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Space is the Place

A zine of psychedelic illustrations throws an equally-trippy launch party

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Inspired by the Sun Ra film of the same name, Space is the Place is a rad little zine coming out of Brooklyn. We first fell for it when it was one of the few indie publications we chose to feature in our pop-up shop with Gap last fall. The work of illustrator (also a friend of CH) Keren Richter and graphic designer Andrew Janik, the mini mag includes some of the best contemporary graphic artists in the field.

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Featuring the work of nearly 25 hand-picked international artists, the work is united by underlying tones of “psychedelia, fluorescent jarring colors and patterns, drug inspired fantasy, and celestial iconography.”

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If you’re lucky enough to be in NYC tomorrow, swing on down to La Caverna in LES for Space is the Place’s “Magazine Launch Party/Rave” featuring DJs, video projections, and even an open bar. The first 50 people there also get a complimentary copy of the zine and some other fun party favors. Make sure to RSVP!


Kugler wins V&A Illustration Award

Olivier Kugler is the overall winner of this year’s V&A Illustration Awards for his depiction of a truck driver’s journey across Iran, featured in French quarterly reportage magazine XXI

Rendered in Kugler’s familiar sketchbook style, the 30-page illustrated journal tells the story of the illustrator’s trip with Massih, a truck driver Kugler met in Tehran and accompanied for a four-day journey carrying bottled water down to a small island in the Persian Gulf.

Kugler won the Best Editorial Illustration category as well as the overall winner prize.

Best Illustrated Book was won by Laura Carlin for her illustration for The Iron
Man (Faber and Faber / Walker Books).

Best Book Cover was won by Lorenzo Petrantoni for Boxer Beetle (Sceptre).

 

The Student Prize was won by the RCA’s Mike Redmond for Awkward people in funny situations

 

All category winners were awarded £2,000, with the overall winner receiving an additional £2,000. A free display of original artwork and published work by the winning and shortlisted artists will be shown from 7 June until 17 December 2011 in the V&A’s 20th-Century Galleries.

The V&A Illustration Awards is supported by the Enid Linder Foundation

 

 

CR in Print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog but if you’re not also reading Creative Review in print, you’re missing out.

The June issue of CR features a major retrospective on BBH and a profile piece on the agency’s founder, Sir John Hegarty. Plus, we have a beautiful photographic project from Jenny van Sommers, a discussion on how illustrators can maintain a long-term career, all the usual discussion and debate in Crit plus our Graduate Guide packed with advice for this year’s college leavers.

If you would like to buy this issue and are based in the UK, you can search for your nearest stockist here. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30%.

Degree Shows 2011

Identity for Stockport College’s degree show by Textbook Studio

It’s early June, so it must be time to blog our list of the UK’s forthcoming graduate degree shows. If yours isn’t on here, then please do add the details, including any websites, in the comments below…

First up, here are the dates for the big group shows taking place in London this year:

D&AD New Blood
July 1-4
dandad.org/talent/new-blood

Free Range
May 31-July 25
free-range.org.uk

New Designers
July 6-9 (Part 2)
newdesigners.com

And here are some of the dates we’ve managed to get from the colleges. Dates are inclusive of all shows relating to the communication arts at each college. Readers should refer to college websites for the exact dates of the show for particular creative disciplines.

Arts University College Bournemouth
June 23-30
aucb.ac.uk

Bath Spa University
June 11-­15
artbathspa.com

University of Brighton
June 4-9
arts.brighton.ac.uk/graduate-show

Brunel University
June 9-11
madeinbrunel.com

Camberwell College of Art
June 21-25
camberwell.arts.ac.uk

Cardiff School of Art and Design
June 18-25
csad.uwic.ac.uk

Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design
June 16-22
csm.arts.ac.uk

University of Central Lancashire
June 11-18
uclan.ac.uk

University for the Creative Arts: Canterbury, Farnham, Maidstone and Rochester
June 3-24 (various dates)
ucreative.ac.uk/degreeshows

Chelsea College of Art and Design
June 18-25
chelsea.arts.ac.uk

Coventry University
June 4-9
coventry.ac.uk

University of Derby
June 3-11
derby.ac.uk/ansynthesis

Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design
May 21-29
dundee.ac.uk/degreeshow

