Posts tagged graphic design
Suprematism

Suprematism is a Russian abstract art movement developed by Kazimir Malevich circa 1915, it is characterised by simple geometrical shapes and associated with ideas of spiritual purity.

With the single mindedness of a missionary or a prophet, Malevich spent nearly 15 years of his career espousing the aesthetic and moral superiority of a system of abstract art he termed Suprematism. A complete departure from any pictorial method theretofore recognised in art, Suprematism was characterised by Malevich as “that end and beginning where sensations are uncovered, where art emerges as such” 

Through (Lazslo) Moholy-Nagy, Malevich was invited to prepare a publication for the series of books being published by the Bauhaus on new currents in Modern art. … Though derived from lectures and articles formulated in a variety of iterations since 1922, the book became a means for Malevich to attempt a more straightforward syntheses of his artistic principles than ever before, translated into a western language. In the first part, he mapped out in text and sixty-six illustrations aspects of the real world that had inspired the foundations of Suprematism. From the painterly abstractions of natural form found in impressionism, works by Paul Cezanne, and Cubism to the machine-age marvel of airplanes, blimps, trains, skyscrapers, and aerial views of cityscapes (creating a perhaps unintended parity with LeCorbusier’s treatise Vers une architecture [Toward a New Architecture], published four years prior). In the second part, Malevich launched into the realm of sensation and pure feeling, offering a catalogue of twenty-four ideal Suprematist forms that demonstrated the contrasting states derived from the first three basic Suprematist elements, the black square, the black circle, and the black cross, and from more dynamic compositions with connotations of feeling, movement, and sound.

Malevich’s Alogic works (1914-15) are playful and cryptic, employing abstract geometric form more freely than his previous Cubo-Futurist works. In the same way that the transnational verse of poets like Khlebnikov and Kruchenykh attempted to open up new possibilities in language through an intuitive, absurdist aesthetic that challenged all sense of commonly accepted reason (as in the libretto for Victory Over the Sun, for instance), Malevich’s Alogic works were experiments with visual form intended to confound conventional picture making, inventing new relations or associations derived from a “random” collision between seemingly unrelated images and shapes. “We come to the rejection of reason,” Malevich wrote, “but this has been possible only because a different form of reason has arisen within us … It has its own law and construction and also meaning, and only in the light of this knowledge will our work be based on a totally new, transrational precept.” 

The Pattern Guild X 3rd Rail Clothing Collaboration
 

We have had the great pleasure of collaborating with the excellent 3rd Rail Clothing on a brand new all over printed t-shirt. We are extremely pleased with the finished result and have been blown away by the attention to detail they have given at every stage of the project.
The t-shirt will be up for grabs in a competition they are running before it becomes available to buy, we will be posting a link in the next few days once it goes live.

Here are some photos from the different process stages.

Stage 1: Panel Printing

The design is printed onto a lightweight white jersey t-shirt fabric in two layers using water based inks.

Stage 2: Pattern Cutting and Assembly

The t-shirt template is laid out and marked before cutting begins, the panels are then sewn together and the ribbing is added at the very end.

Stage 3: The Final Product

The finished project is a limited edition t-shirt that comes with a screen print and is packaged in its own custom box.

The t-shirt: Two colour, water-based print each garment is made from screen printed fabric panels.

The print: 2 colour screen print on Southbank Smooth measuring 30cm x 24cm.

The box: Die cut archival board with 2 colour screen printed sleeve.