background preloader

Art

Facebook Twitter

Free High Resolution Textures - Lost and Taken. Fuji Arts Japanese Prints - Japanese Woodblock Prints and Decorative Arts. Japanese graphic design from the 1920s-30s. In the 1920s and 1930s, Japan embraced new forms of graphic design as waves of social change swept across the nation. This collection of 50 posters, magazine covers and advertisements offer a glimpse at some of the prevailing tendencies in a society transformed by the growth of modern industry and technology, the popularity of Western art and culture, and the emergence of leftist political thought. "Buy Domestic! " poster, 1930 [+] Cover of "Nippon" magazine issue #1, Oct 1934 [+] "Fuji Weekly" cover, Oct 1930 [+] Poster for Japan's first national census, 1920 [+] // "Health for body and country" poster, c. 1930 [+] Grand Nagoya Festival poster by Kenkichi Sugimoto, 1933 [+] Kyoto Grand Exposition to Commemorate the Showa Imperial Coronation, 1928 [+] Poster design by Shujiro Shimomura, 1928 [+] "NAPF" (Nippona Artista Proleta Federacio) magazine cover, Feb 1931 [+] "NAPF" (Nippona Artista Proleta Federacio) magazine covers: Sep 1931 // Oct 1931 "May 1" movie poster by Hiromu Hara, 1928-1929 [+]

::: F*CKIN FINE ::: Illustration work of Marko Prokic. Hand lettering diary, part2Illustration, Typography2013. DeviantART: where ART meets application! Interview with Goro Fujita from Dreamworks. In August 2008 he was hired by PDI/DreamWorks as a visual development artist. Recent Projects are "Merry Madagascar" (2009 TV Special) and "Megamind" (November 2010). Can you tell the readers a little about yourself? What led you to get into film making? I was fascinated by drawing ever since I was a little child. I also remember drawing little flip book animations in my schoolbooks. I did a jumping frog flip book animation when I was about 8 years old A few years later I started doing stop motion animations with a hi-8 camcorder and Lego figures with my brother.

They were very hard to learn since there weren't any tutorials available online and sites like youtube and vimeo didn't even exist yet. Can you tell us a bit more about attending the German Film School? The German Film School was a private school focusing on digital film making, located in a small town called Elstal near Berlin.

A total number of 12 projects had to be done within 3 years. The Beauty Of Life. New York invasion by 8-bits creatures ! - PIXELS. Free Online Portfolio website & Free Blog for your Creative Works! Graphics : un album. Artsblog.