Edinburgh College of Art
June 11-TBC
eca.ac.uk

University College Falmouth
June 17-24
falmouth.ac.uk

Glasgow School of Art
June 11-18
gsa.ac.uk

Kingston University
June 5-10
kingston.ac.uk/degreeshow2011

Lancaster University
June 22-29
liveatlica.org

London College of Communication
June 3-July 8 (various dates)
lcc.arts.ac.uk

London Metropolitan University
June 16-20
londonmet.ac.uk

Manchester Metropolitan University
June 18-22
mmu.ac.uk/degreeshow11

Norwich University College of the Arts
June 22-28
nuca.ac.uk

Nottingham Trent University
June 2-12
ntu.ac.uk/degreean11

University of Plymouth
June 11-23
plymouth.ac.uk

University of Portsmouth
June 6-11
port.ac.uk

Sheffield Hallam University
June 11-25
shu.ac.uk/creativespark

Stockport College
June 14-30
stockport.ac.uk

Swansea Metropolitan University
TBC
smu.ac.uk

University of the West of England
June 11-16
uwe.ac.uk

University of Westminster
June 9-14
westminster.ac.uk

Wimbledon College of Art
June 17-23
wimbledon.arts.ac.uk

University of Wolverhampton
June 6-10
wlv.ac.uk/artanddesign

Resident Advisor’s 10th anniversary party prints

To celebrate it’s 10th anniversary, electronic music magazine Resident Advisor has curated a series of events to take place around the world, each of which will be marked with the release of a limited edition print sporting artwork created b the likes of Simon Cook (above), Trevor Jackson, Laurent Fetis, and The Designers Republic…

Recent graduate Simon Cook was charged with designing the print to further commemorate RA’s Barcelona event on June 17 (above), and Trevor Jackson created the artwork (below) for the London party happening this Saturday June 11.

Actually, Trevor Jackson’s poster has been printed in different colourways, signed and numbered:

The prints, each limited to just 75 editions, are being hand screenprinted by K2 in London on to A1 200gsm Cyclus Offset uncoated stock and offered for sale at a very reasonable £15 each, the idea being that they’re almost gifts to Resident Advisor readers.Below is a sneak peek at Zeke Clough‘s artwork for the New York event set to take place in August. Line up and date TBC.

“We wanted to do something special to mark the anniversary, to bring together artists who’ve helped shape the electronic music scene as we know it and surprise our readers,” explains Nick Sabine, founder fo Resident Advisor. “So the idea of a series of events with a secret headliner was born: we select ten artists influential in electronic music over the last decade to curate line-ups that include emerging talents that will influence the next ten years. We do it in ten cities, in ten different countries with thriving RA communities. And we’ve asked ten visual-artists to create a unique poster for each event. We’re really excited to see how it all comes together.”

More info at residentadvisor.net/x/

Regular CR readers may recall we featured Simon Cook’s work in our graduate special issue in September last year


CR in Print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog but if you’re not also reading Creative Review in print, you’re missing out.

The June issue of CR features a major retrospective on BBH and a profile piece on the agency’s founder, Sir John Hegarty. Plus, we have a beautiful photographic project from Jenny van Sommers, a discussion on how illustrators can maintain a long-term career, all the usual discussion and debate in Crit plus our Graduate Guide packed with advice for this year’s college leavers.

If you would like to buy this issue and are based in the UK, you can search for your nearest stockist here. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30%.

British Heart Foundation kids party packs

Facing statistics that over 80 percent of five year olds in England don’t get their five a day in terms of fruit and veg, and also that a third of children get less than the recommended amount of physical activity each week, the British Heart Foundation commissioned design studio hat-trick to design a kids party pack aimed at 4-8 year olds that would promote healthy fun for kids whilst communicating health messages to parents.

The BHF enlisted the services of recipe writer Lizzie Harris to create no less than 17 party food ideas with an animal theme – hence recipes for carrot cakes that look like rabbits, sandwiches styled as chickens and a Lion made out of tortilla chips. Writer Nick Asbury created playful names such as Bunny Buns, the Cluck Cluck Club sandwich, and Safari Snacks. Photographer John Ross then shot the food on paper plates complete with the odd crumb or food splat, helping to make everything look homemade and, ultimately, achievable.

