A little book of cats

cat zine pages

handlebars

Truth be told I was never very fond of cats. Sure, they’re furry and fuzzy sometimes but what strikes fear in me is their unpredictability. I could be petting them one minute and then the next their claws would be out and I’d have to fend my face away from their weapon-laden paws. Of course this might also suggest that I’m not doing the petting part quite right, but I digress.

A zine about cats however, is the bees knees. I’m content on looking at these feline creatures safely behind the pages zines and books, and this one by Oswald Flump looks super promising. Oswald is not a he, but a she, and her real name is Sally who lives by the sea in UK.

Her flickr stream never fails to amuse me as well, and it’s where you should be headed to right now.

Heiko Müller

Heiko Muller

Heiko Muller

heiko Muller

Heiko Muller

Heiko Müller is a Hamburg (Germany) based artist who combines the surrealism of nature with art. With themes that revolve around nature with a touch of darkness, he experiments with imagery that has the ability to haunt and delight at the same time.

From his bio:
My art comes from an urge to explore. I like the countryside. I like a good view. And once I’m face to face with a lovely scenery, I feel immediately tempted to find out what it’s concealing. The dark goings-on behind the façade of nature, you might say, or the hidden machinations of the animal kingdom.

To imagine and express this, I usually tap the lines linking religious icon art, renaissance painting and comic culture. I am particularly thrilled by the kind of spiritual terror you find expressed in the paintings of the old Flemish masters, and I’m trying to find out what happens when you apply that mood to the serene and harmless world of rural folk art.

There’s something to be said about the way Heiko renders the hidden inner workings of nature’s mind; I’ll definitely look twice the next time I’m going camping! Of course if you don’t want to do the imagining so much, pick up Heiko’s prints over at Thumbtack Press.

Plastic Bag People

Plastic Bag People

Plastic Bag People

Plastic Bag People

These plastic bag people made by Alice Rebecca Potter made me smile today. It’s for the parade of Fox Carnival Band at 2010’s Notting Hill Carnival but I think it’s especially relevant these days seeing how we’re denouncing the use of plastic bags everywhere. Poking fun at plastic is definitely the way to go.

See more of her work over at her website and I found her via Flickr.

UPDATE: Here’s a link to her portfolio.