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"The Trickster By Not Now Nancy"
"Tricksters are boundary-crossers, and the breaker of rules. They violate principles of social and natural order, playfully disrupting normal life and then re-establishing it on a new basis. Using the ace of spades as the motif of the print (the Ace of spades is being the highest card in the pack and also known as the death card), This gives the trickster free reign to use their cunning and cause disruption and mischief."
Price: 80.00

"I'm An Artist! By Mark Hooley"
"This new work features MagnetBoy a comic book character created by Mark Hooley. Here MagnetBoy grips a brush in one of his magnet hands and splashes a rainbow of paint colours onto the left of the page underneath are the words ‘I am an artist’."
Price: 300.00

"RUN! Krakken! By Mark Hooley"
"This piece in a simple blue pallet features Mark Holley’s comic book creation MagentBoy running from the legendary Krakken sea monster who is rising out of the ocean."
Price: 125.00

"Proud Vader By Richard Berner"
"This latest edition to Berner’s series of Star Wars prints features the iconic Darth Vader helmet from the original Star Wars movies. Instead of its usual dark black Berener’s original work mixed this with drips of watercolour and fluorescent poster paints giving another dimension to Darth Vaders dark side."
Price: 120.00

"BB8 By Richard Berner"
"The dynamic little BB8 droid from 2015 The Force Awakens is the latest in Richard Berner’s series of Star Wars paintings. The original work was created using black gouache and orange poster paint."
Price: 175.00

"La Force By Jamie Hewlett"
"La Force (VIII Strength) is one of a new series of Tarot card designs inspired by magic realist Chilean art film auteur Alejandro Jodorowsky’s reconstruction of the original Tarot de Marseille. Jamie Hewlett has produced 22 Tarot cards so far, reconciling Jodorowsky’s uniquely psychoshamanic sensibilities with his own distinct stylistic signature."
Price: 205.00

"L’Empereur By Jamie Hewlett"
"L'Empereur (IV The Emperor) is one of a new series of Tarot card designs inspired by magic realist Chilean art film auteur Alejandro Jodorowsky’s reconstruction of the original Tarot de Marseille. Jamie Hewlett has produced 22 Tarot cards so far, reconciling Jodorowsky’s uniquely psychoshamanic sensibilities with his own distinct stylistic signature."
Price: 205.00

"Le Judgement By Jamie Hewlett"
"Le Jugement (XX The Judgment) is one of a new series of Tarot card designs inspired by magic realist Chilean art film auteur Alejandro Jodorowsky’s reconstruction of the original Tarot de Marseille. Jamie Hewlett has produced 22 Tarot cards so far, reconciling Jodorowsky’s uniquely psychoshamanic sensibilities with his own distinct stylistic signature."
Price: 205.00

"Le Diable By Jamie Hewlett"
"Le Diable (XV The Devil) is one of a new series of Tarot card designs inspired by magic realist Chilean art film auteur Alejandro Jodorowsky’s reconstruction of the original Tarot de Marseille. Jamie Hewlett has produced 22 Tarot cards so far, reconciling Jodorowsky’s uniquely psychoshamanic sensibilities with his own distinct stylistic signature."
Price: 205.00

"XIII By Jamie Hewlett"
"XIII (XIII Death) is one of a new series of Tarot card designs inspired by magic realist Chilean art film auteur Alejandro Jodorowsky’s reconstruction of the original Tarot de Marseille. Jamie Hewlett has produced 22 Tarot cards so far, reconciling Jodorowsky’s uniquely psychoshamanic sensibilities with his own distinct stylistic signature."
Price: 205.00

"Somebody To Save People 3/8 By Kurar"
"‘Somebody To Save People’ is an fantastic piece by artist Kurar - featuring a young boy in shorts with old fashioned socks and shoes, using his watering can to water a small scale mushroom cloud from an atomic bomb. This piece is in black and white, apart from deep red in the menacing dangerous cloud, and vibrant colours in the modern graffiti which covers the boy’s shorts, contrasting not only colours, but times. ‘Somebody To Save People’ is signed and numbered by the artist."
Price: 950.00

"Batterie De Cuisine By Lucienne Day"
"Lucienne Day was a prolific twentieth century textile designer, who revitalised post-war British homes with her vibrant patterns and designs. Her work is bold, fresh and vibrant, incorporating Edwardian style flora and fauna, as well as graphic shapes with an early modernist flavour, which still look as stylish today as when they were first produced. ‘Batterie de Cuisine’ combines graphic design with tactile art. The print - which uses a kitchen-towel design that Day produced for Thomas Somerset in the 1960s - is a triumph of colour and composition. Day uses vertical stripes of bright colour - turquoise and lime green - against stark monochrome. Amongst the bands of colour, Day has placed silhouettes and negatives of kitchenware - pots and pans, sieves and spoons - in an ordered pattern, creating a bold style with the inimitable retro flavour of the 1960s."
Price: 195.00