The animal theme extends to a selection of 15 party activities including a good ol’ Dinosaur Egg and Spoon race and a balloon stomping game called Pop Goes The Weasel. All the games are illustrated by Rebecca Sutherland using cut paper, with the game instructions carefully worded for maximum fun by Asbury.

Hat-trick also designed items in the party pack such as stickers (32 sheets per pack)…

…which look rather splendid on pieces of fruit or on balloons:

Each pack contains 20 placemats:

And even 20 party invitations:

“We did some research into existing [kids party] packs on the market and were surprised to find there were hardly any,” says hat-trick’s Alex Swatridge. “At the momet, partents have to buy almost every element separately, which costs a lot in time and money. Bringing all the party items together made sense. But using separate recipe and games cards also means parents and children can mix and match their favourite elements.”

To find out more and to get hold of a party pack (£6.99), visit bhf.org.uk/partypacks

Credits:
Design: hat-trick
Writing: Nick Asbury
Recipes: Lizzie Harris
Illustrations: Rebecca Sutherland
Photography: John Ross

 

CR Bursary: Tom Darracott

Designer and imagemaker Tom Darracott is the first recipient of a CR Bursary, our new initiative supported by Blurb, which will provide funding for personal projects by promising creatives.

Each CR Bursary will provide £1000 to a designer, art director, illustrator, photographer, filmmaker or similar creative artist to complete a personal project in any medium. We will feature the project on the CR website and Blurb will produce a book designed by the artist to document the work.

Our first CR Bursary goes to Tom Darracott.

A graduate of Leeds Met and St Martins, Darracott first came to prominence with his work for the Fabric nightclub. After finishing his MA at St Martins some ten years ago, Darracott attempted to set up a studio with his friend and long-term collaborator Carl Burgess (profiled by CR in 2008 here). Things didn’t work out (Darracott blames their naïvety) and, after a period of freelancing, Darracott was asked to join Jonathon Cooke’s Love studio.

One of Cooke’s major clients was the Fabric nightclub for whom Love produced regular mailers featuring imagery that was determinedly different to the regular flyer fayre of the times. “It was a pretty open brief really but it had to sit in that less obvious, surreal or twisted area,” Darracott explains, “basically anything that was as far as it could possibly be from nightclub visuals.”

In 2007 Cooke joined forces with Blue Source’s Seb Marling to form Village Green (profiled by CR in September 2008 with cover by Darracott).

Darracott came too and continued to produce striking imagery for Fabric that balanced surrealism with a certain Englishness that drew on folk traditions.

He also worked on projects such as the 2008 identity for music and arts enterprise, The Vinyl Factory, in which a variety of abstract marks form the backdrop for a classic logotype

while probably his biggest project was for the 2007 Mark Ronson Cover Version album where posters were designed, printed, pasted and ripped before being re-photographed to make the cover artwork

“It was at the tail end of when the music industry was still putting some money into artwork,” Darracott says of the campaign that featured multiple torn images of Ronson as if from a wall of flyposters. “It was a really enjoyable project to work on, and it made me realise you can’t be too fussy about the product you are working on. It’s far from being my type of music – at university I had this idea in my head that you should only work on ‘cool’ things – but that project taught me to be not so precious about things and realise it’s a job of work. There’s no shame in that at all.”

The idea came from the record label, weirdly, which might have come down from Mark Ronson as well. Then I worked closely with Seb [Marling] on it, researching artists who did work on ripped posters in the past. What helped was that the timeline was short so it meant that various people at label didn’t have days on end to agonise over every tiny detail.”

Earlier this year, Darracott decided to leave Village Green to set up on his own. As yet, there’s no fancy studio, just a shared space in East London. “It’s an age thing I suppose,” he says of his reasons for the move (Darracott is 32). “I couldn’t imagine I’d be working at Village Green when I’m 50 so, whilst I don’t have any big commitments in the rest of my life, now seemed a good time to throw myself totally into my work.”

And what characterises that work? “I’d like to think my work has a sense of urgency to it, that it’s not too polite I hope, I like to try to get some energy into it. That English, surreal look was more of a Village Green thing than me and it’s something I would like to move away from because it feels like it’s quite on-trend at moment – the whole oldy-worldy thing is not for me really.

