The Sketchbook Project

How one global art community is connecting through sketchbooks
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Five years ago, Shane Zucker and Steven Peterman, fed up with the challenge of making a living as artists, founded Art House as a student project. Now, the active online community has over 50,000 users and an art library that is traveling the United States.

Art House’s beginnings go back to Atlanta College of Art (SCAD since bought it), where Shane was studying graphic design and Steven, printmaking. Seeing their friends daunted by the task of getting into galleries as a daunting task, the two rented a space and held their own pay-to-play exhibit, charging artists enough to show so that it covered their overhead.

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Shane’s father mentioned sketchbooks—what if people from all over the world paid to submit sketchbooks to be displayed? Between April and November of 2010, 28,000 people signed up to be a part of the Sketchbook Project and 10,000 of the sketchbooks sent out to people in 94 countries were sent back. The collection is now touring nine U.S.cities and you can even get a library card to check them out.

Shane sat down with me and a new member of the Art House team, Eli Dvorkin, recently to explain the power of community.

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What is the meaning of paying to be part of an art project?

Eli: We’re not telling anyone that they are going to suddenly become famous through this. Also, we don’t sell any of the work. There’s no financial benefit to anyone here. If you think about the resources that go into this tour and having a permanent space in Brooklyn, it adds up to a lot of money and time. As five people or even 100 of your closest friends, you could never do this, but when 10,000 people come together, you can actually do it.
Shane: For a lot of galleries, art is a means of commerce. They make money. That’s just not us.

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How would you describe the typical participant?

S: Serious artists. Scrapbookers. Moms. There’s a huge range of people who do the Sketchbook Project. There are teachers that have their students do it and then there are senior citizens who are just bored.

Is there any sense that you’re reigniting peoples’ involvement in art?

E: People have written exactly that to us. People say, “This is essentially my one outlet a year for my artistic impulses.” Overtime they sit down with the sketchbook and it’s with them for a good chunk of the year. We get little life stories. Like 10,000 lives on shelves. Only a small subsection is any formal study. It’s cathartic.

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When you check out a book, you choose a theme. What’s with that?

S: Steve came up with most of the themes. My favorite is “Science Project Gone Wrong.”
E: I think I’d have to go with “Mystery Maps” even though I devised it. The themes are not rules, but it’s interesting to see how a teenager in Singapore and a senior in Canada interpret “Science Project Gone Wrong.”

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What’s next?

E: We’re starting to collect a lot more information about the participants. When you check out a sketchbook, the artist has the option to be notified by SMS and eventually you’ll be able to get in touch through our website.
S: We’re going to relaunch the site and will be scanning most of the sketchbooks so that people can start tagging individual pages of books. You”ll be able to search “Photography” and “China” and find results. But what’s really cool is that we don’t have to do that, because the community is dying to get involved.

Any personal projects?

E: Shane, you better not!
S: No, this has been pretty full time. I haven’t even made a sketchbook. Steve started one, but I don’t know if he finished it.
E: We have a lot going on at Art House though. Soon we’ll be launching our own notebook collection. The names will co-ordinate to the sizes, like “Back Pocket,” “Messenger Bag,” etc.
S: And of course there’s the tour and soon we’ll start sending out the 2011 sketchbooks to participants!

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The 2010 Sketchbook Project began in April, so stay tuned for this year’s launch. Also, to see the library in person, check out the 17,900-mile tour or the permanent location in Brooklyn.

Photography by Aaron Kohn


Dior Illustrated: Rene Gruau and the Line of Beauty by Gitta Gschwendtner

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

This exhibition designed by Gitta Gschwendtner for London’s Somerset House displayed fashion drawings on gauze-covered boxes.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

Designed to showcase work by 20th century illustrator René Gruau for fashion brand Dior, the exhibition opened with a collage of posters featuring Gruau’s work, incased in a eight-metre box with a timber frame and coloured gauze covering.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

Similar structures were used to hang works in the exhibition itself, while smaller stacked boxes spelled out the exhibition name.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

Grey netting was used to cover a vaulted alcove housing a selection of Dior Haute Couture dresses.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

The exhibition, called Dior Illustrated: Rene Gruau and the Line of Beauty, took place 10 Nov 2010 to 9 Jan 2011.

