Great Orwell book covers by David Pearson

Great Orwell book covers by David Pearson

Graphic designer David Pearson has censored the cover of George Orwell’s classic novel 1984 as part of his series of redesigned books for publisher Penguin.

Great Orwell book covers by David Pearson

Referencing the novel’s themes of totalitarianism and censorship, David Pearson debossed the title and author and covered them with black foiling.

Penguin’s Great Orwell series also includes Down and Out in Paris and London, whose cover by Pearson frames a Vorticist-style screenprint of the two cities by Paul Catherall.

Great Orwell book covers by David Pearson

Homage to Catalonia, an account of Orwell’s experiences during the Spanish Civil War, features a repeated cubist line drawing of a soldier.

Animal Farm’s cover is dominated by bold, cartoonish lettering in the style of an old movie poster, while Politics and the English Language uses a new font, Caslon Great Primer Rounded, which is inspired by a typeface created by Caslon & Catherwood in 1821.

Great Orwell book covers by David Pearson

We recently featured a font based on an impossible triangle and an alphabet of sculptural letters that can be read from four sides  – see all fonts on Dezeen.

Other graphic design we’ve published lately includes stripy album artwork by British designer Peter Saville and a collection of recognisable products with their brand names removed – see all graphics on Dezeen.

Great Orwell book covers by David Pearson

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The Elements of Typographic Style, Version 4.0

Robert Bringhurst has issued the latest edition of what Hermann Zapf called the “Typographer’s Bible”. The news will surely be welcomed by his ardent followers, but does the book speak to a modern congregation?

In 1992, when the first edition of The Elements of Typographic Style was published, Bringhurst was already an accomplished poet and translator of poetry — most notably Haida poetry, but also Navajo, Greek, and Arabic — into English. He was also a self-trained and accomplished book designer, and Elements was his attempt to catalogue and summarize the best practices of book typography and design, loosely according to the model provided by the book’s namesake, The Elements of Style by William Strunk and E. B. White.

The book was a huge success. Four subsequent editions were published, labeled (somewhat incongruously, given Bringhurst’s approach to typography) versions 2.0, 3.0, 3.1, and 3.2. Now, on the book’s twentieth anniversary and eight years after the last release, a version 4.0 has appeared.

It’s hard to overstate the reputation Bringhurst and his book have gained in the typographic community. It didn’t hurt that Zapf blurbed the book’s first edition by calling for the book to become the “Typographer’s Bible”. More recently, Hoefler & Frere-Jones have called Elements “the finest book ever written about typography”. It appears on countless syllabi and reading lists, and is one of the “triumvirate” of type books still recommended to beginning typographers and designers, along with Alexander Lawson’s Anatomy of a Typeface (1990) and Walter Tracy’s Letters of Credit (1986).

What accounts for the lasting influence and popularity of Bringhurst’s book? Besides the handsomeness of the book itself — Bringhurst continues to enjoy the support of his publisher, Hartley & Marks, with his standards of book design and production — there are three reasons: the range and depth of his treatment, the quality of his writing, and the confidence and generosity of his tone.

Bringhurst’s scope is wide: the fundamentals and finer points of macro- and micro typography, type anatomy and classification; choosing typefaces and page formats; the use of diacritics and other analphabetic symbols (no doubt his experience as a translator of languages that rely on extensive diacritical support in the Latin alphabet has sensitized him to these matters); annotated lists of designers and foundries; glossaries of glyphs and terminology; and more. Besides distilling centuries of typographic expertise, his treatment of it is remarkably thorough: he doesn’t pretend that his book is an exhaustive account of typography, but his care and attention to detail is obvious (in places even overwhelming). And all of it is supported by well-made illustrations and diagrams. It would be hard to find another writer in English who commands as much knowledge about the use of writing and print to capture language as Bringhurst does, and that he can condense it into 398 pages (in this edition) that many people will read (once more) from half-title to colophon is impressive.

