April 2012
29 posts
6 tags
“You cannot be a cynic or a skeptic when you build a building. You cannot be a...”
– Daniel Libeskind, from Hillman Curtis’s Artist Series
Apr 29th
4 notes
6 tags
Reflections on Reviewing Portfolios, or, some...
I was honored to be asked by Northampton Community College, a school where I spent a year and half, to come back and critique portfolios of the current graduates. I remember what it was like to be on the other side of that table showing my own book, thinking how much I thought I knew while also finding the feedback and response to my work incredibly helpful. I’m not sure I was as helpful...
Apr 28th
1 note
7 tags
“Being a geek is all about your own personal level of enthusiasm, not how your...”
– —Mary Sue, What It Means to be A Geek Oh man. Wow. I was smiling so much reading this. I feel like it explains why my eyes light up every time I hear someone say Helvetica, or I smile to myself when I hear the name Woody Allen, or I turn to look who just brought up Steve Jobs. Being a geek is...
Apr 27th
1 note
7 tags
How to Build an Owl
by Kathleen Lynch Decide you must. Develop deep respect for feather, bone, claw. Place your trembling thumb where the heart will be: for one hundred hours watch so you will know where to put the first feather. Stay awake forever. When the bird takes shape gently pry open its beak and whisper into it: mouse. Let it go. (via jackcheng)
Apr 26th
246 notes
5 tags
“I want everything we do to be beautiful. I don’t give a damn whether the client...”
– Saul Bass, who died 16 years ago today.
Apr 25th
6 notes
6 tags
“A writer should concern himself with whatever absorbs his fancy, stirs his...”
– E.B. White, from this fantastic 1969 interview in The Paris Review
Apr 24th
1 note
8 tags
Apr 23rd
5 tags
“The isms go; the ist dies; art remains.”
– Vladimir Nabokov in his lecture on Gustave Flaubert, asserting the historic relativity and therefore the artistic irrelevance of academic terms like “realism” or “post-modernist.” (via mills)
Apr 23rd
349 notes
4 tags
Apr 22nd
3 notes
6 tags
ListenKids - MGMT It’s starting to feel like...
Apr 21st
3 notes
7 tags
WatchWatch
I don’t know exactly where or when I first came across the work of Hillman Curtis. I have a distinct memory of watching his Stefan Sagmeister film sometime during my senior year of high school. I proceeded to watch the rest oh his Artists Series, each of which left me inspired as I left for college and started my journey to graphic design. I found myself returning to the films every few...
Apr 20th
2 notes
7 tags
Bierut on Rand on Logos →
Felt and Wire has an excellent interview with Michael Bierut on the new logo he designed for Mohawk paper. I love the way Bierut thinks about design and the purposeful approach he takes to his work. I nearly jumped out of my chair in excitement reading his thoughts on Paul Rand’s approach to logo design: Paul Rand has written quite eloquently about how logos really are vessels for...
Apr 19th
5 notes
6 tags
Robert Caro's Big Dig →
The New York Times Magazine has an excellent profile on Robert Caro, a 76 year old writer who’s been writing a biography of Lyndon Baines Johnson for almost 40 years and just released the fourth book in what was originally supposed to be a three-book series (and Johnson has only now president). At this rate, it’s taking Caro longer to write the books than it took Johnson to actually...
Apr 17th
1 note
5 tags
ListenIt’s So Easy - Buddy Holly There is...
Apr 16th
24 notes
6 tags
Apr 15th
2 notes
8 tags
How Rem Koolhaas Works →
I completely devoured this 2005 New Yorker profile of architect Rem Koolhaas this morning. I was somewhat familiar with his work but didn’t know anything about this process, operation style, and thinking. I just wanted to pull out a few quotes from the piece I really enjoyed. On how Koolhaas’s studio, OMA, operates: “People think that Rem creates everything, but he doesn’t. He...
Apr 15th
1 note
4 tags
“To create anything… is to believe, if only momentarily, you are capable of...”
– Tom Bissell explores the secrets of creators and creation. (via explore-blog)
Apr 13th
308 notes
5 tags
On Late Style →
Peter Mendelsund questions whether design has a “late style”, whether older designers can and do produce their best work in the later years of their life (like Matisse’s cut paper, Shakespeare’s The Winter Tale, or Beethoven’s opus 132): There are many older designers in the public eye. There are many experienced designers garnering their fair share of attention...
Apr 12th
6 tags
Apr 11th
3 notes
6 tags
Apr 10th
1 note