woensdag 23 januari 2008

Catalogue


This is the Catalogue I made for a jelwery shop in The Hague. I think is is also about Visual Communication because through this catalogue, customer will see the beaty of natural stone and material jelwery. Moreover, it has a prupose, it is to establish the reputation and increase awareness about the shop to its taget customer.

dinsdag 22 januari 2008

Free and Unlimited school


Youtube is becoming an umlimited school for anyone, only depends on what you want to learn.




PRESS

Press is Weapon




Lion Grand Prix Award 2007

Great Outdoor advertisement which won Lion GrandPrix anward 2007

Type Of Entry: AMBIENT
Category: Ambient: Special Build
Title: POWER TO THE PEOPLE
Advertiser/Client: NEDBANK
Product/Service: BANK
Entrant Company, City: NET#WORK BBDO, Johannesburg
Country: SOUTH AFRICA
Advertising Agency, City: NET#WORK BBDO, Johannesburg
Country: SOUTH AFRICA
Executive Creative Director: Julian Watt/Mike Schalit
Creative Director: Julian Watt
Copywriter: Brad Reilly Art Director: Jonathan Santana
Producer: Clinton Mitri
Account Supervisor: Caree Ferrari
Advertiser's Supervisor: Greg Gardens


maandag 14 januari 2008

Photography

Miracle of technology

How amazing one good looking girl is transformed into a real beaty with full spirit, sexy and elegant appeal.


Product packaging




Sometimes it is not the quality but the product packaging that makes me purchase some thing. Such as the smoothis drink ablove...especially with these cute text on the label




"Being sustainable is quite tricky. For every good thing we do (ban all air freighting, make bottles from recycle plastic) there’s a bad thing (driving lorries to the shops to deliver these drinks). So, we are trying to get thing into neutral. We’ll make sure in every bad thing we do, there is a good thing. A yin for every yang; a Luke for every Darth. If we manage to keep this up, we won’t become a bad company . We’ll be slightly better company. Less Darth, more Luke.

This bottle is made from 50% recycle plastic. We are working on the rest."







Japanese influence




Yoshitomo Nara

Yoshitomo Nara (kanji:奈良美智/hiragana: ならよしとも, Yoshitomo Nara?), born 1959 in Hirosaki, Japan, is a contemporary Japanese Pop artist. He currently lives and works in Tokyo, though his artwork has been exhibited worldwide. Nara received his B.F.A. (1985) and an M.F.A. (1987) from the Aichi Prefectural University of Fine Arts and Music. Between 1988 and 1993, Nara studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, in Dusseldorf, Germany. Nara has had nearly 40 solo exhibitions since 1984. He is represented in New York City by Marianne Boesky Gallery and in Los Angeles by Blum & Poe.


Influences:



The Japanese comics and anime of his 1960s childhood are both clear influences on Nara's stylized, large-eyed figures. Nara subverts these typically cute images, however, by infusing his works with horror-like imagery. This juxtaposition of human evil with the innocent child may be a reaction to Japan's rigid social conventions.

The punk rock music of Nara's youth has also influenced the artist's work. Recalling a similar – if more unsettling – image of rebellious, violent youth, Nara's art embraces the punk ethos. That said, Nara has also cited traditions as varied as Renaissance painting, literature, illustration, and graffiti as further inspiration.

But perhaps most significantly, Nara’s upbringing in post-World War II Japan profoundly affected his mindset and, subsequently, his artwork as well. He grew up in a time when Japan was experiencing an inundation of Western pop culture; comic books, Walt Disney animation, and Western rock music are just a few examples. Additionally, Nara was raised in the isolated countryside as a latchkey child of working-class parents, so he was often left alone with little to do but explore his young imagination. The fiercely independent subjects that populate so much of his artwork may be a reaction to Nara's own largely independent childhood.

(wikipedia.org)


I am only familiar with his artworks since last year and found them so interesting. Although I missed his exhibition at Geemente Museum, I managed to have his artwork-postcard collection (picture above). That is such a great postcard collection which even make me think about not to send to anyone. I wll keep them for my self, as an collection of art