Categories
Biographies Design Japan

Yoshitaka Amano: The Illustrated Biography-Beyond the Fantasy by Florent Gorges

Dear Readers, wishing you a very happy and a prosperous new year 2019! It seems like we cannot have enough of Japan, therefore, this month we present to you a wholesome collection of art presented in a biographical format. Those who are familiar with Yoshitaka Amano must know the dazzling fantasy world created and nurtured by this great artist of our times. Read on…

A beautiful celebration of the life and imagery of Japan’s master of fantasy and science fiction art! This handsome, landscape-style hardback contains nearly 400 illustrations and photos from the incredible career of Final Fantasy designer Yoshitaka Amano.

But Beyond the Fantasy covers far more than just the famous game series. Amano’s artistic journey goes back to his first job in 1967—age 15, working on Speed Racer! From animator, to illustrator, to internationally exhibited painter, this biography is a look not only into the work of Amano’s life, but the influences, techniques, philosophy, and family that have nurtured it.

From the book description.

This is a great book for all those readers who enjoy learning about Japan, If you are not familiar with fantasy world, you will learn a lot about it. This book is not widely available. Reserve your copy by calling your local book store ahead.

Categories
Design Japan Posters Technique

Kanban: Traditional Shop Signs of Japan by Alan Scott Pate

Many of our readers have studied engineering or have been to a business school. Regardless, it is hard to escape the course on quality control and total quality management, and therefore most of you would be familiar with kanban cards. But do you know the story behind kanban, or the origin of kanban signs? This month we present to you a wonderful collection of kanban shop signs from Japan. Read on…

A glimpse into the markets, crafts, and signage of early modern Japan

Kanban are the traditional signs Japanese merchants displayed on the street to advertise their presence, represent the products and services to be found inside their shops, and lend a sense of individuality to the shops themselves. Created from wood, bamboo, iron, paper, fabric, gold leaf, and lacquer, these unique objects evoke the frenetic market scenes of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Japan, where merchants created a multifaceted world of symbol and meaning designed to engage the viewer and entice the customer.

Kanban provides a tantalizing look at this distinctive fusion of art and commerce. This beautifully illustrated book traces the history of shop signs in Japan, examines how they were created, and explores some of the businesses and trades they advertised. Some kanban are elongated panels of lacquered wood painted with elegant calligraphy and striking images, while others are ornately carved representative sculptures of munificent deities or carp climbing waterfalls. There are oversized functional Buddhist prayer beads, and everyday objects such as tobacco pipes, shoes, combs, and writing brushes. The book also includes archival photographs of market life in “old Japan,” woodblock prints of bustling marketplaces, and images of the goods advertised with these intricate and beguiling objects.

Providing a look into a unique, handmade world, Kanban offers new insights into Japan’s commercial and artistic roots, the evolution of trade, the links between commerce and entertainment, and the emergence of mass consumer culture.

From the book description

A fantastic treatise on the intersection of Japanese commerce and art, this book is sure to delight the readers. Widely available at all leading bookstores. Good bye, until the next post!

Categories
Automobiles Design Industry Uncategorized

Automobile Design Graphics by Steven Heller, Jim Donnelly

Who loves cars? Who loves beautifully designed cars, mostly European? Looks like most of us do. And for those who are looking to understand car designing and are just exploring the whole wide world of automobiles and how they arouse interest and deliver pride to their owners, we bring this must read book to you this month.

In the heyday of the automobile, marketing cars was an exacting process. Selling the public one of their major life purchases involved not only traditional advertising but also a crucial item that extolled the virtue of the cars: the brochure. Often oversize and sumptuously produced, including acetate overlays with fabric and paint swatches, brochures were only available at dealer showrooms or auto fairs—hence specimens of antique and vintage car brochures are rare collector’s items today.

Frequently overlooked in design and automotive histories, this ephemera offers a lucid mirror image of tastes, consumerism, and buying habits since the dawn of the automobile. Automobile Design Graphics presents for the first time a comprehensive overview of this mostly forgotten breed of collateral advertising. From the most obscure (Tucker, Ajax, Columbia) to the most iconic (General Motors, Ford, Chrysler), the visual history brings together over 500 reproductions from these rare and collectible customer brochures. Across eight decades, they present not only some of the finest cars, but also some of the best illustration and graphic design of the 20th century.

Ancillary examples of automotive literature, including the elaborate dealer manuals are also featured, alongside essays by automobile and cultural historian Jim Donnelly and preeminent design historian Steven Heller. Testament to a bygone era when cars were, quite simply, the stuff dreams were made of, this book is a visual and informative pleasure for car enthusiasts, designers, and pop culture aficionados alike.

