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Monday, March 22, 2010

Good, good friend Duncan Brown sent me a note saying he enjoyed the Rainbow of books down below, and pointing me towards these stunning images/sculptures made of books by Paul Octavious.
There are two sets within his project section. #1 - Book collection; where he has created firstly numbers and then a few random shapes and monsters out of a pile of carefully colour co-ordinated books. And the #2 Stacked; where he has made very simple shapes/piles/towers out of a collection of books (from one series), often tying them together.
The photography is very delicate and neat, and the sculptures look lovely. Perfectly stacked and arranged, but using well worn, used books and string. They look like a quick, fun pile, but must have taken ages to build. These are gorgeously simple, but amazingly effective and stunning images. They look like mini Christo's.
I've not posted all the images. Do go and see them all, as they are all wonderful.
Thanks Duncan x.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

This is nice. It's good designing books, it makes me look up from a screen of code and see the beautiful things people are creating.
This came from (but was not made by) Coralie Bickford-Smith, who is a senior cover designer at Penguin Books.
Speaking of things that make you drool. I came across this yesterday too (it's amazing I got any work done yesterday).
I saw this cover on the excellent The Oxen of the Sun blog, which covers all things book design. As I design a book a year at the moment, I like to check out the latest book design fetish items a bit, and dream about making more books.
Nabokov's The Original of Laura was the book he was working on when he died. He said he didn't want it published, but his son kept hold of it, and seems to have allowed it to be published. They have done an amazing job. Chip Kidd was the designer, which after a bit of research doesn't seem like a surprise, as he seems to be the Johnathan Ive of book design.
Nabokov apparently wrote his books on index cards. This book has been published with a photo of each of the original index cards on each page, and then a printed text version below it.
The back of the index card is displayed on the reverse of the page, so you get pencil smudges and notes etc. PLUS, the index cards are perforated too, so in theory you could pop them all out and have an original version of the book as it was written.
Plus the cover is amazing. Very understated... very black. Another geeky purchase I feel.
I came accross this again the other day. A turntable that plays with a lazer* - ELP Laser Turntable. As a vinyl junkie, this thing sounds like a great idea. Play your records forever without them getting any damage due to usage. Might be a fun purchase. However it costs about £7000 (rising up to £9000+). So probably a bit much, for a 'bit of fun'.
In slightly related note, I think I've just bust my iPod. I'm trying to mentally blame the kids, as I was on the phone to them at the time I dropped it... but basically it's my fault.
I'm feeling decidely non-plused about this. My iPod has been my main travel form of music for the last 3 years. It has lots of good shit on it that I've either downloaded (mixes, free tracks, podcasts etc) or my vinyl that I've recorded. If it is bust, there's a high chance that I've lost a lot of that stuff. So I should probably be a bit more fussed really... plus they don't come cheap.
But some how it feels like, this was bound to happen sooner or later. And losing mp3s doesn't really feel like losing anything important. I'm sure I can find most of the bits again if I need to... but more than likely I will never remember half of the things I've lost.
I'm basically coming round to the idea that I am a record collector... if I try hard I'd say I was a music collector, but the fact that I don't really feel I have a piece of music, unless it's on vinyl, makes me a record collector.
I was listening to Last.fm yesterday and came accross some amazing music I'd never heard of. Really lovely, interesting, deleicate classical stuff. I was listening to Steve Reich radio, so I was hearing lost of stuff made by people who'd studies classic music and had then created their own avant garde style. I heard an amazing piece by Terry Riley called 'In C'. This is a 45 minute classical piece, similar (maybe) to Steve Reich's 'Music for 18 musicians'. Lots of simple loops, played by orchestral instruments. The loops go in and out of each other, and change too. Very plink plonky, very sweet. Very nice.
I found I could buy this online, for really not very much (69p or £6.49 at most), but it felt decidedly unsatisfactory to own this wonderful, beautiful piece of music just a file on my computer.
I did however also find it on the excellent Amber Green shop site, as the original UK release 1971 version. This is no doubt going to be split in the middle - faded out at the end of side one and the faded in on side two. But it is going to fell very precious and very beautiful. And if I ever get round to sitting down and listening to the whole thing, on vinyl, I think it will feel very special and proper.
I don't know what this feeling will be.. probably a geeky, smug, self satisfaction... because in theory any response in me should be triggered by the music, not the format. But I guess this is why I am becoming a record collector, rather than a music collector. But hey, I collect some damn good, beautiful, funky, soulful, heavy, deep, banging, classic records.

* Note: I know Lazer should probably be spelt with an S rather than a Z. But if ever there was a word which desirved a Z in it is must be Lazer...

Thursday, March 11, 2010

More books and rainbows. This time c/o Holly Rose from some publishing conference in Chicago last month.

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

I managed to squeeze in a quick trip around the Design Museum last Saturday during a v quick London trip. The Dieter Rams was amazing as David said, but I also really enjoyed this book rainbow by Jiggery Pokery. Pretty, fun and (coming from someone who does a fair amount of building block building) it's an impressive structural feat too.
And reminded me of this other book structure I saw last year at the UWE end of year show. Excavating Babel. This was quite an imposing and exciting piece - you weren't quite sure how stable it all was... fun to walk inside.
Am currently planning the new Newport Uni, Photo Art book. I like trying to see books as objects, rather than just graphical layouts. I'm feeling drawn to the look of an obviously used, old book, as opposed to a clean cut new one. Might try to do something with exposed binding...


Wednesday, March 03, 2010

I ran a little art workshop at Maisie's Home Education group last Friday. Basically they were given a board, and a table full of cut out shapes, and they had to make a picture, and decide when it was done. Then I'd photograph it. Then they start again... no glue. It was fun. A good mix of abstract and illustrative... Here are some of my favorites.

Jemima - 6
Issac - 5
(note: Issac got the hand of the Damien Hurst-esq creative practice - in that he made me do all the cutting up and positioning for him... good work Issac... he also dangled the stick over the picture too...)
Marli - 7
Jay - 7
Linus - 7
Steven - 35
 
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