For the Page 1 book project, Lucienne Roberts and Rebecca Wright (GraphicDesign&) invited 70 contributors to submit a new design for the first page of Charles Dickens' Great Expectations. The work undertaken in response investigates the role and responsibility of the editorial designer in servicing the audience, the author, the message and/or himself. Beatrice Warde famously compared the effective layout of the book page to the construction of a window frame. This highlights ideas about the act of designing as performance or representation, suggesting, through the subtle interconnectedness of the view, the frame and the viewer, that language can never be transparent. For the Page 1 project, these ideas have been interrogated, identifyin...
‘Form Follows Idea’ was written at the invitation of the publisher who specializes in books on conte...
The original series concept and brief for Great Ideas came from Penguin Press art director Jim Stodd...
I have come to feel that Dickens, more than almost any other nineteenth-century novelist, is driven ...
Page 1 is an unusual typographic experiment designed to explore the relationship between graphic des...
For the 'Page 1: Great Expectations' book project, Lucienne Roberts and Rebecca Wright (GraphicDesig...
Contribution to a publication with seventy designers who re-interpreted the first page of Dickens' G...
In 1932 Beatrice Warde delivered to the British Society of Typographic Designers what has since beco...
Established practices of editorial design for fiction and non-fiction primarily focus on the visual ...
In the age of the novel, we read fiction sequentially and unselfconsciously. This practice requires ...
The original series concept and brief for 'Great Ideas' came from Penguin Press Art Director Jim Sto...
In 1898 The Academy claimed that an unnamed collector, having overpaid for a supposedly rare early D...
The project involved the sculpting of a 21 volume Oxford English Dictionary. It is probably the larg...
The article is devoted to the Charles Dickens’ book “Sketches by Boz”, one of the first author’s boo...
To conceive of the illustrated book as a collaboration between prominent Victorian authors and illus...
The presentation examined the dust jacket as an medium through which the printed book can function a...
‘Form Follows Idea’ was written at the invitation of the publisher who specializes in books on conte...
The original series concept and brief for Great Ideas came from Penguin Press art director Jim Stodd...
I have come to feel that Dickens, more than almost any other nineteenth-century novelist, is driven ...
Page 1 is an unusual typographic experiment designed to explore the relationship between graphic des...
For the 'Page 1: Great Expectations' book project, Lucienne Roberts and Rebecca Wright (GraphicDesig...
Contribution to a publication with seventy designers who re-interpreted the first page of Dickens' G...
In 1932 Beatrice Warde delivered to the British Society of Typographic Designers what has since beco...
Established practices of editorial design for fiction and non-fiction primarily focus on the visual ...
In the age of the novel, we read fiction sequentially and unselfconsciously. This practice requires ...
The original series concept and brief for 'Great Ideas' came from Penguin Press Art Director Jim Sto...
In 1898 The Academy claimed that an unnamed collector, having overpaid for a supposedly rare early D...
The project involved the sculpting of a 21 volume Oxford English Dictionary. It is probably the larg...
The article is devoted to the Charles Dickens’ book “Sketches by Boz”, one of the first author’s boo...
To conceive of the illustrated book as a collaboration between prominent Victorian authors and illus...
The presentation examined the dust jacket as an medium through which the printed book can function a...
‘Form Follows Idea’ was written at the invitation of the publisher who specializes in books on conte...
The original series concept and brief for Great Ideas came from Penguin Press art director Jim Stodd...
I have come to feel that Dickens, more than almost any other nineteenth-century novelist, is driven ...