New books have been piling up again at Design Observer. We thought we'd share some of the many recently published titles we have received over the past couple of months — with a few older titles just stumbled upon. Maybe you'll find a surprise or two...
Dan Ariely Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions Harper Collins, 2008 Elizabeth Armstrong The Birth of Cool: California Art, Design and Culture at Midcentury Prestel Publishing, 2007 | |
Barbara Bloom, Dave Hickey & Susan Tallman The Collections of Barbara Bloom Steidl/ICP, 2008 | |
Mel Bochner Solar System & Rest Rooms: Writings and Interviews, 1965–2007 The MIT Press, 2008 | |
Ricky Burdett & Deyan Sudjic The Endless City Phaidon Press, 2008 | |
Stefanie Burger, Jorre Both & Cees W. de Jong New Poster Art Thames & Hudson, 2008 | |
Jean M. Burks Shaker Design: Out of this World Yale University Press, 2008 | |
R. V. Branham Curse and Berate in 69+ Languages Soft Skull Press, 2008 | |
Pauline Van Mourik Broekman, Damian Jaques & Simon Worthington Mute Magazine Eight Books, 2008 | |
Rob Carter Meggs: Making Graphic Design History Wiley, 2007 | |
Lucy Creagh, Helena Kaberg & Barbara Miller Lane, editors Modern Swedish Design: Three Founding Texts The Museum of Modern Art, 2008 | |
Daab Books Broadcast Design Daab/Mul Edition, 2007 | |
Graham Davis The Designer's Toolkit: Thousands of Color Combinations Chronicle Books, 2008 | |
Michael Dooley & Steven Heller Teaching Motion Design: Course Offerings and Class Projects from the Leading Undergraduate and Graduate Programs Allworth Press, 2008 Nathan Dunne, editor Tarkovsky Black Dog Publishing, 2008 | |
Johanna Drucker & Emily McVarish Graphic Design History: A Critical Guide Prentice Hall, 2008 | |
Gabrielle Esperdy Modernizing Main Street: Architecture and Consumer Culture in the New Deal University of Chicago Press, 2008 | |
Ed Fella & Geoff McFetridge Two Lines Align: Drawings and Graphic Design Redcat, 2008 Robert S. P. Fripp & R. Roger Remington Design and Science: The Life and Work of Will Burtin Ashgate, 2007 | |
Joseph Grima & Karen Wong, editors Shift: SANAA and the New Museum Lars Müller Publishers, 2008 Juergen Gulbins & Uwe Steinmueller Fine Art Printing for Photographers: Exhibition Quality Prints with Inkjet Printers Rocky Nook, 2008 Robert Poque Harrison Gardens: An Essay on the Human Condition University of Chicago Press, 2008 | |
K. Michael Hays & Dana A. Miller Buckminster Fuller: Starting with the Universe Yale University Press, 2008 | |
Steven Heller Iron Fists: Branding the 20th-Century Totalarian State Phaidon Press, 2008 | |
Steven Heller & Mirko Ilic Icons of Graphic Design, Second Edition Thames & Hudson, 2008 | |
Hesign, editor The Master of Design: Pierre Bernard Page One Publishing, 2007 Roxanne Jubert Typography and Graphic Design: From Antiquity to the Present Flammarion, 2006 | |
Christina Kiaer Imagine No Possessions: The Socialist Objects of Russian Constructivism (Life and Mind Series) The MIT Press, 2008 | |
William Davies King Collections of Nothing University of Chicago Press, 2008 | |
Sanford Kwinter & Cynthia Davidson, editor Far from Equilibrium: Essays on Technology and Design Culture Actar, 2008 | |
Alix Lambert Crime Fuel Publishing, 2008 | |
Tod Lippy, editor Esopus 10 Esopus Foundation, 2008 | |
Ellen Lupton & Phillips Jennifer Cole Graphic Design: The New Basics Princeton Architectural Press, 2008 | |
Josh MacPhee & Favianna Rodriguez, editors Reproduce and Revolt Soft Skull Press, 2008 | |
Josh MacPhee Stencil Pirates Soft Skull Press, 2004 | |
Alberto Manguel The Library at Night Yale University Press, 2008 | |
Daniel Mason Materials, Process, Print: Creative Ideas for Graphic Design Laurence King Publishers, 2007 | |
Susan Meiselas Kurdistan: In the Shadow of History Random House, 1997 Grant McCracken Transformations: Identity Construction in Contemporary Culture Indiana University Press, 2008 | |
