Showing posts with label graphic design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graphic design. Show all posts

Sunday, July 14, 2024

NOURS Magazine - Kyozo Hayashi

 



Well there I was, rooting around on Archive.org, as I am wont to do, and I came across a collection of Japanese gamer mags put out by NAMCO in the 1990s. I can't read a word of it, but am immediately seized by awe at the covers. 

At first I was, "How?" Was it an early use of computer graphics? Seemed too smooth. Are they amazingly deceptive trompe-l'oeil paintings? Is it done with paper cut outs? Then my mind begged, "Who?"

After some internet sleuthing, utilizing the only clue I had – the signature "Kyozo" under the little umbrella mark on the lower righthand corner of a few of the covers – the only hint I was able to glean that pointed to an answer was a couple of copies of the above-pictured book for sale on eBay. Kyozo Hayashi is an artist and designer who seemingly specializes in working with clay figures for his work. 

I absolutely love the meshing of Art Deco and Pop Art in Kyozo's aesthetic. At some point the art direction seems to have been revised to fit a more "normal" newsstand gamer mag aesthetic, with Manga-style art or pictures of the characters from the games the magazine was reviewing that month. It makes sense from a marketing standpoint, but man, these covers are works of art!










If you want to go spelunking in the cave of NOURS digital back issues, the gateway to your cavern is here.

As for Kyozo Hayashi himself, he was born in 1939 and graduated from the Industrial Art department of the Nagoya Municipal Polytechnic High School. He began his clay illustration career around 1967, and received multiple awards for his design work and had a number of traveling art shows in the late 1980s. He appears to have an Instagram account, where he primarily showcases digital illustration these days. 

Monday, May 8, 2023

Certain Types of Movies






Some screenshots from the 1945 film The Spider, starring Richard Conte, Mantan Moreland, Faye Marlowe, Kurt Krueger and Martin Kosleck. I've always been interested in type and typefaces, the use of type design to convey a message. You wouldn't know it from looking at this ramshackle blog, but I even have a BFA in graphic design! 

One thing I like about old movies is the art of type and title design that seems to have largely gone away or fallen to two or three presets. Maybe that's a gross overstatement or misdiagnosis. But even the worst Poverty Row (or sub-PR) picture could have a stunningly designed title or interesting title sequence to ease you into the sinkhole of the film.  If you're interested in title design, type design, graphic design, I recommend looking up folks like Robert Brownjohn, Alvin Lustig, Saul Bass, Herb Luballin, Snap Wyatt, Susan Kare and April Greiman.

If you're interested in The Spider, you can stream it online. It's a tight little B-thriller that clocks in at under an hour. Not great--it has plot holes you can drive a Volkswagen bus through --but fun enough. No spider to be seen aside from the spider motif of the faux mind-reader played by Marlowe. If they addressed her as "the spider", I missed it. 
 
Anywho, I've included some other great movie typefaces I've seen as of late, below: