Sunday, January 27, 2013

Day 298: Tekoteko

Day 298: Tekoteko
maori art and design
Image by Heather F
From a letter hanging behind the carving:

Carved by New Zealand Maori Arts & Crafts Institute
Trainee Carver - Robert Rika of Te Arawa tribal affiliation

The Tekoteko (three dimensional ancestral personification) was a stylized representation of the main progenitor of the tribe and as such, it was unusually situated at the most focal point of the Whare Whakairo (fully carved tribal meeting house), either at the highest point at the front of the house, or at the base of the main central ridge support posts of the house.

The depiction of the human image in highly stylized form was the predominant feature of traditional Maori carvings which were deeply spiritual in nature. The pre-European Maori held religious beliefs which told them that no attempt should be made to duplicate what could only be created by lo, the Supreme Being. Hence the disciplines intrinsic in traditional Maori carving are quite unlike those pertaining to classical Western sculpture.

Only the Tohunga Whakairo (priestly expert in the significance pertaining to Maori carving) determined the effigy symbolizing the revered tribal ancestor, and it was his skill which gave greater symbolic meaning to the carvings.

Mr. Rika has imparted his skill in accordance with the design disciplines handed down from the Raharuhirukupo-style school of carving which evolved during the early 1800's.

This carving is an original work of Maori art using totara wood.


'Pipi Platter'
maori art and design
Image by John Penman Glass Art
Blown glass filigrana from the series "Kaimoana". Designed and made by New Zealand glass artist John Penman.


'Tupa Platter'.
maori art and design
Image by John Penman Glass Art
Blown glass filigrana from the series "Kaimoana". Designed and made by New Zealand glass artist John Penman.


'Toheroa Platter'
maori art and design
Image by John Penman Glass Art
Blown glass filigrana from the series "Kaimoana". Designed and made by New Zealand glass artist John Penman.

Nice Art Easel Design photos

Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616
art easel design
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: Chaplain's Assistant Sgt. Maj. Steven Carter won 1st Place in the Accomplished Jewelry division for his entry, “Waiting To Evolve”

www.armymwr.com

Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616 (Posted June 16, 2009)

By Rob McIlvaine
FMWRC Public Affairs

Last year’s winners at the Army Arts & Crafts Contest in both categories brought intelligence, imagination and whimsy to the easel or workbench and elevated craft to fine art through their execution of design and technique.

Their works of art ran the gamut from representational and Trompe-L´œl to abstract, expressionism and surrealism.

The deadline for the 2009 Arts & Crafts Contest is June 30, 2009. Only authorized MWR patrons, except Arts and Crafts employees, are eligible to enter.

The annual contest has two separate groups – Group 1 (Novice-no formal training) and Group 2 (Accomplished-formal training or awards from professional competitions) – with 11 categories, including ceramics, drawings, fibers and textiles, glass, metals and jewelry, 2-D and 3-D mixed media, oil- and water-based painting, prints, and wood.

“It always amazes me how talented our Army Soldiers and Civilians and their Family members are. The annual Army Arts and Crafts contest is a wonderful way to showcase those talents and give them the recognition they deserve," Linda Ezernieks said.

Ezernieks is Community Recreation Directorate Arts and Automotive Program Manager at the U.S. Army Family and MWR Command.

Ten people won two awards each, including Yang Hand at USAG-Yongsan, Karen Reshel at Stuttgart and Natalie Lucht at Fort Detrick. Many of the garrisons had multiple winners with USAG-Yongsan garnering 13 awards, Stuttgart receiving eight, and Redstone Arsenal bringing home five awards.

Sgt. Maj. Steven Carter, a chaplain’s assistant who will retire this August, entered the Accomplished Metals and Jewelry category last year and won 1st Place for his bronze sculpture, “Waiting to Evolve.”

“I received a B.A. in Fine Arts in College and was a painter for about 10 years until I got into making knives for another 10 years as a member of the American Knifemakers Guild,” he said.

But Steve has a restless personality and likes to try new things.

“I went over to the crafts shop at Fort Lewis in ’83 to ’85, sometime around there,” Carter remembered, “and got hooked on the bronze foundry they had there. Those crafts people were the best, teaching me everything about the trade.”

