The house’s living spaces are all located on the first floor. A double-height living room with full-height windows and a terrace deliberately contrasts with the low-ceilings of the space containing the kitchen and dining area.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

Bench seating surrounds two sides of the living room, while a stepped unit mounted on the other wall creates a desk and shelving which continues onto the raised level that leads to the kitchen.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

The ceiling heights of the two bedrooms above differ due to the changes in the height of the spaces below. One also opens out to a secluded balcony.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

A narrow loft creates a quiet study at the very top of the house, while the ground floor accommodates bathrooms, a garage and traditional Japanese room lined with tatami mats.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

Here’s some project text from the architects:


House in Fukasawa, Tokyo, Japan

Located in a quiet neighbourhood where the average house is 2 stories high, the site has a narrow dimension of 4.6 meters wide and 17.3 meters long; very typical of a Tokyo city centre lot. Though the site is narrow, the length of the site created a focal point in the design. Rather than allowing the constraining width of the plot to be felt, the goal was to create the illusion of an open connection with the surrounding area while still instilling the sense of privacy desired by most home owners within Tokyo.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects

In order to create that sense of privacy, a wall design was incorporated on the North and South sides of the home. The southern wall is cut away in a manner which allows the eastern light to fill the interior of the house, but at the same time shield the inhabitants from the harsh rays of the setting sun. The northern wall is utilised as a reflecting board by capturing the southern light and brightening the interior, all the way down to the first floor where light is hardest to reach.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects
Floor plans – click for larger image

The second floor level, which is completely open and connected, utilises a very high ceiling for the living room and a low ceiling for the kitchen to differentiate space. The living room is also designed with a set of steps running around three sides of the room to create a built-in sofa and activity space where cushions can be placed, amplifying the sense of openness. The centre of the house hosts an iron staircase and top light which allows for light to filter down through the house, generating unique atmospheres which separate the individual spaces.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects
Section – click for larger image

The third floor is broken up by different room heights as a result of the design of the second level but which is all connected around the staircase. The Master Bedroom incorporates a slanted ceiling, a result of the setback code common around the city of Tokyo, but which adds a unique element to the room. The loft space opens up to the stairwell, exposing the room to the indirect light coming down from the ceiling window.

House in Fukasawa by LEVEL Architects
Elevations – click for larger image

The design adjustments made in the section planning of the house emphasised the idea of a long house, one which generates a creative use of line-of-sight and height differentiations to create the sense of a house larger than its narrow width.

The post Black house in Tokyo by Level Architects
reveals little to its neighbours
appeared first on Dezeen.

Room Collection Furniture System

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