Archive for the ‘Articles’ Category

Aug
18
'10

“Kuksi’s art speaks of a timelessness–potentiality and motion attempting to reach on forever, and yet pessimistically delayed; forced into the stillness of death and eternal sleep. He treats morbidity with a sympathetic touch and symbolizes the paradox of the death of the individual by objective personification of death. There is a fear of this consciousness because it drops in upon us without mercy, and yet there is a need to appeal to it in order to provide a sense of security, however deluded that sense may be. Kuksi’s art warns us that this appeal is irrelevant, and that we should be slow to create a need for it. His themes also teach us that although death may pursue us arbitrarily, we should never neglect to mourn the tremendous loss of individual potential.”

Kris Kuksi is borne in March 2, 1973, in Springfield Missouri. He grew up in Kansas, in rural seclusion and isolation. He does illustration as well as sculpting. An individual saturated in imagination and introversion, he has fascination with the unusual that lent to his macabre art later in life.

He has distaste for the typical American life and pop culture, feeling that he has always belonged to the ‘Old World’. He feels that the world today is pretty much frivolous and fragile, and driven primarily by greed and materials. Hence, Kris’ work is about a new wilderness, a new beginnings, wars, philosophies, and endings, which he hopes to expose “the fallacies of Man, unveiling a new level of awareness to the viewer.”

His work won several awards and has been featured in over 100 exhibitions worldwide including the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery. Kris’ art can also be found in international art magazines, book covers and theatrical posters.

To view more of his artwork, go to kuksi.com.

Eden

Eden

The Plague Parade: Opus 2

The Plague Parade: Opus 2

Dharma Bovine

Dharma Bovine

Auto-cephalic Suplicating Vehicle

Auto-cephalic Suplicating Vehicle

Saravati Destroyer

Saravati Destroyer

Imminent Utopia

Imminent Utopia

Aug
17
'10

Japanese tends to find opportunity to bring out aesthetic values to what most people see as plain and boring common items. One of these elements, which no one would expect any form of art related to it, and overlooked in our daily routines, (or even, stepped on!) is the manhole cover.

The following are some of the images of these interesting Japanese Manhole Covers, I found online:

manholes01manholes02manholes03manholes04manholes05manholes06manholes07manholes08manholes09manholes10manholes11manholes12manholes13manholes14manholes15manholes16manholes17manholes18manholes19manholes20

Manhole Cover art in the making

Manhole Cover art in the making

Aug
11
'10

Allen and Patty Eckman have been creating incredible paper sculptures since 1987 in their home studio in South Dakota. Each piece can take up to 11 months to make, using a specially-formulated paper. The pieces range in scale from 1/6 to actual life-size.

The husband-and-wife team cast paper pulp into silicone molds and then pressurize it to remove the water. The hardened yet lightweight pieces are then removed from the cast. The pieces now are either standing nude figures or animals with limited details. Details are then added on top of these objects, using soft and hard paper made by the artists in various thicknesses and textures, and using a wide range of tools.

Allen Eckman stated that he concentrates on the men and animals while Patty does the women and children.

Check out their official website here.

Pawnee Prince

Pawnee Prince

Osage Bow and the Buffalo

Osage Bow and the Buffalo

The Way

The Way

Little Eagle Dancing

Little Eagle Dancing

Aug
07
'10

Michael Shapcott (June 6, 1982 in Hartford, Connecticut) is a Central Connecticut-based painter. He studied in Paier College of Art in Hamden, Connecticut, in illustration for two years before switching to fine arts at the later time of his studies. He graduated in 2007 with a diploma in Fine Arts.

The Girl and the Owl

The Girl and the Owl

His style known for his use of daring colours and emotionally-charged portraits. He starts of with detailed graphite drawings as base which then he fills them with colorful washes of oils or acrylics.

Shapcott also creates videos to track the process of his style of creating a painting.

YouTube Preview Image

Although he credits his education for his basic technical experience, he believes that by breaking some of the traditional methods and experimenting on his own, he builds up the confidence, unique style that he continues to expand upon today.

Check out his bio here and FAQ of him here. Do check out his website, or you will miss out a lot of stuff!

Opal

Opal

Drift

Drift

Raccoon, sketch

Raccoon, sketch

Jul
03
'10

Not much is known (at least for me) of this illustrator, except the fact that he can draw superbly detailed and imaginative artwork! Borne in Heisei 1, November, Misaki mentioned in his creatorz.jp account that he/she grew up looking the sea and the factories, and that he/she likes music and books.

His official website is here.

Characters with attributes from trump card

Characters with attributes from trump card

彗奏楽夜

彗奏楽夜

White Nights

White Nights

供花

供花

幸福論

幸福論

Jul
03
'10

Kazuko Taniguchi, born in 1981, is currently based in Okayama. She started working as an illustrator while she was still in college. Her main drawing style is a cute girl with slim figure, normally dressed in traditional Japanese Kimono clothes together with shiny or floral decorations. Her detailed illustrations are very much original and unique, making it stands out amongst many other illustrations.