The bronze piece, “Waiting to Evolve,” grew out of a lump of clay sitting on his desk.

“I started playing around with it until it began looking like someone sitting there. So then I thought, ‘what’s he thinking about?’ Well, we’re always evolving to be better, maybe not actually doing something about it, waiting, kind of like “waiting for Godot,” Carter said.

Asked why he likes to make art he replied, “I don’t have a choice. If I can’t make something, I get anxious so I just start trying to work with clay until something happens.”

This year’s contest will see more of his work.

1st Lt. John Arteche began his career with a degree in computer graphics design but now is a platoon leader in Korea.

“I’ve been working with art for about four years, primarily in digital media. With math and physics you spend forever and a day learning it, only to be tested on who can get the same answer more efficiently. Art, on the other hand, has no answer. It simply just comes to a point where the creator likes where it’s at. The pay, if any, is so-so, the hours are dreadfully long, but in the end it’s just the satisfaction of putting your ideas down on a piece of paper. It’s one of the things in life that can never be wrong.”

Asked how he came up with his winning entry, “Meeting of an Orange & a Venus Fly Trap,” he laughed.

“The idea was to take something ordinary and make it extra ordinary. Initially, I had absolutely no idea what to make. But after three days of chicken scratch and a whole lot of caffeine, I opened my fridge and saw an orange that looked bright, fragrant, healthy and inviting.”

The coffee and lack of sleep must have tipped him over the edge.

“I took each of those components and made it the opposite. You take an orange and supersize it and now it’s unnatural and freakish in dimension. Adding candy corn teeth makes it unhealthy and almost foul. I kept its distinct bright feature because now its orangeness served a different purpose…not to inspire health and wellbeing, but to draw you closer so it can chomp on you.”

Laura Irick and her daughter, Sarah, both Family members in Wiesbaden, Germany won 1st Place and 2nd Place, respectively in the Novice Drawing category. In addition, Laura won 3rd Place in Novice Mixed Media, 2-D and Sarah won 2nd Place in Novice Prints.

“We’ve been doing art our entire lives,” Irick said of herself and her daughter. “However, when Sarah was 14, she drew a portrait of a young girl with a pencil and we both realized she was likely headed for art school. My ambition for art paled in comparison with my passion as a mother to help shape my daughter’s character, and that was what kept me interested in doing art with her.”

This year’s contest won’t include entries from Sarah.

“Sarah is taking a sabbatical by working at a ranch in Arizona for the summer and will be making a decision about college. I’m preparing to return to America so I wasn’t going to enter this year,” Laura said.

But for these artists, art is life, or as the logo for a major motion picture company puts it, “Ars Gratia Artis,” – Art for Art’s Sake.

“Somehow I found time to enter the art contest again,” Irick said, “and I’ve also entered the Army photography contest, concluding this fall.”

Connect with us:
www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR
www.Twitter.com/FamilyMWR
www.YouTube.com/FamilyMWR

ks100910


Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616
art easel design
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: Sarah Irick won 2nd Place in the Novice Drawing Category for her entry, “Girl in Puerto Rico”

www.armymwr.com

Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616 (Posted June 16, 2009)

By Rob McIlvaine
FMWRC Public Affairs

Last year’s winners at the Army Arts & Crafts Contest in both categories brought intelligence, imagination and whimsy to the easel or workbench and elevated craft to fine art through their execution of design and technique.

Their works of art ran the gamut from representational and Trompe-L´œl to abstract, expressionism and surrealism.

The deadline for the 2009 Arts & Crafts Contest is June 30, 2009. Only authorized MWR patrons, except Arts and Crafts employees, are eligible to enter.

The annual contest has two separate groups – Group 1 (Novice-no formal training) and Group 2 (Accomplished-formal training or awards from professional competitions) – with 11 categories, including ceramics, drawings, fibers and textiles, glass, metals and jewelry, 2-D and 3-D mixed media, oil- and water-based painting, prints, and wood.

“It always amazes me how talented our Army Soldiers and Civilians and their Family members are. The annual Army Arts and Crafts contest is a wonderful way to showcase those talents and give them the recognition they deserve," Linda Ezernieks said.

