Avatar
Like the Brookston Beer Bulletin, but also including everything else I'm obsessed with.

Likes

Posts tagged art

This is a pretty cool piece or artwork that would look great on your wall. Los Angeles-based artist David Odere has created a poster entitled There Are 1,952 Craft Breweries In The United States, in which the glass of beer, head included, contains the names of every one of those 1,952 breweries. The poster is below, but to really get a flavor for it, look at in his website, Factry, where you can zoom in on it to read all of the brewery names. Last time I’d checked, the number was in the high 1800s, but I guess we’ve gone way past 1900 since then. Can hitting 2,000 breweries be very far away at this point? See if you can find your own or the ones in your area. For $20 (plus shipping) you can also but an 18″ x 24″ poster of it.

Paintings are like a beer, only beer tastes good and it’s hard to stop drinking beer.
Billy Carter

Sixpoint Craft Ales in Brooklyn, New York is having an art and beer contest called “Beer Is Culture” as we speak, and you can see the entries at their Facebook page. One in particular I thought was pretty funny, a flowchart by Melissa Schmechel where all the choices lead one to beer. But beyond the humor factor, it does nicely showcase just how versatile beer is, because despite the fact that every path leads to beer, few people would disagree that the flowchart isn’t 100% accurate.

Summit Brewing, in St. Paul, Minnesota, commissioned a local artist, Miss Amy Jo, to create a poster celebrating the passage of the Cullen-Harrison on its effective date of April 7, 1933. Eight months before the repeal of Prohibition, the bill allowed the production of 3.2 beer in about twenty states, including Minnesota. I love the retro look of it. It will probably drive historian Bob Skilnik batty, but it’s a cool poster and it’s available for purchase at Summit’s online store.

Strong Women Brew Strong Beer

Fuck yeah they do.

Thursday’s Thanksgiving ad is a Miss Rheingold ad from 1945. In that  year, Pat Boyd was Miss Rheingold. She was the fifth woman to hold the  title. Leaning on a fence with a giant turkey perched on it, she’s  reading “Carving the Easy Way,” which I can only assume would make the  turkey nervous. “My beer is RHEINGOLD — the DRY beer! It’s beer as beer should taste.” Happy Thanksgiving everybody!

Thursday’s Thanksgiving ad is a Miss Rheingold ad from 1945. In that year, Pat Boyd was Miss Rheingold. She was the fifth woman to hold the title. Leaning on a fence with a giant turkey perched on it, she’s reading “Carving the Easy Way,” which I can only assume would make the turkey nervous. “My beer is RHEINGOLD — the DRY beer! It’s beer as beer should taste.” Happy Thanksgiving everybody!

Today’s art is a beautiful lithograph from 1889 featuring both beer and  baseball, our recent topic during the MLB Playoffs and World Series.  Although the lithograph is essentially an advertisement, its age,  historic nature, value and artistic beauty make it artistic enough to be  featured here, at least in my opinion. Known as the Cap Anson and Buck Ewing “Burke Ale” Beer Poster, it is the first known time that a baseball player was paid for his endorsement for advertising. The two baseball players were Cap Anson, of the Chicago White Stockings (the team that eventually became the Cubs, the modern White Sox took  their name from the Cubs’ abandoned nickname in 1900), and Buck Ewing,  of the New York Giants (now, of course, the San Francisco Giants, on their way to the World  Series). The beer being advertised is essentially from Guinness, their Finest Pale Ale and Extra Foreign Stout,  both of which were sold under the label “E. & J. Burke,” which was  for Edward and John Burke who, had a liquor importing company and was  licensed by Guinness to sell their products under that name, beginning  in either 1849 or 1880 (accounts disagree) and continuing through the  start of Prohibition.
Here’s the description from Robert Edwards Auctions, who auctioned one of only three known posters in 2008:

