— Mina Bach

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The London Art Book Fair at The Whitechapel Gallery is one of my favourite book fairs and I’m glad I actually managed to book some lectures before they sold out this year. I attended ‘Artists Reimagine the Classics’ with John Morgan and other designers and artists discussing their work for Four Corners and a conversation between James Brett, founder of The Museum of Everything, and Achim Borchardt-Hume, Chief curator of the Whitechapel Gallery about outsider art and the role played by the independent museums. I also managed to catch the Publish and be Damned pop-up stall the following day.

I actually went twice and came home with a pile of books and catalogues:

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Had a brief chat with the nice people at the Hatje-Cantz stall who told me about the 100 Notes – 100 Thoughts notebooks for the dOCUMENTA (13) exhibition. A series of 100 bilingual booklets in 3 different formats mainly facsimiles of existing notebooks, commissioned essays, collaborations, and conversations with very different topics and lengths.

I bought these two:

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Kluge’s book is only 2 pages long:

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Finally got hold of the Book of war, mortification and love by Ruud Linssen published by design collective Underware.nl Essays on voluntary suffering printed in the author’s own blood (really):

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They showed me a special edition bound in goatskin and not for sale:

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’99p: 99 things you could buy instead of this book’ really is what it says on the cover: a collection of 99 things priced at 99p that I could have bought instead of the book. Genius. I still chose to buy the book, of course:

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The best thing about book fairs is discovering publishers you didn’t know before and for me this year it was all about Eindhoven based Onomatopee:

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They told me they curate exhibitions that inspire their books and publications, never meant as actual catalogues of the show but a discussion around the ideas triggered by it:

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I flipped through every single one of their books and had a very hard time picking up these two:

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Design Mass is a conversation about technology, beauty and design:

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The layout works as a grid system in which every speaker is assigned a column:

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It’s a very effective way of following a 4-way conversation. The resulting blocks of text are absolutely fascinating to look at, a visual representation of the flow of the dialogue:

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Btw, sorry about the quality, really need a new camera!

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Girls+Zines will be running throughout August at Tatty Devine Brick Lane. Curated by the great Barbara Ryan it showcases and celebrates zines made by girls and I’m very excited that my zine How to Wow a Woman will be part of it!

See you at the private view Wednesday August 3rd, open all month.

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Ladies and gents, may I introduce you to one of my favourite places in the world: Quinto Books on Charing Cross Road. On my last visit I overheard a Spanish tourist say ‘this is the kind of bookshop out of an old spy film where they keep the corpses in the back room’. It definitely has a special charm and while I haven’t been invited to the back room (yet), I can tell you about the basement. Ah, the basement! Hundreds of second hand books from pristine £1 Penguin 1st editions to well loved rare books. They get new stock every Thursday and it’s completely restocked (really!) at the start of each month. I always go straight to the ‘Art of Books’ section where the design, publishing, illustration, typography and calligraphy books await. Definitely recommend a visit!

Some of my latest finds:

1954 Faber&Faber edition of ‘A Handwriting Manual’ by English calligrapher (and designer of Bembo Italic!) Alfred Fairbank:

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‘Five Hundred Years of Printing’ by S H. Steinberg 1955 1st Edition on Pelican Books, very very interesting read. They always seem to have a copy of this book in stock (usually the 70s edition):

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‘Words & Faces: An intimate chronicle of book and magazine publishing’ (1954) this 1974 edition published by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in New York. I thought this would be an interesting historical perspective but found it to be very current actually:

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‘Dr Johnson: Some Observations and Judgements upon Life and Letters’ 1948 edition on Zodiac Books. Absolutely beautiful book filled with genius. A quote from it: ‘Books that you may carry to the fire, and hold readily in your hand, are the most useful after all.’ Well said, Dr Johnson.

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Back in October I chose Golden Lane as the subject for the ‘City Surfaces’ brief. One of the finest public architectural spaces of 1950s Britain, this Council Estate is now home to 1,500 people in central London. I am fascinated by the primary colours and the idealism and hope of Post War community living (there is a public swimming pool, tennis court and gym, nursery and even an Art gallery). I want to live there so much!.

‘The Truth is Concrete’ is a series of hand printed A2 posters using a variety of printmaking techniques and materials. I’m now in the process of designing a book form using the images.

Lino Cut Alphabet:

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Great Arthur House:

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Chinese Collage Hand printed Collagraph and Lino cut :

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Bayer House:

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Chinese Collage Hand printed Collagraph and Lino cut :

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Bowater House:

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4 Layer Lino cut:

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On the left a photocopy collage from the image above that I manipulated digitally to create a pattern:

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This is the view from my desk, the two other corners of my room. It took long enough but we’re finally settled, walls are painted and I even enrolled a few days ago. It’s getting colder in London every day and days are getting shorter too. Roll on Autumn!



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