“I’m more into work which is super polished I guess. There’s been a real fetishisation of craft in recent years which is self-indulgent I find. I’m interested in the techniques but find it all too backwards-looking, slightly unhealthy I think. I can see why people like those things, but we should be looking into the future a bit more,” he argues.

“I’m not sure it’s right that graphics work should be timeless as such, it should be tailor-made for current times and then who cares if it looks dated ten years later?”

For his CR Bursary project Darracott is working on a moving image piece which will be featured here on the CR website at the end of June.

Thanks to Blurb for their support of the CR Bursaries.

Related Content

Read Mark Sinclair’s profile of Village Green here

 

CR in Print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog but if you’re not also reading Creative Review in print, you’re missing out.

The June issue of CR features a major retrospective on BBH and a profile piece on the agency’s founder, Sir John Hegarty. Plus, we have a beautiful photographic project from Jenny van Sommers, a discussion on how illustrators can maintain a long-term career, all the usual discussion and debate in Crit plus our Graduate Guide packed with advice for this year’s college leavers.

If you would like to buy this issue and are based in the UK, you can search for your nearest stockist here. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30%.

Kai and Sunny boxed print editions The Flower Show

Kai and Sunny‘s latest exhibition, The Flower Show, is set to open later this week at East London’s StolenSpace gallery. The duo has given CR a sneaky look at the A3 limited edition box set that will be released as part of the show, containing five letterpressed images – all of which take inspiration from flowers – from the exhibition.

The set also includes a short story entitled The Gardener, written exclusively for the project by author David Mitchell (the duo’s cover for Mitchell’s 2004 novel, Cloud Atlas, appears in the June issue‘s Monograph).

Inside the box the there are six A3 letterpressed prints, five of which are images from Kai and Sunny’s exhibition, and one of which is the short story by Mitchell. All are signed and numbered in an edition of 50, one-colour, Heavy Impression on 300gsm Somerset Velvet stock. The prints are wrapped in translucent tissue paper and sealed with a blob of wax, as above.

“We loved the idea of marrying literature with our images,” says Kai Clements of the story included in the box set. “Sunny and I are both huge fans of David Mitchell’s work and because of our history with him, having designed covers for his books, we felt it was right to approach him for this project. We sent over our images and asked if he’d be interested in writing a short story exclusively for us based on the images. We were so pleased he agreed and even more happy when we read the story – it sits with the images perfectly.”

The A3 limited edition box sets will cost £200 + VAT. Full details will be posted soon at kaiandsunny.com

UPDATE: Since posting this, Kai and Sunny have sent us some shots of the just-hung exhibition, The Flower Show. Here is an exclusive sneak peek at the show:

The Flower Show will run from June 3 – 26 at StolenSpace gallery, Dray Walk, The Old Truman Brewery, 91 Brick Lane, London E1 6QL. Opening times and more details at stolenspace.com

Baldness’s secret

Sci-fi classics in 3D

We’ve chosen our winner and added some of our favourite reader suggestions to the bottom of this blogpost. Read on to find out if your suggestion made the cut.

Vintage has republished a series of five science fiction classics, including titles by HP Lovecraft and Jules Verne, and what’s more they’re in 3D, with specs included in each copy so you can see the illustrated covers in all their glory. (Read on to find out how you can win a complete set.)

To make the covers, creative director Suzanne Dean and the Random House design team worked with four different illustrators. Jim Tierney created illustrations for both Jules Verne covers (shown above), and Sara Ogilvie and Mick Brownfield contributed artwork for The Lost World and Planet of the Apes respectively (shown below).

Vladimir Zimakov created the cover for The Call of Cthulhu, the last book in the series.

If you’ve got a spare pair of 3D glasses nearby, you can see the effect for yourself on the pictures above.

Competition winner

Thanks to everyone for sending us your favourite images, we were reminded of a few science fiction classics we’d forgotten about. Honourable mention should go to the following submissions:

However there can be only one winner, and the set of books will be going to Chris Anderson, for his submission of John Wyndham’s The Outward Urge.

Please email emma.tucker@centaur.co.uk to collect your prize.