The quality of Bringhurst’s writing allows him to pull this off. Knowledge, experience, judgment, and enthusiasm are not always accompanied by writing skill, and like many academic and quasi-academic fields, typography is not flush with talented prose stylists. But the fact that Bringhurst came to book design and typography from poetry is evident on every page. He is a gifted author used to making every word tell, and his prose is (to borrow Robin Kinross’s description from Modern Typography) “serene and incantatory”. He finds words that capture — more completely than practically any of us can muster — why typography matters. This is most simply and succinctly evident in “first principles”: “Typography exists to honor content.”

Finally, Bringhurst’s writing is a perfect match for his tone. The Elements of Style is actually a poor model for advice and guidance of any sort: Strunk takes an important insight (that writing should be as considered and economical as possible and appropriate) and worries it into dozens of ponderous, crabby, and often questionable commandments. Fortunately the similarities between that book and Bringhurst’s end with the title and the numbered divisions. Even at his most direct, and despite the fact that the book does have the feel and structure of holy writ in places, Bringhurst’s tone is moderate and reflective. His confidence never drifts into arrogance, and his traditionalist roots don’t prevent him from acknowledging that contemporary themes, subjects, and standards call for contemporary type treatments and approaches. Conservative, yes, but conservative in the style of Edmund Burke: you change what you must to preserve what you can.

None of this will be news to most readers here. But all this being said, is the arrival of a fourth edition of Elements something we should celebrate?

Bringhurst has probably taken a book grounded in print typography as far as it can go. But it is, still, grounded in print. It’s hard to believe that a book revised five times in the last twenty years mentions the World Wide Web exactly twice (if you’re willing to accept a mention of “hypertext” for one of them). And don’t look in the index for those passages, because “World Wide Web”, “web”, “webfonts”, “online publishing”, “internet”, “HTML”, and “CSS” don’t appear there. “E-books” does have two entries. “Linotype machine”, by contrast and with apologies to Doug Wilson for saying so, appears twelve times. (“Monotype machine”, in case you wondered, appears four.)

This doesn’t mean Bringhurst’s book is obsolete. After all, there’s no mention of the web in Lawson’s or Tracy’s books, either. Nor will you find any in the books of Jost Hochuli, Willi Kunz, Hans Bosshard, Carl Gerstner, Emil Ruder, Helmut Schmid, Geoffrey Dowding, Nicolette Gray, Daniel Berkeley Updike, Stanley Morison, Beatrice Warde, Jan Tschichold, or Eric Gill. And Giambattista Bodoni didn’t mention the Linotype machine, or even electricity. That doesn’t mean we have nothing to learn from them, that they don’t belong on the bookshelves of an educated typophile. There are principles of good typography that transcend substrates and technologies.

But all these books are products of their times and contexts, and we must read them that way, Bringhurst’s book included. The only new section in version 4.0 of Elements is a two-page examination of metal type (pgs 300–301). “To think about type”, he tells us to introduce the section, “you have to think backwards and forwards at once.” Well, yes — if you’re setting metal type. But virtually all undergraduate designers and typographers presently in school will never do that — in quantity, anyway, if at all. (It’s actually more likely they’ll set wood type.) That’s not to say that it’s a good thing they won’t, or a bad thing, simply that it’s true. So why do we recommend to them as a central text, as so many teachers and type designers do, a book that, for all its qualities, has an easier time thinking backwards?

Of course, students in any field involving typography should read it — must read it — but not first, and certainly not by itself. And not just because it’s grounded in a world of print. Display typography, which surely demands the same care that book typography does, is also nearly completely absent from the text. Even his consideration of type on the screen, smart as it is, is limited to two pages and five paragraphs.

More importantly and generally, though, for all its range and depth, and for all the generosity and precision of its advice, Elements is far better at exploring the meaning of good typography, at describing outcomes, than explaining process. The debates that brought us to what we value in good typography, the questions that remain contested, the actual means of translating principles into practice for students, are not here. And shouldn’t necessarily be. Bringhurst is the unofficial poet of typography, and a great one at that. But what I learn from Robert Frost is the meaning of woodcutting, not necessarily how to fell a tree or stack a cord of firewood.

The book isn’t without practical advice and we are fortunate that it delivers what it does. But unless Bringhurst plans a considerably expanded version 5.0 that focuses as much on web, mobile, and display typography as it does on the world of books, he should let Elements be what it is: a wonderfully written and wise summary of the world of typography as he found it. Surely others inspired by the world his text reveals to us, the beauty of his writing, and the thoughtfulness of his approach, can take it from here.