Ezernieks is Community Recreation Directorate Arts and Automotive Program Manager at the U.S. Army Family and MWR Command.

Ten people won two awards each, including Yang Hand at USAG-Yongsan, Karen Reshel at Stuttgart and Natalie Lucht at Fort Detrick. Many of the garrisons had multiple winners with USAG-Yongsan garnering 13 awards, Stuttgart receiving eight, and Redstone Arsenal bringing home five awards.

Sgt. Maj. Steven Carter, a chaplain’s assistant who will retire this August, entered the Accomplished Metals and Jewelry category last year and won 1st Place for his bronze sculpture, “Waiting to Evolve.”

“I received a B.A. in Fine Arts in College and was a painter for about 10 years until I got into making knives for another 10 years as a member of the American Knifemakers Guild,” he said.

But Steve has a restless personality and likes to try new things.

“I went over to the crafts shop at Fort Lewis in ’83 to ’85, sometime around there,” Carter remembered, “and got hooked on the bronze foundry they had there. Those crafts people were the best, teaching me everything about the trade.”

The bronze piece, “Waiting to Evolve,” grew out of a lump of clay sitting on his desk.

“I started playing around with it until it began looking like someone sitting there. So then I thought, ‘what’s he thinking about?’ Well, we’re always evolving to be better, maybe not actually doing something about it, waiting, kind of like “waiting for Godot,” Carter said.

Asked why he likes to make art he replied, “I don’t have a choice. If I can’t make something, I get anxious so I just start trying to work with clay until something happens.”

This year’s contest will see more of his work.

1st Lt. John Arteche began his career with a degree in computer graphics design but now is a platoon leader in Korea.

“I’ve been working with art for about four years, primarily in digital media. With math and physics you spend forever and a day learning it, only to be tested on who can get the same answer more efficiently. Art, on the other hand, has no answer. It simply just comes to a point where the creator likes where it’s at. The pay, if any, is so-so, the hours are dreadfully long, but in the end it’s just the satisfaction of putting your ideas down on a piece of paper. It’s one of the things in life that can never be wrong.”

Asked how he came up with his winning entry, “Meeting of an Orange & a Venus Fly Trap,” he laughed.

“The idea was to take something ordinary and make it extra ordinary. Initially, I had absolutely no idea what to make. But after three days of chicken scratch and a whole lot of caffeine, I opened my fridge and saw an orange that looked bright, fragrant, healthy and inviting.”

The coffee and lack of sleep must have tipped him over the edge.

“I took each of those components and made it the opposite. You take an orange and supersize it and now it’s unnatural and freakish in dimension. Adding candy corn teeth makes it unhealthy and almost foul. I kept its distinct bright feature because now its orangeness served a different purpose…not to inspire health and wellbeing, but to draw you closer so it can chomp on you.”

Laura Irick and her daughter, Sarah, both Family members in Wiesbaden, Germany won 1st Place and 2nd Place, respectively in the Novice Drawing category. In addition, Laura won 3rd Place in Novice Mixed Media, 2-D and Sarah won 2nd Place in Novice Prints.

“We’ve been doing art our entire lives,” Irick said of herself and her daughter. “However, when Sarah was 14, she drew a portrait of a young girl with a pencil and we both realized she was likely headed for art school. My ambition for art paled in comparison with my passion as a mother to help shape my daughter’s character, and that was what kept me interested in doing art with her.”

This year’s contest won’t include entries from Sarah.

“Sarah is taking a sabbatical by working at a ranch in Arizona for the summer and will be making a decision about college. I’m preparing to return to America so I wasn’t going to enter this year,” Laura said.

But for these artists, art is life, or as the logo for a major motion picture company puts it, “Ars Gratia Artis,” – Art for Art’s Sake.

“Somehow I found time to enter the art contest again,” Irick said, “and I’ve also entered the Army photography contest, concluding this fall.”

