Posts Tagged ‘durham’

New Neighbors & Pepsi Refresh Project.

// July 1st, 2010 // No Comments » // Art, Design, Life

I received an email at 12:23 am this morning informing me that the New Neighbors project made it into the Pepsi Refresh Everything project.

What does that mean? Well, it’s only the first hurdle that needed to be cleared.

I’ve asked for a $5,000 grant to blow out the project rather proper-like. This will help promote the launch event that will coincide with Preservation North Carolina’s annual conference. It will also purchase the supplies needed to build frames and stretch canvases for the post-installation auction.

So what happens next?

The project has a page on the Pepsi Refresh Everything website. You can go there and vote for it once every single day until midnight on July 31st. Please do go and vote as manytimes as possible between now and July 31st! You can actually vote for up to 10 projects a day, and there are lotsa great ideas. That’s it — come August 1st Pepsi will award funding to up to ten of the $5K ideas (there are other money categories).

So once more, please visit the New Neighbors page on the Pepsi Refresh Everything site everyday in July and cast a vote!

Nd now… you can text your vote from your phone! Just text 100120 to 73774… daily! Thanks so much!

I want YOU.

// June 8th, 2010 // No Comments » // Art, Design, Life

*** UPDATE*** I’m taking photos of Durham folk at the next Third Friday open house at Golden Belt (807 East Main in Durham) on June 18th from 6 – 9 pm. I’m in Studio 138 in Building 3. I’ll have props! This coincides with the Indy’s big Best Of party, so come on out!

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That’s right — I need you to help in the completion of my New Neighbors project. Why should you help? I can tempt you with a few reasons:

+ ultimately this means you will be part of an art installation in east Durham, NC
+ once the installation is over, paintings will be auctioned to benefit Project RED & local arts orgs
+ a launch event is tentatively scheduled to coincide with Preservation NC’s annual conference
+ it’s fun and definitely easy (at least your part will be!)

So what is it I need you to do? Simply pose for a photograph of yourself doing something completely mundane, such as:

+ ironing a shirt
+ changing a light bulb
+ sautéing a side dish
+ peering out with binoculars
+ jumping on a bed
+ teaching a class

I’ll provide the props if you’ll visit me in my studio on a Third Friday at Golden Belt in Durham, NC. The next Third Friday is June 18 and our open studio times are scheduled from 6-9 pm. Come on by. If you want to schedule another time to come by, we can work that out, too.

Heck, you can even send me a photo you already have. I’ll take it! Just make sure you are clearly defined (against a light-colored wall, for example). So let’s say you wanted to illustrate sautéing dinner. All you really need is the pan and you can “sauté” balls of paper or socks or potato chips. That part doesn’t really matter. The photos will become line drawings so I can fudge the missing parts later. Shoot me a note if that doesn’t make sense, or if you want to come by my studio sometime.

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Sea Booty.

// June 3rd, 2010 // No Comments » // Art, Design

Arrrrrggggghhhhh. I painted this used bowling pin to benefit the upcoming Troika Music Festival. It was auctioned off at an event put on by 307 Knox Records, who also puts on the festival. The auction was held at The Pinhook in Durham, NC. It’s pretty basic: I added an aquarium display of pirate treasure and collaged water and fish onto the pin. In the end I landed on “Sea Booty” as the name. I think that part is obvious.

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The Strugglers v1.0.

// April 20th, 2010 // No Comments » // Art, Design

I was recently contracted by a friend to work on a cover for his new album. His band is called The Strugglers. We worked together on an illustration for the Struggs’ tour of Spain last year and the vibe was good. On the shirts, that is — unfortunately, my services weren’t required for the tour of Spain.

When we started on this project, we didn’t know the name of the album or even what all of the songs would be or sound like. But we dove in anyways. We had some general conversations about tone and feel — all those sorts of things. I was made privy to a bunch of covers from other bands that the client liked.

And I shared random examples of how I saw things evolving. I had these ideas of very graphic executions. Some geometry. Is it black and white? I wanted to push the limits of the legibility of the type. It needed to be strong and more like a little piece of art than a designed cover, so I was thinking of doing everything by hand. I could see it, for sure, but was it right for the music?

Well, the music started taking shape and continually evolved over the next few months. Scott Solter, visionary producer for The Mountain Goats and Okkervil River and others, was brought in. The partnership between The Struggs and Solter produced some really interesting sonics. There are layers. The songs have a strong sense of place. And there was tangible, weighty emotion, even beyond the extremely personal lyrics of frontman, Randy Bickford (he’s the client). Here’s a short quote re: Randy’s music:

“The opposite of histrionic, Bickford offers a subdued palette rich in the fineness of its distinctions”
–Pitchfork

A visual concept emerged of a heart (and the circulatory system). I was still seeing (forcing) a graphic execution, but one with a real sense of hand — close to folk art even, but with dark colors. We didn’t want this to end up cliché, though, so we moved beyond the heart and started looking at medical imagery of the circulatory system (in humans, FYI). These were really interesting once we started layering and distorting to give the images texture. In a way, mimicking the musical production process the band had recently undergone. We were operating with a tentative title of “Cursoring.”

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My initial ideas were still way off. The strong graphic approach I was advocating was not the ticket after all. We continued collaborating.

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In the end we arrived at 3 “markers” for the imagery that explained the main qualities of the songs and illustrated these concepts in the following ways:

EMOTION: the circulatory system and other physiological imagery. Think synapses and arteries and stuff
HISTORY: a very old tree. Trees are witness to everything around and often live longer than we do
PLACE: an old map of Virginia, specifically Danville, captures the origin of much of the inspiration for the album

We wanted this all to feel heady and deep and lush and old. And here’s what we came up with.

