sample calendarsEvery year for the last 4 years I have looked forward to obtaining the annual calendar from the design team of Cummings & Good in Chester, Connecticut.  Artful and unique, these beautiful creations serve first as an embellishment to any office or kitchen, but then packaged in a canister the happy calendar owner can roll it up at the end of the year and keep a year of events as a time capsule.  These calendars are not just a palette for date keeping, they celebrate a yearly theme… Love, Work, Play, and this year Books. Each month of 2010, a literary theme is illustrated and illuminated… A Book of Photographs, Alphabet Book, Sketch Book, Book Case, Cook Book, and Scrap Book are some of the subjects explored.

The variety of  letterforms, imagery, and illustration on these calendars are examples that have made Cummings & Good the amazing design team that they are. It is a labor of love. For more than three decades the award-winning Cummings & Good have created compelling design solutions for Fortune 500 companies, arts organizations, educational institutions, and special events.  For the past 16 years, the team has created these gorgeous keepsake calendars.

Calendars and cannisterDesign of Time: Ten Years of Cummings & Good Calendars, an exhibition, is presently on display at Thomas J. Dodd Research Center Gallery and Corridor, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut through March 5, 2010.  The exhibit highlights the calendars and covers from 2001 – 2010. The creative process is demonstrated from concept sketches to the final printed pages as well as original art, photographs, constructions, news articles, correspondence, and promotional items. Slow Latin Groove Project will play at the opening reception on Sunday January 24 from 2-4pm.

January 19th – March 5th, 2010
General exhibition Mon – Fri, 8:30 – 4:30 PM

Sunday, January 24th
Opening Reception 2 – 4 PM

Peter and Jan would love to see you at the opening.

Thomas J. Dodd Research Center
University of Connecticut Libraries

Storrs, Connecticut
(860) 486-4500

The Dodd Research Center is adjacent to
the Homer Babbidge Library.

View Directions

Get your own calendar from the Cummings & Good Website
Also available at Mohawk Paper’s Felt & Wire.

Visit the AIGA CT Website

Read More...

I have an aversion to quitting.  Quitting just seems to be an easy way of getting out of a difficult situation.  This notion was probably instilled in me by my mother who would advise me when things got tough, “Oh Lisa, stop being such a baby. Think of this as a challenge.”  Mom was tough for sure!  Because of my upbringing, it has always been my belief that you will never fail unless you quit. As a result, I’ve probably stayed in certain situations for much longer than required. I assign adjectives such as ‘tenacity’, ‘persistence’, and ‘patience’ to any given matter that requires an extra boost of courage. I’d now like to revise this philosophy.

For the past five years or so, I worked very hard on a particular client relationship.  Dragonfly prides itself with cultivating relationships with its clientele and this client was generally pleasant enough.  I had respect for his experience and his work.  The client also could be very difficult.  Micro managing and projects coming in to my studio at the 11th hour were becoming a lifestyle.  The account was challenging on a monthly basis but clearly no reason to quit.

After four years or so, things became much more difficult.  I found myself all too frequently on the receiving end of verbal outbursts and fists slammed upon the table top.  I witnessed my design work crumbled up and thrown into the trash.  I worked through holidays, weekends, and late into the night because of some “graphic design emergency”.  I postponed vacations and often got phone calls at 7am.  Rarely did I hear a simple ‘thank you’ but my invoices were always paid on time.  Still not a reason to quit?

Over the past week, when desperately hoping to enjoy a Thanksgiving Holiday with my family… in came but yet another series of requests for work to prepare for Art Miami Basel in December.  Despite having spent several weeks already assisting this client in preparing his website and marketing materials… micromanaging was the name of the game and many revisions and additional requests for work were made.  The client was stressed and now so was I.  Unpleasant emails were exchanged several times a day.  As I sat at my desk that holiday weekend, miserable and sad, I began to draw what I titled “I Hate Who I Am When I Am With You.”  Now there was a reason to quit the account.  The whole situation was awful and despite the lies, the threats, the demands and the civil disobedience, it was sad.  Ending a relationship of any kind is emotional… it’s a divorce.

Monday morning I completed all work required, penned my resignation and my reasons for doing so. Relief flooded over me like a warm bath.  I’m sure my ex-client felt the same way as I don’t think people who are nasty are happy about their behavior.  During that same week, I received an invitation to join the AIGA CT Board.  I accepted. My long standing, non yelling clients came through my door with reasonable requests for work.  I made phone calls and reached out to old clients and possible new ones.  Positive things were replacing the negative.

I learned a valuable lesson.  Sometimes quitting is exactly what needs to be done.  Sometimes quitting allows us to move on in creative and exciting directions.  It makes room for new opportunities and allows us to look at life with fresh and rested eyes.  At this point, I am happy and thrilled about my future, my work and my clientele.  Never ever will I allow someone else make me hate who I am when I’m with them…and if you should find yourself in this type of situation, neither should you.  Go forth and plant positive seeds in the universe.

Have you had a similar experience?  How did you handle it?  Share your thoughts with a comment below.

Read More...

I  recently had the pleasure of interviewing Chief Operating Officer, Jim Joseph, and Executive Director of Marketing, Publicity and Design, Ingar Forland, at Globe Pequot Press for an upcoming INK article.  GPP is the publisher for the imprint skirt! which recently released Karen Karbo’s The Gospel According to Coco Chanel – Life Lessons From the World’s Most Elegant Woman. There’s been plenty of brouhaha over Coco Chanel these days.  A recent revival of movies, books and buzz have paid homage to the great Chanel and so it was with a certain amount of glee that I obtained a copy of Karbo’s book.

