Jorge Colombo’s cover for the June 1, 2009 issue of The New Yorker was composed entirely in the Brushes iPhone app. And it looks like the artist’s switch to a digital format is no gimmick — he tells The New York Times that the device allows him to work “without having to carry all my pens and brushes and notepads with me.” And he can work in anonymity — to complete the cover he spent about an hour on 42nd Street, with no interruptions. Via (engadget)
Also see David Hockney Creating art with his Iphone (link)
Jorge Colombo’s i-Phone-generated artwork featured on cover of The New Yorker
Related Posts
Frieze Art Fair Launches Free iPhone/ iPAD App
Frieze is launching a free iPhone and iPad app this autumn. The company’s first mobile app will be an invaluable […]
Museum Launches Groundbreaking Explorer IPhone App to Rave Reviews
The American Museum of Natural History’s Explorer, a groundbreaking free app for iPhone and iPod touch that is part navigation […]
IPhone 4 Potraits to Order from Dave Lanham
Dave Lanham is also an artist who holds FaceTime calls with his iPhone 4 to draw portraits of people at […]
IPHONE CASES OFFER PERSONALIZED ART BY JOSHUA DAVIS, DEANNE CHEUK AND MORE
Case-mate has launched I Make My Case, a site that allows users to remix the designs of illustrators and artists […]
Trending Articles
- Turner Prize 2024 shortlist revealed on 40th anniversary. Tate Britain today announced the four artists who have been shortlisted for the Turner Prize 2024: Pio Abad, Claudette Johnson,…
- National Portrait Gallery announces shortlist for Herbert Smith Freehills Portrait Award 2024 L-R: Zizi, 2023 by Isabella Watling © Isabella Watling; Jacqueline with Still Life, 2020 by Antony Williams © Antony Williams;…
- Top 5 exhibitions to see during the Venice Biennale. As the Art World flocks to see the national pavilions of the Venice Biennale, cultural institutions around town put their…
- Venice Biennale 2024 – Top 7 Padiglione Centrale Giardini | image by Andrea Avezzu, courtesy La Biennale di Venezia Stranieri Uvunque (Foreigners Everywhere) is the theme…