Tag Archives: advertisement


Leon Eisermann

Leon Eisermann_‘Home Invasion’, 2014

Leon Eisermann_‘Home Invasion’, 2014-1

Leon Eisermann_‘Home Invasion’, 2014-2

Leon Eisermann_‘Home Invasion’, 2014-3

Leon Eisermann, installation views of ‘Home Invasion’ (2014)


Van Heusen

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1950s advertisement for Van Heusen shoes.


Bernard Tschumi

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From ‘Advertisements for Architecture’ (1976-77) by Bernard Tschumi.

Tschumi illustrated several of his early theoretical texts with Advertisements for Architecture, a series of postcard-sized juxtapositions of words and images. Each was a manifesto of sorts, confronting the dissociation between the immediacy of spatial experience and the analytical definition of theoretical concepts.


Jack Falanga

jack falanga_Twin  Digital Collage 2011

Jack Falanga, ‘Twin’ (2011)

Digital collage.


Michael Asher

Michael Asher, ‘Think small’ (2010)

Asher’s piece is a reproduction of a 1959 print advertisement designed by Doyle, Dane, and Bernbach for the marketing of Volkswagen in the United States. “Think small” was the tagline in the ad and it became the concept of the campaign. Asher’s piece performs a kind of time travel, stretching back a half a century and replaying a historical campaign for our present consideration. When the “Think small” ads came out, America was firmly committed to a post-war economy perpetuated by the rapid growth of consumerism. Going against that grain, the “Think small” message encouraged investment in a reliable, affordable car rather than an oversized, flashy one. Visually and linguistically, the message of the campaign was to consume less, not more. Yet the ad’s critique of big consumerism performed well for corporate capitalism: many cars were sold, and the ad itself is credited with creating a sea change in the way advertising is created.

(the original ad – right-click and ‘view image’ for enlarging)


Joe Mckay

Joe Mckay, ‘Sunset Solitaire’

In this performance/video/game Mckay wrote a program and built custom hardware that allowed him to mix the sunset live. He then projected with a video projector, from his computer onto a garage in a field behind his studio. As the sun set behind the building he attempted to match the color of the sunset with the projector.

(Also, I want to share this with you: http://homepage.mac.com/joester5/art/gmail.html. A website, by Mckay, on how to remove targeted ads in Gmail.)


In the office

Thank you, Jan!