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Siena Palio Banners


Young fellows from the Contrada del Leocorno (Unicorn) and Contrada di Valdimontone (Valley of the Ram), Siena. Image courtesy of LIFE.

While studying abroad in Italy a few years ago, I made my way to the city of Siena on a day trip. One of the signature events the city is known for is Il Palio, a horse race held in the tight confines of the Piazza del Campo. Held twice a year, in July and August, the race divides the medieval walled city into seventeen rival neighborhoods or contrade, each of which are represented by a horse and rider. What caught my eye while I was there were the bold, graphic, colorful banners representing each city ward. These banners have definitely been a source of inspiration for me, and a little bit of that can be seen in an installation piece I did called Streetscape. Continue reading…

Marina Abramović and Art of the Present


Marina Abramović, The Artist Is Present

I’m going to transition from talking about crafting the past into discussing an artist whose work relies completely on the present moment. Last week, for the second week in a row, I found myself at a talk at SCAD Atlanta, this time given by one of the most influential artists of our time, Marina Abramović. Born in Yugoslavia, she was instrumental in helping raise the prominence of performance art, an often ill-understood medium of artistic expression. Her work tends to focus on body endurance and harnessing extreme self-awareness, all the while engaging the viewers in her presence during her performances. Her philosophy holds that art must “lift the human spirit,” but it also “has to be disturbing” in a way to actually resonate with an audience. Performance art depends heavily on how the artist interacts with live, physical space—it is most definitely ephemeral work. Continue reading…

The Modern-Day Court Painter


Andrew Vicari, self-proclaimed “King of Painters. All images are from the BWW Society.

As I discussed in my last post a few days ago, imagery and symbols play an important role in how we remember the past. Going along with that theme and applying it to institutions like governments and organizations, it’s a pretty common occurrence to see the use of imagery as a means to subtly project a level of legitimacy and to tell a preferred story of past events.

An amazing and quirky example comes to mind that I’d like to share: A month ago, I read an interesting article in the New York Times about British artist Andrew Vicari. This man somehow found himself on board a plane destined for oil-spewing Saudi Arabia in the 1970s, where he made a series of connections that landed him the role of court painter to the ruling House of Saud. On the unsteady political ground of the Arabian peninsula, the Saudi royal family looked to Vicari to provide them with large, gradiose paintings that told the story of their rise to power. Over the course of several decades, Vicari wined and dined with royal elite from all over Europe and the Middle East while reeling in obscene amounts of money for, quite frankly, nothing more than cliché-laden amateur work. Continue reading…

Connecting to and Crafting the Past


My grandfather, John H. “Harry” Link (third from the left), just before getting his Marine haircut in 1942. Image from the Anderson Independent.

For a good while now, I have been fascinated with researching my family history. I think it all started with a project in the eighth grade, but it’s been ongoing ever since. I would guess that a reason that dabbling in geneaology is such a popular past time among Americans is because our history here is so new, at only a few hundred years old—wait, but what about the Native Americans?—that’s a sad story for another day. Nevertheless, odds are, the ancestors of most Americans came here in order to start new, perhaps even to forget their past in search of better opportunities. Continue reading…

Chris Pullman: Design that Matters

If you’ve ever spent time watching anything on PBS, chances are you’ve seen a moving version of the image above accompanied by a signature electronic crescendo. This three-second end title sequence was the work of WGBH design director Chris Pullman in the 1970s and it still airs today.

Last night I was fortunate to hear Chris Pullman speak at an AIGA event at SCAD Atlanta. Pullman was VP of Design at WGBH Boston from 1973 to 2008, during which time the small local public television outfit grew into a producer of one-third of PBS’s total national content, responsible for such institutions as Julia Child’s cooking show, This Old House, NOVA, Masterpiece Theatre, Frontline, and children’s shows such as Arthur and Zoom. On-air projects made up only a small percentage of Pullman’s work there. His team was responsible for creating companion guides for programming, fundraising and outreach pieces, books, and eventually a slew of interactive work. Continue reading…

This is Illustration: The Work of Miroslav Sasek


A couple of years ago, I finished off a study abroad experience in Italy by doing a super-blitz tour of Western Europe. I wound up in London and couldn’t pass up one of the most touristy things to do there—making a trip to Harrod’s department store. Among all the glitz, a simple illustrated book jumped out at me. It was This is London, written and illustrated by Czech artist Miroslav Sasek. As I later found out, this children’s book was originally published in 1959 and what I saw was a reprint from 2004. I couldn’t seem to scrounge up any extra change to take the book home with me at the time, but thankfully I eventually found one wrapped up for me under the Christmas tree. Continue reading…

The Designer As Cultural Curator


Special Exhibition at the Sackler Museum at Harvard University, 2010

It’s been almost nine months since Furman University sent me packing from its beautiful campus with my big purple diploma into the daunting landscape of “the real world.” I must say, it’s true that an education rooted in the liberal arts seems to make you observe the world closely, to take nothing for granted, and to question everything. All of that certainly didn’t go away when I graduated; however, I seem to have lost a good outlet for expanding on everything I’ve been thinking about. So, finally, after a few ill-fated attempts in the past, I’m really leaping into the blogosphere. Continue reading…



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