Competition: 10 Archigram x Graniph T-shirts to be won
Posted in: UncategorizedWe’ve got together with design T-shirt brand Graniph to offer our readers the chance to win one of ten T-shirts featuring designs from the archive of legendary architectural collective Archigram.
The T-shirts are available in a range of styles; unisex Ts, female box Ts and female A-line T-shirt dresses.
See the full range of designs and styles on the Graniph website.
To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, delivery address, telephone number and preferred design, style and size to competitions@dezeen.com with “Archigram x Graniph” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.
Not all designs or sizes are still available. If you select a T-shirt that is no longer in stock, Graniph will contact you to select an alternative.
Read our privacy policy here.
Competition closes 20 September 2010. Ten winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the bottom of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.
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Graniph are also looking for suggestions of new artists to work with. Tweet your suggestions mentioning @graniph_updates for a chance of seeing their designs on future Graniph T-shirts.
Here’s a little information from Graniph about the collaboration:
Archigram x graniph collaboration: The visionary, anti-heroic and pro-consumer images of 1960’s avant-garde architecture group Archigram return to graniph for a major collaboration!
Archigram
Archigram, an avant-garde architectural group formed in the 1960s – based in London and teaching at the Architectural Association – looked to a future which could be antiheroic and pro-consumer.
Drawing inspiration from new technologies in order to suggest an alternative reality that they visualised through a series of hypothetical projects.
Committed to a ‘high tech’, light weight, transient, infra-structural approach that was focused towards the individual and survival.
The group explored the technologies of responsive environments, of mobility and of capsules and expressed their concepts with popular imagery.
Their works offered a seductive vision of a possible glamorous and optimistic future.
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