Connect with us:
www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR
www.Twitter.com/FamilyMWR
www.YouTube.com/FamilyMWR

ks100910


Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616
art easel design
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: Laura Irick won 3rd Place in the Novice Mixed Media, 2-D division for her entry, “Tea Shop in Belgium”

www.armymwr.com

Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616 (Posted June 16, 2009)

By Rob McIlvaine
FMWRC Public Affairs

Last year’s winners at the Army Arts & Crafts Contest in both categories brought intelligence, imagination and whimsy to the easel or workbench and elevated craft to fine art through their execution of design and technique.

Their works of art ran the gamut from representational and Trompe-L´œl to abstract, expressionism and surrealism.

The deadline for the 2009 Arts & Crafts Contest is June 30, 2009. Only authorized MWR patrons, except Arts and Crafts employees, are eligible to enter.

The annual contest has two separate groups – Group 1 (Novice-no formal training) and Group 2 (Accomplished-formal training or awards from professional competitions) – with 11 categories, including ceramics, drawings, fibers and textiles, glass, metals and jewelry, 2-D and 3-D mixed media, oil- and water-based painting, prints, and wood.

“It always amazes me how talented our Army Soldiers and Civilians and their Family members are. The annual Army Arts and Crafts contest is a wonderful way to showcase those talents and give them the recognition they deserve," Linda Ezernieks said.

Ezernieks is Community Recreation Directorate Arts and Automotive Program Manager at the U.S. Army Family and MWR Command.

Ten people won two awards each, including Yang Hand at USAG-Yongsan, Karen Reshel at Stuttgart and Natalie Lucht at Fort Detrick. Many of the garrisons had multiple winners with USAG-Yongsan garnering 13 awards, Stuttgart receiving eight, and Redstone Arsenal bringing home five awards.

Sgt. Maj. Steven Carter, a chaplain’s assistant who will retire this August, entered the Accomplished Metals and Jewelry category last year and won 1st Place for his bronze sculpture, “Waiting to Evolve.”

“I received a B.A. in Fine Arts in College and was a painter for about 10 years until I got into making knives for another 10 years as a member of the American Knifemakers Guild,” he said.

But Steve has a restless personality and likes to try new things.

“I went over to the crafts shop at Fort Lewis in ’83 to ’85, sometime around there,” Carter remembered, “and got hooked on the bronze foundry they had there. Those crafts people were the best, teaching me everything about the trade.”

The bronze piece, “Waiting to Evolve,” grew out of a lump of clay sitting on his desk.

“I started playing around with it until it began looking like someone sitting there. So then I thought, ‘what’s he thinking about?’ Well, we’re always evolving to be better, maybe not actually doing something about it, waiting, kind of like “waiting for Godot,” Carter said.

Asked why he likes to make art he replied, “I don’t have a choice. If I can’t make something, I get anxious so I just start trying to work with clay until something happens.”

This year’s contest will see more of his work.

1st Lt. John Arteche began his career with a degree in computer graphics design but now is a platoon leader in Korea.

“I’ve been working with art for about four years, primarily in digital media. With math and physics you spend forever and a day learning it, only to be tested on who can get the same answer more efficiently. Art, on the other hand, has no answer. It simply just comes to a point where the creator likes where it’s at. The pay, if any, is so-so, the hours are dreadfully long, but in the end it’s just the satisfaction of putting your ideas down on a piece of paper. It’s one of the things in life that can never be wrong.”

Asked how he came up with his winning entry, “Meeting of an Orange & a Venus Fly Trap,” he laughed.

“The idea was to take something ordinary and make it extra ordinary. Initially, I had absolutely no idea what to make. But after three days of chicken scratch and a whole lot of caffeine, I opened my fridge and saw an orange that looked bright, fragrant, healthy and inviting.”

The coffee and lack of sleep must have tipped him over the edge.

“I took each of those components and made it the opposite. You take an orange and supersize it and now it’s unnatural and freakish in dimension. Adding candy corn teeth makes it unhealthy and almost foul. I kept its distinct bright feature because now its orangeness served a different purpose…not to inspire health and wellbeing, but to draw you closer so it can chomp on you.”

Laura Irick and her daughter, Sarah, both Family members in Wiesbaden, Germany won 1st Place and 2nd Place, respectively in the Novice Drawing category. In addition, Laura won 3rd Place in Novice Mixed Media, 2-D and Sarah won 2nd Place in Novice Prints.

