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Auteur POYNOR, Rick
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Affiner la recherche Interroger des sources externesApril Greiman. / POYNOR, Rick
Titre : April Greiman. Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; ABRAMS, Janet, Auteur Editeur : BORDEAUX [France] : Arc en Rêve Centre d'Architecture Année de publication : 1994 Importance : 110 pages Présentation : Ill. en coul et n&b Format : 28 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-3-7608-8417-2 Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Anglais (eng) Catégories : 3. Culture
BiographieIndex. décimale : 709.2 Les artistes (études biographiques, critiques) April Greiman. [texte imprimé] / POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; ABRAMS, Janet, Auteur . - BORDEAUX (L'Entrepôt, 7, rue Ferrère, 33000, France) : Arc en Rêve Centre d'Architecture, 1994 . - 110 pages : Ill. en coul et n&b ; 28 cm.
ISBN : 978-3-7608-8417-2
Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : 3. Culture
BiographieIndex. décimale : 709.2 Les artistes (études biographiques, critiques) Exemplaires
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire DESIGN WRITING RESEARCH / LUPTON, Ellen
Titre : DESIGN WRITING RESEARCH : Writing on graphic design Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : LUPTON, Ellen, Auteur ; J. Abbott MILLER, Auteur ; POYNOR, Rick, Préfacier, etc. Editeur : Londres [Grande Bretagne] : Phaidon Press Limited Année de publication : 1999 Importance : 211 pages Présentation : Couv. coul. et Ill. coul. et N&B Format : 27 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-7148-3851-9 Prix : 24,95 € Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Dessin et dessins Index. décimale : 741.6 Graphisme, Illustration, Art publicitaire DESIGN WRITING RESEARCH : Writing on graphic design [texte imprimé] / LUPTON, Ellen, Auteur ; J. Abbott MILLER, Auteur ; POYNOR, Rick, Préfacier, etc. . - Londres (Grande Bretagne) : Phaidon Press Limited, 1999 . - 211 pages : Couv. coul. et Ill. coul. et N&B ; 27 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-7148-3851-9 : 24,95 €
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Dessin et dessins Index. décimale : 741.6 Graphisme, Illustration, Art publicitaire Exemplaires
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire EYE n°103 / John L. WALTERS ; Justin BURNS ; Peter BUWERT ; Martin COLYER ; De BONDT, Sara ; Mike DEMPSEY ; Paolo FERRARINI ; Anoushka KHANDWALA ; Gabriela MATUSZYK ; McNeil, Paul ; Chris MURPHY ; POYNOR, Rick ; SINCLAIR, Mark ; Kathleen SLEBODA ; Christopher SLEBODA ; Jim SUTHERLAND ; John WARWICKER-LE BRETON ; WRIGHT, Ian
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Titre : EYE n°103 Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : John L. WALTERS, Directeur de publication, rédacteur en chef ; Justin BURNS, Auteur ; Peter BUWERT, Auteur ; Martin COLYER, Auteur ; De BONDT, Sara, Auteur ; Mike DEMPSEY, Auteur ; Paolo FERRARINI, Auteur ; Anoushka KHANDWALA, Auteur ; Gabriela MATUSZYK, Auteur ; McNeil, Paul, Auteur ; Chris MURPHY, Auteur ; POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; SINCLAIR, Mark, Auteur ; Kathleen SLEBODA, Auteur ; Christopher SLEBODA, Auteur ; Jim SUTHERLAND, Auteur ; John WARWICKER-LE BRETON, Auteur ; WRIGHT, Ian, Auteur Editeur : Eye Magazine Ltd Année de publication : 2022 Importance : 108 p. Présentation : ill. N&B et coul. Format : 23,5 x 29,5 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 9770960779087 Prix : £ 20,00 Note générale : Eye, the international review of graphic design, is a quarterly printed magazine about graphic design and visual culture. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Graphisme, illustration, art publicitaire Mots-clés : magazine, graphisme, design, journal, designers, culture visuelle, issue, graphic visual culture, review, typographie, typothèque Index. décimale : 741.6 Graphisme, Illustration, Art publicitaire Résumé : It is commonplace to say that history is written by the winners, but if we have learned anything in the past few years it is that the historical record needs to be challenged. After all, some of the biggest winners are now seen as bad losers. The billboard on our cover, in which Jahnavi Inniss lists prominent Black individuals omitted from British history of the period 1729-1875 (from Greg Bunbury’s Black Outdoor Art project), is an example of the ongoing need to correct and improve our understanding of what went before.