Craig Mod & Ashley Rawlings, editors Art Space Tokyo Chin Music Press, 2008 Laurent Pflughaupt Letter by Letter Princeton Architectural Press, 2008 | |
Phaidon Editors Area 2 Phaidon Press, 2008 Ramon Prat & Tomoko Sakamoto Super Holland Design Actar, 2007 | |
Christian de Portzamparc & Philippe Sollers Writing and Seeing Architecture University Of Minnesota Press, 2008 | |
Graham Rawle Woman's World: A Novel Counterpoint, 2008 | |
Robynne Raye & Michael Strassburger Modern Dog: 20 Years of Poster Art Chronicle Books, 2008 | |
Darrel Rees How to be an Illustrator Laurence King Publishers, 2008 | |
Robert J. Richards The Tragic Sense of Life: Ernst Haeckel and the Struggle over Evolutionary Thought University of Chicago Press, 2008 | |
Joseph Rosa Figuration in Contemporary Design Art Institute of Chicago, 2008 | |
Elizabeth Royte Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought It Bloomsbury USA, 2008 | |
Zoe Ryan Graphic Thought Facility Art Institute of Chicago, 2008 | |
Sam Sarowitz Translating Hollywood Mark Batty Publisher, 2008 | |
William S. Saunders, editor Nature, Landscape, and Building for Sustainability: A Harvard Design Magazine Reader University of Minnesota Press, 2008 | |
Jutta Schickore The Microscope and the Eye: A History of Reflections, 1740-1870 University of Chicago Press, 2007 | |
Paul Schimmel, editor Murakami Rizzoli, 2007 | |
Dean Schwarz & Geraldine Schwarz, editors Marguerite Wildenhain and the Bauhaus: An Eyewitness Anthology South Bear Press, 2007 | |
Felicity Scott Ant Farm: Living Archive Actar, Columbia Gsapp, 2008 | |
Richard Sennett The Craftsman Yale University Press, 2008 Adrian Shaughnessy Cover Art By: New Music Graphics Laurence King Publishers, 2008 Aaris Sherin SustainAble: A Handbook of Materials and Applications for Graphic Designers and Their Clients Rockport Publishers, 2008 | |
Stoltze Design 1,000 Music Graphics: A Compilation of Packaging, Posters and Other Sound Solutions Rockport Publishers, 2008 | |
Sherry Turkle Falling for Science: Objects in Mind The MIT Press, 2008 | |
Tom Vanderbilt Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (And What It Says About Us) Knopf, 2008 | |
Anthony Vidler Histories of the Immediate Present: Inventing Architectural Modernism The MIT Press, 2008 Rob Walker Buying In: The Secret Dialogue Between What We Buy and Who We Are Random House, 2008 | |
David Watkin Thomas Hope: Regency Designer Yale University Press, 2008 | |
Luke Wroblewski Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks Rosenfeld Media, 2008 | |
Indi Young Mental Models: Aligning Design Strategy with Human Behavior Rosenfeld Media, 2008 |
Comments [18]
06.23.08
03:26
06.23.08
07:58
Have you read all these books?
Do you think all books are bound for the clearance bin?
If you have a point to make, why don't you make it properly?
06.23.08
10:50
To the above point:
I can fully recommend Adrian Shaughnessy, Cover Art By: As a massive fan of the Sampler series I was thrilled to see the words of these designer's being included along side their stunning work in here.
Also the same for Modern Dog: 20 Years of Poster Art. It is truly a dying form and these guys show here how it can be done with intelligence and humour.
Also, as someone who teaches, there is no one out there right now that is able to breakdown the access point of graphic design like Ellen Lupton does. When I picked up Ellen Lupton & Phillips Jennifer Cole, Graphic Design: The New Basics I almost immediately added it to my first year student reading list.
I am almost sad to say that I have only read three of the list but since going through them I have a great reference for future reading and in this time of going over it, I have actually already ordered a couple more.
Thank you the all of the people out there that care.
