The Open Window sets the benchmark for higher education programmes in the fields of multimedia, animation, film and contemporary design. Our interdisciplinary approach, with a strong practical and theoretical foundation, exposes students to a variety of disciplines, ensuring an unsurpassed employment rate in industry.

Monday 10 June 2013

Google Unveils Doodle to Celebrate Maurice Sendak's Birthday (Video)

 The 10th of June 2013 would have been illustrator and children’s book author Maurice Sendak's 85th birthday. Google unveiled a doodle that celebrates the occasion. It appeared in New Zealand before it was shown in the U.S.
The doodle starts with the familiar hero Max sailing to the land of Where the Wild Things Are. Then the doodle transforms into the scene of In the Night Kitchen. It concludes with the birthday celebration from Bumble-Ardy. Sendak died in 2012 from complications after suffering from a stroke. His final book, My Brother's Book, was published posthumously.

“It’s the only true happiness I’ve ever, ever enjoyed in my life,” Sendak said about making books in his 2009 HBO documentary Tell Them Anything You Want. “It’s sublime to just go into another room and make pictures. It’s magic time where all your weaknesses of character, and all blemishes of personality, and whatever else torments you fades away, just doesn’t matter.”
http://www.complex.com/art-design/2013/06/google-doodle-maurice-sendak-birthday-video

Monday 3 June 2013

Wayne White incorporates type into old paintings

Wayne White is an American artist who takes old painting he has found at thrift stores, and incorporates type into the image. Sounds easy, but much of the text looks like its just sprang up from the landscape, featuring the same shadows and colour schemes as the background. He also drops cultural observations like "Are You a Boy Or A Girl" and "Beauty is Embarrassin'!"
http://www.lifelounge.com.au/art-and-design/news/wayne-white-incorporates-type-into-old-paintings.aspxhttp://www.lifelounge.com.au/art-and-design/news/wayne-white-incorporates-type-into-old-paintings.aspx

Cartoonist Lynda Barry Helps College Students Tap Innate Creativity


Like most of her work, cartoonist Lynda Barry's class at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, is unorthodox. "No artistic talent required," The course is described as a "writing and picture-making class with focus on the basic physical structure of the brain."



http://www.npr.org/2013/05/29/187079888/looking-ahead-to-the-future-of-cartoons-and-creativity

'Nanogardens' Sprout Up On The Surface Of A Penny

April showers bring May flowers. But in this case, the blossoms are too small for even a bumblebee to see.


Engineers at Harvard University have figured out a way to make microscopic sculptures of roses, tulips and violets, each smaller than a strand of hair. http://www.npr.org/blogs/pictureshow/2013/05/20/185509508/nanogardens-sprout-up-on-the-surface-of-a-penny