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Dictionary of the Worst

November 17, 2010

From Inculte Publishing and author Stéphane Legrand comes the wry and witty philosophical novel, Dictionaire du Pire. In the footsteps of Ambrose Bierce, who published Devil’s Dictionary in the early twentieth century, Legrand unfolds his vision of the world and man. Dictionaire du Pire explores the fields of philosophy, literature and politics with remarkable erudition. New definitions from the “dictionary of the worst” include:

WORSHIP, n..: Quantum of love necessary to bring a group of men together before engaging in the commission of a massacre.

EARRINGS, nfpl.: The part of the wife that moves during intercourse.

New Posters

July 9, 2010

The Felt & Wire Shop of Mohawk Paper is home to Legendre+Rutter’s poster collection, which is available for sale to the public. For July, we announce six new posters:

Andy Warhol

Series of four posters for “La Mucca di Mr. Warhol”

Uncle Kent

for the upcoming fall release of “Uncle Kent,” a film by Joe Swanberg

National Archives Building Book on C-SPAN

March 15, 2010

On a recent C-SPAN program, author Patty Reinert Mason, along with Architect Scott Teixeira and Rick Blondo, National Archives Program Analyst, discuss the history of John Russell Pope’s architectural masterwork, the National Archives Building and the new book “The National Archives Building: Temple of American History.” Commissioned by Thora Colot, the Executive Director of the Foundation for the National Archives, the book became the result of more than a year’s worth of work by Legendre+Rutter, Mason, and project manager, Christina Gehring. To learn more about the history of the National Archives Building, you can watch the video program online.

“The National Archives Building: Temple of American History,” by Patty Reinert Mason, was designed by Legendre+Rutter

Judge Me

February 17, 2010

St. Thomas Aquinas once said (not that we go around quoting him often), “beware of the person of one book.” To him, this statement was almost certainly intended as an inditement of the closed-minded followers of one rigid doctrine. We could also take it to mean that a wise person takes knowledge from many sources. For graphic designers who create covers for books and magazines, the lesson is clear: insistence on a singular visual and metaphorical style serves neither the content nor the reader. 

Inculte Publishing, France

Inculte is a French independent publisher created by a group of up-and-coming young writers. Since 2004, the company has published a quarterly review, a collection of monographs, and many hardcover novels and essays. Our latest work for Inculte includes book covers within the series “Afterpop” and “Temps Réel.”

Cover for “Big Fan,” a tragic fiction about the life of an obsessed fan of the band Radiohead.

 

Book cover for “Les Soniques,” by Niccolo Ricardo & Caïus Locus

 

Cover designs for “Lost Album,” by Stéphane Legrand and Sebastian Le Pajolec, and “The Cannibal Keys,” by Claro

Cover designs for “Lost Album” by Stéphan Legrand and Sebastian Le Pajolec, and “The Cannibal Keys,” by Claro

 

Covers from the Inculte series of philosophy books, “Reédition Arc.” Each cover is an embossed letterform construction, which represents the initial of the author (e.g. Lyotard, Joyce, Freud, etc.).

 

Observatoire du Samu Social de Paris

Founded in 2003 by Dr. Xavier Emmanuelli, with the support of the Mayor of Paris, Jacques Chirac, Samusocial was created to help address the immediate and urgent needs of citizens on the streets of Paris. The Samusocial report, “Mental health & the addictions of the homeless” (2010), has a cover designed by Yann Legendre.

The New York Times 

The last December issue of 2008 for The New York Times featured this cover design for the Arts & Leisure section, entitled “The Year in Culture.” This illustration assignment represents a core capability of Legendre+Rutter not found with many traditional graphic design studios—the ability to merge art and meaning as a strategy for great communication.

Amnesty International

This book, published by Amnesty International in Paris, features posters that express a theme of free expression.

 

The New Yorker

The original “Eustace Tilley” cover of The New Yorker from 1925 appears to the left. At right, Yann Legendre’s “Deconstructed Tilley” was one of 12 winning covers from the annual competition, curated by The New Yorker’s art editor, Françoise Mouley.

International Interior Design Association

IIDA worked with us to create not only a new cover for their design journal, Perspective, but also to launch a fresh approach to the journal’s visual attitude. This first issue expressed the seductive magnetism that designed artifacts wield.

While the adage that one cannot judge a book by its cover is certainly true, we want to believe that a well-designed cover gives the reader a vision of the journey within. It is not a reflection of the narrative but a window into it.

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