Books on Shirts. Shirts on a Mission.

Out of Print Clothing celebrates the world’s great stories through fashion. Their t- shirts feature iconic and often out of print book covers. Some are classics, some are just curious enough to make great t-shirts, but all are striking works of art.

They work closely with artists, authors and publishers to license the content that ends up in their collections. Each shirt is treated to feel soft and worn like a well-read book. Out of Print sees book cover art as a natural bridge between readers and authors’ ideas and their tees as ultimate conversation starters.

Founders Jeffrey LeBlanc and Todd Lawton have been pals since the 2nd grade in Oregon. In addition to spreading the joy of reading through their tees, they acknowledge that many parts of the world don’t have access to books at all. They are working to change that. For each shirt they sell, one book is donated to a community in need through our partner Books For Africa. Just this month, Out of Print sent a forty foot container of textbooks and library books to Tanzania. Hence the moto, “Books on Shirts. Shirts on a Mission.”

 

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More Creative Cartography

Thanks to David McCandless from Information is Beautiful.

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Creative Bookshelving

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Who Would Call It Graffiti ?

Whether you call it street art, vandalism or graffiti, Portuguese artist Alexandre Farto, AKA Vhils, has spread his amazing architectural portraiture from Moscow to Milan. The 23 year old artist has been altering building facades and the walls of abandoned homes, offices and workshops with paint, hammers, axes and jackhammers for nearly ten years. his mesmerizing architectural embellishments range from small hidden images to building-sized portraits. You can see and learn more on his website

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The World According To San Francisco

Thanks to Generic for this post.

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The Joy of Travel

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That’s Mass Production

Sunflower Seeds 2010 Tate Modern Museum, London October 12, 2020 to May 2, 2011.

Photo Credit: Ai Weiwei Tate Modern

“Ai Weiwei’s Sunflower Seeds challenges our first impressions: what you see is not what you see, and what you see is not what it means. The sculptural installation is made up of what appear to be millions of sunflower seed husks, apparently identical but actually unique. Although they look realistic, each seed is made out of porcelain. And far from being industrially produced, ‘readymade’ or found objects, they have been intricately hand-crafted by hundreds of skilled artisans. Poured into the interior of the Turbine Hall’s vast industrial space, the seeds form a seemingly infinite landscape. The casual act of walking on its surface contrasts with the precious nature of the material, the effort of production and the narrative and personal content that make this work a powerful commentary on the human condition.

One of China’s leading Conceptual artists, Ai is known for his social or performance-based interventions as well as object-based artworks. Citing Marcel Duchamp, he refers to himself as a ‘readymade’, merging his life and art in order to advocate both the freedoms and responsibilities of individuals. ‘From a very young age I started to sense that an individual has to set an example in society’, he has said. ‘Your own acts and behaviour tell the world who you are and at the same time what kind of society you think it should be.’ As material for his art, he draws upon the society and politics of contemporary China as well as cultural artefacts such as ancient Neolithic vases and traditional Chinese furniture, whose function and perceived value he challenges and subverts.

Sunflower Seeds is the latest of a number of works that Ai has made using porcelain, one of China’s most prized exports. These have included replicas of vases in the style of various dynasties, dresses, pillars, oil spills and watermelons. Like those previous works, the sunflower seeds have all been produced in the city of Jingdezhen, which is famed for its production of Imperial porcelain. Each ceramic seed was individually hand-sculpted and hand-painted by specialists working in small-scale workshops. This combination of mass production and traditional craftsmanship invites us to look more closely at the ‘Made in China’ phenomenon and the geopolitics of cultural and economic exchange today.

For Ai, sunflower seeds – a common street snack shared by friends – carry personal associations with Mao Zedong’s brutal Cultural Revolution (1966-76). While individuals were stripped of personal freedom, propaganda images depicted Chairman Mao as the sun and the mass of people as sunflowers turning towards him. Yet Ai remembers the sharing of sunflower seeds as a gesture of human compassion, providing a space for pleasure, friendship and kindness during a time of extreme poverty, repression and uncertainty.

