Author Archives: Clifton Burt

Fresh Ink

Alabama Letterpress

Letterpress poster from Rural Studio Film Series

I just got back from a week long trip to the Rural Studio in Newbern, Alabama. A quick backgrounder to bring you up to speed:

“The Rural Studio is a design-build architecture studio run by Auburn University which aims to teach students about the social responsibilities of the profession of architecture while also providing safe, well-constructed and inspirational homes and buildings for poor communities in rural west Alabama, part of the so-called “Black Belt”. The studio was founded in 1993 by architects Samuel Mockbee and D. K. Ruth.” — Wikipedia

Danny Wicke, a faculty architect, shared with me some of his favorite printed ephemera from life at the Rural Studio.

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Print Matters

Grand Canyon Map

This weekend I visited the Grand Canyon with my family. I brought with me an exciting range of iPad and iPhone tools. As one would expect, they failed miserably in the desert. And so it was a freely provided map of the canyon that won my trust. It performed like a champ.

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Book Report

Zero Mostel reads a book

There’s a book on my shelf that’s been on my mind called Zero Mostel reads a book. My wife Kate was in Austin at Domy Books where shop proprietor Russell recommended it. It was originally a photo-essay in the June of 1963 New York Times. Zero Mostel was an actor and comedian best known (to me anyway) for his role in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. In this hard-bound photo-essay, photographer Robert Frank, known for his outsider’s perspective on the strata of American society, follows Zero with a camera while he reads a random progression of books. A dictionary, a comic book, novels, and an anonymous assortment of thick texts. Reading, he moves around his home from room to room, first on a chair, then on a sofa, then pulling more books from his shelves; he drinks, he smokes. Frank’s camera is all the while capturing Zero’s reaction to what is being read — he cries, laughs, sweats, uses a magnifying glass, is scared,  horrified, enraged, makes hammy faces; he emotes.

Now that the iPad and its bretheren have ushered in the new era of fast-moving downloadable screen-reading, Zero Mostel reads a book serves as a reminder of the book-as-object, a singularly contained idea. It’s possible that now there are two genuses of books: screen-based and print-based where print-based have now been re-assigned to the category of the art-object. I don’t know. I do know that I kind of really like reading books on the iPad and liking that bothers me. I also know that I wouldn’t like this book nearly as much if it were instead Zero Mostel Reads an eBook on His Second Generation iPhone.

Zero Mostel reads a book — Amazon.com

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Book Report

The Art of McSweeney’s

There’s always some newly released book that won’t leave my thoughts until I’m able to get my hands on it. New material from McSweeney’s is often the object of my sights and right now that’s become the case again with the newly released retrospective: Art of McSweeney’s.

Created by the McSweeney’s staff to commemorate their 11th (or 12th) anniversary, Art of McSweeney’s showcases their award-winning art and design across all the company’s activities (which includes the Believer magazine and Wholphin DVDs). The book features hundreds of images, interviews with collaborators such as Chris Ware and Michael Chabon, and dozens of insights into McSweeney’s visual experience of reading.

Art of McSweeney’s — Powells.com

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Fresh Ink

Zine Ride

Summer has arrived in Portland and it’s spectacular weather for bike rides. I took mine out to local shops to see what new publications have hit the shelves recently. This post shares some of what captured my eye and even my imagination…

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Fresh Ink

Icon Letter

This is it. This is paper and envelope that you should use to write that letter you’ve been promising yourself that you will write “tomorrow”. The one you’ve been waiting for. You see, this is icon paper with an icon envelope. Ironic, no? You like irony. So does the person who will get your letter. Well, maybe not your Mee-Maw, so let’s not send her this one. But those friends you like, yeah them, this is for them. All that needs to be done is to write down some of your goings-on and stick a stamp on that bad boy and off it goes. BOOM. A super-simple tangible friendship-restorative hand-delivered by the USPS. Better than a Facebook like? Yes, exactly 100.5 times better than that. You don’t have this paper because it’s not for sale yet? That’s okay, while you’re waiting you can practice sending some letters using blank sheets. Or even better: be pen-pals with these guys.

