seen
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
 

I ripped this sticker off a phone box on the Headrow last year. I liked how someone had gone to the trouble of finding a Deutsche Post sticker to appropriate after seeing so many of our familiar Royal Mail stickers emblazoned with second-rate tags and plastered round our fair city.

"An ape!" I thought, "brilliant." But why? Why should a primate in a policeman's hat inspire such enthusiasm from a passer-by? For me it has more to do with the ape than the hat, or any combination of the two (or any artistic statement contained therein). Apes are cool. Some are big, some are bad, but they are all big business - inspiring films, cartoons, fashion, magazines and street artists the world over.

So what are apes? According to Wikipedia, apes are "the members of the Hominoidea superfamily of primates, including humans." Apes are omnivorous, and all are expert tree-climbers except ourselves and the gorilla. They are native to Africa and Asia, and most species are endangered. Despite our shared ancestry and the evident intelligence of most ape species, gorillas, chimpanzees and other types of apes are not recognised as "persons" in law. That accolade is only afforded to humans under the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights.

The ape has been of cultural and symbolic significance for years, cropping up in various religious folklore, usually with negative connotations. Old Christian tales tell of apes as being created by Satan as symbols of lust. But in more recent times it seems the physical attributes of the ape - particularly the gorilla - have been inspiration for generations of creatives.

Gorillas are large, powerful animals which have strong family bonds and organise themselves into hierarchical societies (much like humans). Their strength and dominance is a definite theme which has been exploited. Everyone knows 'King Kong' and 'Planet of the Apes', but the gorilla is also the symbol of the US-based X-Large clothing company. As the largest non-human ape, the gorilla seems a natural choice for a company branding itself for a predominantly male market. Potential t-shirt buyers can identify with the ape as an abstract version of the imagined self: big, strong, king of the ("urban") jungle.


A similar thinking can be seen to have been applied by Japanese brand A Bathing Ape (Bape), which perhaps unsurprisingly uses a non-specific ape as its ubiquitous logo. If any evidence is required of the ape's "brand-cool" one need look no further than Bape: the name is a byword for exclusive, expensive, limited edition skate style.

Even the shelves of your local news emporium are not safe from the influence of these great beasts. The Illustrated Ape is a magazine published three times a year, which invariably features a different artist's interpretation of its namesake on the cover. What significance the ape has to its creators is unknown to me; it seems to be another case of a powerful animal becoming a powerful symbol for a brand to rally itself around. No matter - the subject has inspired some great illustrations.

Unfortunately none of these ape-obsessed creatives have done much to draw attention to the reality of many a modern primate: the threat of extinction due to destruction of natural habitats and poaching for bushmeat. You can help at WWF.org

links/biblio...
Wikipedia
X-Large
Bape
The Illustrated Ape
 
Monday, February 20, 2006
 


Big up Google Video!!! Check out this trailer for Brokeback To The Future hahaha
 
 


If you've got an hour to spare watch this "conspiracy theory" documentary about 9/11. It raises a lot of questions about the official version of events that led to the collapse of the twin towers and what happened in the aftermath. For further reading Noam Chomsky has some theories about the US government, if not orchestrating it, then letting it happen.

Isn't it interesting that anyone who questions the validity of what we're told to believe is labelled a conspiracy theorist. Not, "maybe this person has a valid point" or "hey, that is worth investigating". Even the term 'conspiracy' has an air of "paranoid psycho" about it. How is anyone meant to challenge conventional viewpoints, when a government lies and it is "official", but someone disagrees and it is "conspiracy".
 
 


Nintendo are one of those consumer giants for whom you got to have respect: like Pixar, they continue to innovate and push the boundaries of what people can expect in their respective fields. "I could tell you the technical specifications," a Nintendo rep told a hungry audience of industry bods, "I'm sure you would like it, but I'm not going to. Because they don't matter." Their next console, Revolution, looks set to outsmart Sony: maybe not in sales, but in creativity. That's what keeps them afloat. It's all about innovation. hardcore crazy advert too, check it out
 
Wednesday, February 08, 2006
 




promo CD sleeves i did for marc to hand out ahead of the John B gig. i sent him 2 versions to choose from. one is a pic of marc djing last december, the other is a shot of some random giving the finger in the back of a car, from some collection of photos i accidentally hacked into once of some american kids causing havoc in nowheresville. bo!
 

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