Competition: five copies of Behind the Scenes to be won

Competition: five copies of Behind the Scenes to be won

Competition: we’re giving readers the chance to win one of five copies of a new book full of stories from the furniture design industry, which includes a chapter about the story of Dezeen.

Competition: five copies of Behind the Scenes to be won

Edited by design writer Hanna Nova Beatrice, Behind the Scenes: Stories from the Design Industry explores current topics relating to furniture design through articles by prominent design writers.

“The Story of Dezeen” written by Dezeen’s editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs is the first chapter in the book, and a piece by Nova Beatrice about the cost and conventions of putting designs into production also features.

Competition: five copies of Behind the Scenes to be won

Other contributors include Disegno editor-in-chief Johanna Agerman Ross, Domus editor Joseph Grima, Apartamento founder Marco Velardi, plus design writers Anna Bates, Daniel Golling and Julie Cirelli.

The book will be launched today at Stockholm Design Week and featured at Lindelöf Showroom at Hornsgtan 29 and the Form Us With Love market at BirgerJarlsgatan 15.

Competition: five copies of Behind the Scenes to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Behind the Scenes” 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.

Competition closes 7 March 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.

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The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: Artist Michael Sieben updates the children’s classic with characteristically kooky illustrations

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Originally published to great admiration in 1900, L. Frank Baum’s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” has since secured itself as one of the most recognizable children’s classics of all time. While the beloved story has stood the test of time HarperCollins teamed with Austin-based artist Michael Sieben to update…

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Competition: three copies of Tree Houses to be won

Competition: three copies of Tree Houses to be won

Competition: Dezeen and publisher Taschen have teamed up to give away three copies of a book containing 50 remarkable treehouses.

Competition: three copies of Tree Houses to be won

Above: image of a treehouse in the southwest of Irian Jaya, Indonesia by Harald Melcher/Rubinland

Author Philip Jodidio compiled a selection of unusual structures built in, around or on top of trees around the world for Tree Houses: Fairy Tale Castles in the Air.

Competition: three copies of Tree Houses to be won

Above: image of Free Spirit Spheres, Qualicum Bay, British Columbia, Canada by Tom Chudleigh

Several photos of each project are accompanied by information about the design and a short biography of the architect in English, French and German.

Competition: three copies of Tree Houses to be won

Above: image of Terunobu Fujimori’s Teahouse Tetsu, Kiyoharu Shirakaba Museum, Nakamaru, Hokuto City, Yamanashi, Japan by Akihisa Masuda

Illustrated by American artist Patrick Hruby, the hardcover book can be published on the Taschen website for £44.99.

Competition: three copies of Tree Houses to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Tree Houses” 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.

Competition closes 5 March 2013. Three winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

See all our stories about treehouses »

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50 (sometimes) glorious years

The cover of D&AD50, designed by Planning Unit, features a clear dust jacket printed with the numerals 10 to 50

As part of its 50th birthday celebrations, D&AD has put together a history of its half century as told by its presidents. Together, they remember the good, the bad, the arguments and the annuals. And a few take the opportunity to grind some axes too…

Cover without the dust jacket

Each year D&AD appoints a significant figure from the creative industry to act as a figurehead for the organisation. In the past, the task alternated between a designer and someone from advertising but in recent years ‘digital’ has provided a third constituency for representation. The full list of 50 past presidents (only two of them women, by the way) consists of many of the great and the good in the creative world. For its 50th birthday book, D&AD invited each past president to recall their year in charge and the work chosen for the awards under their stewardship.

 

It would be fair to say that D&AD has, at times, endured something of a stormy history, particularly when it comes to financial matters. Many older readers will therefore turn first to the chapter dealing with 1992, surely D&AD’s most inclement year, when Tim Delaney was at the helm. Typically, Delaney does not mince his words in remembering this time.

He begins his chapter by recalling the mutinous mutterings of the design community which was threatening a schism (something it has periodically returned to over the years). “They wanted a different Dinner,” Delaney writes. “Design Awards were always less respected by the rowdy crowds at the Awards evening, apparently … Secession was in the air. In our meetings I reminded the rebels that approximately 75 per cent of all of D&AD’s activities were paid for by the advertising community in one way or another, and that if they did, for instance, organise a separate Dinner for the Design Awards, it would most likely take place in a B&B off Praed Street.”

