Tony Cragg, Compound, 2015 Marian Goodman Gallery
Today's Document

if i look back, i am lost

ellievsbear

Origami Around
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Peter Solarz
No title available
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

shark vs the universe

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
almost home
NASA
EXPECTATIONS

Kiana Khansmith
Jules of Nature
Sade Olutola
occasionally subtle
Claire Keane

blake kathryn

seen from Kenya

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Hungary

seen from Singapore
seen from Egypt
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
@jessicamei
Tony Cragg, Compound, 2015 Marian Goodman Gallery
Edward Wright, cast concrete foundation stone, 1962, for Churchill College, Cambridge.
During the 1950s and 1960s lettering from the David Kinderlsey Workshop adorned many Cambridge colleges and historic buildings as well as the tombstones of the great and the good. But his work was markedly ignored by modern-minded pundits like [Nicolete] Gray, James Mosley and James Sutton in their discussions of appropriate lettering for modern buildings. Gray, in particular, disliked the [Eric] Gill legacy of ‘anaemic Romans’, finding little to praise in English inter-war architectural lettering apart from Harry Goodhart-Rendel’s eccentric gold painted triangular wooden lettering for Hay’s Wharf of 1930. Gray, Mosley and Sutton favoured the designer Edward Wright, whose relief concrete inscription for the new Churchill College, Cambridge and painted lettering mural or the 1961 South Bank Architectural Congress suggested a knowledge of lettering developments on the Continent.
—Tanya Harrod, 1999
Edward Wright - Designer, typographer, artist, writer, architect, teacher (1912–88)
Since the book I’ve ordered about Wright (published in 1985) hasn’t turned up yet, i’ll have to make to do with posting Hyphen Press’ bio. They published a book about him in 2007 which I sadly haven’t been able to track down.
“Edward Wright (1912–88) was an artist and designer. Born in Liverpool, where his father was Ecuadorian vice-consul (his mother was Chilean), he trained and worked briefly as an architect before concentrating on painting, drawing, print-making, and also ‘commercial art’ (as it was then still called). From 1942 through to his retirement he lived in London, with periods of work in book publishing and advertising, and teaching graphic design (very broadly conceived) – most notably at the Central School (his evening classes in typography, 1952–6, became legendary) and at Chelsea School of Art. Wright was among those who fostered the modern spirit in Britain, working alongside architects, and refusing any simple split between art and design. He was always much concerned with text and language. Among his exceptional work is the lettering that he made for modern buildings, often managing both a specific design and an alphabet that could be applied more generally.”
The best online source for info about Edward Wright is ‘The optimism of modernity’ which was a 2007 project from the Reading University typography department about modern British typography. One of their pages includes some great quotes about Wright from those who knew him, as both students and/or friends, including this one from Richard Hollis which is very revealing and touches on the ‘This Is Tomorrow’ work from my previous two posts.
“He was a great dancer, in a Latin American way. He and his improbable wife Kitty gave great parties. And generally, Edward was very un-English and exotic in a time of drabness – around 1960. He had all-over short hair, very unusual. His cultural references were almost entirely to things outside this country and his work was unlike what others were doing. He wasn’t really a designer – design was just one of his interests, just one of the skills he practised. His ‘This is tomorrow’ catalogue had no precedent and no direct influence. But it is one of the most memorable pieces of design made here.” - Richard Hollis
There is something very intriguing about his work, it is almost unsettling at times and can be hard to place. This definitely comes from his position as a relative outsider, which goes in part to explain why he is not better known (despite many friends and ex-students who are still big names). In the face of his unfortunate obscurity I’m really glad to have come across him and his work through an interest in 'This is Tomorrow’.
It just so happens there is a lecture about his lettering work in London next month: http://www.letterexchange.org/events/lx-lecture-david-pearson-designer-teacher/ hopefully I’ll make it there to find out more.
Portrait of Edward Wright via NPG all other images from Optimism-Modernity
Maurizio – M4
Label: Maurizio – M-4
Format: Vinyl, 12", 33 ⅓ RPM Country:Germany
Released: 1995
Genre: Electronic
Style: Techno, Dub Techno, Minimal
Rebecca Horn - The Feathered Prison Fan, 1978
Xie Lei (Chinese, b. 1983), Weight of Thought, 2016, from the series Original. Oil on canvas, 39.9 x 49.8 cm.
The Moon, November 20, 1969. In a leftward pan, Apollo 12 astronaut Alan Bean snapped photos as Pete Conrad did some lunar geology work.
(NASA)
Herbert Bayer (Austrian/American, 1900-1985), Constellation, 1960. Liquitex on canvas, 61 x 76 cm.
ON THIS DAY: Lava oozes out of the Earth at the Iki Crater on the Kilauea Volcano in Hawaii, November 14, 1959. (USGS)
Guillaume Leblon
Carol Bove, Will’s Dog (2017).
https://www.instagram.com/p/BTONbNLlSFz/
Leyla Aydoslu
Fluffy cloud animals. Canadian Parade Readers: Work Book for Young Explorers. 1947.
Seven complete specimens of new flower, all 100 million years old http://www.geologypage.com/2017/08/seven-complete-specimens-new-flower-100-million-years-old.html
Kiyoshi Awazu, King of Circles, Science Friend: Volume 2, (1971)