Like the little black dress (invented by non-other than Chanel herself), Karbo’s little book is a pleasure to behold.  The diminutive book fits nicely into your bag for take along reading. The cover is smooth and luxurious.  Fashion illustrations by Chesley McLaren provide the eye candy.  But this book was not written as just another biography of the fashion designer.  This book provides a guide for the modern woman who wishes self sufficiency and empowerment the Chanel way.  With wit and humor, and even a bit of that same snarky Chanel attitude, Karbo’s text provides a series of checks and balances for women navigating life’s many turns.  I read it with greed.  I might even read it again.  Chapters listed as “On Style”, “On Surviving Passion”, “On Embracing the Moment”, “On Money”, and “On Living Life on Your Own Terms” while fun caused me periods of self reflection.  “How do I measure up?” I asked myself, “How can I be better?”  Karbo provided some answers.

Through the pages of The Gospel, we do learn snippets of Chanel’s life… her rags to riches background, the compulsive lying which created her mystique, and her success with and final rejection of love.  But the biography portion of Chanel’s life is not the focus here.  It’s the advice that makes it different and relevant. I especially recommend this book for my fellow ladies who are designers, artists, workaholics and creative entrepreneurs.  Those who enjoy humor and escapism reading with good dose of savoir faire will also not be disappointed.

The Gospel According to Coco Chanel – Life Lessons From the World’s Most Elegant Woman can be obtained from the Globe Pequot Press website and from Amazon, or Barnes and Noble.

Karen Karbo is also the author of How to Hepburn, Lessons of Living From the Great Kate.  Her writings can also be found in Vogue, Elle, Esquire, and Redbook. She lives in Portland, Oregon.

Read More...

Today, October 3, Soundwalk, in joint venture with Clicmobile, will premiere iPhone applications for three Paris audio tours during Nuit Blanche, an annual all-night international arts festival.  For this occasion the Soundwalk iPhone app will be available for free, on October 3 only.

More info at http://nuitblanche.soundwalk.com

Download the different Soundwalk iPhone Paris tours directly on iTunes, available in French and English.  Saint-Germain-Des-Prés, Belleville, and Le Marais iPhone Soundwalks

Read More...

I recently took a three week vacation.  I know, right?  Intervention was required to save me from myself because I have a bit of a problem being a workaholic.  Normally my vacations consist of a long weekend or maybe a 10 day stint where I find myself sleeping for the first 72 hours, then adjusting to the idea of the vacation, and by the time the vacation is over… I’m finally getting the hang of it.

This recent retreat was a staycation (as they call it) and I had around me my loved ones who wholeheartedly supported my “taking it easy.”  Battered and bruised with chronic neck stress and bags under my eyes, I took some time in Boston and then came home for the remainder of my vacation where my family pampered and spoiled me, fed and watered me, and let me nap in the September sunshine.  It was pretty terrific.  By week two, I was beginning unwind.  By week three I noticed a decided change in attitude and physical well being.  My goodness, I hadn’t felt this good since 2006!  I felt clear.

Read More...

artisdeadThat is the question posited by artist and author, Ted Mikulski.  Yup he’s my cousin…but that’s beside the point.  When I first heard about Ted’s plan to publish an art book and learned it’s title, Art Is Dead, I thought “Ted, are you crazy? Of course art is not dead.”  But is it?

As a teacher of art appreciation at Tunxis Community College, Mikulski was surprised to learn that a shockingly low number of students could name their favorite contemporary artist.  When asked this question on the first day of class over the course of several semesters, Mikulski reports that only 2 or 3 of his students each semester could name their favorite LIVING artist.  Some students named their friends, some named Van Gogh.  Interestingly if asked the question”Who is your favorite band or musician?” the examples were plentiful.

The book is Mikulski’s response to “America’s lack of appreciation for art” and offers the opinions and thoughts of 16 contemporary artists, sculptors and photographers.  Accordingly to Mikulski, “I have found through my research that many artists are shocked that I could even consider art to be dead. The sad reality is that many artists are so steadfast in their own work and their own circle that it is difficult for them to see art on a macro scale. Sure artists will always be around, but are they revered? Are they appreciated? And more importantly, are they figureheads in society?”

Read More...

ARTandCopy_graphic1ART & COPY, a new documentary film, has the advertising and design world abuzz!  The new film, directed by Doug Pray, is about the creativity and inspiration behind the work and vision of some of the most influential advertising creatives of our time.  This is not a film about trashing the evil world of advertising.  It is instead a tribute to those relatively unknown few who actually helped shape our society and our culture with their work. These are the people who’ve created such slogans as “Just do it”, “Got Milk?”, and “Think Different.” They’ve created campaigns for the Energizer Bunny, Apple, MTV and so many other ads which became the signs of our times.  Despite advertising’s evil reputation, these brilliant campaigns and creative minds have helped us laugh, think, smile, and have moved us to act.

Read More...

Back in the old days before I had children or a business to run, I would indulge in what I called my “Annual Weekend Read-A-Thon.” Over the course of some weeks (or months) as I went through my life, I would collect books, magazines, brochures, pamphlets etc and stack them in a pile by the side of my bed. When the pile became unwieldy, I planned a Read-A-Thon. Over this past weekend, unwilling to venture out into the hot and humid 90+ degree out of doors… I reinstated the weekend Read-A-Thon.

Read More...