Her work includes designing CD sleeves, flyers, cut illustrations for magazines, and postcard designs. For more of her info click here

Kanashimi

Kanashimi

Work for MdN, August 2007 vol.160

Work for MdN, August 2007 vol.160

Happy Birthday CD Sleeves

Happy Birthday CD Sleeves

One of her work is a souvenir/gift CD designed specially as a birthday presents. The CD comes with a nicely designed CD jacket and a blank CD-R which you can put in photos and musics

One of her work is a souvenir/gift CD designed specially as a birthday presents. The CD comes with a nicely designed CD jacket and a blank CD-R which you can put in photos and musics

CD Sleeves for the album lovesong, lifesong by Amy

CD Sleeves for the album lovesong, lifesong by Amy

CD Sleeves for the album 3 Colors by Amy

CD Sleeves for the album 3 Colors by Amy


Mar
26
'10

Ever wonder how many different variations are there in a font family?

Normally, we will find the following set of weights (regular, italic, bold, bold italic) in a typeface for regular usage. You can open Character panel to see that.

For some more intensive work, like publication or corporate branding design, where typography technique plays a heavy role, a comprehensive family suite of a typeface helps stylistically and logistically.

The following chart, created by fontshop.com, illustrates simply what weights and width are there in a font family.

Weights and widths

Weights and widths

For further readings, go to this link.

Feb
20
'10

Tokyo Metropolis is the capital and largest city of Japan. The total population of the prefecture exceeds 12 million, and an average life span of a building in Tokyo is around 17 years. With this figure, it shows that this city has redevelopment constantly. As such, construction sites are everywhere, and the walls surrounding them, called karikakoi, are often white, invading the urban landscape with long and giant blanks.

However, there have been several efforts to avoid such sore sights by some development projects by using them as canvases for artful illustrations and paintings.

The following are some images of such graffiti.

Construction Fense

Construction Fense

Karikakoi

Karikakoi

Karikakoi

Karikakoi

Karikakoi Painters

Karikakoi Painters

PingMag has more examples of creative uses of these spaces in Tokyo.

Feb
10
'10

Calligraphy

In Japanese, calligraphy is called shodou, or “the way of writing”. All Japanese children have to learn the basics of calligraphy as part of their elementary school education.

The history of Japanese calligraphy can be traced back to the origins of Chinese civilization, where the master Wang Xizhi is credited with the creation of the art, about 4,500 years ago. Shodou as well as Chinese system of writing, kanji, was first introduced into Japan in the 8th century. By the time, Chinese calligraphy had already been developed a considerable amount.

By the early Heian period, the Japanese had already begun to show considerable attainment in the new art form with the “Three Great Brushes” (or sanpitsu) of the Buddhist monk, Kuukai (774-835), the Emperor Saga (786-842) and the courtier Tachibana no Hayanari (778-842) achieving an apotheosis of the then-popular calligraphic style of the T’ang Chinese master, Yan Zhenqing (709-785). Their calligraphy is considered a true representation of Chinese calligraphy’s timeless beauty.

In the 10th and 11th centuries, these three were succeeded by the Sanseki (Three Traces) of Ono no Toufuu, Fujiwara no Sukemasa (also known as Fujiwara no Sai), and Fujiwara no Yukinari (also known as Fujiwara no Kozei). These three masters developed what would become the first uniquely Japanese calligraphy style, wayou (also joudaiyou). Fujiwara no Yukinari’s style led to the creation of the Sesonji School, and Ono no Toufuu served as an archetype for the Shouren’in school which later became the Oie style of calligraphy. The Oie style was used for official documents in the Edo period and was the prevailing style taught in the terakoya schools of that time.

From its roots in ancient Chinese civilization, Japanese calligraphy has continued to grow and develop in style and form with zen-ei sho (an avant-garde postwar calligraphy style) representing just the latest stage in this evolution.

Handwriting

Japanese is related to Japonic language of the Ural-Altaic family of languages, which includes Turkish, Mongolian, Manchu and Korean language.

Early form of Japanese existed from about the 3rd century AD. The writing system the Japanese began to use was Chinese, imported from China and Korea along with a variety of technologies, political systems and Buddhism. This remains in the form of kanji symbols.

There are two phonetic “alphabets” of simplified Japanese symbols, named the Katakana and Hiragana. They were developed to cater to the sounds of the polysyllabic Japanese language pronunciations as it is difficult to adapt Chinese kanji symbols to do so since Chinese script is monosyllabic.

Kanji Characters

Kanji, imported from Chinese characters, is used alongside with hiragana and katakana symbols in written Japanese.

