my illustration deals with the escape from civilization, to coexist with nature
CO-EX-IST
This poster is made from a vintage deck of KAN-U-GO cards, an old British word game.
The deck is a hundred years old and still perfectly playable – a reminder of how things can simultaneously stay the same and evolve beyond recognition. This is my main takeaway from the surreal present we are experiencing : among all the current talk about radical change, we all yearn for the same things and feelings, in an overwhelming sense of immutability. And perhaps these two things can coexist.
More!
The dialogue illustrates the insatiable need for ‘more’, regardless of need, use or purpose. ‘More’ is opposed to meaning, empathy and coexistence.
Just œ it!
Coexistence simply means living together. That can be challenging for a society, but if you don’t want it or try it, you are excluding certain people. That leads to racism, sexism, fascism and death. Just do it like the œ in cœxist: coexist. The poster shows through the o and e 3 different points of decision.
Living, or dying together
This is the only ultimate choice we have.
Mother Earth
In this case, “CO”, is mother earth, taking care of us, while we all try to deal with this pandemic.
merged
This illustration has been created to raise the awarness of diversity and equality of races in our societies.
WE ARE ONE
I am You You are Me We are ONE Loop.
cyclically we orbit, we allow the shadow through, we allow the light in, we shed our skin and allow rebirth, we release things overwrought and welcome tranquility, beauty, fresh energy, healing
United in a coil of existence, each unit within the sequence is crucial to the integrity of the whole.
We are One.
Never thought it would be so difficult
All of the artworks represent and want to create a dialogue about the fragility and fluidity of the term of coexistence. Even more nowadays, the term has shifted and distorted making us wonder what it means finally to coexist? And also with who? with the others? with nature? with ourselves?
Understanding others perspectives
A perspective is not right or wrong by default. It is simply what it is: the viewpoint of an individual person. Each of us has such a viewpoint; there will always be two sides to every story. In order to coexist in the future, we must be able to take both perspectives and try to understand them.
May We Love
To coexist means to openly share our respect, validation, criticism and love with one another. Instead, we’re used to boundaries and hesitate to express ourselves truly due to shame or anxiety. Here, »may we love« isn’t a nervous question, but rather repurposed to be a cheerful invitation.
#coexist
inspired by nature
Hold on
Sometimes simple words
Accompanied by simple graphics
Cope best
With complex subjects
During regrettably complex times.
Coexist
1. Coexist (Come In Peace)
2. Coexist
3. Coexist (Come Together)
Coexist-2
Coexist
CocksExist
….maybe the aliens are not the bad guys after all?
After Bob Mizer, Bob Mccune and Herb Lamm
This a favourite work from 2019, a paper collage on wood panel 11.5 x 16.5 inches. I enjoy how the two figures coexist in the composition, there is tension and conflict but also the eternal calm and stillness captured in the original photograph by Bob Mizer.
Noughts and Crosses
Coexist is based on the childrens’ game of noughts and crosses. Which to a certain degree is a game of chance. Each player takes turns to place either a nought or a cross in a square. The object of the game is to try and get a complete line of noughts or crosses in a straight line. The player who achieves this first is the winner. So the Coexist graphic implies that if you play correctly you will produce a winning outcome.
Auslöser Magazine Issue 3
The Auslöser Magazine Issue 3 features Interviews with Paul Albert Leitner, Nadia Morozewicz, Daniel Chatard, and Katrin Koenning, a behind the scenes of Vienna Secession, and a detail on Apple QuickTake.
Auslöser Magazine is a bilingual (German and English) indie print magazine that focuses on the human stories behind the camera. The Auslöser Magazine Issue 1 (available since March 2019) features 4 long-form in-depth interviews with Friedl Kubelka, Yanina Boldyreva, Wolfgang Zurborn and Brian Finke. Also, there is a behind the scenes photo reportage at the famous publishing and print house STEIDL, and in detail a very special camera from the WestLicht camera museum.
Auslöser Magazine Issue 3
Publisher: Self-publishing company Auslöser
Release: March 2020
Chief Editorship: Sebastian Gansrigler
Art Direction: Sebastian Gansrigler
Assistenz: Kay von Aspern, Martina Schreiner, Niko Havranek
Editing and Translation: Veronika Gansrigler
Workmanship: thread-stiching paperback
Format: 16 × 22 cm
Volume: 160 pages
Language: English, German
Paper: Circlematt White
Typeface: Calyces (Charlotte Rohde), Moderat (Tightype)
Printing: 4-farbig Offset, Printing house Gerin
ISSN 2617-4847
Price: € 20.–
Buy!
WEALLEXIST
Given the current situation, it is more important than ever to widen our view – away from a unidimensional perception and towards a 360° view. This requires not only a certain mindfulness of our immediate environment, but also a significant leap out of our comfort zone, which is as equally important. If the virus forces Germany to run up against its limits, one can only imagine how this situation affects countries with considerable worse starting points. #weallexist (reading direction: bottom to top)
People@Home
People@Home is a joint effort to form an impromptu community of stay-at-homes in times of global pandemics. Initiators of the project are graphic designer and illustrator Moriz Oberberger and designer and web developer Philipp Polder.
The cause of their project is to raise some money for charity (specifically for the Covid-19 Solidarity Fund by the WHO) by offering hand-drawn animations as a donation incentive. Every donor is added to an ever-growing public list of participants and can link to their website. Thereby they can discover their friend’s friends, be entertained by the animations and support a good cause at the same time.
The main idea behind this project is to reflect on this collective experience of self-isolation and social distancing. The designers want to bridge this gap by creating a spontaneous community, that everyone could be a part of. They hope to give all participants the opportunity to form some sort of connection to the project and to each other through discovery. The colorful characters, that each donor becomes a patron of, are representative of the various absurd ways to cope with the ongoing situation. The constant flow of new animations should entertain the “People at Home” and perhaps give them a little something to look forward to. Finally, supporting a good cause with a small donation is also a sure way to feel a little less bleak.
So far 150 people joined the People@Home community and they raised already more than € 2,000.– of donations. Keep spreading the word and become a part of this community as well.
People@Home
Project initiated by Moriz Oberberger and Philipp Polder
Visit People@Home’s Website and make a donation!
The New Machinery in the New Garden
What might normally feel like a sinister form of photographic science fiction, “The New Machinery in the New Garden” imagines a peaceful coexistence between technology and nature.
I’ve been constructing my New Machines for several years, providing physicality to the networks that charm their way into our lives while collecting our data. But recently I’ve coaxed them out of their antiseptic future and into nature, where they wander the land and hover overhead searching for ways to benefit, rather than manipulate, their human architects.
Protection and lack of freedom
We are facing times where the need of protection and security have to coexist with fear and lack of freedom. The same cage that keeps us safe, restricts our liberties.
If we put security above freedom we can end up losing both of them.