In the Store: ‘Annie Hall’ by Anne Benjamin
January 2015 marked another collaboration between Chicago’s Galerie F and the Logan Theatre with the limited edition poster for Woody Allen‘s classic romantic comedy ‘Annie Hall.’ Chicago based...
View ArticleMondo x Steelbook: Home Video, Repackaged
In 1977 JVC brought the first VHS player to the American consumer, abling the cinema going audience to ingest their entertainment in their own homes. CUT TO: Thirty-eight years on and the VHS...
View ArticleLove, Gender, and ‘The Crying Game’
In the niche world of alternative film posters collectibles, the most visible and profitable of posters are those based on existing properties – films, television, music, videogames, and comic...
View ArticleA Brief Look: New Work From Ash Thorp
Through his work on Hollywood blockbusters, talks given across the globe and his recently launched online design classes on Learn Squared, designer Ash Thorp has proven himself a restless creative...
View ArticleBlack Dragon Press Presents the ‘Three Colors Trilogy’
Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski‘s 1993 film ‘Blue‘ was his first installment of his ‘Three Colors Trilogy,’ a series that explores liberty (Blue), equality (White), and fraternity (Red) — the...
View ArticleInterview: Victo Ngai talks Kieslowski’s ‘Bleu’
Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski was a steady observer of the everyday. The commonalities of living. He wrote of the pain of loss and joys of love, as well as the struggles of both. In his...
View ArticleMondoCon 2016: Fancy Posters, Movies, & Art
At the center wall of the Austin Film Society Theater, between elaborate booths of posters, pins, tee shirts, and original art stood a simple picnic table draped with a black cloth. A piece of...
View ArticleInterview: Victo Ngai talks Kieslowski’s ‘Blanc’
In 1994 Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski released ‘White,’ the second entry in his ‘Three Colors Trilogy.’ The film follows Karol Karol, a Polish hairdresser living in Paris who is recently...
View ArticleMad Duck Posters Presents: Jack Durieux’s ‘Rope’
Since arriving in cinemas in 1948, film academia has used Alfred Hitchcocks’ ‘Rope‘ as a lesson in editing, camera movements, and the vital role rehearsal of actors and set action can play in a...
View ArticleA Brief Look: Dan Quintana’s ‘Drop’
The work of Los Angeles artist Dan Quintana focuses on the female body — not sexualized or idolized, but the pure shape of it. Figure as texture. As a conceptual anchor for the canvas at large. A...
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