Showing posts with label dune. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dune. Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2012

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Dune-themed travel posters





Dune-themed travel posters by DrFaustusAU, who also posted this week a few more pages in his Cthulhu by Dr. Seuss book.

*Previously: Disney attraction posters.

*Buy Dune toys at eBay.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Spectrum Awards 18 - - part 8

The eighth (and last) in a series of posts looking at artists featured in Spectrum 18. The art isn't necessarily what will appear in Spectrum 18, just what caught my eye at the artists' sites. Here's part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7.



Mark Zug, who has art on sale here.




Vanja Todoric.




Mark Scheff.



Thomas Scholes.



Ritchie Saciloc.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Illustration roundup


Kyle Maclachlan by Chris Wahl.




Tinkerbell on a tank by Adam Temple.





Naughty and Nice: The Good Girl Art of Bruce Timm. (I don't think this is available for order yet.) Via.




3D MST3K by Jack Rossi.




Skull helmet by Jason Levesque for sale.

*Buy Dune toys at eBay.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Dune action figures



Photo of action figures from the Dune movie. Many of these are available for fairly low prices at eBay. Via these sites.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Friday, October 30, 2009

Starscream and Midna cosplay (link roundup)




Starscream and Midna cosplay from the book Cosplay Fever.

And a few more links:

1. Here's what happens when someone brings fruit instead of the expected donuts on a Friday at LucasArts.

2. Matt Brooker draws the Mac of the future (in Kirby's style). Via.

3. Cute illustration of Baron Vladimir Harkonnen.

*Previously: Starscream by Edvard Munch.

*Buy cosplay collections at Amazon.

Starscream and Midna cosplay (link roundup)




Starscream and Midna cosplay from the book Cosplay Fever.

And a few more links:

1. Here's what happens when someone brings fruit instead of the expected donuts on a Friday at LucasArts.

2. Matt Brooker draws the Mac of the future (in Kirby's style). Via.

3. Cute illustration of Baron Vladimir Harkonnen.

*Previously: Starscream by Edvard Munch.

*Buy cosplay collections at Amazon.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Alejandro Jodorowsky's ‘Dune’: An exhibition of a film of a book that never was





Alejandro Jodorowsky's ‘Dune’: An exhibition of a film of a book that never was is currently on display at The Drawing Room in London:
Alejandro Jodorowsky's ‘Dune’: An exhibition of a film of a book that never was takes as its departure point the cult Chilean filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky’s attempted 1976 adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic science fiction novel ‘Dune’.

This exhibition includes production drawings made by Moebius, H.R Giger and Chris Foss alongside commissioned work made in response by three international contemporary artists Steven Claydon, Matthew Day Jackson and Vidya Gastaldon.

Following the release of his mystical Western ‘El Topo’ (1970) and his psychedelic quest movie ‘Holy Mountain’, Jodorowsky embarked on his ‘Dune’ project, gathering around him a group of collaborators that included the French comics artist Moebius, the Swiss artist H.R. Giger (who would later design the 1979 film ‘Alien’), the British sci-fi artist Chris Foss, and the British band Pink Floyd, who would provide the soundtrack. Among Jodorowsky’s proposed cast were Orson Welles, Mick Jagger and Salvador Dali, the last of whom was to play the Emperor of the Universe, who ruled from a golden toilet-cum-throne in the shape of two intertwined dolphins. Unable to secure the money from Hollywood to create the ‘Dune’ of his imagination, Jodorowsky abandoned the film before a single frame was shot. All that survives of this project is Jodorowsky’s extensive notes, and the production drawings of Moebius, Giger and Foss. These reveal a potential future for sci-fi movie making that eschewed the conservative, technology-based approach of American filmmakers in favour of something closer to a metaphysical fever-dream. This was, though, a future that would never take place. In 1977, George Lucas’ ‘Star Wars’ was released, and the history of sci-fi filmmaking, and even mainstream cinema, would never be the same again.