During this process, Delaney reveals, “one of the staff at D&AD divulged the misdeeds that led eventually, via an evenhanded and formal hearing, to the suspension and exit of the executive chairman and the financial director”. The effects of the ensuing crisis were still being felt by the following year’s president, Aziz Cami, who had to endure an investigation by the Charity Commission and go cap in hand to the industry in order to stave off bankruptcy. D&AD was saved by a total of £40,000 in loans from four leading ad agencies (underlining Dempsey’s point about the ad industry’s importance to D&AD).

Ths stormclouds of this period did however prove to have something of a silver lining as it was during this time that two figures who would lead the revival in the organisation’s fortunes came to be involved: David Kester, who became a passionate, effective and hugely enthusiastic chief executive, and Anthony Simonds-Gooding, who, as chairman, would prove to be exactly the kind of father figure D&AD needed.

 

 

While many most of the advertising presidents confine their comments to the inevitable anomalies of the judging process and their fears that the year of their reign wasn’t a ‘vintage’ one for the awards, as well as picking out creative highlights, quite a few of their design counterparts take the opportunity to loose off a few potshots at both the organisation itself and their erstwhile advertising colleagues. Derek Birdsall (president in 1965) complains about the ‘advertising guys’ taking over and that his ‘kind of work hardly ever got a look in’ while dismissing the awards dinners as ‘pretentious nonsense’. Michael Wolff (1971) bemoans the “torrent of meaningless, unoriginal and superficial work” which drowns the few good pieces in D&AD these days while Mike Dempsey (1997) is concerned that many young designers think D&AD “expensive and irrelevant” today.

My favourite grumpy design contribution has to be that of Rodney Fitch (1984), however. His opening paragraph fulsomely lists the achievements of his own business (“Our work was winning everywhere … Fabulous, clever, talented people at every desk”) before having a dig at D&AD for not giving them any awards, complaining about the Presidents’ Dinner and taking a shot at the design of “later Annuals where, for some egotists, the book design became more important than what was in it”.

 

 

Surely though it is the sign of a confident organisation that such criticism is allowed in what is a celebratory book, so good for D&AD in letting it stand. And elsewhere, there is much for D&AD to be proud of, particularly as the presidential narrative shifts from the looming disaster of the early 90s to careful rebuilding under Kester and then on to today’s pre-eminence and global reach.

And there’s some great work in there too. Although any history based on awards entries is by its very nature partial (more so in the case of graphic design than advertising), D&AD50 provides a fascinating overview of the shifting nature of the creative industry and many of the landmark pieces of work produced in the last 50 years.

 

D&AD50 is published by Taschen, £34.99. Book designed by Planning Unit

 

 

 

CR in Print
The February issue of CR magazine features a major interview with graphic designer Ken Garland. Plus, we delve into the Heineken advertising archive, profile digital art and generative design studio Field, talk to APFEL and Linder about their collaboration on a major exhibition in Paris for the punk artist, and debate the merits of stock images versus commissioned photography. Plus, a major new book on women in graphic design, the University of California logo row and what it means for design, Paul Belford on a classic Chivas Regal ad and Jeremy Leslie on the latest trends in app design for magazines and more. Buy your copy here.

Please note, CR now has a limited presence on the newsstand at WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at train stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your WH Smith store or a local independent newsagent can order it for you. You can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, call us on 020 7970 4878, or buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 970 4878 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month.

