Monday, 22 January 2018

A Possible Future Project

Pictured here is a gem in my book collection.

The Dictionary of Visual Language (1980)

I first found out about this book from Jason Godfrey's Bibliographic: 100 Classic Graphic Design Books (The title is self-explanatory). As soon as I found out about it I searched Amazon and found it .... and placed it in my Wish List .... and (eventually) bought a copy. (I'm not an impulsive buyer.)

The Dictionary of Visual Language began life in 1975 as one of the "Pentagram Papers" (a series of promotional booklets made by the famous design firm). Even though the authors (Philip Thompson and Peter Davenport) took a year to make it, this prototype (entitled ABC of Graphic Clichés) only covered A, B and C. It took a couple of years to cover the rest of the alphabet. 


You could call this a dictionary of our visual culture. A catalogue of memes, even. From abacus to zebras, this book explains and shows how and why various things have been used in various graphic designs, from the 19th century to the 1970s (the book was published in 1980).

This book intrigues me because it kind of taps into something I did back when I was a child. Back then I had a small obsession with dictionaries with illustrations in them. It may have started with a DK CD-ROM. It was the app of the moment for me on my Dad's PC and it inspired me to do something. For about a few years I was drawing the alphabet. On the first sheet of paper I drew everything I could think of that started with "A". Then on the next sheet I did everything I an think of that began with the letter "B". And I go on until I reached "Z". I can't remember how many times I did this as a child. But one thing do remember is that the number of stuff I drew increased overtime, as I learnt about more stuff. It was an intellectual challenge that added to the 10,000 hours of drawing practice I had before high school.
Since then this may have developed into a fascination in cataloguing the world. I know they are people who do just that with nature (real and fictional). But my fascination in human ingenuity has made it focused on manmade things (artworks, buildings, manufactured objects and so on). But I'm also a visually-minded culture explorer (as evident with my comic and movie collection). So what if I combined these two obsessions into one single project?

What if I made my own "Cultural Vandal's Dictionary of Visual Culture"? The Dictionary of Visual Language was made as an art book for graphic designers, which is why its contents were mostly ads, magazine covers, and logos. It was made at a time when the profession was becoming more sophisticated and professional, especially after the "creative revolution" in advertising in the 1960s. (The writer of the foreword, George Lois, was a part of this revolution.).
But my version will cover all visual culture - cave art, tapestries, frescos, movies, video games, internet memes and so on. What many don't realise is that the same meme can have the same cultural values across every medium. No matter what medium, an image of a dove in it can represent peace. 

Its just an idea I just had. Do you think its worth perusing?

Sunday, 7 January 2018

How Was It Done - 50 Years of sparkling skies and a militaristic condiment (and 5 Years of Internet Sketching)

The idea of making a tribute to Sargent Pepper has been one I have had since I realized that its 50th birthday was coming back sometime in 2016. It was a backburner idea while I muddled with my Pokémon history tribute and my computer book. Then I realized that 2017 was also going to be my fifth year as a blogger (My first post on this blog was posted in November 2012) and the Sargent Pepper cover provided a great way to celebrate that milestone.

I did want to start work on it as soon as 2017 began and planned to have it done by June (when the original album was released in 1967). But life intervened. It wasn’t until November when work on this tribute really began. In the following weeks before Christmas on any free time I had I was busy with a sketchbook and tablet/phone (for reference material). I admit that the drawings were done in a hurry, so its not my best quality.

Long before that, when deciding who to put in my version of the cover, I asked a couple of friends for suggestions. It was one of them who came up with the great idea of putting in every person who was a “Fifth Beatle.” This idea probably filled up one third of the cover. The rest were a mix of friend suggestions, links to trivial facts about the album, and personal choice.



