Cropped Will Cardini artwork

August 7, 2009

Folk #4

Filed under: Comics Criticism — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 8:23 pm

I just got Folk #4 in the mail today, courtesy of the source of sci-fi mini-comic greatness, Tyler Stafford. This is the third issue of Folk that I’ve read, and they just keep getting better and better! Stafford’s storylines harken back to old-school sci-fi pulp stories but the art and layouts are informed by a twenty-first century cartoon aesthetic. According to the intro, Stafford’s computer is “on the fritz” so this issue is 11 x 17 sheets folded in half (I guess he draws the pages 8.5 x 11?). The larger art looks good, maybe Stafford should continue to make his comics this big.

Here’s a page that encapsulates the concept of the issue:

That page also showcases one of the aspects of Stafford’s comics that I dig the most, the way he blends his borderless scenes together while keeping the flow between them highly readable.

This next page, though, shows the most interesting thing about this comic, the way that Stafford portrays the experience of feeling someone else’s dream on tape:

I highly recommend this comic and I’m going to keep buying everything that Stafford puts out. You can buy Folk #4 here.

August 5, 2009

GCPM Website

Filed under: Admin — Tags: , — Will Cardini @ 11:47 am

I just threw up a website for the Gold County Paper Mill last nite, go check it out:

August 3, 2009

Vincent Collins

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 10:44 pm

I’m trying to work on animations for my installation for Dispersal/Return, but I just can’t concentrate.

Rhizome fairly recently posted a Vincent Collins animation, Fantasy, which I finally got around to watching tonite.

It’s an extremely mesmerizing video, and it’s similar in structure (objects melting into one another) to what I’m working on, so I decided to scour the internet for more about Vincent Collins. I found his myspace, he’s doing CGI animations now. His about me is incredible, here’s a quote:

Computers were available, but they cost a million dollars and you need a roomful of scientists to operate them. I swear to God.
I went to a demonstration of one of these machines, but they knew I couldn’t afford to buy their crummy system, so they kind of ignored me.
There were a couple of guys there that were phony as hell. Both of them had “Calvin Klein” embroidered on their shirts, as if it was their own goddam name, or something. One guy was the kind of a phony that has to give himself room when he talks. He kept saying he would buy two or three of these systems right away. What a goddam phony.

I also came across It Depends on your Perspective from Sesame Street, which was also animated by Vincent Collins.

I hadn’t thought about that animation in years but when I saw it again I instantly remembered how much I’d loved it when I was a kid.

July 31, 2009

Jason Hackenwerth

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: , — Will Cardini @ 5:14 pm

via design boom.

via web urbanist.

July 28, 2009

Joyteeth

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: , , — Will Cardini @ 9:11 am

My buddy Jose-Luis Olivares just clued me in to a blog for this (White River Junction-based?) sketch group (excuse me I mean “multi-participant reactive drawing space”) called Joyteeth that he’s a part of.

Here’s a choice Chuck McBuck Charles Formsan drawing (damn that guy’s good!) from the blog:

July 24, 2009

Ernst Haeckel

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: , — Will Cardini @ 7:51 am

via woest & vredig.

via counterform.

via tangible interactions.

July 21, 2009

R.I.P. Heinz Edelmann

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: , , — Will Cardini @ 11:31 pm

Edelmann was the art director for Yellow Submarine. He was a well-known illustrator in Europe.

Zardoz

Filed under: SF Reviews — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 2:55 am


via locosceles.

My friend Will Sellari showed me the movie Zardoz on Sunday night.


cover of the novelization, via jimthing.

It was a violent movie (starring Sean Connery!) with a barely sensical climax, a weird dislike of penises and an even stranger inability to understand erections, but besides all that, these masks were really amazing:


via the rope store.

Also there were some great inflatables. Trailer:

July 20, 2009

Apollo Program Patches

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: , , — Will Cardini @ 11:24 am

To celebrate the fortieth anniversary of Apollo 11’s lunar landing, here’s some Apollo program iconography courtesy of the Kennedy Space Center website.

Apollo 11:

Apollo 12:

Apollo 13:

Apollo 17:

I’m jealous of whoever got to design these. NASA, I’m disappointed in your inconsistent usage of Roman and Arabic numerals. Where’s your style sheet? Also, aren’t y’all glad that NASA has a sense of pomp, and wouldn’t let the next moon lander be named after Stephen Colbert? I know I am. Thanks for keeping mythology alive.

July 17, 2009

Amy Marie Long

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: , , — Will Cardini @ 10:04 am

I love images like this last one, that catalogue a bunch of weird, discrete phenomenon by arranging them into some kind of a grid.

artist website

thnx allison