Frieze Art Fair ticket giveaway

The Frieze Art Fair opens in London tomorrow and we have two tickets to give away. Rather than answer a question, we want you to come up with one. The best question wins the tickets…

In the current issue of CR, Eliza looks at how the art world has embraced identity design with museums, galleries and even art fairs such as Frieze recognising the importance of having a strong brand, previously seen as a dirty word in art circles.

As the fair opens tomorrow, we thought we would open up Eliza’s piece to non-subscribers (you can read it, here) but also – thanks to Frieze – give away a couple of tickets to the fair itself (normally £27 each).

Simply pose a question suitable to win the prize on offer in the comments below and we’ll choose a winner tomorrow (Thursday 13) at 10am GMT. Most original/thought-provoking question wins.

The pair of tickets will be held at the Frieze Art Fair box office in Regent’s Park and will be valid for a single day’s entry from Thursday until Sunday. More details on the fair at friezeartfair.com.

Above photo by Christa Holka for Frieze.

Boat sets sail again

Boat magazine, as its name suggests, was born out of a desire to see the world. But what’s remarkable is that the studio behind it relocates to a different city for each issue. Having worked in Sarajevo, the itinerant title moves to Detroit next month…

When we meet, Davey Spens, who launched Boat as a communications studio with his wife Erin last year, is two weeks into fatherhood and a few months into planning taking his studio to the US midwest to work on the next edition of their magazine. From its movements to date, it’s clear that Boat has no interest in documenting the more obvious creative hubs. But why begin with Bosnia and Herzegovina?

“Sarajevo isn’t on Google Maps,” says Spens. “It’s hard to get into, there’s very little English language information about anything going on. But here’s a city that dominated the news for years and years and, now, there’s this vacuum.”

Boat’s raison d’être is to explore the places that the media has tired of. Cities, like Sarajevo, which fall under the media spotlight for a while (in this case because of the Bosnian war), then fade away forgotten.

Detroit, too, suffers from what Davey calls the “millstone” of media attention. The collapse of industry in the city is well reported, less so the upswing in young creative talent now working there. So Boat’s aim is to use media once again, as part of the answer, to redress the balance.

“In Detroit everyone is piling in to do this ‘ruin porn’ stuff. It’s just tiresome,” says Spens. “Speaking to friends in Michigan, it’s destroying the place because the headlines are about how the population has dropped and ‘here’s a shot of a beautiful building that’s in ruins’, while the reality is that it’s become a creative boom town.

“We don’t want to sugar coat it, but there are amazing stories there. It’s set to be one of the first US cities where the food it consumes is grown within the city perimeters, the urban farming movement has taken off, for example. Rent is cheap and studios are popping up everywhere.”

For the inaugural issue of Boat, the studio took a handful of photographers along for the month-long stay in Sarajevo but had to arrange most of the collaborations once in the city.

“The hardest part was finding people,” says Spens. “But the film director, Danis Tanovic [interviewed in the issue], was amazing. He got his little black book out and pointed us in the direction of a few people. The requirement of filling 100 pages also pushes you out there,” Spens adds. “And we just had one rule: that we didn’t show bullet holes.”

Preparations are well under way for the next issue, but Boat is still interested in hearing from writers, photographers, illustrators, even filmmakers who may want to contribute to the Detroit edition.

“We look for things to be created with us, rather than for us,” says Spens. “Ideally people come out with us, or we’ll work with them there on the ground. We’d love more illustrators to be involved, and would really like to speak to people from the midwest who might want to come and see us. We want the magazine to be a blank canvas from which to tell stories – there’s no editorial agenda.”

Not wishing to gauge a course prematurely but I wondered where Boat might end up once it leaves the US? Mexico City is one place high on Spens’ agenda. “We want to go to these ‘millstone’ places,” he says. “And they exist everywhere, really.

“We live in a world that tells us we can do all our research from a laptop, but it means that half of the world is hidden, while the other half is in the spotlight. You don’t think of it this way, but the internet is really good at hiding places. We want to go and find those places and do them justice.”

