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Showing posts with label art and design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art and design. Show all posts
Oreo Cream Centers Carved Into Cameos. Don't Dunk These In Milk!
Artist Judith G. Klausner is a Somerville MA artist, who in her own words, has with a love for small, intricate, and overlooked things. Her "embroidered toast" was featured on many blogs and sites last year, but she's really outdone herself with her latest series of carved Oreo cookie cream centers.
Working intricately on the cream centers of both traditional and vanilla Oreo cookies (not sure if they were Double Stuff or original) , she's created tiny sweet portraits in the style of classic and traditional cameos.
See more of Judith G. Klausner's work here
Nabisco Oreos
Ah, the Sweet Smell of Design. Pantone Candles. Pantone Toothbrushes, Too!
Ah, so that's what PMS 15-5217 smells like.
Pantone Universe (the company behind the Pantone Matching System of colored inks) just keeps pumping out the products - this is actually my thirteenth post on Pantone-related products.
The latest Pantone-branded item for the home from the color inks standard are scented Pantone candles in three sizes and 10 PMS colors. Apparently the candles are created by Belgium-based Ilanga for Pantone and like many of the their products for the home, they do not seem to be available in the US, at least not yet.
Although there is a dedicated website, it is not up and running, but you can purchase some of the candles at Vinçon (only Honeysuckle and twilight) and at Colette (where they carry 7 of them in two sizes).
Pantone Toothbrushes & Pantone Contact Lens Cases
In addition to the candles, other new offerings from the Pantone Universe are Pantone Toothbrushes in a set of five and Pantone Contact Lens cases.
buy the set of 5 here.
Pantone Contact Lens cases
buy them here.
Pantone Universe
Portraits Embossed on Aluminum Foil Pans By Idan Friedman
Designer and artist Idan Friedman of Israel's Reddish Studio has created a series of portraits embossed on aluminum foil pans. All the people featured in "Ordinary People and Disposable Objects" are part of his everyday life, ranging from close friends to passers-by.
As viewed when exhibited:
all images courtesy of the artist
Special thanks to Annals of America for bringing these to my attention
Reddish Studio
36 Of The Best Artist & Architect Google Doodles Since 1998.
above Google Art Doodle by Laura Sweet
Referred to as 'Google Doodles', I gathered my personal fine art and architecture favorites since their inception in 1998 and wanted to share them with you, along with a little history of how they began. I hope you enjoy them.
The Google Doodle during their beta phase in 1998:
First, a brief history.
The Google Doodle has come a long way since their first in August of 1998 when Google founders Larry and Sergey played with the corporate logo to indicate their attendance at the Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert.
The very first Google Doodle:
The crudely drawn homepage doodle was hardly impressive. During the years following, namely 1998-2008, the homepage Google Doodles were very simple, and hardly blogworthy, iterations where in most cases one of the letters was replaced by an object or a small drawing was added to the logo.
The 2004 Leap Year Google Doodle was typical of the logos during 2002-2008:
Occasionally series of Doodles were created. Changing daily but honoring the same theme as in the case of the Summer and Winter Olympic Games, The World Cup, Dilbert cartoons and a few other examples. But these, too, were largely unimpressive.
As the years passed, the Google Doodles became more inventive and more imaginative. Some were even interactive, some animated and some so intensely illustrated, it was hard to make out the word Google.
The Happy Holidays Google Doodle in 2010:
Today, in the first post of this ongoing series, are the best of the Google Doodles honoring artists, designers and architects since 1998. They are listed in alphabetical order by surname. Some ran in selected countries only, so you may not recognize all of them, but they are all worth a look.
The Best Google Doodles - Part I Artists, Architects and Designers
Karen Appel, Netherlands:
James Audubon, world renowned nature artist:
Arthur Boyd, Australian painter:
Constantin Brancusi, Romanian sculptor:
Mary Cassatt, American painter:
Paul Cezanne, French painter:
Marc Chagall, Russian-French painter and stained glass artist:
Leonardo Da Vinci, Italian painter, writer and inventor:
Will Eisner, American comic writer and artist:
M.C. Escher, Dutch illustrator and graphic designer:
Josef Frank, Austrian architect and artist:
Walter Gropius, German architect:
Hokusai, Japanese wood cut artist:
Robert Indiana (for Valentine's Day), American painter:
Frida Kahlo, Mexican painter:
Peder Severin Krøyer, Norwegian-Danish painter:
Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scottish architect and designer:
Rene Magritte, Belgian painter:
Michelangelo, Italian sculptor and painter:
Piet Mondrian, Dutch painter:
Claude Monet, French Impressionist painter:
Alphonse Mucha, Czech Art Nouveau painter and artist:
Isamu Noguchi, Japanese-American sculptor, painter, architect and designer:
Taro Okamoto, Japanese painter and sculptor:
Nam June Paik, Korean video artist:
Pablo Picasso, Spanish painter and sculptor:
Jackson Pollock, American painter:
Ilya Repin, Russian painter:
Norman Rockwell. American illustrator and painter:
Mimar Sinan, Turkish architect:
Wayne Thiebaud (for Google's 10th birthday), American painter:
Vincent Van Gogh, Dutch painter:
Diego Velasquez, Spanish Painter:
Andy Warhol, American artist:
Frank Lloyd Wright, American architect:
Zhang Daqian, Asian painter:
The Doodle team, which consists of Marissa Mayer, Dennis Hwang, Mike Dutton, Susie Sahim, and Jenifer Hom has created over 300 doodles for Google.com in the United States. In addition, over 700 have been designed internationally and submissions by guest doodlers, Google Doodle contest winners and the general public have also been produced.
Meet The Doodlers (video):
Want to take a whack at designing your own Google Doodle? Go ahead, you can submit your own to proposals@google.com
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