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I have to say it was a different, and really refreshing, process for me. It was not the typical need-it-yesterday project. Randy was a great client — respectful of time as well as ideas. And he really helped push the project in the right direction without creating unnecessary work. We see this small step as the first for the album, knowing we want to expand the ideas into a larger, more engaging piece down the line. I’ll be looking forward to that.

Thanks for reading this far.

Looking for logos.

// April 7th, 2010 // No Comments » // Design, Life

I love identity work. I enjoy diving into a company and getting to know them as people and as a business. Ultimately, I’m always inspired at the passion people have for companies they create and ones at which they choose to work.

And besides, logos are fun. How can we make some concocted graphic symbolize a company’s entrepreneurial spirit while nodding to the owner’s dog’s tri-colored coat and the fact his business was first conceptualized by sketching directly on a surfboard 20 years prior to now? I’m making that up, obviously, but it’s hard to ever guess what will be in the brief for a new identity.

My point, however, was a computer isn’t needed to make logos. Necessarily. Yes, at some point, it has to go through the machine for production. I’m speaking more about the creative process and advocating that Step One not involve a computer, a television, an iPod (or iPad) or Design Annual.

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Chasing Bear Identity

I decided to name my company Chasing Bear a few years ago. It’s a weird, nebulous concept that I ramble on about here. I should point out this company is primarily where I pursue my own personal art projects. I’m also a partner at The PARAGRAPH Project and we do really intersting stuff for anyone who’s interested.

So along with this very loose concept of what “Chasing Bear” meant came an indifference to a logo. “I probably shouldn’t use a bear as a mark for a company who has ‘Bear’ in their name, right?” I let it languish.

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Until one day, my wife and I were browsing in an antique shop in the NC mountains. We came across this carved bear that was meant to hang on a wall. My wife told me it was perfect for my home office. I wasn’t used to being cleared for the purchase of mascots. I just wasn’t buying it (the bear). Fortunately, I eventually did purchase the bear. And when I got home, I hung it above my desk.

I eventually realized this bear was MY bear. And I figured out a way to make him say “Chasing” as well. I took a photo, adjusted some levels in Photoshop and then took a print to my local copy shop where I distorted the image. A quick change of the eye, and I was done. It all happened in a few hours.

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The timeline for this endeavor was obviously outside the realm of any traditional client engagement. In fact, there was no timeline. Everything happened organically. I realize it’s not practical from this perspective. But my point is not one of time management. I’m hoping you might look beyond your normal sources of inspiration within the timeframe of any given project. And that the tablet or the mouse are put away for a bit. We (and our clients) might be better served if after reading the brief, we just go for a walk. Or visit an antique shop.

Annemarie Gugelmann at Durham Arts Council.

// September 17th, 2009 // No Comments » // Art, Picks

Annemarie’s work is up in the Allenton Gallery at the Durham Arts Council until November 1. Here’s a bit from Annemarie…

In my current work, I combine my interest in political science with art and investigate how cities and communities form and change. Just as a family is bound by the house they live in, a city ties its people together through common spaces. I am interested in the public domain and how people create an atmosphere and commonality within it. In my art, I want to capture a city’s unique atmosphere and how it separates itself from other urban landscapes.

The series of paintings and prints completed in October 2008 explores the public square of Munich, Vienna, and Zurich. After spending the summer of 2008 in Philadelphia, I completed a group of paintings focusing on New York City and Philadelphia. I just finished a series of work inspired by a trip to San Francisco. Right now, I’m focusing on Durham and NYC.

If you love Durham, then you’ll love you some of these paintings. And an example of her latest work:

Brad Williams at Durham Arts Council.

// September 8th, 2009 // No Comments » // Art, Life, Picks

Brad’s work is up in the Semans Gallery at the Durham Arts Council until November 1. There’s a lot more to these pieces than their visual impact and juxtaposition of animals, landscapes, abstraction and big tents. The surfaces of the paintings display a variety of sheen and texture. Their scale adds to their presence as well. If you enjoy paint — I mean really enjoy paint — stop in for a viewing.

Here’s a bit from Brad:

In my paintings, I insert representational images into abstract distorted and agitated environments. The effect is a tactile surface – my immersion in painterly improvisation – set into an uneasy alliance with the more delicately rendered objects of metaphor. The resulting juxtaposition, of the representational and the abstract, is full of conflict and contradiction, generating a space in which everything competes for rational comprehension because there is too much to take in. And an example of his work:

Sun Ra, currently visiting Earth.

// September 2nd, 2009 // No Comments » // Art, Design, Picks

Pathways to Unknown Worlds: Sun Ra, El Saturn and Chicago’s Afro-Futurist Underground 1954-68 is currently on display in the CCB Gallery at the Durham Art Guild. The exhibit runs through 10/18/09. Drop by — it’s a must-see while it’s here.

Close inspection yields some great results: album covers, original artwork, press-releases, business cards, etc. all show the “hand” quality, regardless of whether the hand happened to be from space or Birmingham. The language used is also entertaining, even though completely serious. Make sure to check out the (ALL-CAPS) press releases and watch some of the documentary running in the gallery space, too.

I designed some artwork for the exhibition. We derived the design from a mask commonly worn by Sun Ra, but turned it into a maze and put in orbit.

And an example of something cool you’ll see… a print block.

The Durham Art Guild is located at 120 Morris Street in Durham, NC.

Dos Perros

// August 14th, 2009 // No Comments » // Life

Had a great meal tonight with fam at Durham’s new hot spot, Dos Perros. Ceviche and plantain fritters were super-good. Grouper, camarones, churros and cocktails (Cheech & Chong, Don Julio margarita) also not to be missed.