Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

Painting Today

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Painting Today
Tony Godfrey, Phaidon Press, $75, 448 pages, Hardcover

Painting Today, Phaidon

Every painting student within the last forty years has been told painting is dead.  But we continue to surround ourselves with paintings, to visit museums and galleries, and to read books filled with images of paintings.  And the market still values paintings–Yue Minjun’s Execution, painted in 1985 and originally sold for $5,000 is now worth almost $6 million.

Author Tony Godfrey picks up on Art Today’s tradition, of using the prestige and magic of print, to effectively create a timeless capsule of paintings from the last forty years. His collection of paintings, arranged by theme, act as an introduction to the major movements in contemporary painting. (more…)

Colors: Extraordinary Records by Taschen

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Extraordinary Records (Taschen / Colors)

Extraordinary Records (Taschen / Colors) (more…)

On my desk today: Heidilicious

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009
Heidilicious by Rankin

Heidilicious by Rankin

Heidilicious by Rankin
teNeues, New York, 2009. 144 pp., 100 color and duotone illustrations, 11¼x14½”, $65

Pure comedy, there is even a forward by Seal.

Heidi Klum by Rankin

Heidi Klum by Rankin

Heidi Klum by Rankin

Heidi Klum by Rankin

H Is For Holy Crap

Monday, August 3rd, 2009
Serious Drawings by Marc Johns

Serious Drawings by Marc Johns

Serious Drawings
by Marc Johns
144 pages, Hardcover, $19.95, TeNeus

This has been sitting on my desk for a while–just got a chance to flip through and enjoyed it.

H is for holy crap

H is for holy crap

Wold Famous Drawing

Wold Famous Drawing

We Enjoy Dressing Up As Birds

We Enjoy Dressing Up As Birds

Bill Murray's Socks

Bill Murray's Socks

Two books on my desk today: Ancient Gonzo Wisdom & Music Listography

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
Ancient Gonzo Wisdom & Music Listography

Ancient Gonzo Wisdom & Music Listography

Ancient Gonzo Wisdom: Interviews with Hunter S. Thompson
432 pages, paperback, Da Capo Press, $18

A chronological collection of his interviews, including a preface by his wife.

Music Listography Journal
by Lisa Nola, 160 pages, paperback, Chronicle, $16.95

Another title in the “Listography” series, these books are strangely addictive.

Music Listography

Music Listography

Two new books on my desk today

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Stitches: A Memoir
This a graphic novel by David Small (coming September 2009 from W.W. Norton), 334 pages, hardcover $23.95. (The advanced copy is pictured here).  Its a real page turner, I sat down and unexpectedly did not get up until I had finished it. Keep an eye out for it.

Stitches: A Memoir... by David Small

Stitches: A Memoir... by David Small

Stitches: A Memoir... by David Small

Stitches: A Memoir... by David Small

Stitches: A Memoir... by David Small

Stitches: A Memoir... by David Small

Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging
This is a great visual resource by Simon Go, 200 pages, Princeton Architectural Press.

Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging

Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging

Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging

Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging

Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging

Hong Kong Apothecary: A Visual History of Chinese Medicine Packaging

Three cool books on my desk today

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009
Seymour (Chronicle), The Artist's Guide (Da Capo), Guerrila Art (Laurence King)

Seymour (Chronicle), The Artist's Guide (Da Capo), Guerrila Art (Laurence King)

Seymour: The Obsessive Images of Seymour Chwast
by Seymour Chwast, Hardcover, 272 Pages, Chronicle Books, $40

The Artist’s Guide: How to Make a Living Doing What You Love
by Jackie Battenfield, Paperback, 380 Pages, Da Capo, $17.95

Guerilla Art
by Sebastian Peiter, Hardcover + DVD, 112 Pages, Laurence King, $19.95

Detail image from Guerilla Art by Sebastian Peiter

Detail image from Guerilla Art by Sebastian Peiter

Cool Design Book: Grid Index (Gestalten)

Monday, June 29th, 2009
Grid Index appeared on my desk this week. Very cool design resource. Check out an interview with the author here.
Grid Index

