Title: guy test
1Negative Space Art by Noma Bar
2- Israeli illustrator Noma Bar cleverly uses
negative space to create some thought provoking
illustrations. His artworks are so simple, yet so
clever you cant fail to be impressed. - An artist using negative space relies on the
space that surrounds the subject to provide shape
and meaning. Of course, the term also refers to
any topic that conjures feelings of unease and
discomfort, says the artist in his latest book
called Negative Space. - Born in 1973 in Israel, Noma graduated from
Bezalel Academy of Art Design in 2000. Since
2001, he has been working in London with a lot of
big names and media outlets including Vodafone,
Coca Cola, BBC, The Observer, The Economist,
Wallpaper and many more. Bar has illustrated over
sixty magazine covers, published over 550
illustrations and released two books Guess Who
The Many Faces of Noma Bar, in 2008 and
Negative Space in early 2009
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???? ??', ? 2008 ? '??? ?????' ?????? 2009 .
4Bomb
5Globalization
6Burka Ban
7Jailed
8Pointed sense
9Escape the Weather
10Forgive Your Enemies
11Fatal Attraction
12Final Cut
13Great Jones Street (D. DeLillos novel)
14Gun Crime
15Hoodies
16Hunger
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19IBM In India Tiny Loans Can Make a Difference
20IBM Now Food Can Tell How Fresh it is
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22Iraq Oil
23Algae Fuel
24Spock
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27Political Cities
28Reserved
29Think Harder
30Pensions and Properties
31Power to the Individual
32Wish You Were Here
33Red Riding Hood
34Shy Guy
35Swimmer
36Tea for Two
37Book Cover
38Charlie Chaplin When Bar works with black and
white, he relies on negative space to create
forms that allow elements to float. Here, Bar
uses one of Charlie Chaplin's most famous
on-screen moments to define his face, though
there are few actual lines . Inspired by
Chaplin's shoe-eating scene in The Gold Rush, Bar
turns a shoelace sum spaghetti strand into
Chaplin's eye and nose the shoe works double
duty as both moustache and mouth.
39Bill Murray As Bar started work on Bill Murray,
he was pleased to discover that in profile,
Murray's face created a ghoulish figure in the
negative space. The Ghostbusters icon for an eye
is a rather obvious, but effective choice.
40Harry Potter We've all been exposed to the Harry
Potter hype. The success of this image is how it
speaks directly to the fictional Harry Potter
story, as well as the reality of this
multi-million dollar industry. The centerpiece of
the illustration is the wand, which evokes
fanciful magic, as well as the almighty dollar.
41George Bush
42Uri Geller
43William Shakespeare The first face Bar ever
published, a full page for Time Out London
related to a feature article about a BBC program
called 'The Search for Shakespeare.'
44Joseph Stalin The hammer and sickle get
rearranged into Joseph Stalin's nose and mouth.
That these two icons can be taken out of context,
but remain in context in that they possess such
associative power that the viewer will know who
this feature face is, bolsters the effectiveness
of Bar's approach to illustration
45Bob Dylan A true cultural icon, Bob Dylan is no
stranger to being interpreted. Bar keeps this one
simple, using three of Dylan's tools of the
trade musical notations, guitar, harmonica. That
Bar can invest such age and mystery into a face
that is primarily white negative space is yet
another example of his ability to see subjects as
more than just people -- they are their careers.
46Albert Einstein Commissioned by The Economist for
a cover story about 100 years of Einstein. Though
the illustration was never printed, Bar considers
this a perfect example of combining two icons,
which results in something that is 'almost like a
logo.' Einstein's famously unkempt hair and the
atomic symbol, with the molecules as eyes, for
this famous face.
47Nelson Mandela Many of Bar's subjects become his
subjects because of dubious behavior. Nelson
Mandela's anti-apartheid activism, however, is a
story of incredible strength in the face of
imprisonment and injustice that concluded with
triumph. Mandela was South Africa's first
president to be voted into office in a
representative democratic election. Mandela
figuratively broke the shackles that imprisoned
him for 27 years, and it is this strength that
Bar celebrates with this illustration
48Kim Jong-Il Known the world over for his cavalier
rhetoric about North Korea's nuclear capability,
missile contrails make for the glasses of Kim
Jong-Il. Commissioned by the Guardian, Bar was
under a deadline, and to this day when he looks
at this illustration, he wishes he had had the
time to use only one missile. Be that as it may,
the illustration works, as it looks like Kim and
also incorporates what he is known for, weaponry
and antagonizing the United States.
49Noma Bars Profile
http//www.dutchuncle.co.uk/illustrators/noma-bar/
show_profile
Noma Bar Negative Space A video clip
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vE7KSvl-dOkc
Noma Bar - Printed Interview
http//grainedit.com/2010/03/17/noma-bar-interview
50Artwork All from the WWW
Music Ernesto Cortazar - Red Roses for a Blue
Lady
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11/2011
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