The Sarajevo issue of Boat features contributions from Dave Eggers, Jasmin Brutus, Milomir Kovacevic, Ziyah Gafic, Sophie Cooke, Max Knight, Agatha Nitecka, Zoe Barker, Jonathan Cherry and Danis Tanovic.

Boat can be purchased from boatstudio.bigcartel.com for £10. For more information and to contact Davey and Erin about possible contributions, go to allaboardtheboat.com.

Jan and Hjalti’s great adventure

How many of you, when asked to pitch ideas, have thrown something outrageous in just for the hell of it, thinking ‘They’ll never pick that one?’ Thus it was that Jan Wilker and Hjalti Karlsson of karlssonwilker inc now find themselves on a ten-day, road trip across Europe all paid for by Mini

Mini asked the New York-based studio (who we featured in June 2008) for ideas around its ‘Another day, another adventure’ theme that is currently being used to launch the new Mini coupé. Among a list of ideas, karlssonwilker suggested that Mini should pay for them to drive two of the cars across southern Europe, stopping off along the way to meet interesting creative types. Mini said yes.

Thus, Karlsson, Wilker and their creative director Nicole Jacek, accompanied by a videographer, a journalist and a photographer set out from Munich on September 15 bound for Istanbul to arrive in time for the Biennial there.

Each day the team stops off to meet people such as Bulgarian chef Joro Ivanov

 

Rumanian graffiti artist Sinboy

 

and Bucharest design studio Aterlierul De Grafica, which showed the pair some of their collection of old signage that will be used in a book project.

They almost met some policemen who, thankfully, decided not to arrest them for speeding

The whole project is being done in conjunction with Matter, a new title from the people behind Kilimanjaro magazine which launches in October. The idea is that “we take all the material that was produced on the trip and design a special 24 page insert for the debut issue of Matter Magazine,” Wilker says. “We are hoping to take the temperature of the south east creative landscape, city by city, country by country, meeting with all kinds of people, some pre-organized, some spontaneous.”

You can follow their antics on a blog here

Nice work if you can get it.

CR in Print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog but if you’re not also reading the magazinein print, you’re really missing out. Our October issue includes the story of Blackpool’s Comedy Carpet, a profile of Jake Barton whose studio is currently working on the 9/11 Memorial Museum, plus pieces on branding and the art world, guerilla advertising coming of age, Google’s Android logo, Ars Electronica, adland and the riots, and loads more.

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% on the printed magazine.

CR October issue: set in stone

The October issue of Creative Review features a cover set in granite and concrete. The design ties in with our feature on Blackpool’s Comedy Carpet, the latest typographical installation by artist Gordon Young and design studio Why Not Associates

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% on the printed magazine.

The Comedy Carpet features sketches and catchphrases from some of the many comedians to have performed in Blackpool over the years (some of our pages on it are shown above). To create the carpet, which has been installed on the seafront across from the Blackpool Tower, letters were cut from granite and concrete at a special factory set up by Young and Why Not in Hull. The letters were then arranged on paper layout sheets and concrete poured around them to set them into paving slabs.

For our cover this month, Andy Altmann of Why Not took our coverlines, created a layout, had the letters cut at the Hull factory and then shot the result at PSC in London.

The back cover shows an in-progress shot.

And in this month’s Gallery competition, you can win a red granite off cut from the Comedy Carpet project

Inside the issue, our main profile is on New York-based Jake Barton whose studio is currently engaged in creating the interactive exhibits for the 9/11 Memorial Museum in New York

Plus the BBC’s Duncan Swain talks us through the design of the corporation’s global iPad iPlayer app

Gavin Lucas leads s discussion on the changing nature of ‘guerilla advertising’

Eliza Wiiliams looks at the art world’s new-found respect for the power of branding

And Emma Tucker interviews music video collective Canada

In Crit, Andy Cameron visits Ars Electronica in Austria, where the exhibits included a special suit for extracting phosphorous from the wearer’s urine and a scheme to allow pigeons to defecate detergent