Sara De Bondt’s account of design’s role in colonial rule and its aftermath in Congo is a reminder that design and advertising are not always on the side of progress – a point strongly argued by Ruben Pater’s CAPS LOCK, reviewed in this issue by Peter Buwert.
But visual communicators can make a difference. Lucinda Rogers’ reportage drawings from the Cop26 climate summit – which contrast human stories with the urgent scrawls of protesters’ banners – had impact on the pages and website of the Financial Times. Tomo Tomo shows what ‘slow’ editorial design can achieve in the high-speed world of Italian daily papers.
Credits and attribution can get lost or omitted in the race to write history’s first draft, as Mike Dempsey’s article about Harry Willock shows. Willock, whose airbrushed artwork (see opposite) made a powerful, colourful contribution to visual culture in the psychedelic fog of the late 1960s, is one of many practitioners whose art and craft deserve greater recognition.
The craft of the darkroom lies at the heart of Garry Fabian Miller’s body of work (below). With his camera-less photographic prints he has created a parallel, fine-art universe over the past half century. Miller’s new fellowship with the Bodleian Libraries in Oxford gives tangible recognition to yet another history worth retelling. JLWNote de contenu :
CONTENT :
FRONT MATTER
3 — Editorial Eye 103
Design history, Graphic design, Illustration, Editorial, the editor, John L. Walters
It is commonplace to say that history is written by the winners, but the historical record needs to be challenged.
14 — Unfinished business
Scott King’s rallying call for creative freedom takes a satirical swipe at cultural gatekeepers. By Rick Poynor
16 — In the arms of the cold cold ground
Photographer Robert Gumpert tells the stories of San Francisco’s homeless. By Martin Colyer
18 — Bound for modernity
Spiral and comb binding have been rehabilitated for aesthetics and practicality. By Simon Esterson
FEATURES
20 — Reputations: Garry Fabian Miller
‘I decided photography had to be colour when I was sixteen years old … The materials were difficult, but Cibachrome has this incredible colour saturation and permanence.’ Interview by Grant Gibson. Portrait by Philip Sayer.
38 — Icons of oppression
Belgian graphic design and the colonisation of Congo. By Sara De Bondt
46 — Noise free
Tomo Tomo, the Milanese editorial design studio founded by Luca Pitoni and Davide Di Gennaro, aims for clarity and structure. By Paolo Ferrarini. Portrait by Luigi Fiano
60 — Battlefield of ideas
Greg Bunbury’s Black Outdoor Art project plays on our expectations of media space and expression. By Anoushka Khandwala
66 — Witness
Lucinda Rogers’ reportage drawings captured the urgent activism and human drama that surrounded Cop26, the 2021 Glasgow climate summit. By John L. Walters. Portrait by Jillian Edelstein
74 — Captain airbrush
Illustrator Harry Willock’s role has been overlooked, yet his work with Alan Aldridge produced scores of era-defining works. Mike Dempsey reports. Portrait by Philip Sayer.
UNCOATED
91 — Reviews
105 — We made this
David Sylvain's ERREn ligne : https://www.eyemagazine.com/magazine/issue-103-2 EYE n°103 [texte imprimé] / John L. WALTERS, Directeur de publication, rédacteur en chef ; Justin BURNS, Auteur ; Peter BUWERT, Auteur ; Martin COLYER, Auteur ; De BONDT, Sara, Auteur ; Mike DEMPSEY, Auteur ; Paolo FERRARINI, Auteur ; Anoushka KHANDWALA, Auteur ; Gabriela MATUSZYK, Auteur ; McNeil, Paul, Auteur ; Chris MURPHY, Auteur ; POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; SINCLAIR, Mark, Auteur ; Kathleen SLEBODA, Auteur ; Christopher SLEBODA, Auteur ; Jim SUTHERLAND, Auteur ; John WARWICKER-LE BRETON, Auteur ; WRIGHT, Ian, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Eye Magazine Ltd, 2022 . - 108 p. : ill. N&B et coul. ; 23,5 x 29,5 cm.
