I love Raphael Vincenzi’s eclectic, in-your-face illustrative style. His women are sarcastic, jaded, stylish, and fierce. He has a very large body of work, and most of his illustration incorporates typography and witticisms that give it conceptual depth. View his portfolio here.
Awesome installation by Clemens Behr, made with cardboard, paint, tape and trashbags. Installed in the Museum of Sculptures in Marl, Germany as part of the 2009 exhibition “Trashism/Trashismus”. Behr has a very interesting portfolio which can be seen here, and even made a cool stop motion of the installation process.
Amazing work from the prolific Mark Weaver. His composition and color sense are spot on, and he skillfully borrows from the visual language of times past. Collage and archival imagery can be hard to pull off, but he makes it look incredibly easy. His portfolio is definitely worth checking out.
Interesting work from Chad Hagen; in this series he pixelates various details from historical photographs, including the pyramids and Abraham Lincoln. His portfolio contains some other conceptually rich series like ‘Nonsensical Infographics’, ‘Type Experiments’, and ‘Analog Controls’. Check it out here.
Really loving Rachell Sumpter’s unique illustrative style. It’s at once hazy and detailed, colorful and quiet. Her characters seem to inhabit a dream world without distinct boundaries, left to wander a nostalgic landscape. View her portfolio here.
I’m loving this set of graphic posters from Thomas Addison. Provocative messages executed with striking graphic design. Check them out on his Behance portfolio.
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