Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts

Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Vladislav Erko

Illustrations by Vladislav Erko for book Richard Bach 'Jonathan Livingston Seagull'.


Snow Queen by Vladislav Erko

Kiev based illustrator Vladislav Erko. There are illustrations for fairy tale 'Snow Queen'.


Artist Oliver Jeffers

Oliver Jeffers makes art. From figurative painting and installation to illustration and picture-book making, Jeffers work takes many forms. His distinctive oil paintings have been exhibited in multiple cities, including the National Portrait Gallery in London. Oliver was brought up in Northern Ireland and now lives and works in Brooklyn, New York, where he recently co-founded the product design company You And Me, The Royal We.


Children's Book Bed

Photographer Yusuke Suzuki created a book bed that folds up during the day. At night, it unfolds into an over-sized book.


Book Sculptures by Brian Dettmer

Brian Dettmer is a contemporary artist from Atlanta, US. He is wrote for his alteration of mass media—such as old books, maps, record albums, and cassette tapes—to create new, transformed works of visual fine art.


One Million People

One Million People is a global project with a simple goal: to create and publish a timeless and striking coffee-table book featuring one million faces of today's digital generation.
It's totally free to join, and with your participation, we'll paint a portrait of the connected world, symbolic of the unifying power of the internet and a celebration of life in a digital age.


Where Children Sleep

Where Children Sleep is a collection of James Mollison's photographs of childrens' bedrooms from around the world. The book also contains a portrait of each child and, as you'd imagine, the differences between the spaces each one calls their own are striking...

"I hope this book will help children think about inequality, within and between societies around the world," says Mollison in his introduction, "and perhaps start to figure out how, in their own lives, they may respond."