ISSN : 9770960779087 : £ 20,00
Eye, the international review of graphic design, is a quarterly printed magazine about graphic design and visual culture.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Graphisme, illustration, art publicitaire Mots-clés : magazine, graphisme, design, journal, designers, culture visuelle, issue, graphic visual culture, review, typographie, typothèque Index. décimale : 741.6 Graphisme, Illustration, Art publicitaire Résumé : It is commonplace to say that history is written by the winners, but if we have learned anything in the past few years it is that the historical record needs to be challenged. After all, some of the biggest winners are now seen as bad losers. The billboard on our cover, in which Jahnavi Inniss lists prominent Black individuals omitted from British history of the period 1729-1875 (from Greg Bunbury’s Black Outdoor Art project), is an example of the ongoing need to correct and improve our understanding of what went before.
Sara De Bondt’s account of design’s role in colonial rule and its aftermath in Congo is a reminder that design and advertising are not always on the side of progress – a point strongly argued by Ruben Pater’s CAPS LOCK, reviewed in this issue by Peter Buwert.
But visual communicators can make a difference. Lucinda Rogers’ reportage drawings from the Cop26 climate summit – which contrast human stories with the urgent scrawls of protesters’ banners – had impact on the pages and website of the Financial Times. Tomo Tomo shows what ‘slow’ editorial design can achieve in the high-speed world of Italian daily papers.
Credits and attribution can get lost or omitted in the race to write history’s first draft, as Mike Dempsey’s article about Harry Willock shows. Willock, whose airbrushed artwork (see opposite) made a powerful, colourful contribution to visual culture in the psychedelic fog of the late 1960s, is one of many practitioners whose art and craft deserve greater recognition.
The craft of the darkroom lies at the heart of Garry Fabian Miller’s body of work (below). With his camera-less photographic prints he has created a parallel, fine-art universe over the past half century. Miller’s new fellowship with the Bodleian Libraries in Oxford gives tangible recognition to yet another history worth retelling. JLWNote de contenu :
CONTENT :
FRONT MATTER
3 — Editorial Eye 103
Design history, Graphic design, Illustration, Editorial, the editor, John L. Walters
It is commonplace to say that history is written by the winners, but the historical record needs to be challenged.
14 — Unfinished business
Scott King’s rallying call for creative freedom takes a satirical swipe at cultural gatekeepers. By Rick Poynor
16 — In the arms of the cold cold ground
Photographer Robert Gumpert tells the stories of San Francisco’s homeless. By Martin Colyer
18 — Bound for modernity
Spiral and comb binding have been rehabilitated for aesthetics and practicality. By Simon Esterson
FEATURES
20 — Reputations: Garry Fabian Miller
‘I decided photography had to be colour when I was sixteen years old … The materials were difficult, but Cibachrome has this incredible colour saturation and permanence.’ Interview by Grant Gibson. Portrait by Philip Sayer.
38 — Icons of oppression
Belgian graphic design and the colonisation of Congo. By Sara De Bondt
46 — Noise free
Tomo Tomo, the Milanese editorial design studio founded by Luca Pitoni and Davide Di Gennaro, aims for clarity and structure. By Paolo Ferrarini. Portrait by Luigi Fiano
60 — Battlefield of ideas
Greg Bunbury’s Black Outdoor Art project plays on our expectations of media space and expression. By Anoushka Khandwala
66 — Witness
Lucinda Rogers’ reportage drawings captured the urgent activism and human drama that surrounded Cop26, the 2021 Glasgow climate summit. By John L. Walters. Portrait by Jillian Edelstein
74 — Captain airbrush
Illustrator Harry Willock’s role has been overlooked, yet his work with Alan Aldridge produced scores of era-defining works. Mike Dempsey reports. Portrait by Philip Sayer.