"Bouquet Garni By Lucienne Day"
"Lucienne Day was a prolific twentieth century textile designer, who revitalised post-war British homes with her vibrant patterns and designs. Her work is bold, fresh and vibrant, incorporating Edwardian style flora and fauna, as well as graphic shapes with an early modernist flavour, which still look as stylish today as when they were first produced. ‘Bouquet Garni’ combines graphic design with tactile art. The print - which uses a kitchen-towel design that Day produced for Thomas Somerset in the 1960s - is a triumph of colour and composition. Day uses horizontal stripes of bright colour - earthy brown, sunflower yellow and tropical blue - against panels of off-white. Amongst the bands of colour, Day has stitched delicate black patterns of leaves, stalks, and laurels, which are both graphic and carefully detailed, to create a bold, beautiful style with the inimitable retro flavour of the 1960s."
Price: 195.00

"Night and Day By Lucienne Day"
"Lucienne Day was a prolific twentieth century textile designer, who revitalised post-war British homes with her vibrant patterns and designs. Her work is bold, fresh and vibrant, incorporating Edwardian style flora and fauna, as well as graphic shapes with an early modernist flavour, which still look as stylish today as when they were first produced. ‘Night and Day’ combines graphic design with tactile art. The print - which uses a kitchen towel-design that Day produced for Thomas Somerset in the 1960s - is a triumph of colour and composition. Day has split the linen into two sections, one off-white, the other deep brown, to depict both night and day. The top section contains a large, yellow globe, edged with tiny black flecks, to represent the sun. In the bottom, Day has created a symmetrical white orb, containing a black, illustrated owl and three night-time stars. The final result is bold and graphic, with the inimitable retro flavour of the 1960s."
Price: 195.00

"Too Many Cooks By Lucienne Day"
"Lucienne Day was a prolific twentieth century textile designer, who revitalised post-war British homes with her vibrant patterns and designs. Her work is bold, fresh and vibrant, incorporating Edwardian style flora and fauna, as well as graphic shapes with an early modernist flavour, which still look as stylish today as when they were first produced. ‘Too Many Cooks’ combines graphic design with tactile art. The print - which uses a kitchen-towel design that Day produced for Thomas Somerset in the 1960s - is a triumph of colour and composition. Day has created row after row of simple figures, each adorned in brown, purple and black garb. The different figures are repeated, but not in uniform order, for a higgledy-piggledy aesthetic that has enduring charm. The final ressult is bold, graphic, and beautiful, with the inimitable retro flavour of the 1960s."
Price: 195.00

"Land of Milk and Honey II By Angela Newberry"
"Angela Newberry is a prolific printmaker who has been working with linocuts, relief prints and screen prints since the 1950s. Her work is largely landscape driven, focusing on the topographies, climate, and eco-cultures of rural parts of the world. Like her tutor Edward Bawden, her aesthetic is one which mixes naivety with highly skilled processes, to create an appealing charm that artfully captures her passion for geographical place. ‘Land of Milk and Honey II’ depicts the Yugoslavian countryside, with rolling fields of yellow and green, striated pink crops and a hazy, clouded sky. The image proffers the bounteousness of the Yugoslavian land - the land of milk and honey - with its diverse mixture of market and agricultural corps, growing side by side. Newberry’s use of bright colour and her skilled compositional technique make this an exceptional and beautiful print."
Price: 138.00

"Somerset II By Angela Newberry"
"Angela Newberry is a prolific printmaker who has been working with linocuts, relief prints and screen prints since the 1950s. Her work is largely landscape driven, focusing on the topographies, climate, and eco-cultures of rural parts of the world. Like her tutor Edward Bawden, her aesthetic is one which mixes naivety with highly skilled processes, to create an appealing charm that artfully captures her passion for geographical place. ‘Somerset II’ shows a patch of somerset coastline at low-tide, its crackled ground and ovoid pebbles exposed. Newberry has an astonishing eye for colour, mixing chalky blue with moss greens, burnt oranges and harsh chunks of black, for a dramatic and moody effect. A dusky, beige coloured sky perches above the landscape, with simple white clouds hovering uncertainly across the vista. Full of childlike charm, ‘Somerset II’ is a triumph of colour and composition: a truly beautiful print."
Price: 138.00

