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The End of Printillustrated guide to popular US avantgarde typographist
David Carson’s jarring and visually chaotic
magazine spreads, posters and print ads have
consistently challenged the boundaries of
legibility and typography. His modest San Diego,
California, studio has become the epicenter of a
new graphic anti-aesthetic that has stirred
ongoing debate among fellow designers such as
Neville Brody, who observed that his work
prophesies 'the end of print'. This comment
inspired the title of Carson’s new book, the first
comprehensive collection of his decade-long
output of graphic imagery.
Recently, Carson has shifted from spokesman for Left-Coast subculture to the corporate arena, taking on larger projects that include print ads for Nike and a television commercial for Citibank, as well as collaborations with musician David Byrne and photographer Albert Watson. The End of Print was designed by Carson, and ironically, this proves to be the most disappointing aspect of the book. For those designers and readers who want to learn more about Carson's graphic work and philosophy must do so on his terms. The text of the book is presented in the confusing and often incoherent typography typical of a Ray Gun layout. Those not willing to read the garbled introduction and inarticulate essays may surrender in frustration. However the book manages to stand on its own as a purely visual document, a fascinating chronicle of David Carson’s creative mind. Like the collage artist Kurt Schwitters, who collected his materials from curbside rubbish, Carson finds much of his inspiration in the visual garbage of modern-day living. Handlettered signs, torn and layered poster kiosks and the eroded storefronts encountered in city streets serve as backdrops which Carson equates into the digital realm. Many of these found objects and photographs are reproduced in the book and they offer insight into Carson’s design approach. One page reproduces a Carson ad selling a Beach Culture T-shirt sight unseen, with the premise that "if you like the look of the magazine, you probably would like the shirt." Likewise, if you like the design of David Carson, you probably will like this book. Editor's note - a new revised edition is now available which includes a lot of extra visual material. This book gets a huge number of hits at this site - almost as many as the books on Neville Brody. © Philip Krayna 1999 [more TYPOGRAPHY books] Lewis Blackwell and David Carson, The End of Print: The Graphic Design Of David Carson, Chronicle Books, 1995, pp.160, ISBN: 0811830241 |
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