UNCOATED
91 — Reviews
105 — We made this
David Sylvain's ERREn ligne : https://www.eyemagazine.com/magazine/issue-103-2 Exemplaires
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire EYE n°104 / John L. WALTERS ; Simon ESTERSON ; Catherine DIXON ; Jarrett FULLER ; HELLER, Steven ; Briar LEVIT ; Gabriela MATUSZYK ; POYNOR, Rick ; Serge RICCO ; Jim SUTHERLAND ; Aggie TOPPINS ; Christopher WILSON
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Titre : EYE n°104 Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : John L. WALTERS, Directeur de publication, rédacteur en chef ; Simon ESTERSON, Directeur artistique ; Catherine DIXON, Auteur ; Jarrett FULLER, Auteur ; HELLER, Steven, Auteur ; Briar LEVIT, Auteur ; Gabriela MATUSZYK, Auteur ; POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; Serge RICCO, Auteur ; Jim SUTHERLAND, Auteur ; Aggie TOPPINS, Auteur ; Christopher WILSON, Auteur Editeur : Eye Magazine Ltd Année de publication : 2023 Importance : 116 p. Présentation : ill. N&B et coul. Format : 23,5 x 29,5 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 6918 Prix : £ 20,00 Note générale : Eye, the international review of graphic design, is a quarterly printed magazine about graphic design and visual culture. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Graphisme, illustration, art publicitaire Mots-clés : magazine, graphisme, design, journal, designers, culture visuelle, issue, graphic visual culture, review Résumé :
Editorial Eye 104
The urge to make static artwork that depicts or creates movement has long been a human preoccupation. In our Reputations interview, influential Elle art director and photographer Peter Knapp talks about his desire to infuse magazines with movement. At a time – the 1960s– when the conventions of fashion publishing and photography were being reinvented, Knapp was a central figure.
The practice of motion design has a deep history and rich present; ‘Jump cuts’ is an examination of some current practitioners who are creating resonant, personal work – from Saskia Marka’s TV titles, via Hiromu Oka’s animated Riso prints, to the haunting transformations that Dirk Koy shares on social media. This is a tantalising time – especially now that the means to make ‘direct film’ (to borrow Len Lye’s useful term), are on most designers’ computers.
Christopher Wilson’s thorough feature about the series of Album Cover Albums engages with a period when graphic design and music culture were entangled to an unprecedented degree. As Wilson demonstrates, the books ‘traced shifts in graphic design and in ideological differences between generations of designers.’
In Ukraine, art director Glib Kaporikov and editor Anna Karnauh have made an edition of design magazine Telegraf that shows the design community’s response to war. Karnauh says: ‘Telegraf is about a new reality, where creativity is the weapon against the aggressor.’
John L. WaltersNote de contenu :
CONTENTS :
OPIINION
* Resistance is essential - p. 16
Telegraf’s second issue embodies Ukraine’s creativity and courage in the face of the Russian invasion. Report by John L. Walters
* This is a column - p. 20
Design that tells the story of its own making harks back to conceptual art of the 1960s. By Rick Poynor
FEATURES
* Reputations: Peter Knapp - p. 22
‘I redesigned the Elle logotype as I thought it was too small. I wanted its letters to sit with the head of the cover model by enlarging the letter-spacing. Of all the things I’ve done, this is the one thing that was never changed.’ Interview by Serge Ricco.
* Philadelphia freedom - p. 44
Pentagram’s Luke Hayman has given The Philadelphia Inquirer an overhaul. By Steven Heller.
* Jump cuts - p. 50
Motion design is everywhere. The gleaming screens of our phones, TVs and poster sites demand more and more ways to make words and pictures dance in space and time. By John L. Walters.