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

See also: Drawing fashion at the Design Museum by Carmody Groarke

Dior Illustrated by Gitta Gschwendtner at Somerset House

More about Gitta Gschwendtner on Dezeen »
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The information that follows is from Gschwendtner:


‘Dior Illustrated: Rene Gruau and the Line of Beauty’ at Somerset House

‘Dior Illustrated’ celebrates the renowned illustrator René Gruau, who created some of the most iconic fashion images of the 20th century. This exciting exhibition showcases groundbreaking artworks including original illustrations for Christian Dior Perfumes, vintage perfume bottles, sketches and magazines, as well as a selection of Dior Haute Couture dresses.

The challenge for the exhibition design was to create a spatially stunning environment for the predominantly two-dimensional works. Furthermore, the Embankment Gallery with its vaulted ceilings and stone coloured render required a design that complements its unique architecture.

Gitta Gschwendtner’s design solution creates a stunning installation of timber frame boxes covered in coloured gauze. These light three-dimensional structures form the main exhibition build for the hanging of the prints and object display.

On entering the exhibition the visitor encounters an 8 meters long gauze box containing a collage of Dior advertisements. This exhibit introduces Rene Gruau’s prolific work prior to seeing the original illustrations that form the basis for the advertisement prints upstairs.

Further along a large-scale installation of red gauze boxes showcases the exhibition title while introducing the concept of the transparent exhibition structures to the visitor.

In the main gallery gauze boxes are staggered in the space loosely following the shape of the vaulted ceiling. The transparent gauze creates layers of colour in the space, with each section custom dyed in a different shade to compliment the work. The precious couture dresses are dramatically lit behind a screen of grey gauze, protecting them from visitors touch and giving them an ethereal quality.

Exhibition Design: Gitta Gschwendtner
Graphic Design: Studio Frith
Photography: Sorted


See also:

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Drawing Fashion at The Design
Museum by Carmody Groarke
Drawer Kitchen by
Gitta Gschwendtner
Lik+Neon by
Gitta Gschwendtner

Dig

Explorations in form as artists carve out a foam-filled room
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Fresh off Perrier-Jouët‘s Bi-Centenaire Project (more on that later), Daniel Arsham has a new installation and performance piece debuting this week in NYC. “Dig”, in collaboration with Arsham’s firm Snarkitecture, comprises of completely filling the gallery space at the Storefront for Art and Architecture with white architectural foam. Arsham and his fellow Snarkitects will occupy the space during the monthlong installation, excavating the foam filled gallery with simple tools to transform the space into a cavernous experiment in form.

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The tunneling continues through 4 April 2011, and as performances until 22 April 2011. The exhibition is invitation-only, but passersby can sneak a peak from the street or can follow the progress from start to finish on OHWOW’s site.


Rashid Rana

Things are not as they appear in this Pakistani artist’s pixelated works
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Working across mediums—sculpture, video installation and large-scale photography among them—Pakistani artist Rashid Rana explores the singular issue of South Asia’s struggle between tradition and modernity. Typically he uses a pixelated aesthetic to express how globalization and the media impact the region’s identity.

This approach separates out and reassigns associations between the part and whole as a way of challenging stereotypes. His work—on view at London’s Lisson Gallery—teeters between 2D and 3D perspectives, creating tension and forcing his audience to question reality while underlining his position that “we live in a state of duality.”

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Rana’s series of sculptures, aptly called “Books,” are really aluminum cubes printed with pixelated photographs, putting the perceptions of three-dimensional space and form into play by toying with our sense of concrete information.

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Described by Rana as “unpacked abstraction,” his large-scale photographic work looks like a chaotic field of geometric shapes from afar. As you focus closer, the pixels reveal themselves as smaller, context-specific images disrupting the serenity of the work as a whole with their sheer volume.

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Rashid Rana’s show will be at Lisson Gallery from 30 March 2011 through 30 April 2011, and is accompanied by a new monograph on the artist.


Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

We’ve teamed up with publishers Frame to offer readers the chance to win one of five copies of Grand Stand 3 – Design for Trade Fair Stands.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

The 512-page book covers 145 examples of trade fair stands from around the world by designers including Nendo, Patricia Urquiola and UNStudio.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Grand Stand 3” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.

Read our privacy policy here.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Competition closes 19 April 2011. Five 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.

Subscribe to our newsletter, get our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

The information below is from Frame:


Grand Stand 3

Design for Trade Fair Stands

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Following in the steps of Grand Stand and Grand Stand 2 , the latest publication in this series, Grand Stand 3, brings readers up to date on current developments in the fast-paced world of stand design.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

The design of trade-fair stands has become increasingly important to exhibiting organisations, and today’s designers are playing an essential role in integrating brand identity into fascinating corporate presentations.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

The scenographic design of space and the creation of a stimulating atmosphere are crucial in shaping human experience.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Covering 512 pages, the book encompasses 145 remarkable trade-fair environments from around the world – successful designs ranging from small booths to multi-level structures, all of which have grabbed the attention of visitors to major commercial events within the past three years.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Featured stands include those by Atelier Markgraph, D’art Design, nendo, Patricia Urquiola, Stefan Zwicky and UNStudio, and presented brands such as Audi, Diesel, HSBC, Nike, Mercedes-Benz, Reebok, Samsung, Sony, and many more.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Grand Stand 3 is divided into nine categories: Apparel, Architectural Products, Consumer Products, Electronics, Interior Products, Lighting, Mobility, Services and Shoes & Accessories.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Each stand is presented by a description of the design, project credits, photography and a designer profile. Floor plans, sections, sketches, detail drawings, renderings and construction photos explain the design processes from concept to execution.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Completing the book is an index that provides contact details of architects, design studios, brand agencies and stand builders, making Grand Stand 3 an indispensable source of information as well as inspiration.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Features:

  • 145 remarkable trade fair environments.
  • Work by agencies such as Atelier Markgraph, D’art Design, nendo, Patricia Urquiola, Stefan Zwicky and UNStudio.
  • A-brands like Audi, Diesel, HSBC, Nike, Mercedes-Benz, Reebok, Samsung and Sony.
  • Nine categories: Apparel, Architectural Products, Consumer Products, Electronics, Interior Products, Lighting, Mobility, Services and Shoes & Accessories.
  • Extensive descriptions, project credits, stunning photography and designer profiles.
  • Floor plans, sketches, detail drawings, renderings and construction photos.
  • Index with contact details of architects, design studios, brand agencies and stand builders.

Competition: five copies of Grand Stand 3 to be won

Title: Grand Stand 3
Subtitle: Design for Trade Fair Stands
Release date EU: 10 March 2011
Release date NA: May 2011
Authors: Marlous van Rossum-Willems, Sarah Schultz, Carmel McNamara and Sarah Kuehne
Published by: Frame Publishers
Language: English
Size: 240mm x 320mm
Format: 512 pages, flexicover with transparent pvc jacket
ISBN: 978-90-77174-25-8
Price: €69 excluding shipping costs

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Cool Hunting Capsule Video: Zoomorphic Collection

Our video on London’s most extensive and unusual collection of taxidermic antiquities

by Michael Tyburski

In this video we catch up with Emma Hawkins, co-curator of the 2010 Hawkins Zoomorphic Collection exhibit in London. Put together in association with her father J.B. Hawkins, a 40-year-veteran of the antique industry, the collection contains over 200 animal objects, from hummingbird jewelry to a bull head snuff box. Here Emma shows off some prime examples of functional and entertaining taxidermy that has lasted into the 21st century.