Dune’s themes of jihad, resource war and environmental degradation are especially pertinent to our current political moment and the exhibition also seeks to explore the notion of adaptation and counterfactual histories of film. The exhibition brings together production drawings for ‘Dune,’ alongside new works by Steve Claydon, Matthew Day Jackson and Vidya Gastaldon developed in reaction to Jodorowsky’s notes on ‘Dune’ - an extraordinary mixture of mystical pronouncement, philosophical speculation on the nature of authorship, cultural criticism and ‘70s film world gossip.

Steven Claydon uses a range of media to explore moments in history and draw provocative connotations between contemporary social concerns and obsolete ideologies.

Matthew Day Jackson makes paintings, drawings and sculptures that tackle America’s colonial past and its environmentally rapacious present. Vidya Gastaldon creates sculptures, drawings, video animations and prints which explore the neverland between fantasy and reality in works which are microcosms of hallucinatory, saccharine symbols.

The project is guest-curated by Tom Morton, Curator at The Hayward, London, Co-curator of The British Art Show 7 (2010 -11), and Contributing Editor, frieze magazine.
You can see more images here, here, here, and here.

*Previously: H.R. Giger's ads for Pioneer.

*Buy H.R. Giger books at Amazon.

Alejandro Jodorowsky's ‘Dune’: An exhibition of a film of a book that never was





Alejandro Jodorowsky's ‘Dune’: An exhibition of a film of a book that never was is currently on display at The Drawing Room in London:
Alejandro Jodorowsky's ‘Dune’: An exhibition of a film of a book that never was takes as its departure point the cult Chilean filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky’s attempted 1976 adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic science fiction novel ‘Dune’.

This exhibition includes production drawings made by Moebius, H.R Giger and Chris Foss alongside commissioned work made in response by three international contemporary artists Steven Claydon, Matthew Day Jackson and Vidya Gastaldon.

Following the release of his mystical Western ‘El Topo’ (1970) and his psychedelic quest movie ‘Holy Mountain’, Jodorowsky embarked on his ‘Dune’ project, gathering around him a group of collaborators that included the French comics artist Moebius, the Swiss artist H.R. Giger (who would later design the 1979 film ‘Alien’), the British sci-fi artist Chris Foss, and the British band Pink Floyd, who would provide the soundtrack. Among Jodorowsky’s proposed cast were Orson Welles, Mick Jagger and Salvador Dali, the last of whom was to play the Emperor of the Universe, who ruled from a golden toilet-cum-throne in the shape of two intertwined dolphins. Unable to secure the money from Hollywood to create the ‘Dune’ of his imagination, Jodorowsky abandoned the film before a single frame was shot. All that survives of this project is Jodorowsky’s extensive notes, and the production drawings of Moebius, Giger and Foss. These reveal a potential future for sci-fi movie making that eschewed the conservative, technology-based approach of American filmmakers in favour of something closer to a metaphysical fever-dream. This was, though, a future that would never take place. In 1977, George Lucas’ ‘Star Wars’ was released, and the history of sci-fi filmmaking, and even mainstream cinema, would never be the same again.

Dune’s themes of jihad, resource war and environmental degradation are especially pertinent to our current political moment and the exhibition also seeks to explore the notion of adaptation and counterfactual histories of film. The exhibition brings together production drawings for ‘Dune,’ alongside new works by Steve Claydon, Matthew Day Jackson and Vidya Gastaldon developed in reaction to Jodorowsky’s notes on ‘Dune’ - an extraordinary mixture of mystical pronouncement, philosophical speculation on the nature of authorship, cultural criticism and ‘70s film world gossip.

Steven Claydon uses a range of media to explore moments in history and draw provocative connotations between contemporary social concerns and obsolete ideologies.

Matthew Day Jackson makes paintings, drawings and sculptures that tackle America’s colonial past and its environmentally rapacious present. Vidya Gastaldon creates sculptures, drawings, video animations and prints which explore the neverland between fantasy and reality in works which are microcosms of hallucinatory, saccharine symbols.

The project is guest-curated by Tom Morton, Curator at The Hayward, London, Co-curator of The British Art Show 7 (2010 -11), and Contributing Editor, frieze magazine.
You can see more images here, here, here, and here.

*Previously: H.R. Giger's ads for Pioneer.

*Buy H.R. Giger books at Amazon.