— Swiss Legacy

Archive
Magazine





Apartamento issue 07

Featuring: Bruce Benderson, Masha Orlov, Zoe Bedeaux, Kenny Scharf, Juana Molina, Ola Rindal, Juergen Teller, Nick Currie, Thomas Dozol, Adan Jodorowsky, Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi, Gemma Holt, Jordi Labanda, Aldo & Marirosa Ballo, Mariuccia Casadio, Nicolas Trembley, Crisis vs. Creativity, Liselotte Watkins, Plus: everyday life food supplement with essays by Chiara Merino and Claire Frisbie, Red, green & yellow peppers, Alice Waters, Jim Haynes and Gloria & Anaïs

Also includes the Oficio y Criterio supplement.





Stockholm based studio Unestablished just launched their new website. I really like the work they’re doing with Rodeo Magazine.

phpThumb_generated_thumbnail.jpeg
phpThumb_generated_thumbnail-1.jpeg
phpThumb_generated_thumbnail-2.jpeg
phpThumb_generated_thumbnail-3.jpeg

FILE Magazine is a bi-annual publication featuring a broad selection of visual communication in the fields of graphic design, art, photography, fashion and moving image. Beautifully presented in a 30 x 39 cm hard cover with a full colour 96 pages stitched inside. Each issue is accompanied by a full-screen online player, Screening in full the issue’s short films, music videos and documentaries. A magazine to Watch & Read.

Content includes interviews with Dorothy Iannone, Mercedes Helnwein, Kirsten Justesen. Features written by Tuur Van Balen, Anne Bernard, Pierre Radisic, Luisa fici. Short film and documentary features written by film directors; Reynold Reynolds, Thomas Comerford, Dana Wilson, Michelle Coomber, Michael Rittmannsberger, Magali Charrier, Kim Albright and more…

img_poster1.jpg
img_poster7.jpg
img_poster10.jpg

Poster tribune is a bi-anual newspaper devoted to posters. It contains 12 pages of illustrated articles and 3 posters (65 cm x 96 cm).
Posters are equally artistic creations, communication tools and witnesses to social, commercial and artistic trends from specific periods. Poster Tribune examines such posters and breathes new life into these short-lived street exhibitions. Through these articles, Poster Tribune promotes the international and Swiss contemporary graphic scene, and reports on the poster’s history and latest news.

For this first issue, Poster Tribune looks into posters that, not content with promoting their specific event, bring a new poetic or offbeat dimension through the skilled use of détournement. The public can relate to these posters because they counter conventional images that we are used to. The détourned poster is based on an analogy or a metaphor of the poster’s focus. The graphic designer chooses to distort an image to give it a totally new function than that which was originally intended. By détourning an image, the focus takes on a new dimension. In a way, it then forms part of the designer’s approach and is no longer ‘merely’ from the illustrator’s perspective. The subversive poster has neither the same aims nor the same challenges. It focuses on upsetting existing values and deliberately imposing an image that goes against what is expected; without there being the slightest analogy or metaphor. The subversive poster tries to be free and demands pure creativity. It has a Dada style (although it is not often a conscious legacy), which does away with convention, often playing with extravagance, derision and humour. In some respects, the détourned or subversive poster is a means of giving the item it is promoting a ‘different’ perspective. It characterises our generation by revisiting and reinterpreting references from other times, styles and contexts. But first and foremost, it is also a way for today’s graphic designer to be an author, poet or designer in an infinite world of abundant images.

THUMB.jpg
Tiger#2_02.jpg
Tiger#2_05.jpg
Tiger#2_16.jpg

Tiger Magazine #2: Another great project designed by Folch Studio.