Michael Evamy’s logo column this month looks at Google’s ubiquitous Android

Jon Daniel calls for black designers and creatives to celebrate their role models, such as Archie Boston, whose self-promotional ads tackled race head on

And Gordon Comstock experiences pangs of guilt over the August riots

Jon Daniel was also responsible for our Monograph this month which draws on his collection of stamps celebrating the African diaspora – soon to be an exhibition as Post Colonial at Stanley Gibbons in London

 

Keen-eyed readers will also notice that each section of this issue is printed on a different paper stock, all suppplied by Denmaur. At the beginning of each section, a page details the stock used alongside one of a series of illustrations from Handsome Frank‘s stable of artists telling the sory of paper from forest to printed page (illustrations below by Stephen Cheetham and Malika Favre)

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% on the printed magazine.

15 Wallpaper* covers by 15 image makers

Wallpaper* has collaborated with GFSmith on a cover project that looks to celebrate the magazine’s 15th anniversary. 15 designers or brands were approached to each create a special cover design, to be printed on Colorplan paper stock. Collaborators include Build, It’s Nice That, James Joyce, MadeThought, Nike, and Spin…

“Wallpaper* asked us to commission 15 designers to each produce a ‘celebrity’ bespoke cover around the concept of Wallpaper* Famous for 15 years’,” explains GFSmith’s James Groves.

“In the true sense of bespoke, using digital printing by FE Burman, each cover design was printed on to the stock of the designer’s choosing from our Colorplan range,” continues Groves. “FE Burman pushed the printing by using many different processes including multiple passes of white ink. The results show how choice of paper plays an integral part of the design process.”

Without further ado, here are the 15 covers:


1. James Joyce‘s design is printed on Cool Grey

2. Peter Crawley and Mark Blamire chose Turquoise Colorplan for their collaborative design

3. Paul Antonio‘s design appears on Dark Grey

4. And Nike‘s design appears, appropriately, on Park Green


5. Plus Agency opted for Vellum White


6. Build / Factory Yellow


7. Regard‘s design is on White Frost


8. Ico‘s design is printed on Mandarin


9. And Agent Provocateur‘s design is on Candy Pink


10. Accept & Proceed Real Grey


11. MadeThought / Mist


12. Johanna Bonnevier for Topshop is printed on Citrine


13. Spin / Harvest


14. It’s Nice That / Lavender


15. Studio Makgill / Powder Green

Sadly, the covers have been produced in super-limited editions so won’t be available on newsstands or even to subscribers, although an exhibition is planned to show off the work of the 15 designers and to further celebrate the magazine’s 15th anniversary.

GFSmith

Wallpaper*


Nice publications, August

Two new releases from Nobrow, YCN’s latest quarterly Ideas Illustrated journal, a V&A book entitled The Power of Making, Google’s latest Think publication, plus an encyclopedia of 8-bit computer game villains courtesy of GameSpite. Yup, it’s something of a bumper edition of our regular Nice Publications post…

First up is Luke Pearson‘s graphic novella, Everything We Miss, published by Nobrow. Printed in 3 spot colours, the hardback A5 book’s 38 pages follow the final, painful days of a couple’s doomed relationship – but illustrates all the things that might be happening around the central and peripheral characters when they’re not looking or paying attention. It’s beautifully observed and drawn, and darkly engaging.

Everything We Miss by Luke Pearson (£12), is available from nobrow.net

Also fresh from Nobrow, Forming is a larger book in every way. The oversize A4, 122 page hardback is actually the first part in an ongoing saga (there will be three books in total) by Philadelphia-based illustrator Jesse Moynihan that charts a fictional, psuedo-mythological history of planet Earth in which gods, giants, humans and interplanetary assassin droids slug it out in a new, irreverent look at how our universe, planet, and belief systems were formed over several millennia. Moynihan has actually been revealing the Forming story, page by page, on his website since early 2009, but this is the first time it has been printed…