From the book descriptions

An excellent collection for the petrol-heads (and the diesel-heads), covering the whole range of activities that feed into each other as a creative journey of designing, assembling, and marketing of cars. A marvelous addition to any car lover’s library. Available at leading book stores. Get it now!

Categories
Africa Coloring Decorative Arts Design Zoology

101 Animals To Color: Adult Coloring Book Packed With Owls, Elephants, Lions, Butterflies, Cats, Dogs, Horses, Eagles, And So Much More! by Savanna Magic

Dear Readers, sorry about the long hiatus on account of summer travels. We are extremely overwhelmed with the response to our sharing of Savanna Magic’s previous book. Therefore, we have decided to feature their another book which, like the last one, is a visual treat for those who enjoy coloring. 

101 Unique Images To Color

Enjoy a large array of beautiful animals and relaxing exquisite patterns with this easy coloring book from Savanna Magic

This “101 Animals to Color” coloring book is a relaxing way to show your love of animals while your stress fades away. Each animal features simple patterns that allow you to effortlessly fill pages with any of your favorite colors. This book is packed with a variety of favorite animals with close-up animal portraits and full-body animal designs so you will have an abundance of options of what to color next.

You get to color a variety of fun animal designs from all across the animal kingdom. You can color lovable farm animals, wild jungle animals, mysterious animals of the sea, and so much more! Take time from your busy schedule and choose an animal you feel like coloring whether wild, exotic or adorable. You can challenge yourself and color each animal with realistic colors or have fun and let your imagination run wild and use whichever colors you choose.

From the book description

This home grown artist continues to amaze us. Hope you will enjoy this collection of coloring images. Available at many book stores now.

Categories
Architecture Biographies Design Performing Arts

Ming Cho Lee: A Life in Design by Arnold Aronson

Happy New Year 2015!

This month, we bring a special treat to you about a glorious career in the arts, Ming Cho Lee. He has made significant contributions to the performing arts in America. This very beautiful coffee table book by Arnold Aronson, pays a well deserved tribute in prose and photographs to Ming Cho Lee’s great career.

Ming Cho Lee is not only one of the most important American designers of the twentieth century, but one of the most significant influences on American theatre. As a designer, he drew upon his training in Chinese watercolor, the aesthetics of his mentors, Jo Mielziner and Boris Aronson, and the post-war developments in German design to develop a new approach to stage design that radically altered American scenography. He broke new ground, combined existing motifs in startling new ways and continued to explore new ideas throughout his entire career. Lee introduced a sculptural style with soaring verticality that had been largely unknown to American stages. The painterly image was replaced with a decidedly modern and industrial scenic vocabulary that emphasized stage-as-stage.

Lee has designed more than 300 productions of theatre, opera and dance, beginning with his first student work, The Silver Whistle at Occidental College in 1952, through his last productions in 2005. Unlike his predecessors, Lee did not make his mark on Broadway. Rather, it was achieved through some forty productions with the New York Shakespeare Festival, including eleven seasons at the Delacorte Theater from its opening in 1962; thirteen productions for New York City Opera, beginning with its inaugural production at Lincoln Center; five mainstage productions for the Metropolitan Opera, including Boris Godunov, which stayed in the repertoire for more than thirty years; twenty-one productions for Arena Stage in Washington D.C., and numerous other productions at regional theatres including the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, D.C., Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven, the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, and Actors Theatre of Louisville; and ten pieces for the Joffrey Ballet, as well as productions for Martha Graham, Alvin Ailey, Elliot Feld, the Pacific Northwest Ballet and Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan.

Called “the dean of American set designers” by the New York Times, Lee had an impact that goes well beyond his own work. As a teacher, including more than forty years at the Yale School of Drama, Lee shaped generations of theatre artists—not only set designers, but costume and lighting designers, as well as directors, writers and dramaturgs. It is through these students that he helped transform not only American scenography but the larger aesthetics of American theatre.

For this richly detailed exploration of Lee’s work, theatre historian Arnold Aronson spent hundreds of hours interviewing Lee at his legendary New York apartment. The book is both a study of and a conversation with Ming Cho Lee. Each image selected for this book was chosen personally by Lee from thousands of photos, drawings, sketches, renderings and models, all carefully cataloged by Lee’s wife and lifelong archivist, Betsy. Lee’s work has been showcased at the New York Public Library and the Yale School of Architecture, and his honors include a Tony Award for best scenic design of a play, an Outer Critics Circle Award, three Drama Desk Awards, a special Tony Award for lifetime achievement and the National Medal of the Arts, the highest national award given in the arts.

From the book description

We hope you will thoroughly enjoying getting to know more about Ming Cho Lee and his singular career.

Have a wonderful 2015! And, for our compatriots in India, wishing you a Happy Republic Day!