* John Randle and his 26 soldiers of lead - p. 68
As Matrix comes to a full stop, its doughty founder talks to Eye. Photographs by Philip Sayer.
* Form and feeling - p. 82
Rudolph de Harak gets the recognition he deserves in a new monograph by Richard Poulin.
* Heavy rotation - p. 88
From 1977-92, the Album Cover Albums presented a broad spectrum of record sleeve art, unintentionally raising questions about the way graphic design for popular culture is experienced, interpreted and preserved. By Christopher Wilson.
REVIEWS - p. 103
* Tupigrafia. The 2000-2020 Anthology
* Sans (FR) 1628–1924
* Process Music: Songs, Stories, and Studies of Graphic Culture
* Graphic Events: A Realist Account of Graphic Design
* Flexible Visual Systems: The Design Manual for Contemporary Visual Identities
* Growing Up Underground: A Memoir of Counterculture New York
* Design After Capitalism: Transforming Design Today for an Equitable Tomorrow
* RUHUMAN: The Typewriter Art of Keith Armstrong
* ‘Fontstand International Typography Conference’
* Catherine Griffiths: Solo in [ ] SpaceEn ligne : https://www.eyemagazine.com/magazine/issue-104 EYE n°104 [texte imprimé] / John L. WALTERS, Directeur de publication, rédacteur en chef ; Simon ESTERSON, Directeur artistique ; Catherine DIXON, Auteur ; Jarrett FULLER, Auteur ; HELLER, Steven, Auteur ; Briar LEVIT, Auteur ; Gabriela MATUSZYK, Auteur ; POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; Serge RICCO, Auteur ; Jim SUTHERLAND, Auteur ; Aggie TOPPINS, Auteur ; Christopher WILSON, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Eye Magazine Ltd, 2023 . - 116 p. : ill. N&B et coul. ; 23,5 x 29,5 cm.
ISSN : 6918 : £ 20,00
Eye, the international review of graphic design, is a quarterly printed magazine about graphic design and visual culture.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Graphisme, illustration, art publicitaire Mots-clés : magazine, graphisme, design, journal, designers, culture visuelle, issue, graphic visual culture, review Résumé :
Editorial Eye 104
The urge to make static artwork that depicts or creates movement has long been a human preoccupation. In our Reputations interview, influential Elle art director and photographer Peter Knapp talks about his desire to infuse magazines with movement. At a time – the 1960s– when the conventions of fashion publishing and photography were being reinvented, Knapp was a central figure.
The practice of motion design has a deep history and rich present; ‘Jump cuts’ is an examination of some current practitioners who are creating resonant, personal work – from Saskia Marka’s TV titles, via Hiromu Oka’s animated Riso prints, to the haunting transformations that Dirk Koy shares on social media. This is a tantalising time – especially now that the means to make ‘direct film’ (to borrow Len Lye’s useful term), are on most designers’ computers.
Christopher Wilson’s thorough feature about the series of Album Cover Albums engages with a period when graphic design and music culture were entangled to an unprecedented degree. As Wilson demonstrates, the books ‘traced shifts in graphic design and in ideological differences between generations of designers.’
In Ukraine, art director Glib Kaporikov and editor Anna Karnauh have made an edition of design magazine Telegraf that shows the design community’s response to war. Karnauh says: ‘Telegraf is about a new reality, where creativity is the weapon against the aggressor.’
John L. WaltersNote de contenu :
CONTENTS :
OPIINION
* Resistance is essential - p. 16
Telegraf’s second issue embodies Ukraine’s creativity and courage in the face of the Russian invasion. Report by John L. Walters
* This is a column - p. 20
Design that tells the story of its own making harks back to conceptual art of the 1960s. By Rick Poynor
FEATURES
* Reputations: Peter Knapp - p. 22
‘I redesigned the Elle logotype as I thought it was too small. I wanted its letters to sit with the head of the cover model by enlarging the letter-spacing. Of all the things I’ve done, this is the one thing that was never changed.’ Interview by Serge Ricco.
