Description: EMIGRE MAGAZINE / Honey Barbara: I-10 & W. AVE. EMIGRE #60 / FALL 2001 CD and 64-page booklet, 5.25" x 8.25"in cardboard wallet, 6" x 8.5"Edition of 36,000Booklet printed at American Web, Denver, COCardboard wallet printed at Centerpoint Graphics, Portland, ORPublisher and designer: Rudy VanderLansCopy Editor: Alice PoleskyMusic: Honey BarbaraEmigre Fonts: Zuzana Licko CONTENTSRudy VanderLans, IntroductionRudy VanderLans, Honey Barbara: 1-10 & W. AVE (album cover design, production details and lyrics)Naomi Yang, The Dream of Los Angeles (essay)Peter Maybury, Hard Sleeper (visual project)Brian Schorn and Rudy VanderLans, Joshua Tree (eight details and a poem, “Elegy 5” by Schorn, from the book Joshua Tree by VanderLans) PREPRESS AND PRINTING: AMERICAN WEB, DENVER, COPAPER: NEW LEAF PAPER, SAN FRANCISCO, CAPRINTED ON REINCARNATION MATTE TEXT;100% RECYCLED/50% POST-CONSUMER WASTE, PROCESSED CHLORINE FREE. EMIGRE ISSN 1045-3717 Was published quarterly by EMIGRE, Inc., TYPEFACES USED: SOLEX & DALLIANCEJUMPING FISH DESIGNED BY JOHN HERSEY.EMIGRE SCRIPT LOGO DESIGNED BY JOHN DOWNER. Sleeve printed on BROWNVILLE NEWSBOARD - BROWN NEWS 100% RECYCLED CARDBOARD MADE WITH 20% POST-CONSUMER WASTEBOOKLET INSIDE PRINTED ON NEW LEAF REINCARNATION MATTE 60 lb. TEXT100% RECYCLED RAPER MADE WITH 50% POST-CONSUMER FIBER, AND PROCESSED CHLORINE FREE From 1984 until 2005 Emigre published the legendary Emigre magazine, a quarterly publication devoted to visual communication. Emigre created some of the very first digital layouts and typeface designs winning them both world-wide acclaim and much criticism. The exposure of these typefaces in Emigre magazine eventually lead to the creation of Emigre Fonts, one of the first independent type foundries utilizing personal computer technology for the design and distribution of fonts. Complete sets of Emigre magazine are in the permanent collections of: The Museum of Modern Art, New YorkThe Stedelijk Museum, AmsterdamThe Design Museum, LondonThe Denver Art MuseumThe Museum of Modern Art, San FranciscoThe Museum fur Gestaltung, Zurich History of Emigre Magazine Emigre was a (mostly) quarterly magazine published from 1984 until 2005 in Berkeley, California, dedicated to visual communication, graphic design, typography, and design criticism. Produced by Rudy VanderLans (editor and art director) and Zuzana Licko (type designer and typesetter), Emigre was known for creating some of the very first digital layouts and typeface designs. Exposure to Licko's typefaces through the magazine lead to the creation of Emigre Fonts in 1985. Emigre was a graphic design magazine founded by fellow Dutchmen Marc Susan, Menno Meyjes, and Rudy VanderLans who met in San Francisco. The first four issues were edited by Susan and art directed by VanderLans, with Meyes mostly in an associate publisher role. By issue 6 (1986) Susan and Meyes had left, and all subsequent issues were edited and art directed by VanderLans. In 1985, VanderLans started incorporating the bitmap typefaces designed by Zuzana Licko in his layouts. Licko’s type designs became a prominent feature of the magazine for its entire run. By 1986, Emigre began selling commercial licenses of its digital fonts under the name Emigre Fonts. The magazine was always self-funded, initially through commercial design work performed by VanderLans and Licko under the name Emigre Graphics which became Emigre Fonts. Additional income came from sporadic advertisement sales and subscriptions. Later issues were funded primarily by licensing of digital typefaces. When the magazine began in 1984, it featured work by and topics important to émigré artists. The first eight issues were concerned with boundaries, international culture, travel accounts, and alienation (as the issues' titles suggest). These eight issues also incorporated a dynamic aesthetic that caught the attention of other designers. As the publication grew in popularity (and sometimes notoriety) it gained collaborators. VanderLans invited guests such as Gail Swanlund, Anne Burdick, Andrew Blauvelt, and Experimental Jetset to edit dedicated issues, and readers began to recognize Jeffery Keedy, Kenneth FitzGerald, Lorraine Wild, and Diane Gromala as recurring contributors. A notable content shift started with issue 9, which featured the art of Vaughan Oliver