“We’ve been doing art our entire lives,” Irick said of herself and her daughter. “However, when Sarah was 14, she drew a portrait of a young girl with a pencil and we both realized she was likely headed for art school. My ambition for art paled in comparison with my passion as a mother to help shape my daughter’s character, and that was what kept me interested in doing art with her.”

This year’s contest won’t include entries from Sarah.

“Sarah is taking a sabbatical by working at a ranch in Arizona for the summer and will be making a decision about college. I’m preparing to return to America so I wasn’t going to enter this year,” Laura said.

But for these artists, art is life, or as the logo for a major motion picture company puts it, “Ars Gratia Artis,” – Art for Art’s Sake.

“Somehow I found time to enter the art contest again,” Irick said, “and I’ve also entered the Army photography contest, concluding this fall.”

Connect with us:
www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR
www.Twitter.com/FamilyMWR
www.YouTube.com/FamilyMWR

ks100910


Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616
art easel design
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: 1st Lt. John James Arteche won 1st Place for “The Meeting of an Orange & a Venus Flytrap,” his entry in Accomplished Mixed Media 3-D division.

www.armymwr.com

Army Arts & Crafts Contest deadline is June 30 090616 (Posted June 16, 2009)

By Rob McIlvaine
FMWRC Public Affairs

Last year’s winners at the Army Arts & Crafts Contest in both categories brought intelligence, imagination and whimsy to the easel or workbench and elevated craft to fine art through their execution of design and technique.

Their works of art ran the gamut from representational and Trompe-L´œl to abstract, expressionism and surrealism.

The deadline for the 2009 Arts & Crafts Contest is June 30, 2009. Only authorized MWR patrons, except Arts and Crafts employees, are eligible to enter.

The annual contest has two separate groups – Group 1 (Novice-no formal training) and Group 2 (Accomplished-formal training or awards from professional competitions) – with 11 categories, including ceramics, drawings, fibers and textiles, glass, metals and jewelry, 2-D and 3-D mixed media, oil- and water-based painting, prints, and wood.

“It always amazes me how talented our Army Soldiers and Civilians and their Family members are. The annual Army Arts and Crafts contest is a wonderful way to showcase those talents and give them the recognition they deserve," Linda Ezernieks said.

Ezernieks is Community Recreation Directorate Arts and Automotive Program Manager at the U.S. Army Family and MWR Command.

Ten people won two awards each, including Yang Hand at USAG-Yongsan, Karen Reshel at Stuttgart and Natalie Lucht at Fort Detrick. Many of the garrisons had multiple winners with USAG-Yongsan garnering 13 awards, Stuttgart receiving eight, and Redstone Arsenal bringing home five awards.

Sgt. Maj. Steven Carter, a chaplain’s assistant who will retire this August, entered the Accomplished Metals and Jewelry category last year and won 1st Place for his bronze sculpture, “Waiting to Evolve.”

“I received a B.A. in Fine Arts in College and was a painter for about 10 years until I got into making knives for another 10 years as a member of the American Knifemakers Guild,” he said.

But Steve has a restless personality and likes to try new things.

“I went over to the crafts shop at Fort Lewis in ’83 to ’85, sometime around there,” Carter remembered, “and got hooked on the bronze foundry they had there. Those crafts people were the best, teaching me everything about the trade.”

The bronze piece, “Waiting to Evolve,” grew out of a lump of clay sitting on his desk.

“I started playing around with it until it began looking like someone sitting there. So then I thought, ‘what’s he thinking about?’ Well, we’re always evolving to be better, maybe not actually doing something about it, waiting, kind of like “waiting for Godot,” Carter said.

Asked why he likes to make art he replied, “I don’t have a choice. If I can’t make something, I get anxious so I just start trying to work with clay until something happens.”

This year’s contest will see more of his work.

1st Lt. John Arteche began his career with a degree in computer graphics design but now is a platoon leader in Korea.

“I’ve been working with art for about four years, primarily in digital media. With math and physics you spend forever and a day learning it, only to be tested on who can get the same answer more efficiently. Art, on the other hand, has no answer. It simply just comes to a point where the creator likes where it’s at. The pay, if any, is so-so, the hours are dreadfully long, but in the end it’s just the satisfaction of putting your ideas down on a piece of paper. It’s one of the things in life that can never be wrong.”