Forming, Vol.1 (£18) is available from nobrow.net

It’s called Ideas Illustrated and it’s an apt title. There’s some great illustration in YCN‘s latest quarerly edition by the likes of Jean Jullien, Martin Nicolausson, Jacqueline Ford and plenty more. Written contributions come from Sir John Hegarty (BBH), Mark Borkowski (Borkowski PR), Tom Uglow (European CD of Google and YouTube) and more. Here are some spreads:

To get hold of a copy of Ideas Illustrated (£5), visit the YCN store online at shop.ycnonline.com

Also making great use of illustration is Google’s latest issue of Think Quarterly, the Innovation Issue – edited and designed by The Church of London. Written contributors include Google’s own president of advertising, Susan Wojicki, Ogilvy’s head of planning, Russell Davies, Nike’s Hannah Jones (vice president of sustainable business and innovation), and interior designer Kursty Groves. Illustration contributions come from Mitch Blunt, Robert Hanson, Steve Wilson, Noma Bar, and Gary Taxali.


Lift Think Quarterly out of its box to find there are some fridge-style word magnets. It didn’t take long to find they ‘stick’ to the front cover.

More about this issue of Think Quarterly at thinkwithgoogle.co.uk/quarterly/innovation

The Power of Making (September 6 – January 2 2012) is the second V&A and Crafts Council triennial exhibition and this book of the same name (cover shown above), edited by Daniel Charny, contains essays by Daniel Miller, Professor Sir Christopher Frayling, Martina Margetts, Ele Carpenter, and Bruce Sterling. It also showcases a host of works from the exhibition. Designed by Oscar & Ewen. Here are some spreads.

We were also sent the latest issue of GameSpite Quarterly, a magazine devoted to all things computer game related. Issue 7 is called the Encyclopedia of 8-Bit Villains and, well, that’s exactly what it is. From Abobo (Double Dragon) through to Zoda (StarTropics) they’re all here. Well known villains such as Atari’s Asteroids, and Nintendo’s Bowser and Donkey Kong are all written up, along with lesser known baddies such as Namco’s Biggy Man (from Splatterhouse released in 1988) and Goruza from 1990 game release, XEXYZ. This encyclopedia of video game nasties even has entries for Gravity which, according to this tome, made its first appearance as an obstacle to overcome in a video game in Steve Russell’s 1962  Spacewar! game. Also worthy of its own entry is the dreaded Edge Of The Screen – a classic gaming glitch that has plagued the hardiest of gamers since time immemorial (well, since about 1971). Here are some spreads:

To order a copy of GameSpite Quarterly (issue 3 is an encyclopedia of 8-bit heroes) head over to gamespite.net. Paperback issues will cost you $14 while hardback editions will set you back $38 a piece.

 

 

BBC R&D and magneticNorth’s Maestro installation

Digital design agency magneticNorth has collaborated with BBC R&D to create Maestro, an interactive installation that gives children the chance to conduct the BBC Philharmonic orchestra…

Maestro is part of the Music Boxes exhibition at MediaCityUK which is, in turn, part of the Manchester International Festival. Using Microsoft Kinect technology – which is similar to PlayStation’s motion-sensing EyeToy technology – Maestro enables a player standing in front of a screen showing a fish eye lens view of the London Philharmonic orchestra to use their hands to control the tempo and dynamic of the orchestra, just like a conductor – as a number of kids demonstrate in this film:

BBC Philharmonic Maestro from mN on Vimeo.

The concept and initial prototype for Maestro was first created by the BBC’s Research & Development team who partnered with magneticNorth to develop the user experience, design and technical solution. “This has been a fun project to work on,” says Adam Todd, creative director of magneticNorth, “and has allowed us to continue our experiments into how we can interact with digital content. The Kinect allowed us to create something that children found natural to use, and as the complex technology at the core of Maestro is hidden away it makes the experience even more magical.”

