Remove man-and-his-mark
article thumbnail

Man and His Mark, 1970

Logo Design Love

Man and His Mark was the title of Impressions Number Three from February 1970. Man and his mark: Recently a TV panel show involved three husband and wife teams in a word association game designed to indicate a couple’s emotional compatibility. Ceramic marks.

article thumbnail

Man and His Mark – Trademarks and Company Symbols Designed by Les Mason 1970

The Logo Smith

The post Man and His Mark – Trademarks and Company Symbols Designed by Les Mason 1970 appeared first on The Logo Smith All Content © 2020 The Logo Smith.™ Not sure you’d get away with titling a publication Man and His Mark today, but that just shows how things have changed.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Stanley Chow exhibition will showcase illustrations of people from film, stage and TV

Creative Boom

Photography by Jack Roe 'Local legend' brings some of his most famous faces to The Edge in Chorlton over the next few months. One of the world's most renowned illustrators has chosen some of his most iconic works for a 14-week exhibition at The Edge Theatre & Arts Centre in Chorlton.

article thumbnail

Ben Zank questions social norms through hyper-staged performance art

Creative Boom

© Ben Zank We profile the rising star of American art photography and explore his use of nudes, bizarre scenarios and celebrations of the absurd. A native New Yorker, Ben was born in 1991 and began photography at the age of 18 when he discovered a Pentax ME Super in his grandmother's attic.

Art 329
article thumbnail

Rothko versus The Robots: How I learned how to stop worrying about AI killing our creativity

Creative Boom

In this insightful piece, he explains why and shares his views on this controversial topic. A few weeks ago, I visited the Mark Rothko exhibition in Paris. The exhibition chartered the story of a Lativan-born man (Markus Yakovlevich Rothkowitz) who became the toast of wealthy Manhattan art collectors.

article thumbnail

Emil Paun's sci-fi illustrations imagine a more hopeful future for humanity

Creative Boom

UK-based illustrator Emil Paun has channelled his childhood love of sci-fi novels into an optimistic series of images that imagine a more hopeful future for humanity. That's Emil Paun's approach in his illustration series Techno Optimism. This is connected to his interests outside of spaceships and robots. It comes and goes.

article thumbnail

Creatives reveal when they made a fool of themselves, and the lessons they learned

Creative Boom

My Posca marker snapped from overenthusiastic mark-making, and the black paint cascaded everywhere," he explains. "I Then in walked Kendrick, with his entourage and project manager, to see a pasty-white, fully-grown man on all fours, topless, on the brink of tears." Let's be honest, we all make mistakes, all year round.

Client 413