Mr. Hipp

Dan Hipp’s extraordinarily lively illustrations are borne of some mash-up universe in which comics, sci-fi and action-adventure fiction have both been flipped over on their backs, only to reveal their shockingly adorable undersides. Here’s an example in which everyone’s favorite boy reporter, Tin Tin wanders into Alien territory.

Mr. Hipp

Hipp has tons of similarly playful and resoundingly vibrant works throughout this blog. Looking through them all, it becomes apparent that his is a talent that is truly only possible in this digital century, in which ideas can’t help but cross-fertilize, breaking the boundaries of franchises and intellectual property, and resulting in such agreeable end products. Check it all out here.

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Tang Yau Hoong

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia-based illustrator Tang Yau Hoong is a master of warping negative-space to create surprising pictorial illusions.

Tang Yau Hoong

Some of his work recalls the brainy, minimalistic surrealism of Guy Billout, of whom I’m a huge fan. This similarity is true occasionally in Tang’s style but more often in the sheer wit of the work. See his full portfolio here.

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What They’re “Protecting” Us From

My friend Anil Dash is smart and eloquent and capable of writing blog posts that floor you with their insight and their almost pitch perfect understanding of the form. You can explore the entirety of Dashes.com to enjoy them all, but his most recent entry, published just today, has got to be some kind of high-water mark.

Anil argues that the single greatest entrepreneur of our time is a living refutation of the oft-touted conservative fallacy and propagandistic line that liberal values are bad for business. In fact, this individual personifies the successful realization of liberalism. I tried to choose an excerpt to quote here, but the whole thing is so good, it demands to be read in its entirety.

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Space Trek

One of the things I like in imagery — photographic or graphic — is when an artist or a curator is able to capture the quietude hidden within moments of great activity. This is why I like photographer Carli Davidson’s shots of pets shaking their heads so much, and why I can’t stop talking about John Hilgart’s 4CP project. These bodies of work unearth the fleeting elegance buried in unexpected places and demonstrate that the more closely we look at things, the more likely we’ll see beauty.

This is also why I’m crazy for Space Trek an image blog that finds great, unexpected moments of quietude in the original “Star Trek” television show from the late 1960s. Here’s one example:

Space Trek

Space Trek’s purpose is to show us “The quiet despair of the Starship Enterprise,” and it does this by highlighting the transitional moments from the television show that we normally don’t pay much attention to. Each screen capture is like a little portrait of the show’s flimsily makeshift architecture and sickly technicolor lighting. They remind me how eerie the show felt to me when I saw it for the first time, in endless reruns, as a kid. The show was not just fantastic, it was strange and somewhat off, almost unseemly in its otherworldliness. That’s something that seems to have been lost in nearly every reboot of the franchise since. Anyway, Space Trek is worth a look; see it here.

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Photos of Pets Shaking Their Heads

A great gallery of photographer Carli Davidson’s shots of pets caught as they shake their heads.

Carli Davidson Photography

It’s no secret that I’m a dog person, so of course I find these adorable, even the shots that completely distort the animal’s face. But what I really like about these images is the way they capture something hidden but that’s been right out there in the open forever, until technology came along and allowed us to see it. See the full gallery here.

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Pop Sensation

An entertaining blog of vintage paperbacks — of the seedy variety that once allowed commuters and housewives to safely dive into the racier parts of mid-20th century Americana. Adhering to the dictum that one should not judge a book by its cover, blogger Rex Parker provides details on the plot, tone and unintentionally hilarious details of the book — he even posts back covers.

Part of the blog’s purpose seems to be to create a sales catalog for Parker’s collection of these paperbacks, as he lists prices with each post. The net effect, though, is that Pop Sensation is a rich trove of specimens from the tradition of truly commercial art. This is not high-minded design or illustration; this is down and dirty commercial work intended to titillate and rack up sales. Nevertheless, lots of these samples are fantastic works.

Pop Sensation

On a sideways note, the paperback featured here in the upper right is an early edition of what eventually became one of the strangest — and best — film noirs of all time, “Kiss Me Deadly,” which was recently re-released by Criterion. It’s a cynical and surprisingly satirical take on the detective genre, directed by Robert Aldrich and starring a captivatingly vain Ralph Meeker. Its ending, which had been mysteriously hacked by unknown hands, also inadvertently served as a critical bit of inspiration for a very different school of filmmaking. Read more about that here, or peruse the rich Pop Sensation archives here.

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Street Tag

Would-be graffiti artists too timid to actually break the law can make use of this new iPhone app from the U.K.’s Channel 4, which lets anyone tag any real world location via augmented reality. The virtual tags are then available for viewing by anyone else running the app.

Street Tag

Read more over at Creative Review.

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Cinemetrics

This thesis project from designer and technologist Frederic Brodbeck “is about measuring and visualizing movie data in order to reveal the characteristics of films and to create a visual ‘fingerprint’ for them. Information such as the editing structure, color, speech or motion are extracted, analyzed and transformed into graphic representations so that movies can be seen as a whole and easily interpreted or compared side by side.”

Cinemetrics

This is gorgeous work and much more thoughtful than most similar projects, too. But frankly I’m a little weary of infographics being applied to ‘unexpected’ subject matter. Yes, it’s visually amusing to see beautiful abstractions of the mundane, but not everything needs to be reductively interpreted into its most simplistically brainy-looking form. The world is not a dashboard nor does it really benefit from being portrayed as one; it’s more interesting than that.

See the whole project here.

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Ghostery

Ghostery is a plug-in available for all major browsers that “gives you a roll-call of the ad networks, behavioral data providers, Web publishers, and other companies interested in your activity.” It allows you to block or allow the many legitimate and not-so-legitimate tracking scripts, img tags and iframes embedded into Web pages of all sorts that are quietly collecting information about your browsing habits, interests and demographic information. I’ve used Ghostery in the past but was pleasantly surprised to see recently that it’s been polished up significantly and made much more user-friendly. It also has a great name. Download it here.

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The New Spider-Man Is Half-Black, Half-Hispanic

I try not to overdo it here with the super-hero stuff, but this I had to write about. Forbes reports on the reaction to Marvel’s recent — and typically gimmicky — decision to “kill” Spider-Man’s longtime alter ego Peter Parker and replace him with Miles Morales, a young kid whose ethnic heritage is half-black, half-Hispanic.

The article points to this post at I’m Not Racist But… which captures some of the public reaction to this decision. It’s not pretty.

Spider-Man

Notwithstanding the fact that when comic book publishers sentence major characters like these to death, they never stay dead and they always return in some form, I think any furor over this is ridiculous. First, the original Spider-Man was a kid from Queens, New York, and it makes all the sense in the world that a kid from Queens, New York, circa 2011 would be half-black and half-Hispanic. Second, the beauty of these characters is that we get to constantly reinvent their origins in new and interesting ways. This may not be a great example of pop reinvention, but it’s a perfectly legitimate one.

Read the full article here.

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