Category: Art

All art forms — too many to list — that don’t include photography, although there is often overlap.

  • Beautifully Briefed, Early July 2022: The Autopian, The Ford Heritage Vault, and an Eames Follow-Up

    Beautifully Briefed, Early July 2022: The Autopian, The Ford Heritage Vault, and an Eames Follow-Up

    Car site The Autopian scores with book design, Ford posts old marketing material gold mine, and more on the Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity in this edition of Beautifully Briefed.

    Autopian suggests book design

    The Autopian, founded by a couple of former Jalopnik writers, is a new automotive gem: in these days of more-of-the-sameism sites trying to make money of others’ ideas, the Autopian has a retro style and interesting, original content.

    Including this short post from their Cold Start column:

    Sometimes you may encounter an old car ad and realize that the design of it could lend itself very well to something completely different. In this case, this 1958 Ford Zodiac ad, with its rich, saturated colors, striking dress on the model, and evocative name with understated typography just feel like something you’d see on modern book cover design.

    Jason Torchinsky, Autopian Founder

    The ad:

    A 1958 Ford Zodiac (European)

    His book design idea “realized”:

    Jason’s book cover mock-up. Love the author name.

    Nice.

    The Ford Heritage Vault

    Ford has taken the unusual step of posting a good chunk of their old — 1903 to 2003, their first 100 years — marketing materials online: “promotional materials, photographs, and all kinds of other historical goodies,” according to CarScoops.

    “Our archives were established 70 years ago, and for the first time, we’re opening the vault for the public to see. This is just a first step for all that will come in the future,” says Ted Ryan, Ford archive and heritage brand manager.

    Here’s a personal favorite: the 1965 full line brochure, showing the cars set in architectural drawings — presumably, matching the car to the house:

    The 1965 Ford Family of Cars brochure

    Fancy a drive down memory lane?

    More from the Eames Institute

    We discussed the Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity back in April, but Metropolis magazine has published an extensive article covering a visit to the Institute.

    Modernism has largely been diluted from a series of ideas rooted in social change to one of just style—Instagram moments, if you will. The Eameses insisted that they did not have a style or even an “ism.” […] Modernism was an idea, not a style. With the establishment of the Eames Institute, I hope Charles and Ray will be remembered most of all for their ideas and processes.

    Kenneth Caldwell, Metropolis
    An exhibit at the Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity.

    With our ongoing struggle to use materials more efficiently, many of the Eameses’ ideas and ideals need to be taken for the solutions that they are: style with incredible substance.

    Read the whole article at Metropolis. (Via ArchDaily.)

  • Updated Galleries: Macon Downtown x3

    Updated Galleries: Macon Downtown x3

    FedEx pulled up around 8:30 this morning and dropped off a new lens. (It wasn’t due ’til Tuesday — bonus!) Given that it was an absolutely beautiful morning, I shelved my plans for the day, picked up the camera, and headed downtown.

    Verdict? It’s so a keeper. See for yourself:

    Catholic Cross, St. Joseph’s, Macon
    Purple Hydrangea, St. Joseph’s, Macon
    (Funeral) Chapel, New St., Macon
    552 New St. (Brick Detail), Macon
    Public Art (Detail #1), D T Walton Sr Way, Macon
    Tree and City Auditorium, Macon

    Wound up with sixty new items posted. However, the downtown Macon gallery was getting almost too big — confusing, even — so has been separated into three parts:

    Enjoy your Memorial Day weekend!

  • Beautifully Briefed, May 2022: Two on Type, Two on Photography, and Kottke

    Beautifully Briefed, May 2022: Two on Type, Two on Photography, and Kottke

    This month’s favorites cover a delightful new extension of the typeface DaVinci, Google’s updated mega-font, Noto, photographs of a desert aircraft boneyard from above, and mega-photographs of the Milky Way.

    Before we get there, however, I wanted to wish Jason Kottke — whose 24 years of web sleuthing has been a source for items here on Foreword dating back to its original iteration in the ’90s — good luck on his sabbatical:

    “I need some space to think and live and have generative conversations and do things, and then I’ll make something, but I can’t tell you what it is just yet.”1Alexandra Bell, NYT That’s the sort of energy I need to tap into for a few months.

    Hear, hear.

    The Beautiful DaVinci Italic

    It’s Nice That points us to a new, extended version of the font DaVinci, done for Sydney’s Biennale:

    “When you do this sort of type exercise — based on printed letters — it gives a very organic shape and form, in opposition to the very metallic sharp shape from type materials.” Furthering this organic look by pushing the fluidity curse at its maximum, Virgile ended with a design “which is very historical, yet with a contemporary twist.” 

    Just look at those glyphs!

    Makes you want to find an excuse to use it. But that’s not all: Flores is an incredibly diverse artist whose work both challenges and inspires. See more.