"Mediterranean Head By Bryan Ingham"
"Bryan Ingham was an English painter, etcher, sculptor, and collage artist who practiced in multiple mediums and was inspired by the Cubist styles of Braque, Gris and Picasso. His aesthetic carries the Cubist play of perspective to new heights, experimenting with form and substance to create striking, mixed media prints. ‘Mediterranean Head I’ instantly recalls a Picasso portrait - the famous ‘Weeping Woman’, perhaps, or one of ‘Les Demoiselles D’Avignon’. Yet Ingham’s work removes the brutality of a Picasso, revelling in a naivety and simplicity which is easier on the eye, with more elegant appeal. Ingham layers blocks of sketchy colour, using a palette of earthy greens and mossy browns against bold-red and deep-violet. Much of the image remains monochrome, for graphic effect, the face itself formed out of carefully ruled pencil lines. If there is something grotesque in Picasso’s warped perspectival experiments, Ingham has replaced this with a mathematical, stripped-back approach, creating a final result that is pleasing and harmonious."
Price: 115.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Shoreditch By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of metropolitan areas, Buonaguidi has created lithograph prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters, overlaid across the entire map image. For Shoredtich, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the fashionable East London district from a historic map (probably early twentieth-century, although the lack of date provides some novelty guesswork for the cartography enthusiast). Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the gentle palette of salmon pink, mustard yellow and lime green, interspersed with ribbons of black and white. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white, with a thin black outline. It’s the perfect print for the Shoreditch lover, or for anyone with a penchant for graphic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 50.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Amsterdam By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of metropolitan areas, Buonaguidi has created lithograph prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters, overlaid across the entire map image. For Amsterdam, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the laid-back European capital from a historic map (probably early twentieth-century, although the lack of date provides some novelty guesswork for the cartography enthusiast). Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the gentle palette of salmon pink, chalky-blue and lime green, interspersed with ribbons of white. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and coral coloured with a thin white outline. It’s the perfect print for the Amsterdam lover, or for anyone with a penchant for graphic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 50.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Brussels By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of metropolitan areas, Buonaguidi has created lithograph prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters, overlaid across the entire map image. For Brussels, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the European capital from a historic map (probably early twentieth-century, although the lack of date provides some novelty guesswork for the cartography enthusiast). Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the labyrinthine network of streets and the soft palette of yellows, blues and pinks. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white, with a thin black outline. It’s the perfect print for the Brussels lover, or for anyone with a penchant for graphic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 50.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Munich By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of metropolitan areas, Buonaguidi has created lithograph prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters, overlaid across the entire map image. For Munich, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the German city from a historic map (probably mid twentieth-century, although the lack of date provides some novelty guesswork for the cartography enthusiast). Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the labyrinthine explosion of the city plan and the electric palette of black against white, mixed with bright yellows, pinks and greens. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white. It’s the perfect print for the Munich lover, or for anyone with a penchant for graphic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 75.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - NYC By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of metropolitan areas, Buonaguidi has created lithograph prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters, overlaid across the entire map image. For New York, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the iconic East-Coast City from a house number and transit guide map, complete with key. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the blocky shape of Manhattan Island, with its rigid, uniform street plan, set against the deep, cyan blue of the sea and laced with ribbons of lemon yellow and forest green. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white, with a thin red outline. It’s the perfect print for the New York lover, or for anyone with a penchant for graphic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 195.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Norfolk By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters, overlaid across the entire map. For Norfolk, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the coastal county from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the soft palette of blue and green and the blocky shape of Norfolk with ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white. It’s the perfect print for the Norfolk lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 195.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Kent By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters, overlaid across the entire map. For Kent, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the coastal county from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the soft palette of blue and green and the blocky shape of Kent, with ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white. It’s the perfect print for the Kent lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 195.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Dartmoor By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties and areas, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters. For Dartmoor, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the vast moorland from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the soft green palette with the ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white. It’s the perfect print for the Dartmoor lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 195.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Lake District By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties and areas, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters. For the Lake District, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the mountainous region from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the bold, burnt orange palette, interspersed with sections of blue river and ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white. It’s the perfect print for the Lake District lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 195.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Cornwall By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters. For Cornwall, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the coastal county from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the blue and green palette, interspersed with ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white. It’s the perfect print for the Cornwall lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 195.00

"I Fucking Love This Place - Suffolk By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘I Fucking Love This Place’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the frank admission, ‘I fucking love this place’ in huge letters. For Suffolk, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the coastal county from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the blue and green palette, interspersed with ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, serif type, italicised and white. It’s the perfect print for the Suffolk lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for artsy humour."
Price: 195.00

"Let's Get Lost Together - Ireland By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘Let’s Go Get Lost Together’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties and countries, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the escapist suggestion, ‘let’s go get lost together’ in huge letters. For Ireland, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the country from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the blue and green palette, interspersed with ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, white sans-serif type, with alternating lines of bold upper-case and italicised lower-case, for graphic dynamism. It’s the perfect print for the Ireland lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for typography."
Price: 150.00

"Let's Get Lost Together - Scotland (Atholl) By Dave Buonaguidi"
"Print artist Dave Buonaguidi knows how to provoke reactions. Famous for creating the iconic ‘MAKE TEA NOT WAR’ poster in 2003 - an image that now hangs in both the V&A and Trento Museum of Modern Art, and became notorious at the height of anti-war sentiment - Buonaguidi continues to stir up the art world with stylised prints, splashed with graphic, tongue-in-cheek slogans. His recent, ‘Let’s Go Get Lost Together’ series brings together graphic sensibility, effortless simplicity, and wry humour to perfection. Using vintage maps of British counties and countries, Buonaguidi has created silkscreen prints, each one dominated by the escapist suggestion, ‘let’s go get lost together’ in huge letters. For Scotland, Buonaguidi has taken a large cross section of the country from a vintage road map. Buonaguidi has a fantastic eye for colour, composition and graphics: the print is all about the blue and green palette, interspersed with ribbons of thin, red and black roads snaking throughout. The font for the slogan is a large, white sans-serif type, with alternating lines of bold upper-case and italicised lower-case, for graphic dynamism. It’s the perfect print for the Scotland lover, or for anyone with a penchant for cartographic design and a taste for typography."
Price: 150.00