Showing posts with label printmaking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label printmaking. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Graphic Posters

Remember my post about Polish posters a while back?
In the past couple days I've come across another couple of sources for well-designed posters.
Claudia Varosio at Etsy has several awesome movie posters for sale:



And graphic designer Albert Exergian has created a bunch of posters for TV shows:




Flavorpill featured their top ten here.
Neat, eh?

Saturday, April 25, 2009

San Jose Art Museum


Went for the first time today...
They have an exhibit up on Andy Warhol that I wanted to check out. The actual selection of pieces was blah--a couple rooms of screen prints that I've seen a million times before. But there was an interesting blurb about his "fascination with fame" on one wall and an informative documentary playing in one corner. The best part, though, was the little craft table in the middle of one gallery where you could combine Warhol's images (soup cans, a self portrait, and flowers) printed in black on clear plastic with your own compositions of colord paper cutouts and crayon drawings. It was neat.
Upstairs they had an exhibition called "Process as Paradigm" with works from the permanent collection and it was a great smattering of things, including Tony Oursler's Slip (2003), seen above. It's an S-shaped fiberglass sculpture with a video of a woman's mouth and lips projected onto it. Her skin looks green and there's a soundtrack of various phrases, some more intelligible than others, all emphasizing the 'sss' sound. It was both creepy and alluring; I really liked it.
There was also an exhibition of works by female printmakers, where these two aquatints:

by Pat Steir (whose work I just realized I also saw at Crown Point Press last year) really reminded me of my own work:


Other standouts:

Edward Corbett Untitled (Black Painting), 1950
(part of an exhibition on San Francisco Abstract Expressionism)


A detailed Franklin Williams 1972 thread and fabric canvas kind of like the one above.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Tree Print


Bryan Nash Gill made this print by inking a tree stump:

Pretty frickin awesome. Brings new meaning to the term "woodblock." I'd like to try it sometime.
(via A Cup of Jo)
This is the closest I've come:

It's a four-block woodblock print called 'Antlertree'...the antler image was the inspiration for this blog's name.