Read Frame Type Film

Read Frame Type Film — Intrigued by MUBI’s new cine-centric publishing venture, MUBI Editions. In this first title, film curator Enrico Camporesi, graphic design historian Catherine de Smet, and designer Philippe Millot discuss 24 works from the film collection at the Centre Pompidou that capture the affinity between cinema and typography.
The Art of Robert E. McGinnis — Paperback and poster legend Robert McGinnis passed away last month, aged 99. This 2014 monograph is an absolute must, but the NYT obituary is a good starting point to get into his work.
90 Little Book Stops — As well as invoking the almighty Sphenisciformes Satan to rule over us, Penguin is celebrating its 90th birthday with book stops around the country – you’ve got until 1 May to nominate a location for one in your neighbourhood.
How to (and how not to) approach the business side of freelancing – Also that day, I’ll be tuning in for St Bride Foundation’s lastest talk, in which Micaela Alcaino, Becky Chilcott, David Pearson and Jack Smyth discuss contracts, fees and other freelance hacks.
The Face Magazine: Culture Shift — Absolutely loved this at the National Portrait Gallery. One heck of a nostalgia hit. Although I haven’t really got into the revived incarnation of the magazine, it’s nice to see they’re putting together an archive of old articles.
Fonts in Use — Congratulations to the indispensable FIU for reaching THIRTY THOUSAND posts. Incredible.
Google volume 2 — Twelve years ago, Felix Heyes and Ben West’s book Google volume 1 replaced thousands of words and their meanings with the first image that appeared when the word was searched for on Google Images; a testament to the visual culture of its time. This new volume updates the experiment with 25,000 images on 1368 pages, and an introduction by Douglas Coupland. It’ll be interesting to compare the two books (and hopefully one day a third), to see if/how AI-generated sludge has infected culture.
Neasden Control Centre — aka Stephen Smith, has a fresh new website. Particularly love his work on Vintage Classics’ Julio Cortazar series.
Recent readings: Martha Wells’ first Murderbot novella All Systems Red is great fun; Andy Weir’s Project Hail Mary is pretty much the epitome of the “book by the author of The Martian that is being made into a film directed by Lord and Miller and starring Ryan Gosling” genre; and I’m slap bang in the middle of Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone’s wonderfully titled This Is How You Lose the Time War. Lots of sci-fi this year … basically the Hugo Awards is my TBR pile.