Barnbrook designs David Bowie album and single covers

Barnbrook designs for David Bowie

News: graphic design studio Barnbrook has defaced a classic David Bowie album and upturned a 1970s photograph of the musician to create the covers of his new album and single.

Jonathan Barnbrook, head of the London-based studio, explained in a blogpost why the cover for The Next Day, due out in March, recycles the artwork for Bowie’s 1977 album “Heroes” by placing a blank square over the pop star’s face.

“The “Heroes” cover obscured by the white square is about the spirit of great pop or rock music which is ‘of the moment’, forgetting or obliterating the past,” he said. “If you are going to subvert an album by David Bowie there are many to choose from, but this is one of his most revered.”

Barnbrook designs for David Bowie

“We know it is only an album cover with a white square on it, but often in design it can be a long journey to get at something quite simple which works,” he added. “Often the most simple ideas can be the most radical.”

The studio also took a picture of the musician from the late 1970s and turned it upside down to create the cover for new single Where are We Now?, Bowie’s first release in a decade.

A new typeface called Doctrine was also created for the covers, and will be released soon by Barnbrook’s font-producing wing VirusFonts.

Barnbrook previously designed the covers for Bowie’s 2002 album Heathen and 2003’s Reality, and has also been working on the upcoming David Bowie is exhibition at the V&A.

We previously featured a selection of work by Barnbrook shown at the Design Museum in London in 2007.

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album and single covers
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Cranbrook talks to Barnbrook

CranbrookDesign.com, an independent site created by alumni from the Cranbrook Academy of Art design departments, recently sat down with Jonathan Barnbrook. The dialogue is quite good and well worth 5 minutes of your time. We’ve included an excerpt below:

We are not perfect although we try very hard. we do have a definite policy about who we work with and if somebody wants to work with us we will check them out. There are quite a few companies that we have turned down but I think it is now at the stage that certain people would not be silly enough to ask us. Its important that designers make a stand and let companies know they are not completely mercenary. Often people will argue they can’t afford to turn down work, and I know its not a case of them being starving…so they are changing it to a black and white situation that does not exist….

To read the full interview, visit this.