The Music Boxes exhibition for kids aged between six months and seven years is open for another two days at MediaCityUK in Salford Quays. More info at mif.co.uk/event/music-boxes

Julia art directs Elephant

London-based design studio Julia comprises the talents of Valerio Di Lucente, Erwan Lhuissier and Hugo Timm. The trio has recently completed a rehaul of the art direction of visual culture magazine Elephant, designing a bespoke typeface in the process. Click through to find out more about the new typeface and to see a selection of spreads from the new issue of the magazine…

 

The new typeface, appropriately named Elephant, is the result of an investigation, say Julia, of letterpress. “The ink absorption of the letterpress process was and is very different from current offset printing, resulting in clogging. On its display sizes, Elephant has ink already trapped in the inner angles, simulating this effect. For small body copy there is another cut with normal ink traps.”

Above: a closer look at a couple of letterforms that show a bit more clearly the idea of ink trapped in the tighter angles of letterforms

 

Here are some spreads from the new issue (7) of Elephant:

 

“When we’re designing a magazine we see ourselves as contributors in the broadest sense of the word,” Julia’s Erwan Lhuissier tells us of the sudio’s approach to art directing Elephant. “The design is one of the many things involved in putting a publication together,” he continues, “and we enjoy when it’s an extension of what’s happening in the whole editorial process. With Elephant we’ve been focusing on giving each of its sections a distinctive identity. That requires changing image selections, the way texts are written, the relationship between individuals and their subjects, and ultimately the layouts. It is an ongoing process and that’s part of the beauty of working on magazines: it’s never over and there’s always more to be explored. The typeface is part of this process and we’re taking the opportunity to keep developing it. We feel that its main idea, clogged ink, can generate interesting effects when pushed further.”

elephantmag.com

julia.uk.com

 

Wrap issue 2

Wrap‘s second issue landed on our desks the other day. It’s an oversize A3 journal that looks to champion work by contemporary illustrators, but it’s also eight sheets of patterned wrapping paper…

Printed on 100% recycled 9 Lives stock, iWrap ssue 2 has the theme of Animals & Creatures and contains work by and interviews with Milan collective Carnovsky (we blogged about their wallpaper in April and also November last year), Dan Funderburgh, Patrick Hruby, Johnna Basford, Tim McDonagh, Elly Strigner, Zoran Pungercar and Thereza Rowe. There’s also a rather sweet illustrated day-in-the-life spread by Gemma Correll. Here’s a look inside:

Not only is every sheet of paper used in Wrap usable as patterned wrapping paper, but the back cover (printed on a slightly heavier stock) is perferated so you can use it as no less than eight notecards.

More info about Wrap at thewrappaper.com

It’s Nice That 6

The sixth instalment of It’s Nice That looks to be a cracker and includes features on Lawrence Weiner, Marion Deuchars, Keith Haring and cover-star, George Lois…

Danish photographer Asger Carlsen and gallerist Kate MacGarry also feature in the issue, alongside a conversation piece between designer/artists Martino Gamper and Francis Upritchard. INT now also runs to 140 ad-free pages, apparently, which can’t be bad for a cover price of £10.

Also inside, write INT, “Pennsylvania-based photographer and publisher Nicholas Gottlund shows us his studio and the process behind his publishing house, Gottlund Verlag; the Bafta winning animator Mikey Please talks about his love of imperfection; curator Virginia Whiles remembers the artist Shelagh Cluett, her work and her collection of international artefacts; David Bennewith writes about typographer Herbert Bayer and in particular his _Universal Alphabet_ design study; photographer Carl Kleiner gets the freedom of ten pages to present his brightly coloured exploration of the golden ratio; and finally, Columbian musician Chaz Bundick (aka Toro Y Moi) welcomes us into his family home.”

The Work section of issue six features Xavier Antin, Assemble, Romulo Celdran, Dallas Clayton, Quentin Dupieux, Encyclopedia Pictura, William Goldsmith, Anna-Wili Highfield, Ill Studio, Tom Phillips, Eske Rex, Brian Nuda Rosch, Travess Smalley, Stephan Tillmans, Studio Weave, Paul Wackers, Ann Woo and Federico Yankelevich.

Published on July 14, It’s Nice That 6 will be available from itsnicethat.com and various stockists. Designed by It’s Nice That in collaboration with Joseph Burrin. Printed by Push. A Flickr set documents the entire production process of the issue, here.