    Google’s Noto

    Called “A Typeface for the World,” Google’s Noto defines “megaproject.”

    Noto is a collection of high-quality fonts with multiple weights and widths in sans, serif, mono, and other styles. The Noto fonts are perfect for harmonious, aesthetic, and typographically correct global communication, in more than 1,000 languages and over 150 writing systems. 

    Google’s Noto font collection.

    According to Google,

    “Noto” means “I write, I mark, I note” in Latin. The name is also short for “no tofu”, as the project aims to eliminate ‘tofu’: blank rectangles shown when no font is available for your text.

    While the font itself has been around for a few years — 2013 seems like yesterday in so many ways! — it’s updated regularly, cover 150 out of the 154 scripts defined in Unicode, and deserves attention from every web designer and type nut. Read more at Google or Wikipedia. (Via Kottke.)

    Aircraft Boneyard, From an Aircraft

    This is Colossal introduces us to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson, Arizona, whose desert conditions are ideal for storing — and scrapping — aircraft:

    What happens when the military’s aircraft are end-of-lifed

    The photographs are by Bernhard Lang — whom Colossal has highlighted before — and who has an incredible talent for finding patterns from above. See many more at his website.

    Milky Way Photography

    We don’t get many opportunities here in Middle Georgia, but in other, less populous (read: less light-polluted) places in the world, the Milky Way shines forth from the heavens:

    Mountain, redefined.

    The Guardian points us to the 2022 Milky Way Photographer of the Year, and many just wow:

    Take cover . . . in awe!

    Check ’em all out, be inspired to take one of your own, or simply be reminded just how big this system we’re a part of is. Enjoy.

  • Gallery Update: The Columbus Museum

    Gallery Update: The Columbus Museum

    As I mentioned in the last entry, Gerald and I were in Columbus, Georgia on Saturday, where our primary photographic mission was The Columbus Museum — specifically, its Olmsted Garden.

    ArchDaily is to blame here; they pointed me to the following:

    Celebrating the bicentennial of the birth of Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., known as “the father of landscape architecture”, the Cultural Landscape Foundation has created an ever-growing digital guide of Olmsted’s most notable works.

    I immediately looked up what was near me, and lo and behold…. (Full disclosure: the garden is actually by Bradley Olmsted, one of Fredrick’s sons.)

    Of course, the building’s interesting, too, so there’s a good mix of architecture, gardens, architecture from the garden, and — you guessed it — garden architecture:

    The Columbus Museum (B&W #1)
    Urn, Columns and Bricks, The Columbus Museum
    Crawford’s Kindred (B&W detail), The Columbus Museum
    Olmsted Garden (Flower #3), The Columbus Museum
    Old Pool House (B&W), Olmsted Garden, The Columbus Museum

    I enjoyed the visit, and as a result of that visit, added 32 new photographs to the Columbus gallery. (They’re grouped together: “Columbus Museum – Mar22.”) Peruse anytime; purchase if you’d like. Thank you!

  • Beautifully Briefed, Early April 2022: Eames Institute, Loony Backgrounds, and … Condor!

    Beautifully Briefed, Early April 2022: Eames Institute, Loony Backgrounds, and … Condor!

    Three completely unrelated items for you this time, ranging from the serious and interesting through the loony and interesting to something of a whole different stripe.

    The Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity

    Update 2, 25 Apr: Brand New discusses this logo, with the usual catchy title: The Fast and the Curious: Counterspace Drift

    Eames Institute’s “curious” logo variations, discussed at Brand New

    Update, 8 Apr: It’s Nice That has more: The Eames Institute launches with a curious, “Eamesian” identity, and a logo that observes

    Original post: Practically everyone has heard of an Eames Chair:

    A particularly awesome example of an Eames Chair (and ottoman).

    What you might not realize is that the legacy Charles and Ray Eames left behind enriches our lives to this day. It’s a shame, then, that while their house is a mid-century masterpiece (and museum), much of their lives have remained behind closed doors.

    For almost three decades, a barn-like building in Petaluma, California, contained remnants of one of the most iconic design legacies of the twentieth century. […] We created the Eames Institute because we want you to examine the archive of what you know—the collection of your experiences, understanding, memories, and questions—and connect to the provocations that call to you. We want you to tap into that same fount of relentless curiosity, and its power to shift your perception and open you to innovations and discoveries.

    Now, however, there’s the Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity. Awesome name aside, it introduces us to the more personal side of one of design’s strongest partnerships.

    Items from the Charles and Ray Eames Institute.
    Drawings from the Charles and Ray Eames Institute.

    The website requires some interesting scrolling to get where you need, but the results are more than worth the time — and is one that earns (Eames?) its suggestion of satisfying infinite curiosity. Explore and enjoy. (Hat tip: ArchDaily, The Newly Launched Eames Institute Brings Insight into the Eameses’ Design Methodology.)