Adobe’s Online Museum Debuts John Maeda Exhibition: ‘Atoms + Bits = the neue Craft (ABC)’

In the blink of a disembodied Tony Oursler eyeball, the Adobe Museum of Digital Media has mounted its second exhibition. Through the end of the year, visitors to the sleek site can watch John Maeda, embattled president of the Rhode Island School of Design, deliver an illustrated lecture on his version of the ABCs: atoms, bits, and craft—specifically the physical-meets-virtual mashup that he calls “neue craft.” Maeda begins his discussion of the potential for art and design to catch up with technology by tracing his own path from creating early computer graphics and discovering MacPaint. “That began this era where the computer began to feel more like our world, more like the physical world,” says Maeda, conscious that a sizable chunk of his audience may own an iPad 2 but never heard of an Apple II. “The virtual world, at the time, was very clunky.” Highlighting the technological jumps enabled by Adobe PostScript (cue the Bézier splines!) and Photoshop, the ubiquity of Flash, and the growing awareness of art and design, he asks viewers to consider the origins of innovation before tackling the intersection of craft and computers. At RISD, of course, craft has always been king. “Our students are so steeped in the art of making, bending, gnawing, sawing, changing, forming,” says Maeda. “Today, because of digital tools, we’ve lost that sense of reality. However, craft is alive in the space I live in today.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Fable

New absurdly allegorical paintings by Edward del Rosario

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Set against monochrome backgrounds, painter Edward del Rosario‘s fairytale-like scenes depict people counterposed with nature in charmingly unsettling ways. The Brooklyn-based artist has been exploring the subject for the past eight years, each piece adding to a larger meta-narrative that explores the “aftermath of a post-colonial world.” His latest installment of curious paintings will show at L.A.’s Richard Heller gallery in the upcoming exhibition simply titled “Fable.”

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An active performance artist while earning his MFA at RISD, del Rosario’s theatrical roots are evidenced by the comedically tense or absurd situations in which he carefully depicts his characters. The melodramatic situations often depict his characters’ misunderstandings of each other and their conflicts over the balance of power. As explained in a 2009 interview with Lowdown Magazine, del Rosario’s performances, influenced by absurdist playwright Eugene Ionesco, still inform his painterly study of social interaction and group mentality.

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“Fable” is on view at the Richard Heller Gallery from 26 March 2011 through 30 April 2011.


Pure Water Vision

Creativity and one of the world’s biggest environmental challenges intersect in a group show
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EcoArt uses art as a platform for drawing attention to the environment and surrounding issues. Their altruistic endeavor aims to inspire creativity that will raise awareness through various events and exhibitions, such as their current show “Pure Water Vision.” Featuring a collection of works from the ten finalists of the Acea EcoArt 2010 Pure Water Vision competition, artists explore the relationship between man, water and the environment through photography, video, painting, sculpture or performance.

Focusing on the inherent interactions between humans and nature, the artists addressed issues from global warming to biodiversity to the human effect on ecosystems, covering a broad spectrum of issues facing the environment today.

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Of the 600 submissions to the competition, 30 will be featured in the next volume of the EcoArt book and the ten finalists will have their work displayed in the exhibit, one lucky winner being awarded €10,000 and admission to the Acea Group Collection. The Pure Water Vision exhibition runs through 5 April 2010 at the Auditorium Conciliazone di Roma in Rome.


Gardens

Flying liquid paint splashes captured by Japanese photographer Shinichi Maruyama
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Splashes of tempura paint come to an arresting standstill in “Gardens,” the latest project by Japanese artist Shinichi Maruyama on exhibition at Manhattan’s Bruce Silverstein Gallery. With high-speed photography and the spontaneous gestures of action painting, Maruyama produces sculptural images at once frozen and fleeting in midair.

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“I have tried to represent this feeling I get from Zen gardens in my artwork,” he explains. “It is its own universe, empowering the visitor to resist temptation, eliminate negative thought and sever the continuous stream of inessential information emanating from the outside world.”

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Born in Nagano, Japan, Maruyama made a name for himself in advertising with his innovative use of digital photography and the visual properties of water. Taking a contemplative turn, he published two books documenting Tibetan life in 2001. Maruyama relocated to New York two years later and began to explore the artistic possibilities of photographic strobe technology and liquids. In the well-received series “Kusho,” he examined the elusive nature of calligraphy with hurls of sumi ink and water.

“Gardens” runs through 2 April 2011. All images © Shinichi Maruyama, courtesy of Bruce Silverstein Gallery, NY