* Philadelphia freedom - p. 44
Pentagram’s Luke Hayman has given The Philadelphia Inquirer an overhaul. By Steven Heller.
* Jump cuts - p. 50
Motion design is everywhere. The gleaming screens of our phones, TVs and poster sites demand more and more ways to make words and pictures dance in space and time. By John L. Walters.
* John Randle and his 26 soldiers of lead - p. 68
As Matrix comes to a full stop, its doughty founder talks to Eye. Photographs by Philip Sayer.
* Form and feeling - p. 82
Rudolph de Harak gets the recognition he deserves in a new monograph by Richard Poulin.
* Heavy rotation - p. 88
From 1977-92, the Album Cover Albums presented a broad spectrum of record sleeve art, unintentionally raising questions about the way graphic design for popular culture is experienced, interpreted and preserved. By Christopher Wilson.
REVIEWS - p. 103
* Tupigrafia. The 2000-2020 Anthology
* Sans (FR) 1628–1924
* Process Music: Songs, Stories, and Studies of Graphic Culture
* Graphic Events: A Realist Account of Graphic Design
* Flexible Visual Systems: The Design Manual for Contemporary Visual Identities
* Growing Up Underground: A Memoir of Counterculture New York
* Design After Capitalism: Transforming Design Today for an Equitable Tomorrow
* RUHUMAN: The Typewriter Art of Keith Armstrong
* ‘Fontstand International Typography Conference’
* Catherine Griffiths: Solo in [ ] SpaceEn ligne : https://www.eyemagazine.com/magazine/issue-104 Exemplaires
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire EYE n°105 / John L. WALTERS ; Simon ESTERSON ; POYNOR, Rick ; Louise SANDHAUS ; BANTJES, Marian ; SINCLAIR, Mark ; Elizabeth RESNICK
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Titre : EYE n°105 Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : John L. WALTERS, Directeur de publication, rédacteur en chef ; Simon ESTERSON, Directeur artistique ; POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; Louise SANDHAUS, Auteur ; BANTJES, Marian, Auteur ; SINCLAIR, Mark, Auteur ; Elizabeth RESNICK, Auteur Editeur : Eye Magazine Ltd Année de publication : 2023 Importance : 108 p. Présentation : ill. N&B et coul. Format : 23,5 x 29,5 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 7008 Prix : £ 20,00 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Graphisme, illustration, art publicitaire Mots-clés : nglais (eng)
Mots-clés : magazine, graphisme, design, journal, designers, culture visuelle, issue, graphic visual culture, reviewRésumé : At a time when people are seeing Artificial Intelligence as either a get-rich scheme or an existential threat, Marian Bantjes’ article ‘Artificial idiot’ is a useful corrective to the tsunami of commentary. Bantjes has taken the time to investigate the processes required to coax something interesting out of Midjourney, and has found a typically novel way to incorporate the application into her own practice. Along the way she has discussed the issue with other experimenters, notably Pum Lefebure (Design Army) and Jonathan Hoefler, and has come up with some provocative and fascinating observations.
Meanwhile, quizzed by Louise Sandhaus in our Reputations interview, brand supremo Brian Collins has a more Tiggerish take on AI: ‘We must now become as fluent with AI as we are with colour, shape, form, type, glyphs, motion, sound and words.’
Dennis Gould’s practice stems from the early 1990s, a time when a poet could become a printer with the purchase of an obsolete proofing press. As mainstream graphic design entered a turbulent period of adjustment to the emerging digital world, Gould pursued an aesthetic and political agenda rooted in earlier, more analogue (and revolutionary) times.
