Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Rise of American Poster Art


"American Artifact: The Rise of American Rock Poster Art", is a documentary about the history and subculture of rock poster art in America, will be released on DVD on March 27th, 2010. The film has been touring around the country in the meantime and was recently added to the permanent collection at the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame.

It is playing tomorrow night at the Clinton Street Theater in Portland.
2522 SE Clinton St.
Portland, OR 97202

The DVD release party will be at the Wherehouse in Newburgh, NY. Director Merle Becker will be in attendance. Admission is free and seating is limited. (First come, first serve).

Details for the DVD release party are:
Saturday, March 27th 7:30p
The Wherehouse
119 Liberty Street
Newburgh, NY 12550
845.561.7240

More details, trailers and such on the American Artifact web site.

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Saturday, January 16, 2010

Plazm posters join Swiss museum


Plakatsammlung Museum fur Gestaltung Zürich—the international poster museum based in Switzerland—has recently ascended over 90 Plazm posters into their permanent collection. A sampling of these posters created from 1992–2000, are shown here. Designers include Plazm folks as well as guests such as David Carson, Scott Clum, Pablo Medina, and many others. Pictured above, a call to sumbit. Designed by Niko Courtelis and Robert Rasmussen (pictured), Photographed in one shot with projection by Bob Waldman. Enjoy.

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Monday, October 19, 2009

Liminal: An Examination of Graffiti in Tokyo



I recently self-published a 32 page zine that covers the scope of Tokyo street graffiti to coincide with a lecture I did recently for the Artalking series of contemporary art gatherings in Tokyo.


The zine features an illustrated essay in English about Tokyo graffiti while simultaneously operating as a sort of "birdwatching guide" to help readers identify different graffiti writers' work.


Liminal was printed in an edition of 125 and each is hand-numbered. You can pick one up for $12.00 postpaid (shipping included) via Paypal to ian(at)ianlynam.com or email me.





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Saturday, September 12, 2009

The Graphic Eye Book Release


Joshua Berger is one of a number of designers featured in the upcoming book The Graphic Eye:
Photographs By Graphic Designers From Around The Globe. There's a release party at Skylight Books in Los Feliz on Friday, September 18th at 7:30pm.

Skylight Books
1818 N Vermont Ave
Los Angeles, CA 90027

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Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Blur - Rick Valicenti Mash-up of Farrah and Michael


Following up from my post a week ago in tribute to Rick Valicenti's 1996 cover for Plazm #14, now you can download Rick's mash-up book "Blur." Made a week or so ago in response to Michael Jackson and Farrah Fawcett's passing and impact on our collective consciousness.

Download the pdf here.
Blur-RV.pdf

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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Rebranding the Mercenary


Blackwater, the notorious private army, contracted by the Bush administration to protect "high value" military personnel, and accused of numerous crimes against Iraqi civilians, has recently undertaken an extensive brand repositioning. 

The corporate name itself, Blackwater, had become a public relations liability, a toxic asset if you will. The company spent more than a year in an internal search to develop the new name, "Xe" (pronounced "Zee"). Following this arduous renaming and rebranding process, company spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell announced there was "no meaning at all in the new name." 

Perhaps Ms. Tyrrell is telling the truth, that no meaning whatsoever, is an appropriately pore-less exterior for a company doing secretive contract work around the world. Of course companies spend vast sums of time and energy creating brand marks. They know these nuanced signifiers exude meaning to audiences around the world. I sincerely doubt that Xe is an exception. Since this is not a topic they wish to discuss, we are left to judge by what we see as formally trained graphic artists and observers of media.

At first glance, the word "Xe" seems vaguely technical. Perhaps it is a reference to the chemical xenon, or more specifically, the highly explosive xenon trioxide, XeO3. The gender neutral pronoun seems a stretch for this brand. But who knows? Maybe Xe is all about inclusiveness now. They won't let us ask, and they won't tell. Then there is the phonetic interpretation. The letter Z is the final letter in the English alphabet. Perhaps Xe is a metaphor for the last word? The last line of defense? Who you call as a last resort? The final option? Or maybe Xe is a reference to another famed vigilante, Zorro, "the Gay Blade" who went slicing his "Z" tag about following a conquest. The new Xe logo does have an slicing motion embedded within it. Perhaps more appropriately, there is Bill Barker's underground comic from the early 90s, Schwa, where distant alien overlords in concert with omnipresent corporations and religions organizations control all human activity. Xenon figures prominently and is used on items such as "Alien Invasion Survival Cards" so you can tell if you have been abducted.

The old Blackwater mark was crass and ominous, with it's sharp claws and encompassing bear-trap/target. It might have been seen as cartoonish, like a semi-pro football icon, had the news reports surrounding the company not been so gruesome. The new Xe brand mark suggests a professional level of discretion, subtlety, and cutting edge stealth. This is clearly a company growing in efficiency and evolving in sophistication. In an era of instant media attention, keeping a clean image is of the utmost importance. 

Blackwater may now fade into the dark memory recesses of public consciousness while the kinder, gentler vigilante group can continue doing our goverment's business. In this light, the rebranding of Blackwater can only be viewed as a success.






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Sunday, February 1, 2009

Obsessive Consumption


I recently discovered the work of Kate Bingaman-Burt, and was surprised (but not too surprised) to find out she lives in Portland, OR, and teaches graphic design at PSU. She draws her daily purchases and they provide a different take on consuming altogether.

Visit Kate's website here.

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