Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Clobber Grotesk Bold

Clobber Grotesk Bold

Clobber Grotesk Bold is a new typeface just released via MyFonts. It was one of a two-part family originally designed for a metal-cutting business, as they were seeking bold letterforms for their custom aluminum furniture that would be readable at very small sizes.

Clobber is a fairly traditional grotesk, designed in the same vein as Akzidenz Grotesk and a number of anonymous grotesks, though with the addition of slightly flared terminals.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Saturday, January 23, 2010

The Wife, the Mistress, and the Prostitute


Plazm at the Backroom, January 11, 2008.

Curator Stephanie Snyder in conversation with Plazm editors Joshua Berger, Jon Raymond, and Tiffany Lee Brown on the occasion of the Plazm Backroom event. We recently posted the essays from Jon, Josh, and Tiffany plus a complete podcast of the hour+ discussion on our website. Photo above from the event is of Tara Jane O'Neil with Fred Nemo dancing.

Enjoy here

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Rise of American Poster Art


"American Artifact: The Rise of American Rock Poster Art", is a documentary about the history and subculture of rock poster art in America, will be released on DVD on March 27th, 2010. The film has been touring around the country in the meantime and was recently added to the permanent collection at the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame.

It is playing tomorrow night at the Clinton Street Theater in Portland.
2522 SE Clinton St.
Portland, OR 97202

The DVD release party will be at the Wherehouse in Newburgh, NY. Director Merle Becker will be in attendance. Admission is free and seating is limited. (First come, first serve).

Details for the DVD release party are:
Saturday, March 27th 7:30p
The Wherehouse
119 Liberty Street
Newburgh, NY 12550
845.561.7240

More details, trailers and such on the American Artifact web site.

Labels: , ,


Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

New typeface: Cooper Fullface Italic

Cooper Fullface Italic

Just released via MyFonts, my latest typeface release is the definitive version of Oswald Bruce Cooper's great lost typeface Cooper Fullface Italic.

At the end of 1927, Oswald Bruce Cooper yearned to create a heavy "modern" face- akin to Broadway and other display types in height and proportion, but more nuanced while being a dense, black type. The Barnhart Brothers & Spindler foundry, for whom Cooper had designed a number of typefaces, saw the potential of the typeface as a big seller. Richard McArther, General Manager of the foundry, referred to it as "the hotsy stuff", though he was highly critical of a number of characters in the original design. He requested a successive number of modifications, including the addition of Dwiggins-inspired serifs to the face to make it stand apart from similarly-weighted typefaces then on the market. He wanted to imbue the face with a considerable amount of "old-timey" flavor in order to impart a sense of originality to the face and have it sell across both Modern and Bodoni/Didot market segments.

The resulting typeface was called Cooper Fullface, a jaunty and swollen caricature of a Didone with great potential for display advertising work. The final form of the face was a regulated and consistent balance of cartoonishness and earnest visual braggadocio, the bouncy, circus fairway-like swing of the original drawings of the letters taken down considerably and figures redrawn and redrawn for maximum readability.

A specimen sheet was mailed out in 1929, and generated moderate sales, but too late- Barnhart Brothers & Spindler closed its foundry division shortly thereafter as part of ATF's corporate roll-up of manufacturing. The American Type Founders continued to produce the face and sell it at a decent pace, renaming it Cooper Modern.

Cooper designed a matching italic for Cooper Fullface, but it was never released. The BB&S foundry closure resulted in the foundry equipment being shipped to New Jersey a few weeks shy of the typeface's completion. It is unfortunate, as the accompanying italic is perhaps Cooper's masterpiece, a lively Bodoni-esque italic with more than a bit of influence from 19th Century display types, particularly in the treatment of the ball serifs on the uppercase "A", "J", "M", and "N". Cooper Fullface Italic stands as the until-now missing bookend to Cooper's career as a type designer.

This digital release is the revival of that lost Cooper typeface, Cooper Fullface Italic. Within are two typefaces- Cooper Fullface Italic and Cooper Fullface Italic Fancy. The two faces span the range of Cooper's original drawings- the Fancy typeface utilizing a number of alternate characters.

