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Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Iraqi Refugees
Posted by steve



The Iraqi diaspora may become the greatest humanitarian crisis of our time. Although the U.S. has promised to accept 20,000 out of the 4.5 million refugees, so far only a fraction have been admitted to the country. "These are truly innocent victims of the war, and in many cases, have supported American troops," says Milton Glaser, who has developed a poster campaign for the International Rescue Committee. (The one above is partly sponsored by The School of Visual Arts in New York and hangs on one of the school's buildings.)

The IRC initiative is based on interviews with, quotes from, and photographs of refugees who continue to be at risk. For more information on the IRC's involvement, click here.

This one reads: "I was first in my class and headed for college when my street became a war zone. My cousin was killed, my father was threatened. We left everything and fled. Now we are refugees. We're not allowed to work. We've run out of money. How will we survive?"


Advertising | Design
10/28/2008 8:14:00 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [0]
Monday, October 27, 2008
The Legendary Wall
Posted by Steve



"Okay, wiseguy, what would you do?" With those words, Frank Stanton, former president of the Columbia Broadcasting Company, challenged Lou Dorfsman, the creative director, who died last Thursday at 90, to devise a concept for the 35' x 8'6" cafeteria wall in the new corporate headquarters. Dorfsman replied, "Give me 30 seconds ..." and the mammoth "Gastrotypographicalassemblage" was conceived, subsequently rendered by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnese (Lubalin's sketch below). The wall was dismantled after 25 years (once the "Tiffany Network" became the Wallgreen's network) and left to the termites. Recently, artist and illustrator Nick Fasciano obtained the nine panels, which are currently housed at The Center for Design Study in Atlanta, Georgia. Together with Richard Anwyl, he has mounted a campaign to "Save Lou's Wall." See a wonderful video here. And here is a great tribute by Michael Bierut.


Design | Obit | Television | Type
10/27/2008 8:25:46 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [2]
Friday, October 24, 2008
London Calling
Posted by Steve



I love looking at sketches, especially those of storied graphic icons. The London Underground "roundel" logo, which celebrates its 100th anniversary this month, was originally designed in 1908 by an anonymous artist, but redesigned (above) in 1913 under the auspices of Frank Pick, commercial and publicity manager of the London Underground Group of Companies, and Edward Johnston (bottom), who also designed the Underground's typeface. In 1938, Man Ray designed an extraterrestrial-looking poster that equates the roundel with the planet Saturn--it's still one of the most progressive commercial posters ever created.









Branding | Design | Logos | Posters
10/24/2008 11:09:50 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [0]
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Pardon Who?
Posted by steve


Here's a weekend guessing game to take your minds off the current economic woes: With George W. Bush's presidency coming to an end, he's entitled to give out a few get-out-of-jail-free cards (i.e. presidential pardons) to a lucky few. Can you guess who they might be? The folks at Pure Products U.S.A. offer a few possibilities pictured here. I wonder who'll be the first?






Election  | Photography | Propaganda
10/23/2008 8:12:05 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [7]
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Chwast Versus Ogden Nash
Posted by Steve


Thanks to Art Chantry, design archeologist par excellence, I am now the proud owner of Funniest Verses of Ogden Nash, illustrated by Seymour Chwast in 1968, and published by Hallmark Editions. It features such wry witticisms as "Lines on Facing Forty": I have a bone to pick with Fate. / Come here and tell me, girlie, / Do you think my mind is maturing late, / or simply rotted early? (image below, top). Then, there's "Assorted Chocolates": If some confectioner were willing / To let the shape announce the filling. / We'd encounter fewer assorted chocs, / Bitten into and returned to the box. (image below, bottom)

There's more, like "Ask Daddy, He Won't Know," "Lather as You Go," and "The Hat's Got My Tongue," all splendidly illuminated in Chwast's early, colorful linear style.

Happily, if you look, / you may find the book. / The online dealer is not a crook, / and his prices do not rook, / so surf here yourself to get the book / I guarantee it will look very good in that special nook.










Books | Daily Heller Vaults | Illustration
10/22/2008 9:28:56 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [1]
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
I Want My 3rd Reich TV!
Posted by Steve


Television was introduced by RCA in the United States at the 1939 New York World's Fair (bottom), but actually premiered in Nazi Germany in 1935, beating out the competition here and in Great Britain. Reich Broadcast Director Eugen Hadamovsky (who was also a deputy of propaganda--and who I quote in Iron Fists) launched "Greater German Television," which broadcast entertainment and political programming into the homes of a mere few thousand Berliners who owned sets. The hope was that everyone would eventually be a proud recipient. The extraordinary Spiegel TV documentary, Television Under The Swastika, by Michael Kloft is now available in the United States as a DVD but also on the web in its entirety here and here. It's well worth a look to see the birth of TV and never-before-seen programs (including variety, exercise, and dance shows, featuring a Nazi cowgirl hopping through a lariat and a tennis player balancing tennis balls, as well as rare footage of Adolf Hitler himself) direct from Nazi Germany. The film certainly underscores how visual media played a major role in the banality of evil.





