Tag Archives: Book

Fresh Ink
Forest_ Joel Speasmaker_The Small Book series

Forest does The Small Book series

Forest_ Joel Speasmaker_The Small Book series

Joel Speasmaker is Forest, a Brooklyn-based studio with a varied portfolio of design work. His series of small books (aptly titled The Small Book series) recently caught my eye.

The set of simple booklets each approaches a different topic with a different visual approach, but remain united through their use of materials and format. Titles include Spirit Figures, On Symbolism, Abstractions, and Collections, each printed on French Poptone paper that evokes archetypal pastel photocopy paper from the cornerstore copy shop.

Sets one and two of the Small Books series is unfortunately sold out, though we can hope a new title is on its way. In the meantime, drool over these out-of-stock titles and peruse Joel’s stellar design portfolio. See below for more images.

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Print Matters

Publication Fair 2010: Part 1

Now in its second year, Publication Fair boasts posters printed by OMFGCO and Container Corps.

The 2010 Publication Fair was held this weekend at the Cleaners at the Ace Hotel in Portland. We were on hand to scope it out and to staff the Pinball Publishing /Scout Books table. I scored some amazing printed works and, in the midst of doing so, spoke with the exhibitors about about their work. This three-part video series highlights those conversations.

Watch the first installment below.

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Book Report

As the digital and analog collide…

How will printed objects fit into our material future?

As we monitor the pulse of printed communication, the ever-present question resurfaces: What will happen to our relationship with books, magazines and printed ephemera as digital takes over some aspects of our communication landscape?

A new book slated to be released at the Design Anthropology symposium in Vienna this month seeks to answer that question. Called Design Anthropology, the collection of essays edited by anthropologist and design historian Alison J. Clarke features input from leading thinkers on the shifting topics of material culture and our relationship to objects.

We’ll keep our eye on this publication and eagerly await its arrival in the States. View a spread above. You can pre-order the book from Amazon.de before its release later this month.

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Fresh Ink

Shapes and Trails by Nigel Peake

Two limited-edition photography chapbooks.

I’m a Nigel Peake geek. His illustration work and self-initiated publishing projects have long caught my eye as being particularly more contemplative than most style-driven design and illustration emerging today. He has a way of corralling a complex concept and illuminating it in a beautiful, accessible way. Two new publications follow suit: Shapes and Trails, both put out by the fabulous Edinburgh-based Analogue Books.

Each is a simple, 28-page black-and-white volume of photography with a hand-printed drawing on the cover. Each is made in a limited edition of 100. Shapes illuminates the patterns and geometries of the built and natural environment in a series of photographs taken while in Europe and the States. Trails documents on paths cut through the environment by humans and machines in a collection of photography from Norway and the Pyrenees. Get one. Get both.

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Print Matters

Sorted Books

Sort, stack.

I was at Pacific Northwest College of Art (PNCA) yesterday and found myself in the recently opened exhibition Sorted Books by Nina Katchadourian.

Sorted Books primarily features photographs of stacks of books, their titles meant to be read sequentially, top to bottom. The results are pithy dadaist poems such as:

Primitive Art /
Just Imagine /
Picasso /
Raised By Wolves

and another:

Relax /
When I Relax I Feel Guilty /
When I Say No, I Feel Guilty /
God Always Says Yes! /
Don’t Say Yes When You Want to Say No

I like the idea of books being corralled into groups for which they were never intended because that’s where they wind up naturally anyway right?, on our bookshelves in random groupings. Now I can’t help but read the titles on my bookshelf sequentially. If I come across any particularly interesting ones I’ll post it in the comments below. What about yours? Any Nina Katchadourianesque sequential titles on your bookshelf?

Sorted Books Sept 2 – Oct 23 — PNCA

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Print Matters

The Bible Illuminated: R. Crumb’s Book of Genesis

R. Crumb at the Portland Art Museum

Portlanders: anyone who has not gotten the chance to go see The Bible Illuminated: R. Crumb’s Book of Genesis at the Portland Art Museum needs to go soon. Rarely have comics met with the walls of museums, but this show marks a new and well-deserved turn. The book took Crumb over four years to render and it is filled with his trademark scratchy, exaggerated characters and cross-hatched detail.  It’s wonderful to look at all the pages up close and see his pen work, the waviness of the paper, and the dabs of white-out all over. It’s a truly unique experience because as you examine the pieces, you can’t help but get sucked into reading the text as well. Though the museum’s layout for the show is not the easiest to follow, you can always get the 224 page book if you’re itching to delve into it a little bit more.

The exhibit runs until September 19th. Tickets are $12 for adults or try and catch “Free Fourth Friday Night” at the museum on August 27 from 5-8pm. More information at www.portlandartmuseum.org.

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Book Report

BOOM! A little book jam-packed with good.

Dimensions: 2 inches high, 1.5 inches wide, and 1 inch thick.

Dutch book designer Irma Boom‘s recent monograph is barely larger than a box of matches. Containing 704 miniature pages of book projects from her massive library of work, Boom’s BOOM shocked fans and critics alike with its unconventional format and approach. But my outlook is: who can be surprised by Irma Boom? Her groundbreaking book work hovers somewhere between art, design and pure genius and is always a delight. The New York Times digs into the details of the project in this in-depth article. I’d recommend reading it and then crossing your fingers for the printing of a second edition.

More beautiful images can be found over on Slanted.

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Book Report

Comics Mastr

Publications by CF.

The artist CF (Christopher Forgues) is a truly notable character in the comics world today. Hailing from the Providence, RI/Fort Thunder scene of the late 1990′s, he’s produced a number of works including the series Low Tide, as well as small zines like Core of Caligula (featured above) and the captivating graphic novels, Powr Mastrs 1 & 2, put out by PictureBox Inc. Not only are his drawings beautiful, but the unique design in the layout and panels has me flipping through his books every time I see one. I’m sure anyone who has read the first two Powr Mastrs will be thrilled to know that Number 3 is due out this September. Finally, the sci-fi/fantasy/abstract/metaphysical comic shall continue!

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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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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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