‘The quiet confidence of Tomoko Miho’ is the latest in Elizabeth Resnick’s series of eloquent profiles from recent graphic design history, while ‘The power of physical books’ takes the temperature of current practice, with a detailed overview of the considered and typographically resonant work of Sonya Dyakova’s Atelier Dyakova.Note de contenu :
CONTENTS:
Editorial Eye 105
John L. Walters
OPINION
* Connecting a collection
A stylish pack of artist cards celebrates this German-Japanese collaboration. By John L. Walters
* Overloading the page
A big survey of Dutch photobooks raises issues about visual editing and layout. Critique by Rick Poynor
FEATURES
* Reputations: Brian Collins
‘The way I see it, problem-seeking is the yin to the yang of problem-solving. Solving is narrow and practical. Seeking is expansive and brimming with possibility. Solving asks “What’s wrong?” and then tries to fix it. Seeking asks “What if?” and then shows how.’ Interview by Louise Sandhaus [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot
Unpredictable, cliché’d, wonderful, neither artificial nor intelligent– is AI the dumbest new kid on the block or the future of illustration? Marian Bantjes explores the weird world of text-to-image generators [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot: Pegasi, people and golden warriors
Marian Bantjes makes collages using multiple AI images [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot: Deep fake, pink fake
Pum Lefebure’s Design Army made AI ‘space tourism’ landscapes for an adventurous client. By Marian Bantjes / Eye Editors [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot: Puzzling answers to nonexistent questions
Jonathan Hoefler experiments with AI to create what he calls ‘Apocryphal Inventions’. By Marian Bantjes / Eye Editors [EXTRACT]
* The power of physical books
Sonya Dyakova has a way with words, ideas, space and type. By Mark Sinclair [EXTRACT]
* The creative anarchist
Printer, poet, designer and publisher Dennis Gould interweaves the personal with the political in his clamorous, intuitive letterpress work. By Rick Poynor. [EXTRACT]
* The quiet confidence of Tomoko Miho
The influence of three continents underpins the meticulous work of this underrated Japanese-American graphic designer. By Elizabeth Resnick [EXTRACT]
REVIEWS
- ‘Wave: Currents in Japanese Graphic Arts’
- The Graphic Language of Neville Brody/3
- What is Post-Branding? How to Counter Fundamentalist Marketplace Semiotics
- Design, Ecology, Politics: Towards the Ecocene
- Moving Pictures Painted: 200 Posters from the Golden Age of Egyptian Cinema
- Milton Glaser: Pop
- Heated Words: Searching for a Mysterious Typeface
- Strikethrough: Typographic Messages of Protest
- A Cantos Compendium – Paulo de Cantos (1892-1979) A designer of pedagogical theories
- ‘ATypI Paris 2023: Rendez-vous’
- Inventing the Alphabet: The Origins of Letters from Antiquity to the Present
- QSL? (Do You Confirm Receipt of My Transmission?)
- Critical Visualization: Rethinking the Representation of Data
- Skolos+Wedell, Overlap / DissolveEn ligne : https://www.eyemagazine.com/magazine/issue-105 EYE n°105 [texte imprimé] / John L. WALTERS, Directeur de publication, rédacteur en chef ; Simon ESTERSON, Directeur artistique ; POYNOR, Rick, Auteur ; Louise SANDHAUS, Auteur ; BANTJES, Marian, Auteur ; SINCLAIR, Mark, Auteur ; Elizabeth RESNICK, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Eye Magazine Ltd, 2023 . - 108 p. : ill. N&B et coul. ; 23,5 x 29,5 cm.
ISSN : 7008 : £ 20,00
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Graphisme, illustration, art publicitaire Mots-clés : nglais (eng)
Mots-clés : magazine, graphisme, design, journal, designers, culture visuelle, issue, graphic visual culture, reviewRésumé : At a time when people are seeing Artificial Intelligence as either a get-rich scheme or an existential threat, Marian Bantjes’ article ‘Artificial idiot’ is a useful corrective to the tsunami of commentary. Bantjes has taken the time to investigate the processes required to coax something interesting out of Midjourney, and has found a typically novel way to incorporate the application into her own practice. Along the way she has discussed the issue with other experimenters, notably Pum Lefebure (Design Army) and Jonathan Hoefler, and has come up with some provocative and fascinating observations.