Both Anson and Ewing are pictured in their respective  uniforms as they take a break from a game to enjoy a refreshing glass of  beer. Anson is seen enjoying a glass of Finest Pale Ale, while Ewing  opts for a glass of Extra Foreign Stout. The timeless appeal of this  piece, aside from the colorful graphics and high-quality production  values, lies in the artistry of the scene as a whole. In what was then a  nostalgic homage to the game’s early history, Anson and Ewing are  pictured relaxing outside a large retiring tent. Such tents, which were  holdovers from the game of cricket, were a common site at ball games  during the 1850s and early 1860s, but were no longer in vogue at the  time. A large banner displayed above the tent reads “Champions,” which  most likely refers to the many championships won by each player’s  respective teams in the preceding years, to which they now toast.  Pictured in the background is a game-in-progress scene (presumably  between the White Stockings and Giants), with the field bordered by a  filled-to-capacity grandstand. The foreground image further promotes the  company’s products, as Anson is sitting on a keg of Finest Pale Ale and  Ewing is resting his arm on a barrel of Extra Foreign Stout. Boxes of  “Burke’s Old Irish Whiskey” and “Garm Kirk Scotch Whiskey” are also  visible among the barrels. Perhaps the most amusing detail are the  numerous empty bottles of each respective beverage that are strewn all  along the ground at their feet, along with various pieces of baseball  equipment (base, ball and box, and bat). Also in the foreground, lying  next to a beer barrel, is letter of endorsement from the brewery that  bears an “Arthur Guinness Son & Co.” seal. The name of the  lithography company, “Wagner & Co. Lith – 75 Murray St. N.Y.,” is  printed in the lower right corner of the poster.

The Robert Edwards Auctions also has a lot more information about the poster. According to Collectors Corner,  the poster “sold for an astonishing $188,000, setting a record for a  baseball-related advertising poster and a record for any American  advertising poster featuring a product of any kind.”

Today’s art is a beautiful lithograph from 1889 featuring both beer and baseball, our recent topic during the MLB Playoffs and World Series. Although the lithograph is essentially an advertisement, its age, historic nature, value and artistic beauty make it artistic enough to be featured here, at least in my opinion. Known as the Cap Anson and Buck Ewing “Burke Ale” Beer Poster, it is the first known time that a baseball player was paid for his endorsement for advertising. The two baseball players were Cap Anson, of the Chicago White Stockings (the team that eventually became the Cubs, the modern White Sox took their name from the Cubs’ abandoned nickname in 1900), and Buck Ewing, of the New York Giants (now, of course, the San Francisco Giants, on their way to the World Series). The beer being advertised is essentially from Guinness, their Finest Pale Ale and Extra Foreign Stout, both of which were sold under the label “E. & J. Burke,” which was for Edward and John Burke who, had a liquor importing company and was licensed by Guinness to sell their products under that name, beginning in either 1849 or 1880 (accounts disagree) and continuing through the start of Prohibition.

Here’s the description from Robert Edwards Auctions, who auctioned one of only three known posters in 2008:

Both Anson and Ewing are pictured in their respective uniforms as they take a break from a game to enjoy a refreshing glass of beer. Anson is seen enjoying a glass of Finest Pale Ale, while Ewing opts for a glass of Extra Foreign Stout. The timeless appeal of this piece, aside from the colorful graphics and high-quality production values, lies in the artistry of the scene as a whole. In what was then a nostalgic homage to the game’s early history, Anson and Ewing are pictured relaxing outside a large retiring tent. Such tents, which were holdovers from the game of cricket, were a common site at ball games during the 1850s and early 1860s, but were no longer in vogue at the time. A large banner displayed above the tent reads “Champions,” which most likely refers to the many championships won by each player’s respective teams in the preceding years, to which they now toast. Pictured in the background is a game-in-progress scene (presumably between the White Stockings and Giants), with the field bordered by a filled-to-capacity grandstand. The foreground image further promotes the company’s products, as Anson is sitting on a keg of Finest Pale Ale and Ewing is resting his arm on a barrel of Extra Foreign Stout. Boxes of “Burke’s Old Irish Whiskey” and “Garm Kirk Scotch Whiskey” are also visible among the barrels. Perhaps the most amusing detail are the numerous empty bottles of each respective beverage that are strewn all along the ground at their feet, along with various pieces of baseball equipment (base, ball and box, and bat). Also in the foreground, lying next to a beer barrel, is letter of endorsement from the brewery that bears an “Arthur Guinness Son & Co.” seal. The name of the lithography company, “Wagner & Co. Lith – 75 Murray St. N.Y.,” is printed in the lower right corner of the poster.

The Robert Edwards Auctions also has a lot more information about the poster. According to Collectors Corner, the poster “sold for an astonishing $188,000, setting a record for a baseball-related advertising poster and a record for any American advertising poster featuring a product of any kind.”

The Colors of the Web, an interesting infographic showing the Top 100 websites and the color of their logos, via ilovecharts and Gizmodo. But perhaps most fascinating is a discussion on the growing popularity of companies trademarking specific colors in Color: The Next Limited Resource?

Awesome Lego recreations of M.C. Escher artwork, submitted by dear-cora. Click on the photos above to see many more Escher Lego works.

Next page Something went wrong, try loading again? Loading more posts