Sunday, December 30, 2007

Re: Text in Sculpture

Incorporating text in a monument is a special challenge for the artist. This version of the 23rd Psalm is a small feat compared to the Vietnam War Memorial. Sand blasting is now used to execute the computer output; however, the Kennedy Inaugural Address was over 2,000 hand chiseled characters.

Friday, December 14, 2007

re Birdhouses

Pick up some scrap lumber. Make some birdhouses. Line them up along a road.
Sell them.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

re holiday thought for 2007

This special holiday photo was taken along Aurora Avenue North near Seattle.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Re Work Disguised as Art


This is image is quite spectacular if you think that it was created from scratch in Photoshop 5.0 requiring 200 hours of time starring at an LCD screen. Sorry to admit that it is just an unaltered photo shot with a low cost point and shoot camera. Hopefully it still works as a reminder of the luxury of waste.

Monday, October 29, 2007

re txt mssg sgn

The wind assisted communication when it blew away the superfluous letters and converted this used car lot sign into a text message.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Saturday, October 13, 2007

re THINK


The original IBM ad campaign might seem to have permanently damaged the word "Think",
however this recent pissoir message puts the verb in a new context.

Monday, August 6, 2007

re Please Ring Bell

San Francisco is a city of doorbells. Pick any street in any part of the city and the visual variations of such technology is compelling. They often betray far more than the owner might realize. After 50 years of over-painting, rusting, fingering, polishing, and labeling, it is still quite likely that a bell somewhere inside will sound the alarm when you give the button a push.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

re Back View


The back view is rarely disappointing. . . even of religion.

Saturday, July 7, 2007

re Red Cross


It is difficult to imagine a more successful rendering of the basic red cross design. Part of the impact might be the context of the vintage handpainted VW bus, but there is also something exceptional about the way the stencil failed to impede the running paint.

Friday, June 22, 2007

re Stone Pyramid

If someone accidentally knocked down a life-sized balanced stone sailboat....maybe a stone pyramid might be a great plan B.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

re: Roadside Shrine


Roadside shrines appear on various highways to commemorate where people have died in accidents. This shrine is filled with descriptive artifacts that include a toy motorcycle, an unopened bottle of beer, Mardi Gra beads, color photos and Honda logos. Obviously only part of the story. The concept of the roadside shrine dates back to paleolithic time. Early shrines were linked to the worship of pagan gods and provided travelers with a place to rest or worship.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

re TV


A homeless man found a TV set that had been discarded along along a sidestreet. He knew exactly what to do with it. Decisive action.

Re Nice "E"


The search for a perfect letterform often leads to the most beautiful kind of failure.
Abandoned signage does not require that the meaning must also be abandoned.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

re Not Empty


The problem of space and storage and access is universal and ancient. Is the idea of "random structure" an oxymoron? The unstructured aesthetic.

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

re Empty


The space between buildings is often more interesting than the buildings. Things can be added but seldom does anything improve on the beauty of the empty space.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

re Stone Sailboat

What a fine boat. It was made by a guy who loves to stack rocks that are precariously balanced one on another. This sailboat is life size and bigger than life at the same time.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

re Water Music


Mixing the real world with musical notation has its own set of implications. Do the notes have a physical existence? The reflection in the water and the ripples confirm something that is contradictory. But it is rather early in the morning at Greenlake.

Re Controlling Chance


The interplay between chance and order keeps us guessing. Why the carefully broken plate? Why the numbers? Just waiting for the mapping that will make it a directory for a home page.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

re Public Table


A well designed piece of furniture is one which takes into account intended function, use of materials, and visual context. Being deprived of function, this table mimics the environment in a brutal display of vernacular sturdiness.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Roy De Forest

Sad to read that the painter Roy De Forest died. He loved dogs. Always had at least two. Often used them as subjects in his painting.

Mr. De Forest identified himself as an “obscure visual constructor of mechanical delights” and quoted a talking dog, named Samuel Johnson, who said, “What is current taste but old desires made palatable by present boredom.” -- from NYT

The Ampersand and the Treble Clef


There can be considerable pleasure in making a connection between things. Hard to resist drawing a ductile line between heterogenous things, even when it serves no clear purpose.

Pleasure of Things Virtual


Perhaps we now live in a time when the virtual realities are often the preferable reality. Must confess that the painted curtains make this house far more memorable than it once was with bare windows.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

re Toilet Training


It was recently reported that Seattle's public toilet project is being phased out. What fun they were. Designed in Germany. A product that combined the talents of graphic designers, engineers, medical doctors, plumbers, sociologists, and the homeless beta testers. During their short tenure in this city it was hoped that they would provid a secure and relatively clean place for one, to shoot up, to make love, to get warm, to wash up, and even to read the Sunday funnies. The installation of an outside security camera did not deter the abuses of one facility, since there were apparently 7,418 reports of human waste on the floor in the first two years. Apparently it is easier to toilet train dogs than it is people. Seems it will cost $700,000 to vacate the $700,000 a year maintenance contract that was set to run until 2014. One can only wonder if maybe the project failed because the signage used the wrong typeface. As they say at IBM... "No one ever got fired for using Helvetica." -- F.U.

Just Say Non


Before and after concepts are a good way to test the rules. Mondrian was one of the first graphic designers. He made it very easy to steal his ideas, thus insuring his permanent place in history. The Grateful Dead understood this tactic in that they allowed concert goers to freely record and share their music. Even a computer can be programmed to produce a fairly convincing Mondrian.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007


Great graphic design is not rocket science . . .but it is like chemistry. A great poster design often starts out in a test tube. -- F.U.

In the old days all type was set by hand. Each individual letter had to be picked up and placed in position. For better or for worse. . .photography has changed all of that. -- F.U.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007


“Take a point, stretch it into a line, curl it into a circle, twist it into a sphere, and punch through the sphere.”

— Albert Einstein

Big News

The news is out. A big new book is about to fly out of the bindery via Chronicle Books.
Hint: It will be required reading and prolonged looking for every image hungry designer on the planet.

Watch this space for further announcements.

F.U. esq.