These two typefaces are the result of researching Cooper's original drawings and series of engraved proofs for both typefaces. The typefaces include the original ligatures, original Oz Cooper ornaments, fancy swash characters, and a range of punctuation and diacritics, et al, that fill out a full character set. The typefaces have been lovingly kerned for the smoothest result in text setting.

Available via MyFonts.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Does Banksy still have it?

uh, yeah.





Just in time for Sundance!

(image stolen from designated.area ... thx to Juxtapoz for the pointer.)

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Dee Hock of VISA interviewed by Jon Raymond


Dee Hock, Founder and CEO Emeritus of VISA on capitalism and spirituality.

Interview by Jon Raymond

Everyone knows what VISA is, right? It's a credit card company, with a logo featuring blue and orange stripes, and sometimes there’s a hologram of a white dove involved. It makes commercials with people buying things in tropical locales and its motto is “everywhere you want to be” (or is that the other one?). But what is VISA, really? Who owns it? Where is it located? How is it organized? These are questions that not many people can answer, even though they carry the card around in their pocket and buy things with it all the time.

VISA, it turns out, came to being in the late 1960s, out of the tumult of the early credit card industry, and went on to grow as no financial institution had ever grown before, a thousand fold in less than twenty five years. It now links more than a billion consumers in an enterprise with an annual sales volume of $1.8 trillion, the largest consumer purchasing block in the history of the world.

The founder and CEO Emeritus of VISA is a man named Dee Hock and he is not the kind of guy you might think he would be. He is not a hard- driving bondtrader in tassle-loafers, nor a steely- eyed industrialist with broad shoulders. Rather, he is something of a self-styled Thoreau, with a dash of the Siddhartha, living quietly in Olympia, Washington, where he spends his time reading philosophy and literature and constructing thought-experiments about the nature of organizational management. He is a CEO-guru, in the mold of guys like Larry Ellison, Mike Ovitz, and Steve Jobs, blending capitalism and spirituality in a far-ranging vision of sanctified markets and institutionalized social change.

In fact, Hock invented the mold. Back in the 60s, while the hippies of Haight-Ashbury were tripping out over the galaxies embedded in their own toenails, across the San Francisco bay in Salinas, Hock and a coterie of young bankers were doing much the same, asking themselves mind-expanding questions about the organizing principles of the universe and pondering the cosmic interconnectedness of all things. What is the purpose of being? What is the nature of a tree? The answers they came up with were a synchretic stew of gnostic Christianity, quantum mechanics, chaos theory, Zen Buddhism, and Native American eco-epistemology, aimed at replacing the command and control model of industrial Fordism with the fractal, self-organizing principles of what has since come to be known as the New Economy. You cannot understand Silicon Valley without understanding the quasi-spiritual entrepreneurism that Hock pioneered. You can’t understand Chiat-Day, or Star-bucks, or Apple computers, or Ben and Jerry’s or Kinko’s. It is a model that exchanges the very metaphors of market capitalism for the nearly psychedelic human enhancement of the New Age.

In 1984, Hock left VISA to do some gardening and think about the lessons he had learned in the building of VISA. He bought a piece of land in Northern California, and read a lot of books, and six years ago founded the Chaordic Commons of Terra Civitas, a nonprofit group devoted to fomenting organizational experiments in a host of fields, from religion to marine systems to breast feeding to Geo data mapping. To Dee Hock, it turns out, the triumph of VISA was only the beginning, now that the world is finally exiting four hundred years of Cartesian machine-thinking.

In Plazm #27, editor Jon Raymond chatted with Dee Hock from his home in Olympia. What he says is not what you might expect. This is not the typical market boosterism of someone normally associated with arch-capitalist endeavor. It makes you wonder: if the founder of VISA talks like this, what is capitalism even about anymore?

