Eye, Issue 078, Winter 2010

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Content inclides:
Opinion:
A soul drifting in neon limbo – Typography, Visual culture, Rick Poynor
Understand, visualise, survive – Design education, Education, Max Gadney
Features:
Reputations: David Gentleman by John L. Walters
The little journal that grew big by Lance Knobel
Hail that cab map by Mark Porter
Head Trip by Simon Esterson
The way ahead by Paul Stiff
Pin point by Jack Schulze
Undergrowth by John Ridpath
Bullet point by Christopher Wilson
Strip science by Rob Waller
Drawn to the land by Angharad Lewis
Tool-shop for a counterculture by Ken Garland
Future projections by Saki Mafundikwa
Branches and roots by John L. Walters
Life’s little detours by Eric Heiman
Do it yourself by Fraser Muggeridge
Culture compass by Andrew Losowsky
Graphic language by Tony Pritchard
Paper planet by John L. Walters
Love of lexicons by Rick Poynor
Reviews:
Bossa Nova and the Rise of Brazilian Music in the 1960s
Process Is the Project
Just My Type: A Book About Fonts
Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: The Writers and Artists Who Made the National Lampoon Insanely Great
Form+Code in Design, Art, and Architecture: A Guide to Computational Aesthetics
Custom Lettering of the 40s & 50s; Custom Lettering of the 60s & 70s
Atlas of Remote Islands
Design: Peter Blake
Migropolis: Venice / Atlas of a Global Situation (2 volumes)
Supergraphics

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Eye, Issue 078, Winter 2010
Eye, Issue 078, Winter 2010
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles
Triest Verlag für Architektur, Design und Typografie are a Swiss independent publisher producing specialist design books in the realms of typography, graphic design and architecture. Their books provide valuable insights and the print production is of exceptional quality. I interviewed the founders, to find out more about their books.

Members Content

Joseph Binder established his studio, Wiener Graphik, in Vienna. One of the first clients was the City of Vienna’s Music and Theater Festival, followed by many other posters and logos for clients in Austria and beyond.

Members Content

Katayama worked in several art and design disciplines from graphic design and sculpture to environmental works and sculpture. His design work features rhythms and patterns and has a resemblance to modern jazz and the studies of Josef Albers.
Flexible Visual Systems is the design manual for contemporary visual identities. It teaches you a variety of approaches on how to design flexible systems, adjustable to any aesthetic or project in need of an identifiable visual language.