06.23.08
01:17
at that. Some people, it seems, can utter a few words and that is
enough for them. Meanwhile, some people love to go on and on
about essentially mundane or worthless matters.
Perhaps what his less than verbose response means is that his
taste is above the ordinary, that is to say, even of the most elite
DesignObserver reader or blogger. Perhaps he is questioning
why there are so many books available in the world when most of
them are not only bound for the clearance section but are
absolute rubbish despite the assumptions of those embroiled in
the modern aesthetic of design book navel gazing.
I know many reviewers like myself who have seen so many
books come across my desk that I just glance through them
quickly, decide a similar thing as Angus does, and then it's off to
the bookstore to unload them for a dollar or two. Because, in
fact, irrespective of the liberal sentiment that some people do
"care", many books (including some of these) really are not worth
the paper they're printed on.
Etc etc.
06.23.08
01:49
recently honored Birth of the Cool: California Art, Design and
Culture at Midcentury with their top award for exhibition
catalogues for 2007 (Elizabeth Armstrong, curator, Orange County
Museum of Art).
06.23.08
02:30
You make a good point. I should reword my statement.
I would like to thank the people involved in publishing the titles listed above for the interest, research and work that they have put into these books. Publications that they will stand behind and defend as important, even knowing that a potential reviewer my be trucking them down the road to sell for pennies.
Harry is right though, the majority of the buying public won't pick up your book and deem it a worthy purchase. There are books above that I won't read. I would, however, like to believe that I have the ability to make that decision for myself without being judged on its outcome. (It is curious that someone who accuses people of being 'embroiled in the modern aesthetic of design book navel gazing' is on here reading these posts in the first place)
I would like to finish this by standing behind the word I was called out on, 'care'. I cared enough to post and Harry cared enough to counter my post. When it comes to the books on this list I wouldn't be wrong in saying that everyone involved in these books 'cared' about what they were doing. I 'care' about wanting to have a book industry (at least a small one) to pass on to my daughter and that means I have to 'care' enough to keep buying books (I don't get them free to review).
I obviously care about what Harry thinks too because I came back for more.
The Sentimental Liberal
06.23.08
03:24
06.23.08
06:00
his taste is above the ordinary, that is to say, even of the most
elite DesignObserver reader or blogger."
How sad to have such elite taste that no outside
phenomenon (a book, a work of art, etc.) can penetrate the
tough carapace of self-assuredness. This makes for fine and
creatively thinking, (not to mention feeling) human being?
"...many reviewers like myself who have seen so many
books come across my desk that I just glance through them
quickly, decide a similar thing as Angus does, and then it's off to
the bookstore to unload them for a dollar or two. Because, in
fact, irrespective of the liberal sentiment that some people do
"care", many books (including some of these) really are not
worth the paper they're printed on.
Isn't there such a thing as being too self-assured? Isn't it
possible to miss something interesting when a mere list
of books is somehow threatening to the tyranny of one's inner
editor?
06.23.08
07:44
This obtuse, overly-refined "elite taste" won't lead you to those elusive gods of design, anyway. Just loneliness and prematurely receeding hairlines.
06.23.08
11:27
06.23.08
11:53
You know: basic economics and all that.
06.24.08
09:41
06.24.08
11:50
It's much easier to act like you already know best.
06.24.08
01:32
06.26.08
11:26
Studio Releases How To Design a Logo in eBook .pdf Format
Helping Artists Visualize and Communicate Ideas Graphically Through Designing Logos that are Instant Recognized
LAS VEGAS, Nevada–July 1, 2008–Studio Advertising Art today released How To Design
a Logo, a comprehensive book on logo design for all audiences of all skill levels. The book introduces the art of trademark design to individuals of all skill levels, making it easy for graphic designers, artists and non-designers alike to apply the specialized techniques outlined in the book to design effective, professional, and creative logos. http://ebooks.ebookmall.com/ebook/277765-ebook.htm
How To Design a Logo, is available immediately for $6.95 downloadable as a pdf. http://ebooks.ebookmall.com/ebook/277765-ebook.htm
For additional information or an evaluation copy, contact Rick Barker at [email protected]. Additionally, the author can be reached at: (702) 813-4912.
07.03.08
11:57
07.08.08
01:12
07.23.08
11:50