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progresswear

Last seen: 6 months ago

Patrick is a guy from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

Painter, Designer, political clothing entrepreneur. Reviews are always welcome at my painting website and Progresswear, my company delivering politically charged messages. I'm also a designer and we've just launched a communications firm serving Progressive politicians and causes:Design for Progress. Whatever age it says I am today might be an outright lie. At the end of the day I'd be just as happy playing guitar.

  • The Graphic Imperative

    Rated Jul 08 2006 4 reviews activism, graphic design, society, marketing, politics thegraphicimperative.org

    Once again I can't resist plugging the work of a friend. My old pal Frank Baseman of Philadelphia University along with Chaz Maviyane-Davies and Elizabeth Reznick of Massachusetts College of Art labored for two years to chose the 121 best posters of the past 40 years relating to Peace, Social Justice and the Environment.

    While the selection is impressive online, go catch the show before August 18th in NYC at the AIGA Gallery at the National Design Center; 164 Fifth Ave. at 21st. Confront yourself with the power of the real posters instead of jpegs. In the flesh, these posters are power rendered visual. Designers will marvel at printing and production techniques employed long before Photoshop arrived. Spend an hour surrounded by ideas that designers around the world, free of their usual commercial constraints, were compelled to try and wedge into people's minds while they drove down the street or waited for the subway.

    Sometimes StumbleUpon is just a bit too cerebrally Alice through the looking glass. Click an image from Darfour or Iraq here, escape via the next Stumbler's predilection for waif/heroin addict chic fashion photography or pretty puddy-cats. Knowing that these posters reached millions and made many think gives me hope that yes, the profession whose feeding hand I so love to bite, can bring some good.
    The Graphic Imperative
  • Worldmapper: The world as youve never seen it before

    Reviewed Jun 21 2006 62 reviews economics, environment, maps, statistics, society shef.ac.uk

    Redrawn maps of the world based not upon land mass but rather a variety of factors from energy consumption to tourism income. A most curious set (below) examines toys imported vs. toys exported. We do like our toys in the good old USA, though we don't like to make them. Whereas "At City Toys Ltd., ... Shenzhen, youngsters worked 16-hour days, seven days a week" Agence France-Presse, 2000

    Worldmapper: The world as youve never seen it before
  • ExChristianDotNet - encouraging ex-Christians...

    Reviewed Jun 20 2006 17 reviews atheist, society, atheism, cults exchristian.net

    A sincere site full of people who, once steeped in unquestioning loyalty to their faith, have renounced it for a variety of reasons. Some seem a bit lost and shell shocked, the rock upon which they based their world views suddenly missing. Yet there's intelligent discussion here, devoid of the usual atheist/agnostic never believer point of view.
    ExChristianDotNet - encouraging ex-Christians (de-converting or former Christians)
  • Houtlust :: Social Advertising from around the globe

    Reviewed Jun 17 2006 38 reviews activism, society, non profit, advertising, politics xs4all.nl

    Having spent too much of my working life in advertising, I'm fond of biting the hand that feeds me. It's an industry whose sole purpose is to separate you from your money and make entire populations long for things they don't need and can't afford.

    And then one stumbles upon a blog like Houtlust. The editor has compiled the most comprehensive collection of activist, public service and social awareness advertising I've yet to encounter.


    One realizes then that the medium can be used for great good. They say that the average American sees over 3,000 advertising messages per day. If even 10% of them could inform and educate as these examples, our world might be a different place. Unfortunately public service advertising is nearly invisible compared to its heyday in the 70s, culminating in the Crying Indian environmental PSA. Years of corporate rule have eroded media regulations which required their airing, and harder hitting PSAs addressing controversial issues almost never get seen in the US.
    Houtlust :: Social Advertising from around the globe
  • The Six Thousand
  • Look at Me, a collection of found photos

    Reviewed Jun 13 2006 35 reviews history, photography, society moderna.org

    Perhaps the best record of an era is not found in news photos and other images filtered through mass media. Lives lived and viewed through personal snapshots will bear witness of what truly happened.
    Look at Me, a collection of found photos
  • Le site officiel du Festival et du Marché international...

    Reviewed Jun 12 2006 116 reviews animation, politics, sociology, film, society annecy.org

    A beautiful piece of filmmaking. Reminiscent of Saul Bass and an entire school of designers, painters and illustrators who made brilliant, prescient films that we all got to see at one point or another in grade school.

    Show your children.
    Le site officiel du Festival et du Marché international du film danimation