Great news! You can now pick up all the work from the Triforce Tribute show (including my letterpress ‘Inventory’ print, seen above but not mine, as it just sold out) right here!
Thanks to everybody who came out to the opening night at Land, and to Jolby and Always With Honor for putting together such a fantastic show - it was a pleasure to be a part of it. Also a pleasure: Portland’s many fine restaurants, book stores, and wooded areas.
I’m excited to be a part of this insane Zelda-themed show organised by Jolby and Always With Honor. Would you just look at that roster? Good lord. Not only has it given me a chance to play some video games and call it research, but it’s also a nice excuse to finally make it to Portland (I hope). Here’s hoping I finish my piece, instead of getting distracted by fishing, catching chickens, collecting bugs, or hacking mindlessly at grass for money.
John Stezaker has a show at the Whitechapel Gallery until the 18th of March - I look forward to making it along next month when I’m in town, as well as the Isotype exhibition at the V&A which closes on the 13th.
London people: I’m about from the 10th to 27th of March (roughly) - is there anything else I should see?
Right now myself and the rest of Evening Tweed are putting together a bunch of new work for Pick Me Up 2011, a contemporary graphic arts fair hosted at Somerset House. Last year’s was a tremendous amount of fun and the line-up suggests this year will be no different.
We’ll be constructing our own workspace for the run of the show, in which (among other things) I’ll be doing a bunch of live Gocco printing for the first time, so I’m looking forward to that going inevitably pear-shaped (I am only partly joking).
Pick Me Up runs from 17-27th March, and you can find the full line-up of artists and collectives involved (and pick up tickets in advance) right here. If you’re in London around that time, please come say hello!
Got myself to the superb Decode show at the V&A yesterday (which runs until April 11th and is highly recommended if you’re in London). One of the pieces, Fabrica’s Exquisite Clock invites people to submit images of numbers through a free iPhone app, which are then displayed in the show itself (and on the app) as a clock. Here’s one I caught yesterday made entirely of numbers from printed money.
loading…