First of all, thanks to everyone, all 200-plus of you, who came to Artspace 111 last Thursday night for our inaugural Visionary Awards. And thanks, in general, to all of our readers and supporters –– on that Thursday night on the other side of town, at Central Market specifically, Weekly friends and employees and music lovers were out in force for a show by Kevin Aldridge and Blackland River Devils as part of our and Central Market’s free weekly outdoor concert series, Thursday Night Live. We couldn’t do anything without you guys, and we thank you all from the bottom of our collective journalism-and-arts-lovin’ heart.
Thanks to Seryn for plugging in at Artspace 111 and blowing everyone away, and congrats to our Visionary Awards honorees: photorealist Michelle Brandley, filmmaker Andrew Disney, and multimedia artist Micah Yarborough. Congrats also to Jordan Roberts, whose label design for the forthcoming Visionary Brew, brewed by Rahr & Sons Brewing Company to commemorate our Visionary Awards, was the popular favorite based on the votes of attendees. View the five finalist designs below and also some images of the event. See you next year.
Hey did anybody else notice that the so-called original artwork of the winning entry from Jordan Brown is a direct ripoff of a woodcut from M. Jean Belot in1649, later translated to English by Richard Saunders? No not an allusion to it, but an exact duplicate precisely as it appears in Physiognomie and Chiromancie, London: Nathaniel Brooke, 1671, p. 51. Wow, now that’s some serious visionary work there! There must have been some remote viewing involved.
You’re exactly right Psychotic. It’s a publicly open image meaning it has no rights holder therefor open to public use for whatever. What I did is no different than using royalty free stock imagery to create a design which is done everyday in graphic design. Is it what I would have liked to have ultimately submitted? No. But time was a factor and using this essentially royalty free image is what I went with. I had no clue it would win and if I had been given the opportunity I would have replaced the image with an illustration of my own which I am beyond capable of doing so essentially that was an FPO or in laymans terms For Placement Only.
Thanks Jordan,
I apologize for my snarkiness. I was not feeling well that day and immediately felt badly for having posted such a rant. Please accept my apology and allow me to make amends.
Photos by Robert Hart.
Hey did anybody else notice that the so-called original artwork of the winning entry from Jordan Brown is a direct ripoff of a woodcut from M. Jean Belot in1649, later translated to English by Richard Saunders? No not an allusion to it, but an exact duplicate precisely as it appears in Physiognomie and Chiromancie, London: Nathaniel Brooke, 1671, p. 51. Wow, now that’s some serious visionary work there! There must have been some remote viewing involved.
Correction: Jordan Roberts. Not Jordan Brown.
You’re exactly right Psychotic. It’s a publicly open image meaning it has no rights holder therefor open to public use for whatever. What I did is no different than using royalty free stock imagery to create a design which is done everyday in graphic design. Is it what I would have liked to have ultimately submitted? No. But time was a factor and using this essentially royalty free image is what I went with. I had no clue it would win and if I had been given the opportunity I would have replaced the image with an illustration of my own which I am beyond capable of doing so essentially that was an FPO or in laymans terms For Placement Only.
Thanks Jordan,
I apologize for my snarkiness. I was not feeling well that day and immediately felt badly for having posted such a rant. Please accept my apology and allow me to make amends.
Civility in the comments section? What a concept.