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Showing posts with label retro art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retro art. Show all posts

Modern Fossils : Short Lived Tech from the 80s and 90s Immortalized In Concrete.




Cassettes, Nintendo controllers, Motorola cell phones, Floppy Disks, Sony Walkmans, Boomboxes, 8 Track Tapes and Rotary phones are among the cement hand-cast 'modern fossils' by artist Christopher Locke of Austin, Texas.

Using a special process, these items - which are given humorous Latin names- are reproduced in a proprietary blend of concrete and other secret ingredients, giving them the look and feel of real stone fossils. Each fossil is made one at a time, by hand, in an individual mold and available for purchase from the artist. As you will notice, colors vary.




Modern Fossils as described by Christopher Locke (aka Heartless Machines):
These are modern fossils. They are made from actual archaic technology that was once cutting-edge. Most of these examples were discovered in the United States, although the various species are represented all over the world. It is sad, but most of these units lived very short lives. Most people attribute the shortened lifespan to aggressive predators or accelerated evolution, but this is not necessarily true. It has been shown recently that the true demise of most of these specimens came from runaway consumerism and wastefulness at the high end of the food chain.

Hilarofustis atarium (commonly referred to as the Atari Joystick):


Dominaludus supernintendicus (commonly referred to as the Supernintendo Controller or "SNES"):



Asportatio octoamatis (commonly referred to as the 8 track tape):


Ludustatarium temperosony (Commonly referred to as "Playstation controller" or "Dual Shock"):


Deferovoculae circumdactylos (commonly referred to as the Rotary dial telephone, or rotary phone):



Deferovoculae cellarius (commonly referred to as "Cellular Phone" or "Cellphone") This particular example is a "Motorola Meteor":



Bombus colaphus (commonly referred to as "Boom Box" or "Ghetto Blaster"):


Egosiliqua malusymphonicus (commonly referred to as the iPod):




Ambulephebus sonysymphonia (commonly referred to as the Walkman):



Asportatio acroamatis (commonly referred to as the Cassette Tape):


Repondicium antiquipotacium (commonly referred to as the 3.5 inch floppy disc):


Dexteludicrum repuerasco (commonly referred to as Game Boy):



Dominaludus nintendicus (commonly referred to as the Nintendo Controller):



Dominaludus sexagentaquad (commonly referred to as the Nintendo 64 Controller or "N64"):




Anaticula persequor (commonly referred to as the Nintendo Zapper or Duck Hunt Gun):



Below is a "hive" of original NES parts. One Anaticula persequor in the middle, surrounded by five examples of Dominaludus nintendicus, with a fragment of Dexteludicrum repuerasco near the top. This is the only one of its kind:


Because of the hand-made nature of the item, there will be variations in pigmentation, and small imperfections in the surface. While you can choose a general color range, please keep in mind that each fossil is unique, and color variations are inevitable.



Each "species" of modern fossil has a Latin name marked on the bottom or back, and can be shipped straight to your door. Lead times vary.

Some of these fossils would not have been possible without the generous help and support from the Austin Computer Works. They are saving our planet, one mouse at a time. Many of the original specimens were loaned to me mid-stream in their recycling program. The items are fossilized and returned, so they can be recycled. There is absolutely zero e-waste from these fossils, thanks to the Austin Computer Works. Some pieces are also on display at their museum.

About Christopher Locke aka Heartless Machines:
Christopher graduated from the George Washington University with a degree in fine arts, specializing in sculpture. He's very passionate about creating, and says that he feels like sculpture is his purpose. On his site, there are a few things expressly noted as collaborations with Howard Connelly Designs, but everything else is his own work, of his own design, and made on his own time for his own satisfaction. Nothing there has been backed by a corporate sponsor. It's all one-of-a-kind, and comes straight from his soul.

See them all and order them here

Fictional Magazine Covers Combine Retro Superheroes and Pin-Up Girls.

 Superhero Pin Up Girls

Illustrator Des Taylor, who has a self-professed obsession with retro film and 50's pin-up girls, combined these interests to come up with a collection of fictional magazine covers.

Three Different Designers Do An Artful Retro Take on Cyberspace and Social Media.



Three different designers have all created various posters and ads that take the most popular sites in cyberspace and give them a vintage look. From Google Plus to Facebook, the stylized retro treatment emulates everything from Propaganda posters to vintage textbooks. Take a look.

Mad For Ads? Taschen Publishes New Book on Ads from the Mad Men Era





Gleaned from thousands of images, this companion set of books offers the best of American print advertising in the age of the “Big Idea.” At the height of American consumerism magazines were flooded with clever campaigns selling everything from girdles to guns.






These optimistic indicators paint a fascinating picture of the colorful capitalism that dominated the spirit of the 1950s and 60s, as concerns about the Cold War gave way to the carefree booze-and-cigarettes Mad Men era.





Also included is a wide range of significant advertising campaigns from both eras, giving insight into the zeitgeist of the time. Bursting with fresh, crisp colors, these ads have been digitally mastered to look as bright and new as the day they first hit newsstands.




The editor:
Cultural anthropologist and graphic design historian Jim Heimann is Executive Editor for TASCHEN America, and author of numerous books on architecture, pop culture, and the history of the West Coast, Los Angeles, and Hollywood. His unrivaled private collection of ephemera has been featured in museum exhibitions around the world and dozens of books.

The contributing author:
Steven Heller is the co-chair of the School of Visual Arts MFA Designer as Author Program. For 33 years he was an art director for The New York Times, and currently writes the "Visuals" column for The New York Times Book Review. He is the author of 120 books on graphic design, illustration, and satiric art.

Mid-Century Ads: Advertising from the Mad Men Era
Jim Heimann, Steven Heller
Hardcover, 2 vols. in slipcase, 9.4 x 13.2 in., 720 pages, msrp $59.99

Not yet released you can pre-order it for less from Amazon ($37.99) now by clicking on the link below:
Mid Century Ads: Advertising from the Mad Men Era (25)

Retro 80's Items Made Entirely Out of Cut Paper by Zim and Zou.









Thanks to an interview in Don't Panic, I've discovered the paper crafts of Zim and Zou, aka Thibault Zimmermann and Lucie Thomas.

The French Graphic Design studio proposes a contemporary approach of design thanks to a mix of different fields such as paper sculpture, installation, graphic design and illustration.

Their latest project, Back to Basics, uses bright colorful paper crafted into icons from the 80's such as Polaroid cameras, giant clunky Motorola phones, floppy disks, Sony Walkman, casettes and more.


















images courtesy of Behance




Thibault ZIMMERMANN - Lucie THOMAS
10 rue du recteur Louis Bruntz 54000 Nancy (FR)
06 19 19 29 96 -

zim and zou

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