This page is the “Personal Network.” It displays work from the websites a member is following, in the order it was published. It also provides a way to engage in dialogue about the work in the form of “Cargo Comments.”
The “Projects/Images” toggle provides access to an Image Gallery, offering an alternate way of browsing websites in the Personal Network.
The small thumbnails on the top of this page are a random sampling of websites in a member’s Network.
Visions of space and the future in Japan in the 70s and 80s. What you are seeing here is a selection of scans from my (somewhat endless) stash of books and...
In 1922, Harrap published The Fairy Tales of Perrault with pictures by Ireland's Illustration God Harry Clarke (1889–1931). While not as frightening as Clarke's...
LWLies Back Section Series of Illustrations comissionned by LittleWhiteLies for the issue 36 "The Skin I Live In". Little White Lies Back section cover...
This amazing French graphic novel—Kris Kool by Philip Caza—was published in 1970 by Eric Losfeld/Le Terrain Vague. The scans are courtesy of David from Jive...
Aeron at Monster Brains just featured some vintage German ad cards from the enormous collection of flickr user cigcardpix. My eye was drawn immediately to his set...
Carl Kylberg (1878–1952) was an important and controversial figure in twentieth-century Swedish art. Though I can't find much information about him in English,...
Four illustrations by Andrzej Strumiłło for Robert Stiller's Narzeczony z morza (Poland, 1971). (It's a children's book, which may not be so obvious.)...
Here are some scans from a grainy 1960s Penguin Pelican of Two Screenplays: The Blood of a Poet and The Testament of Orpheus by Jean Cocteau. I featured the above...
"And You, What Do You Seek?" [the title of the last chapter, never written] Here's the outrageous City Lights edition of Rene Daumal's Mount Analogue. Apparently it...
I've been threatening this post since Jan.2008, continually putting it off because of the hair-raising prospect of destroying the book by scanning. It...
Selected works by Ruth Marten In Ruth Marten's remarkable world, Pinnipeds and Quadrupeds must fight off the advances of hirsute Lotharios while foot fetishists...
"There once was a girl named Nicole Pennsylvania Snow who, when she was ten months old, slept in an abstract bed designed and decorated for her by a famous artist."...
The McDonald Observatory is a research unit of The University of Texas at Austin, located in the Davis Mountains of West Texas. The observatory also plays an...
I feature here Heinz Valk's illustrations for a children's poem book by Helvi Jurisson (Estonia). In submitting these scans, Piia from A Lifetime of Temporary...
These illustrations come from a Czech anthology which pairs stories for children with six different Czech illustrators. Kveta Packovska's section is a little too...
This post originally appeared on July 30, 2008 Sometimes at night -- the Flea meditated on a certain occasion -- when, as now, I am up reading because of...
I spent a few hours recently digging through the Japanese blog That's Eurobeat—through all 5,443 images in fact. While the blogger has been scanning vintage...
Eat Me Now! Set of 2 Placemat designs created exclusively for the Burgerac show. The Burgermat Show is a collection of 24 paper placemats each by a different...
Sammy Harkham of Family recently edited and published a wonderful 48-page zine of artwork and memoirs by Joanne Oldham. I've included some of my favorite images and...
As featured in the book Chinese Graphic Design in the Twentieth Century by Scott Minick and Jiao Ping About half of this 160-page book is devoted to the 1920s and...
69 25 Limited edition screenprints. 56x76 cm. Printed on Southbank paper. 60£. SOLD OUT New : 50x70cm 50 limited edition Giclee print on sale on Artistic.ly
Illustrations from a 1928 edition of Andersen's fairy tales, from 50 Watts fave Takeo Takei Bio from the Kodomo No Kuni site:Takei was born in Suwa, Nagano...
I was invited, along with several other Handsome Frank illustrators, to take part in an exhibition called 'Secret 7"'. The brief was to illustrate a vinyl sleeve...