JIM DATZ

Cy Twombly he studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; herman miller, PARSON's school of design, the Art Students League, New York, where he met Robert Rauschenberg. At Rauschenberg’s encouragement, he attended Black Mountain College where he studied under Franz Kline,  gustav klimt, Robert Motherwell. and Ben Shahn.
JIM DATZ
Illustrator + former Art Director/ Urban Outfitters
Mr. Datz resides in Brooklyn, New York —home to the colossal rides and hot dogs at Coney Island .
His work is reminiscent of olden times, with images of sailors, explorers, keystone cops, and mustached men in bowler caps. After several year’s serving as Urban Outfitters key Art Director, Jim now currently juggles numerous design projects in the corporate and cultural sectors under his own name. He also goes by the moniker “Neither Fish Nor Fowl”. (his website + design firm)






JIM in Brooklyn, New York











































see more :
http://www.neitherfishnorfowl.com/

Shepard Fairey

Cy Twombly he studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; herman miller, PARSON's school of design, the Art Students League, New York, where he met Robert Rauschenberg. At Rauschenberg’s encouragement, he attended Black Mountain College where he studied under Franz Kline,  gustav klimt, Robert Motherwell. and Ben Shahn.

Shepard Fairey
artist


ABOUT: Armed only with a few sheets of Xeroxed sticker paper, artist Shepard Fairey began his art career on the street poles and abandoned buildings of Providence, Rhode Island. (RISD grad’92) In the process, he created an artistic phenomenon, as his “AndrĂ© The Giant Has A Posse” sticker campaign evolved into an iconic image known as “Obey Giant,” propelling him to cult-like status. Shepard used the image in his politically driven work for nearly 20 years, making it hard to imagine that he’d ever be known as anything but the “Obey Giant” guy. But then in 2008, Fairey created a poster of a Senator and presidential hopeful from Illinois. Today, that man sits in the Oval Office, thanks to a campaign that included Shepard’s now-famous blue-and-red “Hope” screen-print. And while Fairey takes pride in that project, it’s also drawn criticism, most notably in an ongoing battle with the Associated Press over image usage. But with all the attention, good and bad, one thing is apparent: Shepard Fairey has a posse, and it’s growing. Fairey recently spoke to The A.V. Club about intellectual property, getting arrested for art, a job offer from Hummer, and why some people love the underground for the wrong reasons.
Since then everything has gone steep uphill for Fairey. He now displays in many museums of contemporary art and sells out his limited edition prints within minutes.


VISIT the : Shepard Fairey/ retrospective
Contemporary Arts Center
Open till august 22, 2010
cincinnati, ohio