Monday, July 15, 2013
Monday, May 20, 2013
Tomorrow
Tomorrow I catch three planes to far, far away places
Washington, Denver and San Jose
![]() |
Joan Didion and her Chevrolet Corvette Stingray in Hollywood, 1972. |
To meet some brand new faces
So I bid fare thee to this fine city
And welcome some natural spaces.
Through wonder, eyes open, a brave new world
before me, a wide open road unfurls
So long skeletons, I know where you'll be
While I traipse around and find my way to the sea
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Brooklyn part 1
Summer, 1974.
Photographer Danny Lyon spent two months snapping pictures of daily life in the borough.
Photographer Danny Lyon spent two months snapping pictures of daily life in the borough.
![]() |
Riis Park, a public beach in Brooklyn |
![]() |
Bond St, Brooklyn, July, 1974 |
![]() |
Example of Brooklyn architecture on Vanderbilt Ave, June 1974 |
![]() |
Nostrand Ave |
![]() |
Fire set by Brooklyn Polytechnic for testing |
![]() |
Kosciusco Public Swimming Pool, Bed Stuy, July 1974 |
![]() |
Williamsburg Bridge facing Manhattan |
more here
The Zombies
An English rock band formed in 1962, their 1968 album, Odessey and Oracle, was twelve tracks written by the group's principal songwriters, Argent and Chris White and is ranked number 100 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
Mad Men Art
Illustrator for Mad Men's sixth season Key Art is Brian Sanders, a designer who started in the 1960s in print
![]() |
a ten-part serial for Woman's Mirror, 1964
|
![]() |
Brian’s first published illustration painted in acrylics |
with paintings and drawings only,
Did a Fante cover
a portrait of Noel Coward for Nova magazine
and was known for his Bubble & Streak style as used for this,
season 2013, Mad Men -
season 2013, Mad Men -
“Matthew Weiner, inspired by a childhood memory of lush, painterly illustrations on T.W.A. flight menus, decided to turn back the promotional clock. He pored over commercial illustration books from the 1960s and ’70s and sent images to the show’s marketing team, which couldn’t quite recreate the look he was after. ‘Finally,’ he said, ‘they just looked up the person who had done all these drawings that I really loved, and they said: ‘Hey, we’ve got the guy who did them. And he’s still working. His name is Brian Sanders.' NY Times
In the era that “Mad Men” depicts, Mr. Sanders said, his illustration “gods” were mostly Americans — Bernie Fuchs, whose work defined much of the 1960s’ look of magazines like McCall’s and TV Guide and who was perhaps Mr. Sanders’ strongest influence; Lynn Buckham, known for a clean, Norman Rockwell-like style; Jack Potter, who dropped out of advertising in the ’50s and became a renowned teacher; and Joe De Mers, whose impossibly curvy pin-up-type womenhelped set the template for a character like Joan Harris on “Mad Men.” NY Times
more here amctv and here Brian Saunders via whorange
more here amctv and here Brian Saunders via whorange
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)