Icon Letter: Icon Paper + Icon Envelope — Brigada Creativa

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Book Report

The Best American Comics Criticism

Title: The Best American Comics Criticism
Editor: Ben Schwartz
Publisher: Fantagraphics
Specs: 6″x9″, 360 pages, perfect bound

I think I like to read about comics more than I like to read them and I’m really looking forward to getting to work on this new book. “It’s the kind of volume that starts fights” says the Comics Reporter. There’s a lot to digest here, so I’ll pass the mic to Fantagraphics:

This chorus, as presented in The Best American Comics Criticism, comprises both criticism (Douglas Wolk on Frank Miller and Will Eisner, Robert C. Harvey on Fun Home, Donald Phelps on Steve Ditko and Phoebe Gloeckner) and history (David Hajdu on the 1950s comic-book burnings, Jeet Heer on Gasoline Alley, Ben Schwartz on Little Orphan Annie, Gerard Jones on the birth of the comic-book business), as well as revelatory peer-on-peer essays by novelists (Jonathan Franzen on Peanuts, John Updike on James Thurber) and cartoonists (Chris Ware on Rodolphe Töpffer, Clowes on Mad’s Will Elder, and Seth on John Stanley).

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Fresh Ink

The Stone Masters: California Rock Climbers in the Seventies

The Stone Masters

Title: The Stone Masters: California Rock Climbers in the Seventies
Publisher: T. Adler Books/Stonemaster Press
Specs: Hardcover, 196 pages

I thought this book was a recent release but it was released in the fall of 2009, but it’s new to me and probably you too, so let’s just roll with it ok?

I find this book exciting. Most books on the subject of outdoor sports are poorly designed. They capture the facts, but not the spirit. This one captures the spirit. It’s a beautiful presentation of a hidden niche of rock climbing history. We’re given entry into these climbers’ world — circa the 1970′s — through the book’s epic photography and its restless enthusiasm. It’s exciting in the same way that Don James’ Pre-War Surfing Photographs book was (that book, by the way, is amazing), which is to say that the photographs were taken by those who were there and the things they did were solely for their own amusement. I’m looking forward to seeing future titles from publisher Stonemaster press.

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Fresh Ink

New NYC Subway Map

New York subway map

One of the world’s design icons has received a face-lift. A new version of the New York City subway map is currently being unveiled, its fifth design overhaul in 40 years and its first in over a decade. Roll-out of the new maps is happening now —some of the 1.5 million currently being distributed are beginning to appear in the wild, with a total of 6 million going to print by year’s end.

Clarity versus inclusion is a struggle that continues to play out in this latest design iteration. Changes include a fattening of Manhattan by as much as thirty-percent from the previous map —to better display the density of transit lines— and a significant shrinking of Staten Island. The color palette is more vibrant —water is a bolder blue, greenspace is now a pea-green instead of an emerald-green. And tabular information has been the biggest loser, being reduced and removed at every opportunity —bus-transfer call-out boxes have lost more than half of their in-map real-estate.

You can inspect the map’s new design features and compare the changes against previous versions at the New York Times’ An Overhaul of an Underground Icon

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Fresh Ink

LONDOPENHAGENBURG

The newest release from Islands Fold

Title: LONDOPENHAGENBURG
Artists: Maxwell Paternoster, Jon Boam, Micahel Rytz, Sune Ehlers, Anders Arhoj, Miss Lotion, EKTA and Luke Ramsey
Publisher: Islands Fold
Specs: 5.5″ x 8.5″, 20 xerox pages, card stock cover

During the spring of 2010, Luke Ramsey went on a tour of Europe and collaborated with 7 artists in London, Copenhagen and Gothenburg. The drawings are impressive in that the line-work looks like it’s vectorized but it’s not(?) Is it? I don’t know but if I were an art director I’d be putting some of these to work as editorial spot illustrations.

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