Sunflower Seeds is a sensory and immersive installation, which we can touch, walk on and listen to as the seeds shift beneath our feet. To touch one piece is to interact with the whole, a poignant commentary on the relationship between the individual and the masses. There are over one hundred million seeds, five times the number of Beijing’s population and nearly a quarter of China’s internet users. The work seems to pose numerous questions. What does it mean to be an individual in today’s society? Are we insignificant or powerless unless we act together? What do our increasing desires, materialism and number mean for society, the environment and the future?

Ai Weiwei was born in 1957 in Beijing, China, where he lives and works.”

 

 

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Memorial De La Shoah

The central Paris Memorial de la Shoah on Wednesday launched a moving exhibition in tribute to the French -Jewish writer Irène Nemirovsky.The extensive collection includes a series of letters she sent months before her arrest and deportation to Auschwitz and an original audio recording of an interview she gave in 1939.

The exhibition, titled “Sometimes I feel I am a stranger”, features about 250 documents – some previously shown at New York’s Museum of Jewish Heritage   in 2008 – including family pictures, original manuscripts of Suite Française and David Golder, Ms. Nemirovsky’s most famous novels, and dozens of articles she wrote for major newspapers and magazines in the 1930s.

Born in 1903, Nemirovsky was just fifteen when she emigrated to France to escape post-Russian Revolution chaos. She published her first short stories at the tender age of eighteen and the controversial novel, David Golder, in 1929.

The exhibition captures, with several heartbreaking letters and notes, the tragedy of  Nemirovsky’s fate and her last efforts to obtain help, only several days before her arrest. Among the show’s most significant items is a letter she sent to the head of France’s collaborationist Vichy regime, Marshal Philippe Pétain. “I’ve learned that your government had decided to take measures against stateless people,” she writes. “I can’t believe, Mr. Marshal, that there isn’t any distinction made between undesirable people and honorable foreigners.”

Ms. Nemirovsky was arrested on July 13, 1942 by French police and deported to Auschwitz, where she died of typhoid fever. She first gained international recognition in 2004, more than 60 years after she wrote Suite Française.

The exhibition runs from October 13th, 2010 – March 8th, 2011

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Is This NYC’s Quirkiest Museum?

The City Reliquary is a not-for-profit community museum and civic organization located in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Through permanent display of New York City artifacts, rotating exhibits of community collections, and annual cultural events, The City Reliquary connects visitors to both the past and present of New York.

The City Reliquary began in 2002 at a ground-floor apartment window at the intersection of Havemeyer and Grand Streets in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. If a passerby paused to admire the window’s contents, they would discover a small button on the building’s exterior the size of a doorbell. Push the button and the recorded voice of Dave Herman would guide your eye around: two-and-a-half links of a “city hall window chain,” a set of dentures found in Dead Horse Bay, Statue of Liberty figurines. Next to them, carefully painted directions point toward nearby landmarks. Orienting your body toward the Williamsburg Bridge, which the sign tells you is 1.3 miles to the west, you face the heart of New York City.

In January 2006, The City Reliquary moved to 370 Metropolitan Avenue, a storefront only a few blocks from its original location. Collections have expanded and precious wall space has all but disappeared. State of Liberty postcards,1939 World’s Fair souvenirs, burlesque costumes, terracotta fragments of landmark buildings, subway tokens, geological core samples, paint chips from the L train, and a “very old shovel” each tell their own story of New York City’s past. Rotating exhibitions of community collections can be seen in the storefront window: giant pencils, copper jelly molds, pulleys, and flashlights – each celebrate the community of New York’s present.

As the museum has grown, so has its programming. The City Reliquary hosts block parties, backyard concerts, and film events throughout the year. To foster future generations of collectors, The City Reliquary collaborates with PS132 to create exhibitions of student work. Every year, generous donations from patrons help them to continue expanding the collections and programs.

 

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Stay on Track with FictFact

The website FictFact has compiled an enormous database of serial fiction, keeping track of the order and release dates of hundreds of book series so you don’t have to.

As readers and fans, we often come late to a compelling fiction series or discover an author whose work has been translated and published out of order of original publication. Now FictFact from Brain Scan Studios helps us keep track and stay up to date on our favorite authors. For instance, if you wanted to read the amusing and intriguing Inspector Montalbano detective series by Sicilian writer Andrea Camilleri, you could follow this link to see the entire series laid out in order of translation and publication.

Fictfact is a free service that helps to organize serial fiction collections, to read series in correct order, receive updates when titles are released and to share series and authors with friends.

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