Magazine covers
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Magazine covers
Mitchell Beazley, 2003
Available at 2 libraries
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
The magazine cover has always been a formidable selling tool. Far more than in other forms of printed media, it is the cover that sells. Magazines have to catch the reader's eye and therefore their impact must be immediate. Today, a hundred years on from some of the fist serial magazines, it is possible to look back and see how the magazine has affected the way we perceive the world. Not only has the magazine cover provided the canvas for some of the world's great designers and art directors, but it has also also created lasting icons, from Nixon's makeover on the of "Esquire to a naked, pregnant Demi Moore on the cover of Vanity Fair Magazine Covers is an unparalleled survey of the best of magazine and periodical cover designs in the 20th centuries, from the avantgarde magazines of the 1920s through to the style press of today. Representative examples of the very best covers are chosen by design expert David Crowely to explain the methodology, motivations, and aims of the art directors and their designers.
The author reveals the heydays of world-famous magazines, such as Harper's Bazaar, French Elle of the 1960s, Nova of the 1960s and Andy Warhol's "Interview of the 1970s, and shows how magazines covers were closely linked to the social and political events of the times. With over 300 color illustrations of both well-known covers and more obscure examples, "Magazine Covers is a truly international survey, a unique documentation of the development of the medium and will be required reading for all design students, designers, and vintage magazine collectors.
Table of Contents
- The art of art and design magazines - art nouveau, avant-garde magazines 1920-1960, the modern movement in graphic design, 1920s, modernism in postwar America, European postwar design
- "Ark" (RCA magazine), "Opus" (France, 1960s), graphic press today
- art magazines today
- the art of magazine illustrations - satire - late 19th to early 20th century, illustrated good taste ("Radio Times" etc.), "Fortune" (US), "Saturday Evening Post" (US), "New Yorker" (US), sci-fi pulps, everyday experts (DIY and popular science, 1930s to 1950s), "Private Eye" (UK), "Ti I Ja" (Poland)
- covering the world - revolutionary magazines, photojournalism in Europe, John Heartfield and the workers' "Illustrated Review", a social eye - "Picture Post", photojournalism in the USA - "Life", "Ebony" (USA), "National Geographic" (US), the Sunday supplements (UK), covering Vietnam, the underground press, tales of New York and London ("Time Out" and "New York"), "Spare Rib", "Wired", "Colors" (various), global protest ("Adbusters" etc)
- celebrity and popularculture - Hollywood covered, crime pupls, boxing magazines, teen readers, 1960s "Fabulous", " Flip, "16" etc), music broadsheets ("NME", "Sounds"), punk fanzines (UK and US)
- "The Face" (UK)
- "Raygun" (US)
- "Interview" (US)
- fashion and lifestyle - "Ladies Home Journal" (US), "Vogue" between the wars, Alexei Brodovitch, art director ("Harper's Bazaar", "Portfolio"), Alexander Lieberman's "Vogue"
- "Seventeen" (US), "Twen" (Germany), "Town" (UK), "iD" (UK), the style press today ("Dazed and Confused", "UK", "Purple", "France" etc).
by "Nielsen BookData"