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Arrrrr Richie Jackson

May 5th, 2010

Richie Jackson from ian on Vimeo.

Skating videos always get me inspired. I have very little desire to actually skate, but damnit if I could have skate videos on all day, I would.

Also, this dude is ILL. He’s like the second-coming of Natas. Naaaasty.

via Unttld

Getting The Finger: Cycling, Logos, and Mixtapes

April 23rd, 2010

It’s been a helluva week here at the ministry. On Tuesday, I released the latest sorta-monthly office mixtape email. This one is called Here/There and this time instead of the usual download link, I decided to create a little mini site on which the good people who give a rats ass about what songs are in heavy rotation here at The Ministry can listen before downloading.

Also, some of you guys may know that I’m almost as much a bike dork as I am a design dork. Well, my two worlds came careening into one another this week, not once, but twice! First, Transportation Alternatives, the cycling dorkdum enclave of which I am a member (in spirit cause I still haven’t sent in this year’s donation), unveiled a new logo and website.

TA_logos
click here for larger pic

Developed by Doyle Partners, the new logo is a natural progression for Transportation Alternatives. It takes the old TA logo and makes it into a singular, identifiable, and hopefully memorable mark. While the old logo wasn’t necessarily bad, it suffered from an I-need-to-tell-you-everything-now design, which I think may have been necessary for TA when it was a more obscure organization. Granted, TA has been around since 1973, but there’s no denying that the recent cycling explosion, and the aggressive initiatives of the current NYC DOT (Dept. of Transportation) has given TA much more publicity. In that respect, the new branding is quite appropriate.

In other cycling/designer news, Bike Snob NYC did a thorough critique of 2009 Tour de France winner, Alberto Contador’s new logo.

contador_1

The logo itself is an abstraction of Contador’s old logo which was an illustration of what Snob coined The Fingerbang, after Contador’s victory salute.

astana-lanciearm
Contador with some other guy. Notice Contador’s hat bares the original Fingerbang logo.

I have to admit, I liked the old logo. Not because it was particularly good, but because it was campy. Think Bruce Campbell in Army of Darkness. Still, Snob hit the nail on the head with this assessment, “It could almost be the insignia of a bank or securities firm–albeit one with a disconcerting tendency to try to screw you with an index finger. (Actually, Contador should really consider selling his new logo to Goldman Sachs.)”

An Image

April 20th, 2010

andy-warhols-polaroids-dolly-parton-1985

Andy Warhol Portrait of Dolly Parton

I love this image. I can stare it forever. Looking into Dolly’s eyes remind me of summer evenings that never happened. Her gaze is one of confidence, but there’s an almost undetectable vulnerability lurking beneath it all. Also, the muted tunes of yesteryear’s photography makes any shot a tiny bit more interesting.

An Image

April 17th, 2010

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via The Sartorialist

Work Until You Die.

April 13th, 2010

ilovenewyork
Above: Yeah, Milton Glaser did that.

“What you want to do is keep working until you die.”

Read that sentence again. Does it make you cringe?

It sure made me cringe the first time I read it. I don’t know if this came about during the 90s, or what, but I always thought the idea was to till and toil in your twenties, so you could bank your way into an early retirement.

Not so, according to Milton Glaser’s response in a recent interview on Success Secrets of the Graphic Design Superstars. When asked what work he’s most gratified to have done, he answered, “I can’t say I am most gratified by anything. I think the issue for old-time professionals is sustaining. Right?” He then goes on to paraphrase T.S. Eliot(?): “The greatest blessing in life would be to die in the midst of work.”

I’m going to go out on a limb and say most people of my generation would vehemently disagree. We’re of the mind that the greatest blessing in life would be to die of heart failure while water skiing, on our third senior citizen’s Carnival Cruise to the Bahamas. We don’t want to work for the rest of our lives. We want to work while we’re young and spend our grey years basking in the spoils of our labor.

So what’s up with Milton Glaser? Is he just a bastion of the old guard who refuses to hang his hat? My theory is that Glaser represents a rare breed – the individual fortunate enough to absolutely and justly enjoy what it is he does for a living.

Sure, being a graphic designer can be fun but make no mistake about it, it’s a lot of work. It’s not all pretty colors and “cool” ideas. A lot of it is business. Actually, the more that I think about it, MOST of it is business. It’s the few hours in between the business when you get to do something fun and exciting, or you get to be a part of building someone’s brand, or you get to inspire people to take action that make it worthwhile.

As with any art, the joy is in the creation. That being said, would I want my withered and pixelbeaten dead body found hunched over my then-antique Ikea work desk? Probably not. But hey, I’m no Milton Glaser.

Read the interview:
Success Secrets of the Graphic Design Superstars: Milton Glaser