Books

Showing results 341-360 of 397

Art director Pearce Marchbank recently launched a website that rounds up much of his excellent magazine work from the past 40 years, including many now-iconic covers for Architectural Design, Time Out and OZ.

%7Bfiledir_9%7DOz_new.jpg

Marchbank started at Central School of Art and Design, London in 1966, initially influenced by George Lois (whose work for Esquire is currently showing at MoMA ; some of Lois’s best-known covers have been revisited – or rehashed – a few times of late).

A precocious student, Marchbank was art-directing AD, a ‘design science’ monthly, while still studying at Central. After graduating, he worked on Friends, the short-lived Mick Jagger-funded UK version of Rolling Stone, before starting at the newly founded Time Out in 1970. Marchbank’s re-design of the Time Out logo, a slightly blurred Franklin Gothic only intended as a stop-gap, is still used today.

%7Bfiledir_9%7Dto_new.jpg

The covers are all the more impressive given that Marchbank would often have less than a day to come up with a design. Marchbank worked at Time Out until 1983, then moving to the Richard Branson-backed competitor Event. Interestingly, some of his layouts for Le Nez Rouge (pictured below), a house magazine for a wine club that Marchbank worked on in 1984, are close to those of well-designed new(ish)comers Fantastic Man and Bedeutung. It seems that his influence lives on.

%7Bfiledir_9%7Dnez_new.jpg

BY Sam Thorne |

We’ve just observed Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement, and the sins and transgressions of the past year have been more or less absolved. Which may be just as well, since another major guilt-trip may loom on the horizon: ‘If Barack Obama doesn’t become the next president of the United States, I’m going to blame the Jews.’ Or so threatens Sarah Silverman, the aggressively sardonic and deadpan comedian (_Jesus is Magic_, The Aristocrats), in her new web video The Great Schlep.

Noting that Florida is yet again going to be a pivotal swing state in the upcoming election, Silverman made the video with the help of the political action committee The Jewish Council for Education and Research to urge young Gen-X and Y Jews to head down to the Sunshine State and badger, bully and coerce their retired grandparents to let go of their latent fears and prejudices and vote Obama in November. ‘Yes, OK, Barack…Hussein…Obama: it’s a super fucking shitty name. But you’d think someone named “Manischewitz Gooberman” might understand that,’ explains faux-exasperated Silverman regarding why normally staunchly Democratic nanas and zaides might believe all the right-wing blogosphere rumors about Obama being a Manchurian Candidate-like closet Muslim bent on the destruction of the state of Israel.

I first came across The Great Schlep while in Tel Aviv for the opening of Art TLV, where it started to get a lot of play, and in the two weeks since it’s release it has been watched by over 7 million viewers in the US, where it is circulating virally and is the latest instance of a brand of confident, informed, acerbic and focused satire that is fast becoming a significant insurgency tool against the Republican’s Rove-style disinformation machine. A tool that is actually having a measurable effect. (After Tina Fey nimbly lacerated Sarah Palin with her pitch-perfect impersonations of the VP nominee – using her own incoherent interview and debate transcripts as fodder – Palin’s solidly positive poll numbers immediately began to drop in inverse proportion to the rising TV viewership of NBC’s Saturday Night Live. Even Palin acknowledged during a campaign rally in Florida late last week that she is ‘providing job security for Tina Fey’ in an odd feedback loop between the parodist and the parodied.) All this stands in stark contrast to the lonely job description of the political satirist just a few years ago (think of Stephen Colbert’s bravely inspired roasting of President Bush at the White House press correspondents dinner in 2006 at the height of W’s mass popularity and the media’s timid self-censorship and how radical and nearly suicidal his speech then seemed).

Now former SNL comedian Al Franken is running a serious campaign for US Senate in a close race against the incumbent Republican senator in Minnesota, and it has become a familiar fact that a disproportionate and rising number of 20 and 30-something Americans get their news from such news parodies as The Daily Show and The Colbert Report, not the major networks. Meanwhile, as Silverman assures her bubbe, using the kinds of carrots and sticks that only a grandkid can wield, Obama’s “brisket is beyond…it’s beyond”. If that doesn’t sway the election, what will?

BY James Trainor |

In an ongoing series frieze asks curators, artists and writers to list the books that have influenced them

Svetlana Boym (Princeton Architectural Press, 2008)

BY Brian Dillon |

Federico Fellini (Rizzoli, New York, 2008)

BY Martin Stanton |

Simon Critchley (Granta, London, 2008)

Tate Britain, London, UK

BY Brian Dillon |

A new, expanded edition of Lawrence Weschler’s classic, Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees: A Life of Contemporary Artist Robert Irwin is a cause for celebration

BY Eugenia Bell |

Mark E. Smith with Austin Collings (Viking, London, 2008)

BY Nathaniel Mellors |

Boris Groys (MIT Press, Cambridge, 2008)

BY Brian Dillon |

Jason Lutes (Drawn and Quarterly, Montreal, 2008)

BY Chris Fite-Wassilak |

Independent publishing has seen a boom in new imprints, often designed by artists, of classic novels and ‘lost’ books

BY Michael Bracewell |

Bridget Penney (Book Works, London, 2008) / Maxi Kim (Book Works, London, 2008)

BY Sally O’Reilly |

Edward Castronova (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2007) / eds. Hilde G. Corneliussen and Jill Walker Rettberg (MIT Press, Cambridge, 2008)

BY George Pendle |

Michael Stevenson (JRP Ringier, Zurich, 2008)

BY Nicola Harvey |

frieze asks curators, artists and writers to list the books that have influenced them

Fritz Haeg (Metropolis Books, New York, 2008)

BY Bradley Horn |

Alex Ross (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 2007)

BY Paul Kildea |

John Roberts (Verso, London, 2007)

BY Belinda Bowring |

Shumon Basar, Antonia Carver and Markus Miessen (eds.), (Bidoun and Moutamarat, Dubai, 2007)

BY Max Andrews |