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The Art of Looking Sideways par Alan…
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The Art of Looking Sideways (original 2001; édition 2001)

par Alan Fletcher

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9231222,951 (4.3)34
Describing himself as a visual jackdaw, designer Alan Fletcher has spent a lifetime collecting images, useless information, quotations and scraps. This work distills this collection into a quirky and entertaining feast for the eyes and the mind.
Membre:knowthyself
Titre:The Art of Looking Sideways
Auteurs:Alan Fletcher
Info:Phaidon Press (2001), Hardcover
Collections:Votre bibliothèque
Évaluation:*****
Mots-clés:Aucun

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The Art of Looking Sideways par Alan Fletcher (2001)

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Affichage de 1-5 de 12 (suivant | tout afficher)
I was captivated by this huge book when I found it in a bookshop. Now I'm not so sure. It looked like fabulous design and clearly it is the work of a fabulous designer. But I noticed some other reviewer referred to it as a kind of "Jackdaw collection of bits and pieces. And I agree. It really seems to me that the author has used this book as a way of publishing his scrapbooks where he's gathered together all sorts of trivia and interesting facts. The real issue for the reader his whether they are captivated by the same sort of trivia as the author. Now, confession time. I haven't actually sat down and read this giant tome from cover to cover. I suspect nobody does that. It's more like something that you "dip into". but that means that if there is a theme of structure, then it's not obvious,.But I found stuff there that really did interest me and the title gives it away aslightly: .....thbe art of looking sideways. That is looking at things in a different way to normal. I guess this is the true skill of the great designers and this is what is being fed to us here. I'm now in the position of having to downsize my library and this book is one of the casualties. Pity but I won't be re-reading it. It's actually a lovely design book with all sorts of curious and interesting material. I'm really sad that I will no longer have the time to read it or even to dip into it. I give it four stars. ( )
  booktsunami | Jan 18, 2024 |
High-brow magic eye for "creative types." Chapters like imagination, ideas, inspiration. Some interesting things in here, like learning that anteaters don't dream, and other, pretty pedestrian stuff formatted to look like it's anything worthwhile. Paul McCartney wrote "Yellow Submarine" right before he went to bed, really, who would have guessed. I don't know. I feel like shit like this just flatters the idea that every one of us is a genius when really what it's doing is over-explaining the whole creative process and cramming a lot of out of context things into one feel good instant gratification coffee table book. It's like tumblr for grown-ups. It's a TED talk in print. I'm not trying to be overly cynical here; I think everyone has something of interest to do, make, or say. But that's only liberated through commitment and hard work and practice, not through catchphrases. Give me a 19th century tome on what-the-fuck ever over this garbage any day. ( )
1 voter uncleflannery | May 16, 2020 |
"Words and pictures on how to make twinkles in the eye and colours agree in the dark. Thoughts on mindscaping, moonlighting and daydreams. Have you seen a purple cow? When less can be more than enough. The art of looking sideways. To gaze is to think. Are you left-eyed? Living out loud. Buy junk, sell antiques. The Golden Mean. Standing ideas on their heads. To look is to listen. Insight on the mind's eye. Every status has its symbol. 'Do androids dream of electric sheep?' Why feel blue? Triumphs of imagination such as the person you love is 72.8% water. Do not adjust your mind, there's a fault in reality. Teach yourself ignorance. The belly-button problem. Visual charades. What has an ox to do with the letter A? The art of looking sideways. How to turn knots into bows. When does 1 and 1 add up to 3? Why sit with your back to the view? Notes on the Blue Tit Syndrome, letterplay and visual puns. Patterns of chaos. Kissin' cousins to camp. Half a word is enough for a quick ear. Some people think computers can't. Civilization is chaos taking a rest. Too far east is west. Writing is the geometry of the soul. Why look at things upside down? Squaring the circle. 'If you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain.' The sympathy of things. How to think by jumping. Never wait for yourself. A word in your eye. The art of looking sideways. Beauty is a flavour of quark. Cerebral acrobatics. By the way, what's it like living with a paper bag over your head? Not referring to you of course - the uncommon exception to universal bondage."

Enough said. ( )
  Sylak | Jan 5, 2019 |
shelved in: Interiors Library - at: B17
  HB-Library | Feb 14, 2016 |
This is a source book of so many ideas and graphic notes. It is not really true that I read it (it's got hundreds and hundreds of pages) but it is not really designed to be read from cover to cover. ( )
  joeydag | Jul 23, 2015 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 12 (suivant | tout afficher)
[B]anality can neither be masked behind a thousand snippets of borrowed wisdom, nor redeemed by as many pages of smart-aleck typography.
ajouté par Katya0133 | modifierThe Times Higher Education Supplement, Roy Harris (Aug 9, 2002)
 
[Fletcher] created a design reference book that's fun to read and a good place to get inspiration.
ajouté par Katya0133 | modifierCommunication Arts, Ruth Hagopian (Mar 1, 2002)
 
[T]his book will delight anyone who enjoys unexpected visual and verbal play, cultural and historical observations and insights, and staggering amounts of trivia and anecdotes.
ajouté par Katya0133 | modifierLibrary Journal, Phil Hamlett (Jan 1, 2002)
 
Critiquing The Art of Looking Sideways is like trying to wrestle an elephant into an envelope. It is a bold, magnificent, elusive, almost inscrutable giant of a book.
ajouté par Katya0133 | modifierPrint, Tim Rich (Sep 1, 2001)
 
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Describing himself as a visual jackdaw, designer Alan Fletcher has spent a lifetime collecting images, useless information, quotations and scraps. This work distills this collection into a quirky and entertaining feast for the eyes and the mind.

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