    Loony Toons Backgrounds

    Design You Trust: “Looney Tunes Without Looney Tunes: Existential, Surreal, And Creepy Backgrounds.” The post sends readers to an Instagram account, which I’m not going to link to, but the images themselves are fascinating:

    Crossed wires, anyone?
    Imagine who might run up to — or even get pushed off of — this cliff.
    A nice, innocent factory. Nothing could possibly go wrong.

    Next time I treat myself to a Loony break, I’m going to make sure to spend some time looking beyond the action and appreciate the backgrounds. Nice.

    Condor Airlines Rebrands

    Most of you have probably never heard of Condor Airlines; they’re mainly a European thing, a “leisure” airline associated with Thomas Cook, formerly owned and run by Lufthansa. (Here’s some history.)

    It doesn’t particularly matter. What does is the bravado exhibited by management. Before, a typical airline logo — dare I say, typically Germanic:

    Condor’s OLD livery.

    Then someone said yelled, “HEY. WE DO VACATIONS. LIKE BEACH TOWELS. LET’S DO STRIPES.” The result:

    Condor’s NEW livery. Wow.

    Armin Vit:

    The new livery has zero fucks to give and just plasters every plane with thick vertical stripes that go against pretty much every single assumed tenet of what makes a good livery. It doesn’t look speedy, it doesn’t look nimble, it requires a lot of paint, and by all other standards it is just plain ugly and I love it.

    Read more or see images at Condor, see the Brand New post, or even hear from the armchair pilots at Airliners.net. Now: anyone got a beach?

  • Updated Gallery: Sarasota – Ringling Museum

    Updated Gallery: Sarasota – Ringling Museum

    The Ringling Museum in Sarasota, Florida has been a place I’ve been taking photographs since I lived in the area, almost twenty years ago now — and a place where I continue to enjoy taking photographs whenever possible.

    The grounds have these amazing banyan trees, with root systems larger than many houses:

    Banyan (black and white, detail)

    They’ve expanded over the years, adding buildings, a new entrance, and additions. This is the Chao Center for Asian Art:

    Chao Center’s Asian Art Siding #3 (Detail)

    The old Ca d’Zan gate is the new main entrance:

    Ca d’Zan Lion

    And, of course, the whole compound is right on Sarasota Bay:

    Ringling’s Bayfront

    Take a virtual stroll through the Ringling grounds with 24 new photographs, along with many more over the years, and a few extra photographs from Sarasota proper. Enjoy.

  • Architecture in Music

    Architecture in Music

    New Zealand-based photographer Charles Brooks, who happens to have spent years as a professional cellist, brings us some astonishing inside-the-instrument shots, including this one:

    1780 Lockey Hill Cello. © Charles Brooks

    The Colossal post, where I ran across this, is definitely worth a read. But let me just add one thing: He’s using an L-mount (yes!) Laowa probe lens, an insightful choice driven by curiosity. Well done, sir.

    His levitation shots are killer, too. And there’s behind-the-scenes (literally) stuff on his blog. Oh, and his logo is fantastic.

    Score! (Sorry — had to say it.) Go visit.

  • Beautifully Briefed, December 2021: Holiday Edition

    Beautifully Briefed, December 2021: Holiday Edition

    It’s the yearly wrap-up and the holiday season! Recap and Rejoice!

    Hermès Does Windows

    “Journey of a Lifetime” is this year’s window display for Hermès — yes, Hermès should have an accent, but I can’t seem to summon it today fixed! — so let’s go with a picture instead:

    Hermes window display

    All in paper. No, let me repeat that: it’s all paper. (Well, perhaps some glue.) From artists Zim and Zou. Here’s another, one of their earlier works:

    Zim and Zou, previously

    Read more at This is Colossal about the window and the church. Nice.

    Yule Ogg

    While we’re on the subject of the holidays, check this out:

    Yule Ogg

    That’s right, it’s one of those four-hour Yule log videos — but with a twist. Those are wooden type pieces going up the flame. Check it out, along with the backstory, at It’s Nice That.

    Top Architectural Photography Projects

    Closing out, we start the year’s “best of” round-ups, this one Dezeen’s top 10 architectural photography projects of 2021:

    Soviet (Asia) Photography

    Above, Soviet architecture, central Asia, by Roberto Conte and Stefano Perego. Below, Structure Photography by Nikola Olic:

    "Poetic" Architecture Photography

    The latter is called “poetic,” a description I’d completely agree with. The Mother Road, USA, by Hayley Eichenbaum (previously mentioned) is there, too. Enjoy.

    That’s it until after the holiday. Around the first, stay tuned for my favorite book designs of 2021 and more. Take care!