An artist is a lover, a graphic designer is a whore. we're both. You can email me
Painting Please! 
Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.
http://www.leslie-david.com
Painting Please! 
Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.
http://www.leslie-david.com
Painting Please! 
Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.
http://www.leslie-david.com
Painting Please! 
Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.
http://www.leslie-david.com
Painting Please! 
Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.
http://www.leslie-david.com
Painting Please! 
Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.
http://www.leslie-david.com
Painting Please! 
Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.
http://www.leslie-david.com


Painting Please!

Leslie David is a graphic designer, art director and illustrator based in Paris. She is specialized in brand image and graphic design for fashion brands and culture. She studied at l’école supérieure des Arts Décoratifs de Strasbourg. She was working as art director at Petronio Associates in Paris from 2006 to 2008.


http://www.leslie-david.com

Brooklyn-based artist Leah Yerpe‘s charcoal drawings depict the true beauty and joy of movement. Her work somehow captures the both the constrains of human anatomy, and also the freedom we can experience in our own bodies. Her figures are twisted, but graceful; tightly bound, but free. Her figures’ faces are typically obscured, which leaves their expressions and emotions a mystery. Their poses could represent pain or ecstasy. They could be falling or flying. They overlap like elements in a collage, but the larger image is one of cohesion as bodies blend together to create beautiful new forms.
Brooklyn-based artist Leah Yerpe‘s charcoal drawings depict the true beauty and joy of movement. Her work somehow captures the both the constrains of human anatomy, and also the freedom we can experience in our own bodies. Her figures are twisted, but graceful; tightly bound, but free. Her figures’ faces are typically obscured, which leaves their expressions and emotions a mystery. Their poses could represent pain or ecstasy. They could be falling or flying. They overlap like elements in a collage, but the larger image is one of cohesion as bodies blend together to create beautiful new forms.

Brooklyn-based artist Leah Yerpe‘s charcoal drawings depict the true beauty and joy of movement. Her work somehow captures the both the constrains of human anatomy, and also the freedom we can experience in our own bodies. Her figures are twisted, but graceful; tightly bound, but free. Her figures’ faces are typically obscured, which leaves their expressions and emotions a mystery. Their poses could represent pain or ecstasy. They could be falling or flying. They overlap like elements in a collage, but the larger image is one of cohesion as bodies blend together to create beautiful new forms.

Illustrator, graphic designer, and artist Jordan Speer created his own action figures (or at least illustrations of them.)  Recreating the familiar packaging of childhood toys, Speer fills each one with a unique figurine.  While nearly nostalgia inducing, each toy is also slightly sinister featuring warnings such as “slightly toxic”, “forbidden”, and “highly illegal”.  Speer’s figures are enigmatic characters, unfamiliar and unwilling to reveal much beyond their name and accessories.  Which would you collect?