Thursday, 27 November 2014

Standard Designs Black Friday Sale


This Friday you can save 10% on all purchases of my prints in the Standard Designs Etsy shop. Just enter the coupon code BLACKFRIDAY at the Etsy checkout to receive your discount. Your Christmas shopping could be sorted in a matter of minutes!


Come and browse my series of albums-as-books prints for The Smiths, Morrissey, The Stone Roses, Radiohead, Joy Division, Kate Bush, New Order, Kraftwerk, Bjork, Pulp, Blur, Oasis, The Cure, Suede and many many more. And don’t forget my portraits of all the greats from literature, philosophy, art and… you know… other stuff.


So much to choose from, so little time. The sale ends when Friday ends. Get to it!


Wednesday, 26 November 2014

The Smiths' 'Hatful Of Hollow' As A Set Of Books


Here’s my final new print of 2014 (I’m busy preparing lots of new things for 2015). One of my favourite albums ever - The Smiths’ ‘Hatful of Hollow’, depicted as if Morrissey and Johnny Marr had written it as a collection of books instead of songs. It’s available now in the Standard Designs Etsy Shop.



As much as the songs, I’ve always loved this album’s artwork - the photo of the band in the gatefold, and especially the front cover with its gorgeously flat blue, and the black & white typography. Very 1950s (maybe a bit early 1960s too).



So it was pretty clear this would work well translated into a set of Penguin and especially Pelican Books. And so here we are.



You can see more at the Standard Designs Etsy Shop.


Tuesday, 4 November 2014

Anselm Kiefer at the Royal Academy

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The Royal Academy is currently showing a medium-sized retrospective of Anselm Kiefer’s work. You’re greeted in the courtyard by two huge vitrines containing rusting models of U-boats. But the fun doesn’t stop there.


The show begins with some of his frankly awful 1960s/early 1970s work, but then quickly gets going with his mid-1970s ‘up in the attic’ paintings.


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…and then into his early 1980s work - still my favourite period.





This last one in particular - part of a humongous multi-part folding screen thing - made me want to dust off my lino-printing skills.


As time goes on, and Kiefer moves into bigger and bigger studios with better and better facilities, the works become increasingly process-tastic. You could stand for hours working out how he achieved this surface or that effect. And the great thing is that much of the slightly mystical alchemical nature of what he does is mirrored in his subject matter - or the other way round, I forget which.



Things go a bit askew in the last couple of rooms. The above photo doesn’t really do justice to the amount of gold and purple there is in some of these more recent pieces. They’re - dare I say it - pretty tacky. A gift shop idea of a Kiefer. Talking of which, the gift shop at the RA has been curated to include a number of Kiefer-esque items, including distressed-looking metal keepsake boxes. Funny in a slightly desperate kind of way. And if they don’t sell, they could always hang onto them if they ever stage a Christian Boltanski retrospective.


So in summary, if you’ve not see a large Kiefer show before, it’s worth seeing. If like me you’ve been following his work since the year dot, it’s maybe less essential (the show at White Cube in 2011 was a bit more cohesive). In either case, if you’re passing the RA, go into the courtyard and have a look at those subs. They’re fun!