Art & Development

Frieze rocks

I love Frieze. I hope to attend the Frieze Art Fair one day. It’s exceptional because scholarship and artists’ projects are just as prominent as sales. The magazine is beautifully designed, well written, global yet succinct.

Here are even more reasons to be excited about contemporary art, courtesy of Frieze:

1. This cover.

Cover of the June-Aug 2010 issue of Frieze

2. Frieze Fair Podcasts
My two favorite art podcasts are recordings of art lectures from the Tate and from Frieze Art Fair. (Right now I’m working my way through Tate’s series of talks held in conjunction with their recent exhibition, Pop Life.)

3. Frieze Projects
Frieze produces commissioned projects at every fair, including a highly competitive, juried Cartier Award that is open to artists to apply. The 2010 awardees were just announced, and their projects sound fantastic.

Jeffrey Vallance is especially entertaining and delightfully disruptive.

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Art & Development, Research

Graphic design for art institutions

One of the things I am really enjoying is the top-notch graphic design employed by so many art organizations in the UK—it’s not an afterthought, even among governmental organizations!

Loving:

The Tate logo

The Bluecoat’s printed ephemera

A Bluecoat catalog (left) and calendar (right).

A Bluecoat catalog (left) and calendar (right).

This handsome poster exterior from the Castlefield Gallery (an artist’s run org; believe it!)

Poster/brochure face from Castlefield Gallery

Poster/brochure face from Castlefield Gallery

The amazing exhibition design at the Museum of Science and Industry.

Lightbox in science wing of MOSI.

Lightbox in science wing of MOSI.

More illumnated didactic texts.

More illuminated didactic texts.

This isn’t graphic design, but it’s still brilliant exhibit design.

Video holograms projected into dioramas tell historic scientists' stories from the first person. Brilliant!

Video holograms projected into dioramas tell historic scientists' stories from the first person. Brilliant!


A high-tech counterpoint to Manila's Ayala Museum.

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