There are about 50,000 kanji characters in existence. A literate Japanese adult will be able to recognize about 3,500. Out of these, only 1,945 are officially recognized as daily or jouyou kanji, and knowledge of about 1,000 kanji symbols is considered sufficient to read about 90% of the words in a Japanese newspaper.

Hiragana Symbols

It is simple, rounded Japanese symbols. There are 46 hiragana symbols in Japanese, each with a particular sound but with no independent meaning.

The first step in the development of hiragana was near the beginning of the Heian Period (794-1192) when man’yōgana (kanji characters which are used to indicate pronunciation rather than meaning) was introduced. Hiragana characters evolved from this simplified cursive form of man’yōgana and also conveyed sound rather than meaning.

When hiragana was first created, it was not accepted by everyone as many felt that the educated language was still Chinese. Historically, the regular script (kaisho) form of the characters was used by men and called otokode (men’s writing), while the cursive script (sōsho) form of the kanji was used by women. Thus hiragana was often used by women, who were not allowed access to the same levels of education as men. From this comes the alternative name of onnade (women’s writing).

Interestingly, this development resulted in the explosion of written expression among Japanese women that reached its zenith with Genji Monogatari (The Tale of Genji) by Lady Murasaki

Katakana Symbols

It is a simplified Japanese symbols derived from Kanji but compare to its Hiragana counterpart, it is more angular.

Katakana symbols were developed in the 9th Century by Japanese students of Buddhism who found it hard to keep up when writing lecture notes using complex Chinese kanji symbols. They started to write only parts of the more complex kanji symbols as shorthand that then became established as katakana. The word katakana itself means “fragmentary kana“, as the katakana scripts are derived from components of more complex kanji.

Up until a series of orthographic reforms immediately following World War II, katakana was used for okurigana in official documents, and frequently in other contexts

Rōmaji Characters

Rōmaji (”Roman characters”), sometimes misspelled as Rōmanji, is the romanisation of Japanese kanji or kana words in Latin alphabet. Rōmaji are often used in Japanese text for abbreviations, metric measurements, and to clarify the spelling of foreign names.

The earliest Japanese romanisation system was developed based on the Portuguese language, around 1548 by a Japanese Catholic named Yajiro. Jesuit presses used this system in their printed Catholic books for missionaries to preach their converts without learning Japanese language. In general, the early Portuguese system was similar to Nihon-shiki in its treatment of vowels. Some consonants were transliterated differently, for instance, the ‘k’ was rendered as ‘c’ and the ‘h’ as ‘f’ so Nihon no kotoba (The language of Japan) was spelled as Nifon no cotoba.

When Christians were expulsed from Japan in the early 1600s, rōmaji fell out of use, and were only used sporadically in foreign texts until the mid-1800s when Japan opened up again. The systems used today all developed in the latter half of the 19th century.

In the Meiji era, some Japanese scholars advocated abolishing the Japanese writing system entirely and using rōmaji in its stead. Several Japanese texts were published entirely in rōmaji during this period, but failed to catch on because of the large number of homonyms in Japanese, which are pronounced similarly but written in different characters. Later, in the early 20th century, some scholars devised syllabary systems with characters derived from Latin: these were even less popular because they were not based on any historical use of the Latin alphabet.

Today, rōmaji is used for many reasons; street signs for foreigners, transcription of names used in another language, dictionaries and textbooks for beginners, or typographic emphasis.

There are a number of different romanisation systems in use, which the three main ones are Hepburn, Kunrei-shiki, and Nihon-shiki. Hepburn (long-vowel omitted) is the most widely used. Modified Hepburn, which uses a macron to indicate some long vowels and an apostrophe to note the separation of easily confused syllables (for example, the name じゅんいちろう is written with the syllables jun-ichi-ro and u, and is romanised as Jun’ichirō in Modified Hepburn) is widely used in Japan and among foreign academics.

Feb
07
'10
'0'

artless Inc is a multi-award design agency cum art studio that started out back in the year 2000. It is co-founded by Shun Kawakami, and is based in Tokyo, Japan. Not limited to only art, this studio also does music label named artless records.

artless Inc work scope includes brand and corporate identity strategy, packaging, advertising, web design, interior and architecture, and also installation.

artless AKA Shun Kawakami

artless AKA Shun Kawakami

Shun Kawakami is born in Tokyo, 1977. He is an artist slash designer, which co-founded artless Inc. He is active in various visual communication fields, involving arts and design, prints, web, video and installation.

Check out one of his collaborative projects, balloon as vase here. The vases were originally created for “composition of knowledge and feeling,” an exhibition with Takashi Kawada that was shown at JAGDA TOKYO last month.

Balloon as vase 02

Balloon as vase 02

Related links:

http://shunkawakami.jp/
http://www.artless.co.jp/
http://www.nullartless.com/
http://www.artlessrecords.com/