| “Shit
happens.” —Brodahl
Thomas Brodahl was born in 1977 in Bergen,
Norway. At the age of ten, he moved to
Luxembourg, and throughout 1988 to 1996—Brodahl
attended a private American International
School of Luxembourg. After high school,
he applied to the University of Virginia
and during these years he began designing
and using HTML. The latter resulted in
a deep passion for the Internet to-the-point
that Brodahl put his formal education on
hold to pursue a career in the exciting web
design world.
In the year 2000, Brodahl was approached
with an idea by Yohan Gingras of evilpupil.com
and German Olaya of typo5.com. The idea
was to build a “super e-zine”,
one that would be constantly updated with
design-related content on an
unconventional layout. The trio
worked frenetically on the concept for
two months, and in June of 2000, they launched “Surfstation.lu.” This
e-zine became one of the top design portals
on the Internet, and still today it is
a huge success among a young generation
of users. Their traffic report peaked
30,000 unique viewers per day, something
memorable. Surfstation continued to grow
over time, uniting well-known designers
to their team like Jemma Gura, Niko Stumpo,
Dmitry Utkin, Mike Young, and others.
Brodahl’s vision for design on the
Internet succeeded, his career bloomed,
his name known around the globe for his
highly popular web creations: Surf.lu and
Surfstation.lu. He worked for a small
web company “Visual Online” in Luxembourg,
and in 2001, he moved to London to work
as a freelance designer and illustrator
out of his home-office. With personal and
commercial ventures blasting off, he’s
been fortunate to work with big name clients
such as Nike, Coca-Cola, Epitaph Records,
MacUser, ComputerArts, MTV, Virgin, Kioken,
L’Oreal, and
more. He’s been featured in numerous
magazines like IdN to Impress (Korea),
and has been a guest speaker at
international events such as Iconologica,
and Firanet in Spain, MadMixer in United
States.
...what about his artwork? Brodahl’s
style has stood out for its
70s influences—he mixes images of
semi-nude women, cars, grunge, typography,
bright colors, and lot more juicy stuff.
Despite that he started on the web, he’s
certainly taken advantage of his skills
in print, illustration—and t-shirt
design, his items were on sale at “Stolen
Shirts”, most recently they can be
bought at StatAttack.com.
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