Word as Image

The book "Word as Image" showcases nearly 100 of Ji Lee’s head-scratching word images, along with tips to help you create your own.

“Anyone can create a word as image. It doesn’t require any design or drawing skills. All you need is a little creative thinking and to see words and letters in a different way. The dictionary is filled with thousands of fun visual puzzles just waiting to be solved. Visit www.wordasimage.com to submit your solution.”

Street Art by Pavel 183 (R.I.P. boy)

Russian based street art master Pavel 183 brakes the myths of graffiti vandalism by revealing outdoors installations and modifications of post-urban suburbs of our capital. His works a full of social less politic sense and can be valued as an equal act of contemporary art and most of times his stuff is cooler then we see in modern museums around the world.

Interview http://www.bbc.co.uk/russian/multimedia/2012/02/120202_moscow_street_art.shtml

RIP 01.04.2013 :(

We Were Wanderers On A Prehistoric Earth

Taken on the side of Malaysia shows the awesome strength of mother Earth that can easily exist without our miserable civilization. The narration has been adapted from excerpts from Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad published 1899.

James W Griffiths Director/Producer

Christopher Moon Director of Photography

Mauricio d'Orey Sound Design

Lennert Busch Composer

Into the Abyss by Simon Harsent

Underwater photography by NY based Simon Harsent. Series "Into the Abyss" inspired by the poem of David Harsent

into the abyss

A little deeper and she’ll lose the light. At first the surface is just touchable - shadows that might be clouds or birds in flight… She sets her face to the skim

to get the last of the world she came from, some slight sense of voices fading as she slips from almost-day to almost-night, grey-green shading

first to blue, then more than blue, then to a blue never seen by anyone but her, and that slow drift into darkness set to sever all that she owned or wanted, all she had ever been.

David Harsent

Alex Tyapochkin art

New works from gifted Moscovian artist Alex Tyapochkin. The unique graphic destructive street-art style makes Alex's illustrations speak their own language and that is a matter of his art manners to start from a freehand drawing with a bit of digital retouch at the end. And with an eight years of the background in graphic design and art he runs the successful Yeah Yeah studio: http://yeahyeahstudio.com For this post Alex prepared a set of recent experimental artworks featuring floral ornaments.