Roger Dean is an iconic artist most well known for his fantasy landscapes that have adorned album covers for the past 30 years. In addition to his work for the music industry he has worked in videogames, publishing, architecture and film. Dean’s most well known work was album covers created for Yes and Asia.
69 Love Songs is a project created by London-based fans of the Magnetic Fields. The small collective of artists and designers are taking on the task of interpretting and illustrating each and every track off of the Magnetic Fields’ three volume album, 69 Love Songs. I am eagerly awaiting what they come up for “Washington, DC” and “Popular Mechanics for Lovers.”
Posted by Jamie P. on Feb 18, 2009
Note: See original post, No Ideas Required?
Chairlift (from those iPod Nano-Chromatic commercials, and current Indie sweethearts) last week released the music video for their latest single “Evident Utensil” which uses a mesmerizing artifact visual effect. Today I found Kanye West’s newest music video for “Welcome to Heartbreak” which uses the same effect but to what I would say is a lesser degree of success. Is this something that falls under the stealing a visual style/effect category?
Categories: Thoughts on Design
Tags: Artifact effect, Chairlift, David O'Reilly, Evident Utensil, Kanye West, No Ideas Required, Welcome to Heartbreak