branta

the might of write

Archives for the ‘Graphic Stories’ Category

Art of the Menu

By the Branta Webcrawler • Aug 9th, 2011 • Category: Branta Recommends, Call for Submissions, From the Interweb, Graphic Stories

Our goal is to showcase great menus from around the world. They can be old, they can be new. They surely have to be great. In each showcased menu the ideal structure to the post is to show one or more photos of the menu as it exists in real life along with “flat”, digital versions so that we can all take in the typography and layout details.



Venn Diagram of Author Sensibility

By the Branta Webcrawler • Aug 9th, 2011 • Category: Editor's Picks, Graphic Stories



Montague Projects: Book Graphics Blog

By the Branta Webcrawler • Jun 19th, 2011 • Category: Editor's Picks, Graphic Stories, In the Other Arts, Typography

Julian Montague is a Buffalo, NY graphics artist who, every day (almost) posts some sort of graphic element (mostly covers) from a book that he owns. His original plan was to do it for a year – February 21, 2009 to February 21, 2010, but he has decided to keep going…



Six Word Story Every Day

By the Branta Webcrawler • Apr 14th, 2011 • Category: Branta Recommends, Call for Submissions, Graphic Stories, In Brief, Typography



City hall tries to ban NOW Magazine

By the Branta Webcrawler • Mar 31st, 2011 • Category: Editor's Picks, From the Interweb, Graphic Stories, Ha Ha

Posted in Editor's Picks, From the Interweb, Graphic Stories, Ha Ha | No Comments »

-->

Jillian Tamaki: Penguin Threads

By the Branta Webcrawler • Mar 28th, 2011 • Category: Branta Recommends, From the Interweb, Graphic Stories, Recommended Artistic Consumption



The e-Reader of the future

By the Branta Webcrawler • Mar 22nd, 2011 • Category: Brave New World, Editor's Picks, Graphic Stories, Ha Ha



Entartete Kunst – Degenerate Art

By the Branta Webcrawler • Mar 16th, 2011 • Category: Editor's Picks, From the Interweb, Graphic Stories, Travel

A rare survival, this is the programme that accompanied Entartete Kunst, the Nazi’s 1937 exhibition mocking “degenerate” avant-garde art. Targeting modern art, music, and literature was an important aspect of the Nazi campaign, and as early as 1930 museums were put under pressure to conform, with certain works taken off show and uncooperative directors removed.
Laura Massey/The Cataloguer’s Desk



Geist on Tumblr

By the Branta Webcrawler • Feb 15th, 2011 • Category: Brave New World, From the Interweb, Graphic Stories, Happenings, In Brief



Res Obscura

By the Branta Webcrawler • Jan 17th, 2011 • Category: Branta Recommends, Graphic Stories