Life and Death are the same face of a tossed coin, depending on how it lands and how you look at it. At least so one might interpret while examining this intriguing bit of typographic design by C.E. Krausie.
Shown are the 180 degree views of the very same lovely device.
HI, I have a copy of this artwork for many years, at least 20 years, and always admired it and wondered who was responsible for it's creation. Do you have authentication of the artist? It is a brilliant bit of calligraphy: i always understood it to be the work of a student who submitted it as an entry for a competition on the theme 'opposites'.
I have made a (crude) 3D animated version for my own amusement, and always wanted to find the author to get permission to work on it more.
This great bit of calligraphy was published in a science magazine, back in the '80s, with the creator's name credited. It's possible that this was part of a competition under the magazine's guidance, but I can't be sure of that.
Here's the artist: http://www.npr.org/templates/community/persona.php?uid=9384269 according to the comments on this NPR story. http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2012/04/26/151311708/the-delights-of-reading-upside-down#more
I am posting these images with a non-profit and educational 'fair use' motive, regarding respective copyrights. Anyone downloading and using these images for any commercial use would be in violation of respective copyrights, and does not have my approval for such use.
My name is Thom Buchanan.
I'm an artist and photographer.
People are my favorite subjects to portray in art and photos. My wife (and studio partner) has called that my 'people skills', as I've been passionately creating portrait studies for many years.
I refer to myself as a pictorialist, a combination of image-making and journalist. Images are my life.
4 comments:
HI,
I have a copy of this artwork for many years, at least 20 years, and always admired it and wondered who was responsible for it's creation.
Do you have authentication of the artist? It is a brilliant bit of calligraphy: i always understood it to be the work of a student who submitted it as an entry for a competition on the theme 'opposites'.
I have made a (crude) 3D animated version for my own amusement, and always wanted to find the author to get permission to work on it more.
Good blog, keep up the good work.
Hi Mac—
This great bit of calligraphy was published in a science magazine, back in the '80s, with the creator's name credited. It's possible that this was part of a competition under the magazine's guidance, but I can't be sure of that.
Here's the artist: http://www.npr.org/templates/community/persona.php?uid=9384269 according to the comments on this NPR story. http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2012/04/26/151311708/the-delights-of-reading-upside-down#more
brilliant links. cheers to that
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