Kartell: The Culture of Plastics: The Italian furniture maker’s plastic history

Kartell: The Culture of Plastics

From the very beginning of Kartell’s history plastic and design have been the mantra. Founded by Giulio Castelli, a chemical engineer, the Italian furniture brand is the most influential proponent of plastic industrial design, building a sizable following through quality production processes and design contribution by innovative designers. The…

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Printed Matter Preps First LA Art Book Fair

The good people of Printed Matter are heading west for the first annual LA Art Book Fair. The left coast counterpart of the beloved NY Art Book Fair gets underway tomorrow evening with an opening preview and runs through Sunday (we’ll take a Larry Clark pop-up shop over football any day) at the Geffen Contemporary, the Frank Gehry-renovated police car warehouse-turned-exhibition space that is part of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

The fair promises to be a feast of artists’ books, art catalogs, monographs, and periodicals presented by some 200 international presses, booksellers, antiquarians, and artists. Come for the zine scene–including a “Zine Masters of the Universe” exhibition featuring the work of Mark Gonzales, Ari Marcopoulos, Ray Pettibon, and Dash Snow–and stay for the Gagosian-presented homage to the late Mike Kelley, tarot card readings, and the chance to watch Jean-Philippe Delhomme sign your copy of The Unknown Hipster Diaries, among many other happenings. Can’t make it to MOCA? Snag Andrew Kuo‘s “Reasons to Move to L.A.”–all proceeds from print sales will help to keep the LA Art Book Fair free and open to the public.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

Competition: Dezeen is giving readers the chance to win one of two books from a limited edition containing visualisations of sound projects by Japanese designer Yuri Suzuki.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

BOOM, an acronym for B-side Of Onomatopoeic Music, contains photos, graphics and illustrations that depict artist, designer and musician Yuri Suzuki‘s sound installations as images.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

The book was edited by London design studio Åbäke with contributions from designer Simone Grant and illustrator Tim Hunkin, plus musicians DMX KrewMomus and Maywa Denki.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

The book took two years to complete and was launched last weekend as a limited edition, which can be purchased on the websites of publishers Dente-De-Leone and Clear Edition.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

Suzuki’s sonic works include a radio made from a circuit board that looks like the London tube map and a vinyl globe that plays folk music and national anthems as a needle passes over it.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “BOOM” 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.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

Competition closes 26 February 2013. Two winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Competition: two copies of BOOM by Yuri Suzuki to be won

See all our stories about design by Yuri Suzuki »

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Shirley Tucker, Faber, and The Bell Jar

When Faber & Faber picked up Silvia Plath’s novel The Bell Jar in 1966, in-house designer Shirley Tucker was given the chance to design its cover – and she came up with the perfect image. In a series of interviews filmed at the publisher’s last year, Tucker discusses this work and her time at Faber…

In the interviews, which Faber has uploaded to its extensive Vimeo channel for the 50th anniversary of the book, the designer talks about how she came up with the design for Plath’s first and only novel. First published in 1963, originally under the pseudonym Victoria Lucas, The Bell Jar initially appeared in the UK and only saw a US release in 1971.

Shirley Tucker at work in the Faber & Faber offices

The story centres on young writer Esther Greenwood, her search for identity and her descent into depression, which is at one point likened to being underneath a glass bell jar. Like Plath, Greenwood endures electroconvulsive therapy as part of her treatment – this method of therapy, Greenwood’s ongoing mental state, and the noton of the bell jar are all neatly captured in Tucker’s single cover graphic. Plath took her own life one month after the book was published in Britain.

In the interviews, Tucker discusses the process of making the cover (and others), how Faber founder TS Eliot would come and go – “he worked office hours” – and what the formidable art director Berthold Wolpe was like to work with. Faber also has a great Flickr collection of some classic cover designs from the period.

In the first clip, the designer (who worked at the publishing house from the late 1950s until the 1980s), discusses her approach to the Plath cover as a graphic designer and letterer, and how she was never credited with the design until recently:

Tucker also discusses some of her favourite Faber covers:

And here sheds light on the Faber design process, using an example of a cover for an edition of the writings of David Jones which was carried out by Wolpe and passed on to John Roberts Press of Clerkenwell. She also addresses how the design for The Bell Jar was created, and the coming of the “heavenly” Rapidograph pen:


In this next clip, Tucker discusses working with the then unheard-of PD James, creating the cover for her first book, Shroud for a Nightingale, and the presence of Faber founder, TS Eliot:


Finally, Tucker recalls her first meeting with Berthold Wolpe, Faber’s art director and the designer of the Albertus typeface:


There’s also a new edition of The Bell Jar, published by Faber, as part of its 50th anniverary. Go here for a substantial list of cover designs for the book that have appeared (in several languages) since 1963.