Favourites Posters
Σάββατο 19 Μαρτίου 2011
“Tree's A Crowd”
http://www.designup.pro.br/imgs/view/989
“Tree's A Crowd”
12" x 12" cel vinyl acrylic on watercolor paper
Mexico 1968 Poster
The series of posters for these Games came from the collaboration of three artists: Pedro Ramirez Vazquez, architect and President of the Organising Committee for the Games, Eduardo Terrazas (MEX) and Lance Wyman (USA) who designed the "Mexico 68" logo. They then developed it to create the black and white poster, which recalls the patterns of the Huichole Indians.
http://www.mapsofworld.com/olympic-trivia/olympic-poster.html
http://www.mapsofworld.com/olympic-trivia/olympic-poster.html
Charles Chaplin
Fragment of the poster of the very old movie The Kid (1921) by Charles Spencer Chaplin. It was made from the collection of about 900 different video cassete covers. This is a small collection - to make more tile variants we have arranged cassete boxes horizontally and have rotated whole collection images clockwise and counterclockwise to double collection up to 1800 images at all.
http://www.mazaika.com/gallery.html
Walt Whitman
As I Walk These Broad Majestic Days | ||
by Walt Whitman | ||
As I walk these broad majestic days of peace,
(For the war, the struggle of blood finish'd, wherein, O terrific Ideal,
Against vast odds erewhile having gloriously won,
Now thou stridest on, yet perhaps in time toward denser wars,
Perhaps to engage in time in still more dreadful contests, dangers,
Longer campaigns and crises, labors beyond all others,)
Around me I hear that eclat of the world, politics, produce,
The announcements of recognized things, science,
The approved growth of cities and the spread of inventions.
I see the ships, (they will last a few years,)
The vast factories with their foremen and workmen,
And hear the indorsement of all, and do not object to it.
But I too announce solid things,
Science, ships, politics, cities, factories, are not nothing,
Like a grand procession to music of distant bugles pouring,
triumphantly moving, and grander heaving in sight,
They stand for realities—all is as it should be.
Then my realities;
What else is so real as mine?
Libertad and the divine average, freedom to every slave on the face of the earth,
The rapt promises and luminé of seers, the spiritual world, these centuries-lasting songs,
And our visions, the visions of poets, the most solid announcements of any.
http://www.poets.org/page.php/prmID/98 | ||