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Type tells tales

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posted on 2024-03-12, 16:07 authored by Barrie TullettBarrie Tullett, Philippa Wood, Bianca Bunsas, Herman Inclusus, Pedro Antônio, Gabriel Anhorn, Warren Lehrer, Francis Picabia, Leo Lionni, Robert Massin, Maira Kalman, Molly Leach, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Stuart Sharpe, Jonny Hannah, Tom Hingston, Peter Blegvad, Andrew Swainson, Patrick King, Paula Scher, Paulo Soleri, Johanna Drucker, Richard Eckersley, Hendrik Nicolaas Werkman, John Hendrix, Isabel Seiffert, Lora Fosberg, Laurie Rosenwald, John Passafiume, Nick Reeve, Natali Cohen, Annie Vought, Jack Summerford, Oliver Munday, John Cage, Carolyn Sewell, Alida Sayer, Ariane Spanier, Brian Rea, Daniel Patrick, Timothy Goodman, Rogers Eckersley, Kiril Zlatkov, Sam Winston, Damián Sena, Walasse Ting, Hermes Mazali Pilar, González Bergez, Fortunato Depero, Corita Kent, Marian Bantjes, Cyla Costa, Wael Morcos, Ebon Heath, Angie Butler, Chank Diesel, Antonius Bui, Anne Ulku, Brian Scott Bagdonas, Jamie Clarke, Jason Permenter, Bruno Munari, Roberto de Vicq de Cumptich, Ross MacDonald, Milton Glaser, Shirley Glaser, Dylan McDonough, Dirk Hagner, Allen Crawford

Type Tells Tales focuses on typography that is integral to the message or story it is expressing. This is type that speaks – that is literally the voice of the narrator. And the narrator is the typographer. This can be quite literal, for example when letters come from the mouth of a person or thing, as in a comics balloon. It can be hand lettering, drawn with its own distinctive peculiarities that convey personality and mood. Precedents for contemporary work might be in Apollinaire’s calligram ‘Il pleut’ or Kurt Schwitters’ children’s picture book The Scarecrow, or in Concrete Poetry, Futurist ‘Words in Freedom’ or Dadaist collage.Seeking out examples in the furthest reaches of graphic design, Steven Heller and Gail Anderson uncover work that reveals how type can be used to render a particular voice or multiple conversations, how letters can be used in various shapes and sizes to create a kind of typographic pantomime, and how type can become both content and illustration as in, for example Paul Rand’s ‘ROARRRRR’. Letters take the shape and form of other things, such as people, faces, animals, cars or planes. There are examples of how typographic blocks, paragraphs, sentences and blurbs can be used to guide the eye through dense information.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Design (Research Outputs)

Pages/Article Number

34-37

Publisher

Thames & Hudson

ISBN

9780500420577

Date Submitted

2018-03-15

Date Accepted

2017-04-06

Date of First Publication

2017-04-06

Date of Final Publication

2017-04-06

Date Document First Uploaded

2018-01-06

ePrints ID

30340