Meanwhile, quizzed by Louise Sandhaus in our Reputations interview, brand supremo Brian Collins has a more Tiggerish take on AI: ‘We must now become as fluent with AI as we are with colour, shape, form, type, glyphs, motion, sound and words.’
Dennis Gould’s practice stems from the early 1990s, a time when a poet could become a printer with the purchase of an obsolete proofing press. As mainstream graphic design entered a turbulent period of adjustment to the emerging digital world, Gould pursued an aesthetic and political agenda rooted in earlier, more analogue (and revolutionary) times.
‘The quiet confidence of Tomoko Miho’ is the latest in Elizabeth Resnick’s series of eloquent profiles from recent graphic design history, while ‘The power of physical books’ takes the temperature of current practice, with a detailed overview of the considered and typographically resonant work of Sonya Dyakova’s Atelier Dyakova.Note de contenu :
CONTENTS:
Editorial Eye 105
John L. Walters
OPINION
* Connecting a collection
A stylish pack of artist cards celebrates this German-Japanese collaboration. By John L. Walters
* Overloading the page
A big survey of Dutch photobooks raises issues about visual editing and layout. Critique by Rick Poynor
FEATURES
* Reputations: Brian Collins
‘The way I see it, problem-seeking is the yin to the yang of problem-solving. Solving is narrow and practical. Seeking is expansive and brimming with possibility. Solving asks “What’s wrong?” and then tries to fix it. Seeking asks “What if?” and then shows how.’ Interview by Louise Sandhaus [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot
Unpredictable, cliché’d, wonderful, neither artificial nor intelligent– is AI the dumbest new kid on the block or the future of illustration? Marian Bantjes explores the weird world of text-to-image generators [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot: Pegasi, people and golden warriors
Marian Bantjes makes collages using multiple AI images [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot: Deep fake, pink fake
Pum Lefebure’s Design Army made AI ‘space tourism’ landscapes for an adventurous client. By Marian Bantjes / Eye Editors [EXTRACT]
* Artificial idiot: Puzzling answers to nonexistent questions
Jonathan Hoefler experiments with AI to create what he calls ‘Apocryphal Inventions’. By Marian Bantjes / Eye Editors [EXTRACT]
* The power of physical books
Sonya Dyakova has a way with words, ideas, space and type. By Mark Sinclair [EXTRACT]
* The creative anarchist
Printer, poet, designer and publisher Dennis Gould interweaves the personal with the political in his clamorous, intuitive letterpress work. By Rick Poynor. [EXTRACT]
* The quiet confidence of Tomoko Miho
The influence of three continents underpins the meticulous work of this underrated Japanese-American graphic designer. By Elizabeth Resnick [EXTRACT]
REVIEWS
- ‘Wave: Currents in Japanese Graphic Arts’
- The Graphic Language of Neville Brody/3
- What is Post-Branding? How to Counter Fundamentalist Marketplace Semiotics
- Design, Ecology, Politics: Towards the Ecocene
- Moving Pictures Painted: 200 Posters from the Golden Age of Egyptian Cinema
- Milton Glaser: Pop
- Heated Words: Searching for a Mysterious Typeface
- Strikethrough: Typographic Messages of Protest
- A Cantos Compendium – Paulo de Cantos (1892-1979) A designer of pedagogical theories
- ‘ATypI Paris 2023: Rendez-vous’
- Inventing the Alphabet: The Origins of Letters from Antiquity to the Present
- QSL? (Do You Confirm Receipt of My Transmission?)
- Critical Visualization: Rethinking the Representation of Data
- Skolos+Wedell, Overlap / DissolveEn ligne : https://www.eyemagazine.com/magazine/issue-105 Exemplaires
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire In medias res / Collectif
PermalinkLa Loi du Plus Fort. / POYNOR, Rick
PermalinkLOOKING CLOSER 3 / Collectif
PermalinkProfile Pentagram Design / YELAVICH, Susan
PermalinkTransgression. / POYNOR, Rick
PermalinkTransgression - Graphisme et post-modernisme / POYNOR, Rick
PermalinkTypographie Now. / POYNOR, Rick
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