From the Book

Illustrators Nancy Slonims, Andrew Baker and Martin Ursell are hosting a joint exhibition at London’s Coningsby Gallery featuring woodcut prints, photo etchings and extracts from a children’s graphic novel series.

From the Book is a collection of hand crafted and digital book illustrations by Baker, Slonims and Ursell, who are lecturers on Middlesex University’s illustration course.

Baker’s work is a collection of giclee prints presenting a ‘lucky dip’ of facts about various poets including Lewis Carrol, Spike Milligan and Ivor Cutler.

The series was inspired by a print Baker made for Happy Birthday Edward Lear, an exhibition of illustrations inspired by the nonsense poet’s work which he co-curated with animator Linda Hughes, and another he made for a Lewis Carrol-themed show curated by Middlesex University alumni. The prints were hand made using digital woodcuts, some of which are on display at the gallery (below).

Alongside Baker’s wood cuts and poetry trivia are extracts from a series of graphic novels Ursell is working on, based on Reynard the Fox stories – a set of fables about a red fox that date back to the ninth century and have been published in Dutch, German, English and Latin.

Ursell – who has illustrated books by Julia Donaldson, Roald Dahl and Dick King Smith – is releasing a three-volume graphic account of the complete history of Reynard the Fox, which he says “will span the thousands of years of English history throughout which they have remained popular.” A selection of cover illustrations and double page spreads from the volumes are on display alongside rough sketches.

Slonim’s work is a set of 10 photo etchings inspired by From First to Last, a collection of stories by author Damon Runyon set in 1930s New York. Slonim – who worked as a graphic designer at Pentagram – created a series of layered silkscreens inspired by the author’s work while studying at the Royal College of Art and twenty years later, decided to reinterpret the text through photo etchings.

Slonims, Baker and Ursell are clearly passionate about their craft. The exhibition includes some lovely examples of digital and hand crafted work, and offers an insight into the creative process behind three very different illustration projects.

From the Book is open until October 19 at the Coningsby Galley, 30 Tottenham Street, London, W1T 4RJ. For more information visit coningsbygallery.com

David Pearson at Typocircle

Book designer David Pearson will give the next Typocircle Typo Talk with the intriguing title The Work of Dave in the Age of Digital Revolution

Pearson studied at Central St Martins, graduating in 2002, before taking a job at Penguin Books as text designer and later, cover designer. He left to establish his own studio – Type as Image – in 2007.

Perhaps Pearson’s breakthrough project was the Great Ideas series, but he has continued to produce striking and much talked-about work including, ealier this year, a new set of covers for George Orwell classics including 1984

 

Pearson’s Typo Talk will be on October 30 at JWT in Knightsbridge, London. Tickets for Typo Circle members are £10 (£6 for students). Non-members pay £16 or £10 for students. Full details here

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

Competition: Dezeen is giving readers the chance to win a copy of a new book about contemporary graphic design.

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

New Graphic Design: The 100 Best Contemporary Graphic Designers has been compiled as a guide to the latest work by upcoming and influential designers.

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

It encompasses visual communication designs for websites, apps, packaging, exhibitions and branding campaigns.

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

Images of recent projects are displayed next to text about the work written by their creators, with a short designer bio. Interviews with a selection of designers also feature.

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

The compendium is written by Charlotte and Peter Fiell with a foreword by writer and critic Steven Heller, and published by Goodman Fiell.

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “New Graphic Design” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

You need to subscribe to our newsletter to have a chance of winning. Sign up here.

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

Competition closes 7 November 2013. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeen Mail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Competition: five New Graphic Design books to be won

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Interview: Sass Brown of “ReFashioned”: The UK-based author and fashion designer talks about upcycling and its role in the world of fashion

Interview: Sass Brown of


With her latest book “ReFashioned: Cutting-Edge Clothing From Upcycled Materials,” author and fashion expert Sass Brown has demonstrated two basic things. First: Sustainability is not a mere communication phenomenon,…

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Chomp puzzle books

Questa serie di puzzle in legno rappresentano le catene alimentari nei diversi ambienti di come foreste, oceani, artici, giungle e deserti. Ogni pezzo serve per formare la catena che una volta completata mostra l’intero processo in maniera ordinata. Disegnati da Mirim Seo.

Chomp puzzle books

Chomp puzzle books

Chomp puzzle books

Chomp puzzle books

Coffee Makers: Macchine da Caffè: An encyclopedic tome packing extensive history, photos, technical drawings and more

Coffee Makers: Macchine da Caffè


Rather than a simple reference guide, “Coffee Makers: Macchine da Caffè” is the first encyclopedia of coffee machines and extensive exploration of the history of making coffee. The result of…

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Painting scenes from the movies

Leanne Shapton’s watercolour paintings of scenes from black-and-white films are brought together in a new book, Sunday Night Movies, and form a meditation on the art of cinema…

Moments from nearly 80 different films are glimpsed in Shapton’s paintings – from close-ups of actors and ‘two-shots’ of couples embracing or talking, to title sequences and end credits.

With no text to introduce the sequence, Shapton allows the reader to study the images and, in many cases, wonder what they may mean in the context of the film they depict.

The films Shapton has painted are listed at the back of the book but as the reader turns the pages the images float freely from their source.

Shapton’s skill with paint was evident in her previous book (the memoir, Swimming Studies, is filled with duotone illustrations), but here it’s the perfect medium for rendering fleeting moments into still images – the paint itself hints at the fluidity of film.

Some of the stand-out paintings for me are of the typography that renders the opening titles and credits to a handful of the films. Within these simple sketches of text on celluloid, Shapton manages to capture the excitement of cinema and the expectancy of the story about to unfold.

Drawn & Quarterly; $19.95. See drawnandquarterly.com and leanneshapton.com. Shapton has also posted on the project on the New Yorker.

Fifty Bicycles That Changed the World: London’s Design Museum chronicles two-wheel transportation at its finest

Fifty Bicycles That Changed the World


Short of material innovation and aesthetic refinement, the bicycle as we know it has changed very little since its early days of development in the late 19th century. However slight, the evolution of the world’s most widely used mode of transportation is not…

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Don’t tell the boss…

Phone+Book merges digital and analog in a clever notebook that will be your best friend in boring meetings! Bring the book and included conductive-pencil along with you so it looks like you’re taking notes. Little will anyone know, you’re actually surfing your phone!  Should you get inspired while surfing, you can flip the pencil to doodle regularly.

Designer: KBme2


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Don’t tell the boss… was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Professor Astro Cat: London-based illustrator Ben Newman creates a playful character to teach kids about space

Professor Astro Cat


by Gavin Lucas For the last 30 years, if you wanted to know about space, the universe and its many wonders, Professor Stephen Hawking has pretty much been the go-to guy. However that’s about to change because there’s a new space brainiac with…

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