Dyson – Winter Tale

Un spot et une courte animation réalisée entièrement en stop-motion par le créatif russe Sergey Yazvinsky. Il met en scène un simple aspirateur de la marque Dyson, à l’occasion des fêtes de fin d’année. Une histoire réussie à découvrir en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.



dyson00

dyson02

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Russian Criminal Tattoos

Some of the Soviet’s toughest prison tattoos in a new London exhibit

russtat11.jpg russtat21.jpg

A rare glimpse into the dark world of post-Soviet prison life, the London show “Russian Criminal Tattoos” features a series of photographs of prisoners and their artistic tattoos. From the cells of Russian prison settlements in far-off places with names like Nizhny Tagil, Perm and Chelyabinsk, many of the tattoos were forcibly (and disgustingly) removed by other inmates who disagreed with it or by authorities, since the art form was illegal.

russtat31.jpg

Photographs shot by Sergei Vasiliev compliment drawings by Danzig Baldaev, who from 1948 to 2005 collected 3,000 drawings created by prisoners. Both Vasiliev and Baldaev worked as Soviet prison wardens, providing them easy access to the works. Despite that the KGB still had to consider the project, finally giving Baldaev permission to document and study the works as part of Soviet history.

The Guardian’s article about the tattoos includes the fascinating backstory about “grins”—tattoos depicting communist leaders in obscene positions—and how the ink for these was made of a mixture of melted down boot heels, blood and urine.

russtat4.jpg

London-based publisher Fuel Design, who learned of the collection of Baldaev’s drawings from his widow, is behind the exhibit. Damon Murray and Stephen Sorrell of Fuel purchased and published his work along with Vasiliev’s photos in the “Russian Criminal Tattoo Encyclopaedia” trilogy, which you can purchase from their site for £495.

russtat71.jpg

“Russian Criminal Tattoos” opens 29 October 2010 and runs through 28 November 2010.


People Too

Le collectif russe People Too (Alexei Lyapunov et Lena Ehrlich) a imaginé ces mises en scènes originales en “Paper Art” : des dizaines d’heures sur des papiers de couleurs. L’ensemble est à découvrir sur leur portfolio ou à travers cette sélection dans la suite de l’article.



people-two_beatles-10

00-people-two_the-tools

people-two_beatles-01

people-two_beatles-02

people-two_beatles-03

people-two_beatles-06

people-two_beatles-08

people-two_photographer-06

people-two_reggae-01

people-two_reggae-04

people-two_reggae-05

people-two_theking-04

people-two_theking-11

people-two_wearechampions-08

people-two_wearechampions-09

people-two_wearechampions-11

people-two_wearechampions-12

people-two_wearechampions-13





















Previously on Fubiz

Posters by Zhishi

This image has no alt text

Check out these pretty eye-catching posters for studio pantomime Plastics by Zhishi, a graphic designer from Russia.

Segmentus Clock

Une horloge originale intitulée “Segmentus Clock” avec un formidable mécanisme pivotant afin d’afficher l’heure. Un travail du studio de design Art Lebedev, en provenance de Russie. Conçu pour l’instant en 2 modèles prototypes, noir et blanc. Plus de visuels dans la suite.



segmentus5

segmentus2

segmentus4

segmentus3

Portfolio d’Art Lebedev

Previously on Fubiz

Typo Project

Un excellent travail par Svetlana Sebyakina, une artiste et graphiste en provenance de Russie. Découverte dans la galerie de plus de 180 créations imaginées autour d’une idée simple : des lettres & de la typo construite à partir d’objets du quotidien. Exemples dans la suite.



type1

type2

type3

type4

type5

La suite est disponible dans la galerie / Site officiel et page Behance

Previously on Fubiz