  1. Mal Evans
  2. Terry Gilliam
  3. Jeff Wayne
  4. Yanni Alexis Mardas
  5. John Duff Lowe
  6. Norman Chapman
  7. Ivan Vaughan
  8. Jim Keltner
  9. Pete Shotton
  10. Len Garry
  11. Stuart Sutcliffe
  12. Tommy Moore
  13. Derek Taylor
  14. Billy Preston 
  15. Mitch Benn
  16. Jimmie Nichol
  17. Robyn Barry-Carter
  18. Christopher Nigel Walley
  19. Spiderman
  20. Andy White
  21. Mike Oldfield
  22. Pete Best
  23. Colin Hanton
  24. David Bowie
  25. Ken Brown
  26. Adam Savage
  27. Eric Griffiths
  28. George Best
  29. Eric Clapton
  30. Ian Dury
  31. David Frost
  32. George Michael
  33. Spock
  34. Australopithecus afarensis
  35. Lucy Heartfilia
  36. Randall Monroe
  37. Kryten 2X4B 523P
  38. Rod Davis
  39. Marianne Faithfull
  40. Victor Spinetti
  41. Cilla Black
  42. Jimmy Turbuck
  43. Elvis Costello
  44. Chas Newby
  45. Eddie Izzard
  46. Neil Aspinall
  47. Eric Idle
  48. Neil Innes
  49. Marti Pellow
  50. Brian Epstein
  51. Kalus Voormann
  52. Princess Leia
  53. Peter Serafinowicz
  54. Esther Rantzen
  55. Easy Star All-Stars
  56. Easy Star All-Stars
  57. Easy Star All-Stars
  58. Easy Star All-Stars
  59. Easy Star All-Stars
  60. Easy Star All-Stars
  61. Easy Star All-Stars
  62. Easy Star All-Stars
  63. Daffy Duck
  64. Snagglepuss
  65. Mike Gibbins
  66. Pete Ham
  67. Tom Evans
  68. Joey Molland
  69. Tony Sheridan
  70. John Cleese
  71. Graham Chapman
  72. Exeggutor (Alolan form)
  73. Korosensei
  74. David Tennant
  75. Stephen Fry
  76. Hugh Laurie
  77. Alphonse Elric
  78. Little Richard
  79. Peter Sellers
  80. Noel Gallagher
  81. Cookie Monster
  82. Blair Witch
  83. Apu Nahasapeemapetilon
  84. Tracey Ullman
  85. Terry Jones
  86. Brendan O'Carroll
  87. Michael Palin
  88. George Martin
  89. Yoko Ono
  90. Neil Harrison
  91. David Catlin-Birch
  92. Jack Lee Elgood
  93. Andre Barreau
  94. Murray the K
  95. Ben Minnotte
  96. Sooty
  97. Freddie Mercury
  98. Rick Sanchez
  99. Haruhi Suzumiya
  100. Les Dawson
  101. Mat
  102. Superman
  103. Kai Hiwatari
  104. Richard Hammond
  105. Jeremy Clarkson
  106. James May
  107. Olaf
  108. Frog
  109. Nemo
  110. ET
  111. Buzz Lightyear
  112. Aleksandr Orlov
  113. Brian Griffin
  114. Jann Haworth
  115. Sargent Pepper
  116. Thomas the Tank Engine


An original plan I had was to have other artists to contribute stuff to it and to have portraits of them as the psychedelic Beatles in the centre of it. But this was scrapped when I decided to place the VW Beetle in the centre of it. I did get two artists to make stuff for it. There was a third I wanted to collaborate with, but he was too busy. I did consider using a piece of work he previously made (and posted online) as his contribution. I found a piece that would be a good addition and I asked him (UNLIKE SOME). He declined to have it used and thanked me for asking. 

I did get two unlikely people to make a thing or two for this tribute. One is a student of my drawing classes and another is a friend who only started taking art recently because of my work. Emma drew the Alolan form Exeggutor and Gary drew Alphonse Elric (I asked him to draw him with a cat inside him. He delivered something way better than I imagined.).

It was in the final week before Christmas that the drawing was done and scanned into Photoshop. It was challenge for my old laptop (the same one I have used to post that first post back in 2012 when it was brand new). It took until about 2am on Christmas Eve that the version you saw was complete. I did think about colouring it in, but there was no time for that (and then I thought about the craze for adult colouring books, so I figured that getting you to add the colour would give you a means to explore the piece more closely….)

But for those too lazy to do that, here it is in full techincolor.

Work in progress.
(Posted to show that I am working on it.)


Done