Open wide for a little taste of manga artist Yuichi Yokoyama’s melt-in-your mouth pastels …
One day, I meet … Parts 1 + 2, the first works from the collaborative unit Ine wo Ueru hito, are teeming with visual trickery, reconfigured animals and the strangely comforting relentless mundanely of vacuuming [read more]
Kiiiiiii according to Kiiiiiii [read more]
Unlike a lot of experimentation in noise aesthetic, Monthly Hair Stylistics possess an irresistible brand of hilarity and silliness [read more]
Picture books, wolves, red shoes, forests, metamorphosis, Buddha and traditional Japanese architecture are the the main recurring motifs in Tomoko Konoike’s mythologically-derived work that sets out to examine man’s relationship with nature [read more]
A look back at the psychedelic posters of Aquirax Uno, a prolific and vastly influential graphic artist and illustrator of the 60’s and 70’s who had a penchant for the erotic and the weird [read more]
Illustrator Ayame Ono’s works are populated by electric-eyed donkeys, regal llamas, scissor-holding lambs and owls turning into space parapets. It’s a weird, spliced up wonderland where the creatures meekly agree to, “stop making sense” [read more]
Meet Takeshi Hamada’s pet tiger. The type designer and art director founded the e-magazine as a project back in his student days. Since 2000 it has existed as a platform for visual experimentation with the only restriction being the dimensions of the virtual ‘pages’. Luckily for us, all back issues are archived on tiger.org, making for a mouth-watering buffet of utterly original graphic design, illustration, page layout and photography [read more]