Read the interview here

Labels: , ,


Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Plazm posters join Swiss museum


Plakatsammlung Museum fur Gestaltung Zürich—the international poster museum based in Switzerland—has recently ascended over 90 Plazm posters into their permanent collection. A sampling of these posters created from 1992–2000, are shown here. Designers include Plazm folks as well as guests such as David Carson, Scott Clum, Pablo Medina, and many others. Pictured above, a call to sumbit. Designed by Niko Courtelis and Robert Rasmussen (pictured), Photographed in one shot with projection by Bob Waldman. Enjoy.

Labels: ,


Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Friday, January 15, 2010

Two new Wordshape fonts

Two new font releases on MyFonts this week.

600x375 2

The first is the definitive version of Oswald Bruce Cooper’s classic typeface Cooper Italic.

1924 saw the release of Cooper Italic, the italic companion to Cooper Oldstyle. Cooper Italic possesses “a most unusual swing” in a number of the characters, most specifically the scooped, pigeon-toed feet of the lowercase “n”, “h”, and “m”. These idiosyncratic characters are offset by more stately and assured capitals. Cooper said that his Italic is “much closer to its parent pen form than the roman” and “that freedom is almost the life of it”.

Cooper was a firm believer in creating humanist letterforms that echo the hand that created them, not wringing the life out of them through refinement and mechanization. In Cooper’s own words about Cooper Italic, "The designer is conscious of its crudity, and of its irreverence for the best traditions. But he believes that there are enough good types already– that the need is for poor types that can be used! And since he admits this to be a poor one, there now remains to be found out only whether it is usable or not." Cooper was long a believer that good type should be homely- if too pretty or sleek, it’s lifespan would be exponentially shortened.

cooperswashos

Cooper designed a set of swash capitals to pair with Cooper Italic in 1927 that had not been released until now. The swash capitals are a lively interpretation of round serifed oldstyle caps mixed with classic Caslon italic forms.

These two typefaces are the result of researching Cooper’s original drawings and series of engraved proofs for both typefaces. The typefaces include the original ligatures (never before released digitally), the previously unreleased Swash characters, and a range of punctuation and diacritics, et al, that fill out a full character set. The typefaces have been lovingly kerned for the smoothest result in text setting.

Cooper Italic Complete is available from MyFonts here.

600x375

The second typeface release is called Stacker. Stacker is a display gothic typeface with three weights of extruded typefaces that can be used to project the main typeface spatially.

Originally designed for Beautiful/Decay magazine, then picked up for Nokia’s 2006 Europe campaign, Stacker is a bold, lively, attention-grabbing display face.

The extruded faces can be used in a standalone manner, as they have been by electronic musicians such as YACHT and E*Rock.

Stacker is available from MyFonts here.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

New Oregon Interview Series Fashion Night



Host Nora Robertson sits down with fashion designers Adam Arnold, Ryan Christensen and Elizabeth Dye to discuss their work and Portland's evolving fashion culture.

Wednesday, January 27th, Urban Grind East, 2214 NE Oregon St., $5 admission.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Typography 101

tuj2

Last chance to sign up for Typography 101 at Temple University Japan.

The course has been expanded to include designing custom typefaces and programming digital fonts from them.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Also in the Whitney Biennial 2010


Previously posted about Jessica Jackson Hutchins in the 2010 Biennial... two other artists featured in Plazm #29 are also in the Whitney show; Storm Tharp and Alex Hubbard. Cooley Gallery director Stephanie Snyder wrote a feature for Plazm on Storm last fall. View that here.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Clobber Grotesk Stencil Bold

clobber

Clobber Grotesk Stencil Bold is a new typeface I designed now available through MyFonts. Clobber marries crude stencil forms with extreme legibility/readability at small sizes.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

New Oregon Interview Series Visual Arts Podcast



Host Nora Robertson with painter Michael Brophy, Cooley Gallery curator Stephanie Snyder, and Dark Horse Comics editor Shawna Gore on Portland's evolving visual arts culture. Audio podcasts up now.

Del.icio.us
Digg it
StumbleUpon