Artist Dietrich Wegner covers babies in (fake) tattoos of corporate logos from companies like Lego, Gap, and Sony, turning them into tiny crawling billboards. By creating friction between two conflicting ideas, Wegner said the images become “a meditation on how our identities evolve and how we declare them”.
Artists have been hiding subliminal and secret messages in their art for centuries and the tradition lives on today in the work of logo designers. Find out what's hidden in the FedEx, Tostitos or Baskin Robbins logo. Some of the messages are more obvious than others, but all of them are clever and revealing.
A review of the history of company logos and an imagining of how they may appear in the future.
It's one thing buying a shirt with your favorite company logo emblazoned all over it, but diehard fans get tattoos as well.
Culture Buzz How many of the world's most famous brand logos can you identify? It's probably more than designer Adam Ladd's five-year-old daughter gets right in this video, but I'm willing to bet her descriptions are WAY cuter. (via The Daily What)
Ever feel like Don Quixote, fighting unmovable windmills? So did Rosa Llap, who designed this awesome poster for AdBusters.
http://dearjanesample.wordpress.com/2008/05/19/fun-with-b...
Here's a record of a typical day in the life of some woman named Jane viewed entirely in logos. This is totally going to be my new diary format.