Author: Carsten Nicolai
Language: English

Release: May 2009
Price: € 39,90 / $ 60,00 / £ 35,00
Format: 18,5 x 23 cm
Features: 320 pages, full colour, hardcover, incl. CD-ROM
ISBN: 978-3-89955-241-6

Grid Index is the first comprehensive visual lexicon of patterns and grid systems. Based upon years of research, artist and musician Carsten Nicolai has discovered and unlocked the visual code for visual systems into a systematic equation of grids and patterns. The accompanying CD contains all of the grids and patterns featured in the publication from the simplest grids made up entirely of squares to the most complex irregular ones with infinitely unpredictable patterns of growth, as editable vector graphic data files. Use it to map out the underlying grids of any image or form and to create recurring geometrical grids in graphic design – an essential reference for designers, visual artists, architects, researchers and mathematicians.

The Art of Romance: Mills & Boon and Harlequin Cover Designs

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

art_of_romanceEver wonder what types of romantic escapades your great-grandmother might have fantasized about? We haven’t either. But if for some reason you did, you sicko, The Art of Romance: Mills & Boon and Harlequin Cover Designs, by Joanna Bowring and Margaret O’Brien, would be the place to start.

All kidding aside, the book contains an impressive collection of more than a hundred years of romance-novel cover art, dating from Mills & Boon’s 1908 beginnings through the present.

A studious introduction details the publication’s histories and how romance novels became a type of escapism for generations of women. The pop art inside accentuates that although opportunities and accepted mores for women have changed over the years, many ideals of love and romance have remained the same.

In line with many other types of “for women” entertainment, there are contrasting poses — those of lovey-dovey relationships, such as the sweater-clad couple at an ice rink on the cover of Alison Fraser’s Time to Go (Mills & Boon, 1990), and those of relatively graphic imagery, like the torn dress about to fall off a gun-wielding brunette on Dale Bogard’s Pardon my Body (Harlequin, 1951).

Bowring and O’Brien document the intolerances of Western society as well. For instance, Louise Gerard’s Jungle Love (Mills & Boon, 1924) cover casts a loincloth-wearing warrior in a predatory pose over a distressed, possibly comatose woman on the jungle floor.

Though many would prefer to steer clear of the publishers’ erotica-lite beach reads (not to mention their “family and church” oriented series), The Art of Romance is perfect for the coffee table, and in the right-size prints, many of the images would look perfect on a nearby wall.

Ancient Gonzo Wisdom: Interviews with Hunter S. Thompson

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Ancient Gonzo WisdomFour years after the death of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson in 2005, his widow, Anita Thompson, is releasing Ancient Gonzo Wisdom: Interviews with Hunter S. Thompson, including many interviews that were never before available. After the many books and films about his life, his fans are now given a chance to share personal thoughts and laughs with him. (more…)

Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

After some success with his small, downloadable books for Chicago-based Featherproof Books, Zach Plague has returned with his debut novel, Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring, that is anything but…well, boring. (more…)

Song of Brooklyn: An Oral History of America’s Favorite Borough

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Song of Brooklyn gathers the voices of diverse citizens, past and present, unknown and famous — Spike Lee and Norman Mailer among them. In it, each person gives testimony to one of the most socially relevant and important areas that helped define the United States and continues to do so. (more…)

Do-It-Yourself Screenprinting: How to Turn Your Home into a T-Shirt Factory

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Do-It-Yourself Screenprinting is a resourceful and knowledgeable DIY guide hidden in a comic book. Complete with illustrations, speech balloons, and even Comic Sans, this book is an ideal first step towards making your own wearable art. (more…)

Another Kind of Record: The Merger, The Incident, and The Girl

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Pat O’Neil has long been a mainstay of the Los Angeles art scene as a renowned experimental filmmaker and as an influential professor at CalArts.

For his first book, O’Neil compiles dozens of collage drawings and altered digital prints to create an ambiguous work whose bold designs speak louder than the sporadic text ever could. (more…)

Brighton Graffiti

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

For more than two decades, Brighton, England’s graffiti scene has thrived.

At first, the art form was banned, confining it to the walls of deserted buildings and train tracks. Over time, the city council embraced this underground expression, sponsoring murals and offering free youth classes on graffiti techniques. Now, Brighton is considered a Mecca for graffiti artists. (more…)