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ramonvillalobos:

Kanye West as Batman. This is a quick sketch that spun out of some ridiculous comments people had about Big Barda being like Beyonce or something.
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ramonvillalobos:

Kanye West as Batman. This is a quick sketch that spun out of some ridiculous comments people had about Big Barda being like Beyonce or something.

Source: ramonvillalobos

    • #art
    • #ramon villalobos
    • #batman
    • #kanye west
    • #comics
  • 5 days ago > ramonvillalobos
  • 1620
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bigredrobot:

Adrian Tomine covers Thomas Pynchon.
Via Drawn & Quarterly.
(Reblog from earlier today wasn’t showing up on my blog, so I’m reposting here.)
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bigredrobot:

Adrian Tomine covers Thomas Pynchon.

Via Drawn & Quarterly.

(Reblog from earlier today wasn’t showing up on my blog, so I’m reposting here.)

Source: bigredrobot

    • #art
    • #authors
    • #comics
    • #adrian tomine
    • #thomas pynchon
    • #inherent vice
    • #books
    • #covers
  • 1 week ago > bigredrobot
  • 7
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twiststreet:

“Pan Macmillan’s Don DeLillo book series, published by Picador in 2011, has won a Yellow Pencil for Book Front Covers design at the D&AD Awards held this week. The Don DeLillo series covers were designed by illustrator Noma Bar at Dutch Uncle, London, with art direction by It’s Nice That and INT Works.” (via)
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twiststreet:

“Pan Macmillan’s Don DeLillo book series, published by Picador in 2011, has won a Yellow Pencil for Book Front Covers design at the D&AD Awards held this week. The Don DeLillo series covers were designed by illustrator Noma Bar at Dutch Uncle, London, with art direction by It’s Nice That and INT Works.” (via)

Source: twiststreet

    • #art
    • #design
    • #books
    • #covers
    • #noma bar
  • 3 weeks ago > twiststreet
  • 5
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A panel of Brandon Graham’s comic King City, taken from this interview with him by Tom Spurgeon. There’s a great exchange where they discuss this image: 

SPURGEON: There’s a great mini-sequence here where you isolate an image within a previous image — the way the feet are placed to show a kind of forward intimacy. For someone that comes across to me as a pretty natural cartoonist you use a lot of what I’d call underlining, calling attention to specific moments in the narrative through repetition or labeling. Do you think that’s a fair assessment, and what do you achieve through moments like this one, above, really emphasizing that specific part of the previous picture?GRAHAM: I like how well comics works for that sort of thing, you can just draw an arrow pointing at something and write “look!” next to it and it doesn’t really throw anything off. I don’t think of a panel like that as just a close up of another panel, as much as it looks like it. I still think of time progressing on the page. It’s a beat of time. 

If you look at that page as single unit, you start in the largest panel (top left), move through the two “inset” panels stacked on top on one another, and end in the bottom, with the smoke-blowing. A sequence that takes a short amount of time, extended through panel structure to allow the images and dialogue and captions to hit in sequence, stretching it out like the giddy first moment of attraction it’s depicting. 
This is one of the things comics does really well; the intersection of time and space. Within the layout of the page, the artist can make individual moments flow from one panel to another, or break down a single moment to stretch time out (see this rather famous example). Looking at a comic that does this trains you to be a better reader, to look at a comic and settle into the rhythm and the pace the creator is aiming for. It’s the antidote to the recent (awful) trend from certain creators towards layouts containing the absolute minimum of visual information and variety.
It’s good comics.
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A panel of Brandon Graham’s comic King City, taken from this interview with him by Tom Spurgeon. There’s a great exchange where they discuss this image: 

SPURGEON: There’s a great mini-sequence here where you isolate an image within a previous image — the way the feet are placed to show a kind of forward intimacy. For someone that comes across to me as a pretty natural cartoonist you use a lot of what I’d call underlining, calling attention to specific moments in the narrative through repetition or labeling. Do you think that’s a fair assessment, and what do you achieve through moments like this one, above, really emphasizing that specific part of the previous picture?

GRAHAM: I like how well comics works for that sort of thing, you can just draw an arrow pointing at something and write “look!” next to it and it doesn’t really throw anything off. I don’t think of a panel like that as just a close up of another panel, as much as it looks like it. I still think of time progressing on the page. It’s a beat of time. 

If you look at that page as single unit, you start in the largest panel (top left), move through the two “inset” panels stacked on top on one another, and end in the bottom, with the smoke-blowing. A sequence that takes a short amount of time, extended through panel structure to allow the images and dialogue and captions to hit in sequence, stretching it out like the giddy first moment of attraction it’s depicting. 

This is one of the things comics does really well; the intersection of time and space. Within the layout of the page, the artist can make individual moments flow from one panel to another, or break down a single moment to stretch time out (see this rather famous example). Looking at a comic that does this trains you to be a better reader, to look at a comic and settle into the rhythm and the pace the creator is aiming for. It’s the antidote to the recent (awful) trend from certain creators towards layouts containing the absolute minimum of visual information and variety.

It’s good comics.

Source: comicsreporter.com

    • #art
    • #brandon graham
    • #comics
    • #king city
    • #technique
    • #thoughts
  • 1 month ago
  • 37
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nevver:

Werd

Had to do it
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nevver:

Werd

Had to do it

Source: nevver

    • #art
    • #photography
    • #werd
  • 1 month ago > nevver
  • 454
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funrama:

Neko Case
Ink and digital color.
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funrama:

Neko Case

Ink and digital color.

Source: funrama

    • #art
    • #musicians
    • #Neko Case
    • #ryan kelly
  • 1 month ago > funrama
  • 77
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love-and-radiation:

Brandon Graham’s take on Tintin and Snowy.
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love-and-radiation:

Brandon Graham’s take on Tintin and Snowy.

(via teatimebrutality)

Source: love-and-radiation

    • #art
    • #comics
    • #brandon graham
    • #tintin
  • 2 months ago > love-and-radiation
  • 33
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curiositycounts:

The art of the Japanese manhole cover. More in Drainspotting. 
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curiositycounts:

The art of the Japanese manhole cover. More in Drainspotting. 

Source: kuriositas.com

    • #photography
    • #art
    • #cities
    • #Japan
  • 3 months ago > curiositycounts
  • 219
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I Throw Myself At Men
Lilly McElroy
(via ginandtacos)
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I Throw Myself At Men

Lilly McElroy

(via ginandtacos)

Source: lillymcelroy.com

    • #art
    • #photography
    • #lilly mcelroy
  • 3 months ago
  • 24
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ilovecharts:

What Sort of Moleskinneur Are You?
lunchbreath
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ilovecharts:

What Sort of Moleskinneur Are You?

lunchbreath

Source: core77.com

    • #art
    • #comics
    • #Notebooks
    • #Moleskine
    • #submission
  • 3 months ago > ilovecharts
  • 1072
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