Patrick Moberg

April 2008


Images from Wake

April 29th, 2008

Sketches from my visit to Wake Forest University

Alphabet Blocks

April 27th, 2008

Alphabet blocks by illustrator Lauren Nassef
By Lauren Nassef, who has an amazing drawing a day series.

April 27th, 2008


Little Sweets

April 24th, 2008

Little Sweets illustration by the Royal Art Lodge artist collective
Little Sweets by the Royal Art Lodge
These are fucking great.

Egon Schiele

April 23rd, 2008


Science Machine

April 22nd, 2008

Frame from illustration Science Machine by Chad Pugh
Chad Pugh creates Science Machine. I've only hung around Chad a handful of times, but I have a great amount of respect for him. Artists with this sort of patience and skill within the internet landscape are few and far between.

Music Monday

April 21st, 2008

The band Lullatone
Found out about Lullatone today.

Little Boxes

April 16th, 2008


Microscopes

April 10th, 2008

photomicrography by Michael Franklin
I was given a microscope a little over a year ago and was frustrated that I couldn't save images of the things I saw in it. Michael Franklin, who has access to some incredible equipment, posts wonderful photomicrography on Flickr. She goes to RIT in upstate New York (where I went), and studies Biomedical Photography.

Me and My Arrow

April 5th, 2008

Watched The Point last night. It was bizarre and wonderful.

“Whenever inspiration don't find you, you have to find it.”

April 5th, 2008

- Jay-Z

A Recent Favorite

April 3rd, 2008


Murakami Exhibit

April 2nd, 2008

Installation by Takashi Murakami
Murakami exhibit opens at the Brooklyn Museum this Saturday.

"Imagining is the process of thinking 'what else it could be like', 'how else could things be', and we practice that all the time with objects of culture."

April 1st, 2008

-Brian Eno From a talk between Will Wright and Brian Eno that I have on my iPod. Every few months I go back and listen to it. Near the end Eno talks about how we try to extrapolate a lot of information from small choices people make in their physical appearance. Likewise, you embed information about your own lifestyle, or perhaps a lifestyle you wish you had, in the clothes and style you adopt.