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1413 Magazine

1413 Magazine covers

From Magazine to MFAD

A photo of clown head made from some textile fabric and around it a fur coat.

Todd Carroll

Todd Carroll

The Case for Optimism

rachel shawn and bill in front of optimism digital poster

Hot Off The Presses

Euji Kim- magazine sample

Sour

sour.journal logo

Spoonful

green spoonful logo on white background

THE INTERN

the intern logo on a fuzzy background

DAY JOB

a page of magazine with a collage of images

Pump’d

pump'd logo

STEVEN HELLER

STEVEN HELLER

FLOCKS

A photo of a man sitting on a bike while holding the handles.

Snowboarding In China

A yellow poster with a cyan oval shape with blue margins. Around the shape there are some blue arrows and some red letters. Also on the poster there are some red boxes with some white drawings that look like pictograms. The text in the shape is: SESSION.

Countdown to Tokyo

ideopolis stickers on the floor

Adobe Max Attended

a man giving a speech and in the left side is a big image projected on the wall

Lasky Returns

An orange poster showing a photo of a man with a rocket pack strapped on him while trying to take off the ground. The title: Julie Lasky.

Food Lab

A book with an article and a graphic depicting cigarettes' and other objects like forks, tea bags, cups and lighters in cigarette colors.

Ask Heller

A drawing of a man popping from a book while different letters swirl around his head.

Funny Faculty Part 1

A man standing in as art workshop with his fists up.

Its All Turkish To Us

A store front filled with yellow, red, pink, green, blue sticky notes as well as pieces of colored paper. The title of the photo: MediaCat Tasarim.

Glaser On Line

In Sean-h of the Miraculous. I remember reading Ouspcnsky's book on Gurdjicff as a young man. I found it strangely unpleasant and unconvincing for reasons I don't understand, but the phrase In Search of the Miraculous" has persisted in my memory. One could easily say that all human experience is a miracle: memory, color, taste, walking. skin, affection, Vermeer, stars, watermelon and so on. For those of us in and around the arm, the act of making things that move the mind is our deepest aspiration in regard to miracles. One Thing Leads to Another. The second tide evokes another idea, which is to contextualize the works, in order to better understand them. This is usually done retrospectively after the artist's death, but that seemed problematic. I've chosen work, largely produced over the last five years, to demonstrate how one thing leads to another. It's fascinating to discover that something you thought was a brand new idea actually had its root 35 years tallier.  The Client Didn't Get It. Every designer has a closet full of proposals that were rejected by clients. In many cases, they reel these arc their most insightful works. The reasons for rejection are varied and complex, but frequently, than works represent our most transgressive and imaginative efforts. The professional requirement to succeed demands that the work be both understandable and acceptable to its targeted audience. On the other hand, the imagination feeds on failure and ambiguity, which stimulate the designer's mind and potentially raise it to a new level of understanding. Failure and ambiguity are difficult ideas to sell to a diem who simply wants to move more cans of tomatoes.  Stumbling in the Dark. These prints continue the inquiry into the nature of perception. Does the difficulty of seeing these images — because of their darkness and lack of contrast — provoke the viewer to pay more attention? Or does it produce indifference and irritation? The interval between looking and seeing is one of communication's most profound issues. Designers often comment that in the act of creating what turns out to be their best work, they often experience a sense of doubt and confusion. How could it be otherwise? Certainty is a closing of the mind. To create the new, requires doubt. Or, to quote old man Picasso Art is a lie that reveals the truth.

Our MOD Man

A black and white photo of a man wearing a suit and tie.

Eye on Moving Type

A poster showing a black notebook on a desk with the white letters AB on it.

Watch Out for Anderson

A poster of a drawn woman wearing glasses and a red scarf on a green background.

Meet the Class of 2011

Some newspaper images reading ROAR, Kanye West, Ryan Gosling and in between their portrets.

Meet the Class of 2011

Two body types of a fat an a thin woman and some red and black text.

Souvenir

typography of souvenir the rest is history
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