Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Computer Graphics!


Work in progress with a Corinthian krater
from the National Archaeological Museum in Florence.

The time is high for me to get to grips with some graphics software. I'm tinkering with Inkscape: tracing photos and learning to manipulate the tools. Work produced in Illustrator and similar programs can feel too clean and smarmy, but it's a very useful and flexible method.

Sunday, 20 March 2011

Tuscan Wine

A second wine label for you: Brusco dei Barbi 2008.


It's easy to head straight for the ones with crests, swirls and embossing, but I was more attracted to this snappy and sharp text on what was a clean black background before I scraped it off the bottle. It has a 1960s Italian look, like a book cover; and the fiery colours are almost devilish. The bottles looked great side-by-side on the shelf. To make it even better, there's a crest on the back after all.

Saturday, 19 March 2011

Animal Shapes

I've been thinking about places that are shaped like animals.

My starting point is Sussex, which is said to be shaped like a pig. This is reasonably clear, and the rapes (the ancient divisions unique to Sussex) look a bit like a diagram of cuts of meat.


1: Suthsexia Vernacule Sussex. 1664 J. Blaeu
2: Sussex. 1720 Emanuel Bowen and John Owen in Britannia Depicta

Second comes the Flemish Lion: much more is made of this and there are numerous representations of the low countries as "Leo Belgicus": usually rampant or passant, with the head facing Germany, but occasionally the other way around, facing into France and, in this case, sejeant.


3: Nicolaes Visscher’s ‘Leo Belgicus’ map of 1650
4: 17th Century map on a postcard, showing De Waag (the weighing house) in Gouda.

Question: If the word for "pig-shaped" is porciform, what is "lion-shaped"?

There are plenty of other ideas around. Here are are a few:
South Africa: rhino head - Lesotho is the eye and Swaziland the open jaw.
Africa: rhino head - Lake Victoria is the eye.
Australia: a dog's head - the west coast is the muzzle and Tasmania a collar tag.
China: a cockerel - pecking at the Sea of Japan.
Ireland: a koala - Mayo and Kerry gripping onto a branch.

I'll leave you with the most entertaining one that I've seen recently: the USSR - as a bear chomping on Romania, here at Puffintalk's tumblr.


Mightily ursiform!

Oh, and the Silver Jews' "Animal Shapes", one of my favourite songs.

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Italian Alveolars

or The Trouble With Trills


Italian works best if the speaker can roll the "r"s. As you see from this picture, mine come out stubbornly rigid, while everyone around me demonstrates their somersaulting articulation.

Friday, 25 February 2011

Paris

At the start of this month I joined the college trip to Paris. I concentrated on my small watercolour set. Here are a few of the results.


Becka couldn't resist playing games with the ancient stone monkeys in the Louvre. Here she and Josef are, demonstrating their full respect for the exhibits.


Monday, 21 February 2011

Wine Labels & Calligraphy

I give you my wine label find of the year so far.

I enjoy the contents, but the label is very important in swaying me to spend my pounds on a bottle. This one was brought by a guest, but I certainly would have headed straight for it in a shop. Many of the dark lines in the design are gold on the label; and pomegranates are one of my favourite devices. Here's the back.
Joe Staples showed me the work of the calligrapher and wine label artist Jordan Jelev at this site.

... which leads on to Niels Shoe Meulman's work under the title of Calligraffiti, much of which is collected in a desirable book. Both of these artists mix the density of European scripts with the flair of Islamic calligraphy with a poise that I envy.

Friday, 11 February 2011

Cats

Living with a cat for the first time is a distracting experience. His name is Mopsy. He reminds me of Edward Lear's set of pictures of his cat Foss in heraldic poses.