Asked how he came up with his winning entry, “Meeting of an Orange & a Venus Fly Trap,” he laughed.

“The idea was to take something ordinary and make it extra ordinary. Initially, I had absolutely no idea what to make. But after three days of chicken scratch and a whole lot of caffeine, I opened my fridge and saw an orange that looked bright, fragrant, healthy and inviting.”

The coffee and lack of sleep must have tipped him over the edge.

“I took each of those components and made it the opposite. You take an orange and supersize it and now it’s unnatural and freakish in dimension. Adding candy corn teeth makes it unhealthy and almost foul. I kept its distinct bright feature because now its orangeness served a different purpose…not to inspire health and wellbeing, but to draw you closer so it can chomp on you.”

Laura Irick and her daughter, Sarah, both Family members in Wiesbaden, Germany won 1st Place and 2nd Place, respectively in the Novice Drawing category. In addition, Laura won 3rd Place in Novice Mixed Media, 2-D and Sarah won 2nd Place in Novice Prints.

“We’ve been doing art our entire lives,” Irick said of herself and her daughter. “However, when Sarah was 14, she drew a portrait of a young girl with a pencil and we both realized she was likely headed for art school. My ambition for art paled in comparison with my passion as a mother to help shape my daughter’s character, and that was what kept me interested in doing art with her.”

This year’s contest won’t include entries from Sarah.

“Sarah is taking a sabbatical by working at a ranch in Arizona for the summer and will be making a decision about college. I’m preparing to return to America so I wasn’t going to enter this year,” Laura said.

But for these artists, art is life, or as the logo for a major motion picture company puts it, “Ars Gratia Artis,” – Art for Art’s Sake.

“Somehow I found time to enter the art contest again,” Irick said, “and I’ve also entered the Army photography contest, concluding this fall.”

Connect with us:
www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR
www.Twitter.com/FamilyMWR
www.YouTube.com/FamilyMWR

ks100910


Eco Tots Art Time Easel
art easel design
Image by *NEXT* design for your modern home
Modern kids furniture by Eco Tots. The Art Time Easel perfect for the budding young artist and environmentalist. Constructed from just three pieces of 100% formaldehyde-free, FSC Certified real wood and featuring a durable, 100% non-toxic water-based finish, this easel assembles and disassembles (for easy storage) in minutes with our patented, no-tools assembly method. Perfect for the playroom or kids bedroom. Enjoy years of use with our lifetime construction guarantee.

Cool Alberta College Of Art Design images

Team Alberta (Univ. of Calgary, SAIT Polytech, Alberta College of Art + Design, Mt. Royal College)
alberta college of art design
Image by WayneCorp
House info: www.solabode.ca/default.aspx
Decathlon page: www.solardecathlon.org/virtual_tours/#



alberta college of art design
Image by Andy van der Raadt (minimum)



alberta college of art design
Image by Andy van der Raadt (minimum)

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Cool Art Design Careers images

Winners Announcements – Game Design , Opera House July 8th 2010
art design careers
Image by ImagineCup
Game Design is where art and science come together. Through the Imagine Cup, you can learn and advance toward a career as a game developer or entrepreneur. Use 3D or 2D, make it multi-level or single player but don’t forget one crucial thing – you have to take on the 2010 Theme in your game. How about creating a game that is accessible for users with disabilities or an educational experience for children to learn about the environment? Join up to three of your friends and build a complex and full game experience, using Microsoft's XNA Game Studio 3.0, Visual Studio and/or Silverlight.


Winners Announcements – Game Design , Opera House July 8th 2010
art design careers
Image by ImagineCup
Game Design is where art and science come together. Through the Imagine Cup, you can learn and advance toward a career as a game developer or entrepreneur. Use 3D or 2D, make it multi-level or single player but don’t forget one crucial thing – you have to take on the 2010 Theme in your game. How about creating a game that is accessible for users with disabilities or an educational experience for children to learn about the environment? Join up to three of your friends and build a complex and full game experience, using Microsoft's XNA Game Studio 3.0, Visual Studio and/or Silverlight.


