Hiversaires by Devine Lu Linvega
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The world first tattooing prosthetic Arm!
French artist JL Gonzal made this for Tattoo artist JC Sheitan using an existing prosthesis on which he added the metal bits and built the tattoo machine so that it can be set as needed by the tattoo artist.




Julia Nobis by Steven Meisel for W March 2014.
Fashion editor: Marie-Amélie Sauvé
Hair stylist: Guido Palau
Makeup artist: Pat McGrath
Set designer: Mary Howard
These electronic ballet shoes are a new creation that allow dancers to track their movements through visual translation. The device, called Electronic Traces (E-Traces), was developed by graphic and product designer Lesia Trubat, an artist who is captivated by dance.
MichaI Klimczak aka Shume-1 is a Polish self-taught artist who studied at the Cracow University of Technology. Inspired by the works of Allan Lee, HR Giger and Michael Karcz, Klimczak is currently working as an interior designer in an international corporation.
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Yoshitaka Amano, japanese graphic artist and character designer, usually made his illustrations with ink and watercolor. Well known for designing characters for video games such as Final Fantasy, or his artwork in Sandman or Vampire Hunter D.
The Dystopias of Simon Stålenhag
The acclaimed artist, concept designer and author of Ur Varselklotet (2014) Simon Stålenhag (b. 1984) is best known for his highly imaginative images and stories portraying illusive sci-fi phenomena in mundane, hyper-realistic Scandinavian landscapes. Ur Varselklotet was ranked by The Guardian as one of the ‘10 Best Dystopias’, in company with works such as Franz Kafka’s The Trial and Andrew Niccol’s Gattaca.
Images and text via
- The Mensch-Maschine
by comic artist M.W. Kaluta
For his 1988 adaptation of ‘Metropolis’
My father was the layout designer on this printing at Donning publishing. He still has original artwork of preliminary sketches for this very piece of art gifted to him by Kaluta. It hangs over his study. here is a scan of it.

My dad was a big fan of Frank Lloyd Wright design and architecture and it’s ties to art deco. He designed the cover to marry these two elements. Here is the dust jacket my father designed featuring MWK’s art.

When I met my father at the age of 13 he showed this to me and I fell in love. I read it often and it started my love of futurism, science fiction, art deco, philosophy, equality, near to everything.
This was the last great publishing of the story originally written by Thea Von Harbou. It includes sections of story she left out of the screenplay she and Fritz Lang wrote together.
Elements like the Goths that kept watch over the old cathedrals and architecture of Metropolis, The Crosses of Golgotha: massive vacuum tubes part of the city machinery and the Japanese street gangs of Yoshiwara district (pictured in the front and end papers illustrated below).


The book is much better than the silent film and I highly recommend it’s read for any person who considers themselves a fan of the film or the many others that it has inspired.
My father’s work on this led me to be a designer and touches me everyday in one way or another. It is a pleasure to see it on my dash.

The Exquisite Scale of Jie Ma’s Art
Jie
Ma is a digital artist from Shangai, China. He is currently working as
Concept Designer and Art Director in the industry of Film and Video
Games. Along with his professional career, he has been developing a more
personal and intimate work. Without a specific pattern, he has created
an own, intriguing and surreal universe. Jie Ma doesn’t give any
information about it, just only through his mysterious illustrations.
With a perfect sense of composition and an exquisite taste for
architecture of large proportions, Jie Ma illustrations get us into an
oniric world about a primarily uninhabited society living surrounded by
huge scale libraries and floating structures. Txt Via

