2010 Art-object design/ #2 (54)
Design Education/ #1 (53)
2009 Two Colors Design/ #4 (52)
Latin American Design/ #3 (51)
Multipage publications. Part 2. Annual Reports, Catalogues, Booklets/ #2 (50)
Multipage publications. Part 1. Magazines/ #1 (49)
2008 Type Design/ #4 (48)
Club & Music Graphic issue/ #3 (47)
Corporate identity issue/ #1 (45)–46(2)
2007 Club & Navigation/ #4 (44)
Dutch design issue. Part 2 — the Netherlands/ #43(3)
Dutch design issue. Part 1 — Amsterdam/ #42(2)
Attraction of a client: Creative gifts/ #40(4)–#41(1)
2006 Book Design. Part 2/ #3 (39)
Book Design. Part 1/ #2 (38)
Anniversary Number/ #1 (37)
2005 British Design. Part 2/ #4 (36)
British Design. Part 1/ #3 (35)
Newspaper Design/ #2 (34)
Iranian Design/ #1 (33)
2004 Croatian Design/ #6 (32)
Golden Bee Issue/ #4–5 (30–31)
Indian Issue/ #3 (29)
Issue About Antiglobalism #1-2 (27-28)
2003 Academicians of Graphic Design. Part 2/ #4 (26)
Academicians of Graphic Design. Part 1/ #3 (25)
Total Branding/ #1-2 (23-24)
2002 Issue About Typefaces/ #4 (22)
French Design/ #3 (21)
The Art of Illustration/ #2 (20)
Create your own studio/ #1 (19)
2001 American Design/ #4 (18)
Students` Issue/ #3 (17)
Swiss Design/ #2 (16)
Package design/ #1 (15)
2000 Extreme issue/ #3-4 (13-14)
Japanese Design/ # 1-2 (11-12)
1999 Russian robot/Russian design/ #3-4 (9-10)
Multipage periodicals/ #2 (8)
Angelic issue. To the Golden Bee 4/ #1 (7)
1998 Festival Issue/ #4 (6)
Newspaper Design/ #2-3 (4-5)
Film poster of the Russian Avant-Garde/ # 1(3)
1997 Art Beat in Moscow/ #2 (2)
The very first issue/ # 1(1)
[KAK) MAGAZINE
Coming soon #3 (55) 2010 European design
#1 (37) 2006  Anniversary Number


Seymour Chwast. Long drawer



For over fifty years, Seymour has been the face of American design illustration. Literally and figuratively speaking. He has made enough works to fill up portfolios of fifty great studios. But his achievements haven't slowed him down a bit, he is still working from dawn to dawn, along and sometimes more than his staff. This story began when in 1954 Seymour and his friends published the first issue of Push Pin Almanac, later changed to Push Pin Monthly Graphic. Steve Heller insists that Chwast's illustrations were post-modernist even before that term was invented.