Winners Announcements – Game Design , Opera House July 8th 2010
art design careers
Image by ImagineCup
Game Design is where art and science come together. Through the Imagine Cup, you can learn and advance toward a career as a game developer or entrepreneur. Use 3D or 2D, make it multi-level or single player but don’t forget one crucial thing – you have to take on the 2010 Theme in your game. How about creating a game that is accessible for users with disabilities or an educational experience for children to learn about the environment? Join up to three of your friends and build a complex and full game experience, using Microsoft's XNA Game Studio 3.0, Visual Studio and/or Silverlight.


Winners Announcements – Game Design , Opera House July 8th 2010
art design careers
Image by ImagineCup
Game Design is where art and science come together. Through the Imagine Cup, you can learn and advance toward a career as a game developer or entrepreneur. Use 3D or 2D, make it multi-level or single player but don’t forget one crucial thing – you have to take on the 2010 Theme in your game. How about creating a game that is accessible for users with disabilities or an educational experience for children to learn about the environment? Join up to three of your friends and build a complex and full game experience, using Microsoft's XNA Game Studio 3.0, Visual Studio and/or Silverlight.


Winners Announcements – Game Design , Opera House July 8th 2010
art design careers
Image by ImagineCup
Game Design is where art and science come together. Through the Imagine Cup, you can learn and advance toward a career as a game developer or entrepreneur. Use 3D or 2D, make it multi-level or single player but don’t forget one crucial thing – you have to take on the 2010 Theme in your game. How about creating a game that is accessible for users with disabilities or an educational experience for children to learn about the environment? Join up to three of your friends and build a complex and full game experience, using Microsoft's XNA Game Studio 3.0, Visual Studio and/or Silverlight.

Nice Asian Art Design photos

Bhutan Buddhist Monk Sand Art
asian art design
Image by Images by John 'K'
The "Sacred Arts of Bhutan" exhibition that is currently running at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco is accompanied by a couple of Bhutan Buddhist Monks. They are there to ensure the sanctity of the pieces of art and to carry out sacred rituals as mandated by their religion. In their "spare time" they have constructed these wonderful pieces of sand art in the style of some of their sacred designs. Each piece was about 4 foot square. I'd hate to think how much time went into making these.
(best viewed large)

I typically upload in small sets - don't just look at the latest one in my photostream as you might be missing something you'll like more.... and your comments are ALWAYS welcome :)

© All rights reserved. John Krzesinski, 2009.


Kirsten and Tristan, Asian Art Museum, Capitol Hill, Seattle, Washington, USA
asian art design
Image by Wonderlane
dotted pattern is by design


Asian Elephant Sculpture_8540
asian art design
Image by KitLKat
Asian elephant sculptures seen near Pakenham Watermill in the sculpture's studio garden.


Asian Elephant Sculpture_8543
asian art design
Image by KitLKat
Asian elephant sculptures seen near Pakenham Watermill in the sculpture's studio garden.


Asian Elephant Sculpture_8549
asian art design
Image by KitLKat
Asian elephant sculptures seen from road near Pakenham Watermill in the sculpture's studio garden.

Cool Art Studio Lighting Design images

Burlesque Funk
art studio lighting design
Image by geishaboy500


Burlesque Funk
art studio lighting design
Image by geishaboy500


Burlesque Funk
art studio lighting design
Image by geishaboy500


Burlesque Funk
art studio lighting design
Image by geishaboy500


Burlesque Funk
art studio lighting design
Image by geishaboy500

Cool Indian Art And Design images

Rangoli
indian art and design
Image by Balaji.B
Rangoli - Colour Art - Indian - Art


Rangoli
indian art and design
Image by Balaji.B
Rangoli - Colour Art - Indian - Art


Rangoli-Colours
indian art and design
Image by Balaji.B
Rangoli - Colour Art - Indian - Art


Rangoli
indian art and design
Image by Balaji.B
Rangoli - Colour Art - Indian - Art


Rangoli
indian art and design
Image by Balaji.B
Rangoli - Colour Art - Indian - Art