at 4AD. About this time, Emigre's articles began to explore contemporary design practice more intentionally, catalyzing the magazine as a kind of analog discussion forum. Later issues would be devoted to Cranbrook, the Macintosh, type design, and occasionally individual graphic designers. Increasingly, Emigre's content centered around design writing and critical essays. Design discourse became primary to Emigre's publications by 1994, and the magazine transitioned in 1995 from its oversized layout to a text-friendlier format that debuted with issue 33. The magazine remained this size until issue 60, released in 2001. Issues 60–63 were accompanied by additional media: three compact discs (featuring the music of Honey Barbara, The Grassy Knoll and Scenic) and one DVD (Catfish, an experimental documentary film on the work of designer and performance artist Elliott Earls). In its fourth and final incarnation, the last six issues of Emigre (64–69) were co-published by Princeton Architectural Press as small softcover books. The last issue, The End, was published in 2005. Emigre was one of the first publications to be designed on Macintosh computers, and their work heavily influenced other graphic designers in the early digital era. Its variety of layouts, use of guest designers, and opinionated articles broke away from traditional design practices, making Emigre leaders in Postmodern design and landing them squarely in the middle of controversy. They were equally lauded and criticized for this work. Licko's response that "You read best what you read most," to an interview question about the legibility of her experimental bitmap fonts published in issue 15 (1990) incited what would later be known as the "Legibility Wars." Her statement indicated that fonts such as Helvetica and Times New Roman are not intrinsically legible but become so through repeated use, and it was not entirely well received. In 1991, the prominent New York designer Massimo Vignelli criticized Emigre's work, calling it "garbage" and "an aberration of culture" in an interview published by Print magazine. This brought much attention to their work and sealed Emigre's reputation as design radicals. Six years later Licko and VanderLans were named AGIA medalists and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art staged a solo exhibition of Emigre's work. In 2007, the Museum of Modern Art (New York) exhibited all 69 issues of Emigre as part of the exhibition "Digitally Mastered." FormatsThe magazine changed formats several times. It was originally published quarterly in a large format where each page measures 285 mm × 425 mm (slightly shorter than 11 × 17" or US ledger/tabloid size). Starting with issue 33, each page was about 8.5 × 11" (US letter size). It changed into a multimedia format (a booklet where each page was 133 × 210 mm, plus a CD or DVD) starting with issue 60. And finally, starting with issue 64, the magazine became a book format, published semi-annually, where each page measured 133 × 210 mm. The issues in the book format were co-published by Princeton Architectural Press. Please see and examine all pictures for details, they are considered part of the description Items are sold “AS IS” and NO RETURNS unless otherwise listed with conditions We used recycled boxes to help keep shipping rates as low as possible, we will always try to use suitable boxes for your item, but may have company logos, writings, or markings. CHECK OUT OUR STORE, Burman's Basement, FOR MANY UNIQUE TREASURES, WE ARE HAPPY TO COMBINE SHIPPING WHEN POSSIBLE
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All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Book Title: Emigre #60: Honey Barbara: I-10 & W. AVE.
MPN: Does not apply
Item Length: .25" depth
Publisher: Emigre
Original Language: English
Vintage: Yes
Brand: Emigre
Publication Year: 2001
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Literary Movement: contemporary design practice
Era: 2000s
Illustrator: Zuzana Licko and Rudy VanderLans
Item Height: 8.5"
Author: Rudy Vanderlans
Personalized: No
Features: CD-ROM, Illustrated
Genre: Design, Technology & Engineering
Topic: Graphic Arts / Typography, Technical & Manufacturing Industries & Trades
Unit Quantity: 1
Item Width: 6"
Item Weight: 4 3/4 oz
Number of Pages: 64 pages + cover and cardboard cover