Jonathan Viner was born in 1976 somewhere in New York. He still lives and works from NY. His Website.


Jonathan Viner - Anchorpoint
Jonathan Viner – Anchorpoint

Art by Jonathan Viner - A Sluggish Intervention
Jonathan Viner – A Sluggish Intervention

Art by Jonathan Viner - A Pale Girl In Pale Camo
Jonathan Viner – A Pale Girl In Pale Camo

Jonathan Viner - Bloodline
Jonathan Viner – Bloodline

Jonathan Viner - An Exemplar Of Detached Observation
Jonathan Viner – An Exemplar Of Detached Observation

Jonathan Viner - Love Song
Jonathan Viner – Love Song

Jonathan Viner - Nearsight
Jonathan Viner – Nearsight

Adidas implemented the world’s biggest fresco (800m²) at the Central Train Station in Cologne. Pretty imressive!

Adidas Fresco - Caption

Adidas Fresco

This pantheon of Adidas endorsers includes Michael Ballack (captain of the German national team), David Beckham, Zinédine Zidane, Raúl, Kaka, Nakamura, Lukas Podolski, Lionel Messi, Juan Román Riquelme and Djibril Cissé.

A fun campaign by VW depicting King Kong stepping on a Polo end getting hurt. Illustrated by Paul Slater

Polo Kong | Illustrator: Paul Slater
VW Polo - Polo Kong

Some more illustrations by the English Paul Slater:

Paul Slater - A Sheep

Illustration by Paul Slater - A Sheep

Nigel Cooke was born in Manchester, 1973 now lives & works in London.

Here is a snipit of an interview taken from papercoffin.com:

Craig Garrett: Painters, unfairly or not, are always expected to be able to comment on their place in the history of their medium. What episodes in the history of painting have shaped your artistic development? Your attention to detail, for instance, is often labeled ‘Flemish.’

Nigel Cooke: I’m interested in the history of painting as a kind of dictionary of ideals that I’m trying to ransack as completely as possible. I want all the characteristics of painting, from the retarded to the sophisticated, to be simultaneously represented, as though the whole past lives of the medium were flashing before its eyes. So it becomes kind of ahistorical. It’s a kind of parody of the doomed ‘last paintings’ that some artists tried to engineer in the 20th century — a death of painting played out as one big, bloated painting project.

The Flemish thing is a part of this plurality — it’s about giving an intense visual identity to every inch of the image. In my case, this isn’t just about the close rendering of objects (which of course is important), but the use of a range of painting sensibilities alongside those objects.

Below are some of his pieces:

Nigel Cooke – The Paintis On The Road To
Nigel Cooke - The Paintis On The Road To Tarascon

Nigel Cooke – New Accursed Art Club
Nigel Cooke - New Accursed Art Club

Nigel Cooke To Work Is To Play
Nigel Cooke - To Work Is To Play

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