2.10.2010

The Life and Times of Oz Cooper

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I wrote a 10,000 word essay called "Heft, Gravy, and Swing: The Life and Times of Oswald Cooper" for the latest issue of Idea. The essay serves as the definitive biography of the Chicago type and lettering designer, famed for his Cooper Black typeface.

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The essay is the result of a long-dreamed of trip to Chicago to sift through Cooper's original drawings, scarce writings, and working papers. Copiously illustrated with proofs of Cooper's work, unpublished typefaces, and photographs of rare design work, his legacy is brought into contemporary focus. New biographical information about Cooper, his work, and his associates is discussed within.

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An excerpt:

Bertsch & Cooper was a visionary commercial art service. They were one of the first shops in Chicago that offered to create layouts, compose artwork, and typeset text all under one roof. They continually added staff, resulting in a scattershot assortment of illustrators, draftsmen, and compositors peppered throughout the same building in a variety of rooms. At their first location, Bertsch was famous for his "inter-office communication system" which consisted of yelling upstairs and down from the inner balcony of the building to professional associates. Cooper was ensconced in the "bull pen"- a room with a half dozen or so other commercial artists scratching away at the jobs of the day. Cooper was renowned for his "filing system"- a towering, dusty, haphazardly curved pile of layouts, proofs, notes, and other assorted papers that loomed over his desk, each day's ephemera separated by a newspaper from that date.

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This pile grew in relation with Bertsch & Cooper's increasing roster of clients, which included a number of local Chicago businesses including doctors' offices, legal firms, coffee shops, and banks, New York's Marchbanks Press, the department store Marshall Fields, Strathmore Papers, Red Book Magazine, American Printer Magazine, and the American Institute of Graphic Arts. Cooper's distinctive lettering can be found on a series of public service announcements for the United States government's Food Administration, exhorting the public to eat less and conserve rations during World War One.


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The article was jointly designed by myself and the Shirai Design Office, the esteemed designers of Idea. It contains the first public showing of Cooper Italic Complete.

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2.08.2010

Blunt Mechanic illustrations exhibit


I'll be exhibiting a number of illustrations drawn for the recent Blunt Mechanic CD on Barsuk Records on February 13th at the Sakura Gallery in Nakameguro.

The exhibition is an all-day art party and exhibition, running from noon until 10pm.

Sakura Gallery
Meguro-ku
Nakameguro 2-5-28 1F
Tel. 03-6277-2100

Supported by Niigata Beer, Chazymo, Aroma Tea Ale, and Mooring Deck.
map here.

2.07.2010

Anyone Can Color


Back in 1997 Plazm curated a 32-page coloring book featuring a great range of artists from Raymond Pettibon to Kay Slusarenko. A full list of contributors is below. The coloring book was originally inserted into each issue of Plazm 16, we had a release party with giant blowups of each of the pages in the coloring book, and lots of crayons. Now, anyone can color some more since you can download a free version of the full coloring book here.


Cover: Anton Kimball
2. Storm Tharp
3. Carla Mayela Figueroa
4. Kay Slusarenko
5. Raymond Pettibon & Monica Moran
6. Heather Hadlock
7. Ed Fella
8. Efrat Rafaeli
9. Bob Waldman
10. Chloe Eudaly
11. Isabel Samaras
12. Marcellus Hall
13. Designers Republic
14. Fred Bower
15. Patrick Long
16. Marcus Burlile
17. Carolyn Cooley
18. Zoey Kroll with text by Margaret Tedesco
19. Denise Gonzales Crisp
20. Rick Pinchera
21. Jeff Kling
22. Peace McCracken
23. Linda Reynen
24. Frank Kozik
25. Sean Tejaratchi
26. Bwana Spoons
27. Sam Coomes
28. Patrick Moore
29. Patricking@Thirst