Meanwhile #150

And other links about other things.

Meanwhile #150

— Unused composition for a recent book cover. Particularly happy with the balance of colours on this one; very … springy.

— James Henry recently tweeted “all books would be improved by having maps at the front, particularly literary novels because it would be funny” – and I couldn’t agree more. All books. Publishers, if you need some inspiration, the jpg jumble sale that is Fulltable has a great collection of cartographic endpapers from the last century, or there’s this massive collection of 40s/50s Dell Mapbacks.

— Plenty to explore in the Arabic Design Archive. No idea what it is exactly, but this Mostafa Hussein cover from 1977 is fabulous.

— “Artists must be allowed to go through bad periods! They must be allowed to do bad work! They must be allowed to get in a mess!” – from a 1969 clip of art critic David Sylvester, recently resurfaced by Austin Kleon. Heck, let’s illuminate those bad periods! I would love to see an exhibition of crap art by great artists – shoddy attempts at feet, wonky horses, perspectives gone awry.

Gorgeous illustrations by Eleanor Crow. Big fan of her shopfronts of London series, especially the James Smith Umbrella Shop, one of the smashingest buildings in a city of smashing buildings.

— Putting the fun in funicular! Why the mysterious love affair between video games and giant diagonal elevators may begin with Akira. Doesn’t everything?

On Terry Pratchett and cover art as deterrent, from Sian Clifford’s excellent newsletter. Josh Kirby’s paintings were a big draw for me when I first discovered Pratchett as a kid, but looking back now I can see how some of the leaning into fantasy visual tropes is … troublesome.

— “Like caves carved not from bedrock but out of Bedrock. … The slot canyons that were Studio Gang’s inspiration are equally smooth, as well as variegated in color. The undifferentiated surface is also oddly scale-less, like a child’s papier-mâché model of a volcano.” Alexandra Lange reviews New York’s new $465 million, 230,000-square-foot Gilder Center.

Hoogspanning! Dutch safety posters are intense. [Warning: this is a 50 Watts link, so you might as well say goodbye to the rest of your day now.]