Documentary | Propaganda | Television | Videos
10/21/2008 7:53:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [0]
Monday, October 20, 2008
A Week Devoted to Design
Posted by Steve


Why can't every week be National Design Week? Well, maybe that's asking for too much. Or maybe we should be careful what we wish for. In any case, on Thursday, the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum will host the National Design Awards, featuring winners Scott Stowell for Communications Design and Michael Bierut, the Design Mind. The museum also has designated this week, October 19-25, as its third National Design Week. In addition to events across the country, the Cooper-Hewitt will offer free admission to all visitors. Moreover, the museum will host a series of free public programs in the Target National Design Education Center and Arthur Ross Terrace and Garden. And don't forget that the winners of the People's Design Awards will be announced on Thursday at the awards gala: Nominees (and you can still vote) include the McCain and Obama logos, as well as Helvetica, the movie, and Design Observer, the blog. BTW, The Cooper-Hewitt invites the public to comment on the awards here.




Competitions | Design | Events | Museums
10/20/2008 3:21:44 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [0]
Cool Cat
Posted by steve



Marshall Arisman dedicates his new book The Cat Who Invented Bebop to Dee (his wife) and Katman (their cat). Indeed, Katman was the inspiration for the cool cat in this delightfully penned, beautifully illustrated saga of feline frolic on the jazzy streets of New York. The coolest of all the cats is Stringbean McCoy, a stray with a penchant for swing (who you can see and hear here). Of course, as Arisman notes, the real swingin' cats were Charlie "Bird" Parker, Dizzie Gillespie, and Thelonious Monk, and "any resemblance to actual cats, living or dead, is purely coincidental." But this book makes you want to believe. (Published by Creative Editions and designed by Rita Marshall).










Animals | Books | Illustration
10/20/2008 11:35:03 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [1]
Friday, October 17, 2008
The Great Debate
Posted by steve




Forget about Lincoln v. Douglas, Kennedy v. Nixon, and even Obama v. McCain. The real Great Debate, the one that will have the pundits sputtering, is Batman v. The Penguin (just click on the frame above or here if you're the type that has problems doing "a Google"). See why the nation is divided on who will best lead us in times of crisis. Wham! Bam! Pow! My vote goes to . . . .


Comics | Politics | Television
10/17/2008 6:15:16 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [0]
Thursday, October 16, 2008
More Stupid Dog Pics
Posted by steve


I can't believe I'm blogging this, but like the proverbial fascination with train wrecks I can't seem to get enough of dogs (or monkeys, for that matter) dressed up in bizarre costumes. Well, it can't hurt to promote the Times Square Dog Day Masquerade on Sunday, October 19, (from 1 to 3 pm) to benefit Animal Haven's Adopt-a-Pet program. While I feel for the poor canines who are put through this ordeal (especially the ones who have to wear shoes), it is a sacrifice for a good cause. (Pepe, above, is the 2006 champ, but my fave is the nameless bling-adorned dawg, below).


Animals | Competitions
10/16/2008 5:10:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [1]
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Master of Caricature: David Levine
Posted by steve



David Levine is America's foremost political and literary caricaturist. Although his signature linear style has been copied by more illustrators for more decades than any other cartoonist, no one has equaled his acerbity and wit. He's had more direct hits on presidents and prelates than any other contemporary. Who could forget his Lyndon Johnson showing the scar of Vietnam (above) or Richard Nixon as Captain Queeg from The Caine Mutiny or Henry Kissinger's relations with the world (bottom)?

But as David Margolick writes in Vanity Fair: The 81-year-old Levine's "universe had grown darker and fuzzier." New work appears much less frequently because "He could no longer see very clearly without strong light and magnification, or rely upon his hand: the lines that had always been his friends, the spare, crisp ones that defined someone’s shape, and the elaborate cross-hatchings that gave him soul, he could no longer control. His ophthalmologist had put it bluntly. 'Mr. Levine, you don’t look your age,' he said. 'But your eyes do.' His diagnosis: macular degeneration. Medications and injections didn’t help. Levine worked on, but laboriously. He abandoned pen and ink for pencil, which, as he puts it, 'was more forgiving if I made a mistake.' But the results were plain enough. For the first time—except for those very few instances when it had been too tart for the publication’s taste—the [New York Review of Books] rejected his work." (Photo of Levine by Gasper Tringale, below.)

Levine's presidential caricatures (including those of John McCain and Barack Obama) and selected paintings are on view at New York's Forum Gallery until November 8.






Celebrity | Illustration | Politics
10/15/2008 7:42:57 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [2]
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Remembering the Classics, Illustrated
Posted by steve




When I was twelve years old, I made a pilgrimage to the offices of Classics Illustrated Comic Books on Third Avenue and 16th Street in New York. The walls were covered with illustrated covers, each done in a realistic pulp style that tickled my imagination. I was particularly taken by their approach to Frankenstein (no Boris Karloff monster he), frightened by The War of the Worlds (which now seems so quaint), and I marveled at The Time Machine (I still believe someone will invent one). The other day I found a few of my favorite issues and was reminded how these comics taught me the joy of reading--comics, that is. Although I never got away with only reading these comics for class assignments (I also read the CliffsNotes), seeing how the Classics Illustrated artists portrayed Paul Bunyan, Oliver Twist, and the Prisoner of Zenda helped me to visualize these stories and their protagonists more easily than reading the original books.

I also recently found a copy of Robinson Crusoe, a Classic Comics book, the precursor of Classics Illustrated, and was reminded where graphic novels really came from.








Comics | Daily Heller Vaults | Illustration
10/14/2008 9:34:17 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [4]