Bookbot

What, You Don't Know Grapus?

Viac o knihe

Grapus is a French graphic design collective founded in Paris by François Miehe, Pierre Bernard and Gérard Paris-Clavel immediately following the student protests of May 1968. The group saw life as a field for experimentation, putting the new political, social and cultural debates into graphic form for public discussion. At first Grapus designed posters for local chapters of the Communist Party; 20 years later, they designed the corporate identity for the Louvre in Paris. By the late 1980s, the collective’s fruitful days were over. In its productive phase it had attracted many highly-committed graphic artists, and was honoured with the French Grand prix national des arts plastiques in 1990. Léo Favier set out in search of the colleagues and fellow campaigners of old. The 25 interviews in his book tell of the utopian working methods and heated disputes that formed the heart of this collective way of life.

Nákup knihy

What, You Don't Know Grapus?, Léo Favier

Jazyk
Rok vydania
1988
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(mäkká),
Stav knihy
Veľmi dobrá
Cena
27,49 €

Platobné metódy

Nikto zatiaľ neohodnotil.Ohodnotiť

Titul
What, You Don't Know Grapus?
Jazyk
anglicky
Vydavateľ
Spector Books
Rok vydania
1988
Väzba
mäkká
Počet strán
224
ISBN10
3944669495
ISBN13
9783944669496
Série
Anotácia
Grapus is a French graphic design collective founded in Paris by François Miehe, Pierre Bernard and Gérard Paris-Clavel immediately following the student protests of May 1968. The group saw life as a field for experimentation, putting the new political, social and cultural debates into graphic form for public discussion. At first Grapus designed posters for local chapters of the Communist Party; 20 years later, they designed the corporate identity for the Louvre in Paris. By the late 1980s, the collective’s fruitful days were over. In its productive phase it had attracted many highly-committed graphic artists, and was honoured with the French Grand prix national des arts plastiques in 1990. Léo Favier set out in search of the colleagues and fellow campaigners of old. The 25 interviews in his book tell of the utopian working methods and heated disputes that formed the heart of this collective way of life.