Saturday, April 28, 2012

Breathless

À Bout de Souffle (1960) poster design; Adobe Illustrator

Breathless (English title) is one of the best French New Wave films out there and if you haven't seen it, see it.

While you're at it, watch everything by Jean-Luc Goddard and then watch everything by Truffaut, and then never be happy with anything made in the 21st century again.


Saturday, April 14, 2012

Friday, April 13, 2012

More Edwardian Experiments

Still experimenting with type as image.



^if Transformers were designed by Alphonse Mucha




Also, my name.
I distinctly remember my second grade teacher having us write our names in cursive on a folded piece of construction paper, and then cutting it out to make this surreal typographic form; and so, Mrs. Penton, I have to credit you with the conception of this image. 

Le voilà: Matthew Thomas Brown



Thursday, April 12, 2012

Return from hiatus / Edwardian Script / Karenina

Well, after a month of silence, I return.
A matter of hours ago I turned in my BFA application for BYU's graphic design program (and I can't wait to write out BYUVAGDBFA and have people pronounce it as "by-you-vag-deb-fa"). Strangely, without dozens of pieces to rework and reprint, I'm feeling sort of empty.

I got onto InDesign and Illustrator and —for some strange borderline-sado-masochistic reason— started designing again.

The script font experiments more or less failed, but I got some cool shapes regardless. Here's a T and a G. I feel like the entire architecture of the elves from Lord of the Rings was designed this way...



Also, I'm in love with: books, book designing, and Russian everything. 

I tried out some redesigns of Anna Karenina in the original Russian format. The first is stolen directly from the Russian Constructivist look, which is awesome-looking albeit completely inappropriate as far as subject matter and chronology are concerned.  



So I changed directions to go in a more illustrative route, built up some designs on Illustrator, and came up with these: 







And yes. I made that by hand with cross-stitch marks.




The illustration is a call-out to a previous project that I did, that was posted on my first entry

I'm serious hoping that I can legitimately use the Russian embroidery somewhere in my class work again; I'm dying to use it for a Petrouchka poster.