Steven Heller on Edward Gorey

Steven Heller on illustrator Edward Gorey and his book cover designs:

“In addition to to the linear drawing style, Gorey’s finished lettering looked as though it were a comp or a sketch of hand lettering that approximated real type. ‘I was stuck with hand lettering, which I did very poorly, I always felt – but everybody seemed to like it.’

Gorey was not the first to employ hand-drawn letters. Paul Rand initiated the practice because typesetting was too expensive and deducted from his overall fee. Gorey was not concerned with the costs; rather, ‘I didn’t really know too much about type in those days, and it was simply easier to hand-letter the whole thing than to spec type. Eventually, though, I did a lot of things that weren’t hand-lettered, as far as book jackets were concerned.’ But lettering became a trademark of his own work, and he also rendered it for other designers who, he says jokingly, ‘were even less competent in lettering than I was.’

Gorey did not do a lot of preparation for his covers. ‘I was usually handed the assignment, and there would be some little paragraph summarizing the plot,’ he explains. It rarely mattered anyway, since his style was so individual that the covers themselves did not illustrate the respective plots as much as they evoked moods.

Gorey developed stylistic and compositional conceits that recur throughout this work. ‘There were certain kinds of books where I followed a routine, such as my famous landscape, which was mostly sky so I could fit in a title. Things like A Hero of Our Time by Mikhail Lermontov, Victory by Joseph Conrad, and The Wanderer by Henri Alain-Fournier tend to have low-lying landscapes, a lot of sky, sort of odd colors, and tiny figures that I didn’t have to draw very hard.’ He also maintained a muted and earthly color palette – rather surprising, given that paperback convention demanded covers that were miniposters, able to grab a reader’s eye in an instant. Explaining his palette, he says, ‘It was partly because you had to keep it to three [flat] colors, plus black. I guess I could have picked bright reds or blues, but I’ve never been much for that. My palette seems to be sort of lavender, lemon yellow, olive green, and then a whole series of absolutely no colors at all.’

[…] Notable is his work for the Henry James novels published by Anchor, which Gorey insists was ‘all a mistake’ because this is one author ‘who I hate more than anybody else in the world except for Picasso. I’ve read everything of Henry James, some of it twice, and every time I do it I think, ‘Why am I doing this again? Why am I torturing myself?’ Everybody thought how sensitive I was to Henry James, and I thought, ‘Oh sure, kids.’ If it’s because I hate him so much, that’s probably true.’

Most of Gorey’s work was illustrative, but for a few books he designed only lettered covers (what he insists on calling ‘tacky hand-lettering’). One such was Kierkegaard’s Either/Or. The reason, he admitted, was fairly simple. ‘Was I planning to sit down and read Kierkegaard at that point? No, I wasn’t! And it wouldn’t have helped if I had, I’m sure. I probably would’ve been completely paralyzed.'”

— (via Design Literacy: Understanding Graphic Design)

Saul Bass on feeling

Saul Bass reflecting on The Man With the Golden Arm:

“There was a tendency to think it worked because it was ‘graphic,’ but that was incidental. If it worked, it was because the mood and the feeling it conveyed made it work, not because it was a graphic device.

[…]

Otto Preminger was sitting with his back to me – he didn’t know I was there – talking on the phone, obviously to an exhibitor somewhere in Texas. The exhibitor was complaining about the ads and saying that he wanted to have a picture of Sinatra. …And I heard Otto say to him, ‘Those ads are to be used precisely as they are. If you change them one iota, I will pull the picture from your theater.’ And hung up on him.”

— (via Graphic Design America, 1989)

Albert Camus on time

“Life is short, and it is sinful to waste one’s time. They say I’m active. But being active is still wasting one’s time, if in doing one loses oneself. Today is a resting time, and my heart goes off in search of itself. If an anguish still clutches me, it’s when I feel this impalpable moment slip through my fingers like quicksilver…”

— Albert Camus

Susan Seidelman on advertising

“The job mostly involved sweeping the set in between takes and bringing people coffee. But I got to listen in as a group of advertising execs sat around a bank of video monitors critiquing the shot being filmed over and over and over. It was a close-up of a baseball player’s feet stepping out of a limo wearing Converse All Stars. The execs drove the director nuts with their notes. One said the shoelaces should hang more to the right. Another said more to the left. A third said the laces should be tucked inside the shoe. Too many cooks, too many options. It seemed like a very frustrating job that put me off ever wanting to direct a TV commercial.”

— Susan Seidelman (via)

Herb Lubalin on legibility

“We’ve been conditioned to read the way Gutenberg set his type, and for five hundred years people have been reading widely-spaced words on horizontal lines Gutenberg spaced far apart. … We read words, not characters, and pushing letters closer or tightening space between lines doesn’t destroy legibility; it merely changes reading habits.”

— Herb Lubalin

Steven Heller on designer Paul Bacon

Steven Heller on Paul Bacon and his time working as a book jacket designer:

“The Simon & Shuster advertising people liked the idea of using an icon or a logo on a jacket as opposed to the conventional treatments of just type or literal illustration. And Bacon discovered he was good at ‘finding something that would be a synthesis graphically of what the story was about.’ Moreover, since he had no formal training in illustration, he felt free to explore in this realm. ‘I was not encumbered by having to work from models. Many of the things I did, I just did strictly from memory and without any reference at all. Unless I needed something specific, like a German airplane or something – then I’d look it up. But it was very liberating to realize that I didn’t have to do something that looked like Norman Rockwell.’

[…] Bacon didn’t do thumbnails or multiple sketches – just one iteration of any idea. But he was accommodating. ‘If people didn’t like something about a Cole Porter tune, he just tore it up,’ he says. ‘And I did the same thing with the jackets.’

For the 1961 publication of Joseph Heller’s classic Catch-22, he did as many as eleven versions. ‘I did a jacket that just said ‘Catch-22‘ in very large lettering… Then I did one that had [the protagonist] Yossarian bull’s-ass naked, but with his back to you, saluting as a flight of planes went over. I liked that one. Then I did the finger. Then I did a couple of modifications of those. Then at some point I came up with the little guy that I tore out of a piece of paper, representing Yossarian in full flight from everything.'”

— (via Design Literacy: Understanding Graphic Design)

Robert Frost on sincerity

“There is such a thing as sincerity. It is hard to define but it is probably nothing but your highest liveliness escaping from a succession of dead selves.”

— Robert Frost

Ray Bradbury on being joyful

“Go to the library. Live in the library. Fall in love with old movies. Look closely at everything. Don’t be a snob. Be joyful; writing is not a serious business – it’s a celebration.”

— Ray Bradbury

Mary Ruefle on reading

“In one sense, reading is a great waste of time. In another sense, it is a great extension of time, a way for one person to live a thousand and one lives in a single life span, to watch the great impersonal universe at work again and again, to watch the great personal psyche spar with it, to suffer affliction and weakness and injury, to die and watch those you love die, until the very dizziness of it all becomes a source of compassion for ourselves, and for the language which we alone created, without which the letter that slipped under the door could never have been written, or, once in a thousand lives – is that too much to ask? – retrieved, and read. Did I mention supreme joy? That is why I read: I want everything to be okay.”

— Mary Ruefle (via Madness, Rack, and Honey)