MTU Cork Library Catalogue

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Infographic designers' sketchbooks / Steven Heller and Rick Landers.

By: Heller, Steven [author].
Contributor(s): Landers, Rick [author].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York : Princeton Architectural Press, [2014]Copyright date: ©2014Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 31 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781616892869 (hardback).Subject(s): Visual communication | Communication -- Graphic methods | Information visualizationDDC classification: 302.23 Other classification: DES007000 | DES007030 | DES012000
Contents:
Introduction: Raw data, fresh cooked -- Accurat -- Clint Beharry -- Christopher Cannon -- Jennifer Daniel -- Stefan Fichtel -- Agnieszka Gasparska -- Jan Hartwig -- Karlssonwilker, Inc -- La Tigre -- Aleksander Macasev -- Onformative -- Papercut -- Raureif -- Nik Schulz -- Scott Thomas -- Samuel Velasco -- Mahir Yavuz.
Summary: "We have entered the period of Big Data, where huge amounts of information can be gathered and processed with ever greater speeds, where algorithms have become so refined that they can predict behavior and tell us what we want. Increasingly, graphic designers and illustrators try to understand what all the information we have collected really means and how we can make sense of it to improve our personal and professional lives. This is not new: humans have been trying to map their worlds since they could draw. More recently, in our Information Age, many publications have collected examples of information graphics. Infographic Designers' Sketchbooks, however, is the first publication to get behind the finished image, to reveal how a stack of numbers could be transformed into a beautiful image rich with meaning and explanation. From the political charts of the New York Times to gadget instruction manuals, from creating a narrative out of complex process or spaces to mapping physical fitness, visualizing data is one of the preoccupations of our day. This timely publication, which will appeal to graphic and interaction designers as well as information visualizers across all media and subjects, offers a deeper understanding of how a diverse range of designers attempt to explain our world"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 302.23 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available DESI6029 - Core Reading 00213803
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

We are living in a golden age of data visualization, in which designers are responding to the information overload of our digital era with astonishing feats of visual thinking. Using a wide variety of techniques, they transform complex ideas into clear, engaging, and memorable infographics. In recent years, books and websites have been collecting the field's best. While stimulating, these finished projects offer little insight into how visual solutions were reached, making them of limited use to designers wanting to produce work of their own. InInfographic Designers' Sketchbooks, more than fifty of the world's leading graphic designers and illustrators open up their private sketchbooks to offer a rare glimpse of their creative processes. Emphasizing idea-generating methods--from doodles and drawings to three-dimensional and digital mock-ups--this revelatory collection is the first to go inside designers' studios to reveal the art and craft behind infographic design.

Includes index.

Introduction: Raw data, fresh cooked -- Accurat -- Clint Beharry -- Christopher Cannon -- Jennifer Daniel -- Stefan Fichtel -- Agnieszka Gasparska -- Jan Hartwig -- Karlssonwilker, Inc -- La Tigre -- Aleksander Macasev -- Onformative -- Papercut -- Raureif -- Nik Schulz -- Scott Thomas -- Samuel Velasco -- Mahir Yavuz.

"We have entered the period of Big Data, where huge amounts of information can be gathered and processed with ever greater speeds, where algorithms have become so refined that they can predict behavior and tell us what we want. Increasingly, graphic designers and illustrators try to understand what all the information we have collected really means and how we can make sense of it to improve our personal and professional lives. This is not new: humans have been trying to map their worlds since they could draw. More recently, in our Information Age, many publications have collected examples of information graphics. Infographic Designers' Sketchbooks, however, is the first publication to get behind the finished image, to reveal how a stack of numbers could be transformed into a beautiful image rich with meaning and explanation. From the political charts of the New York Times to gadget instruction manuals, from creating a narrative out of complex process or spaces to mapping physical fitness, visualizing data is one of the preoccupations of our day. This timely publication, which will appeal to graphic and interaction designers as well as information visualizers across all media and subjects, offers a deeper understanding of how a diverse range of designers attempt to explain our world"-- Provided by publisher.

CIT Module DESI6029 - Core reading.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

CHOICE Review

This title beautifully showcases the work of many artists working on real world projects. The book's focus on the process, from idea through sketch up to final product, sets it above other similar titles. One way that Heller (School of Visual Arts, New York) and Landers (graphic designer) accomplish this is through a pleasing balance of information about many different designers and the substantial content related to the process. For students, the focus on process is incredibly valuable because it helps them grasp the importance of the underlying work that culminates in a finished piece. However, what this title lacks is depth of information about that process. Though readers are exposed to many excellent examples of artists and their work, the quantity of information on techniques and artists' approaches to doing their work is limited. Other books more geared to instructional content include Jason Lankow, Josh Ritchie, and Ross Crooks's Infographics: The Power of Visual Storytelling and Isabel Meirelles's Design for Information (CH, May'14, 51-4823). Both types of books are crucial to any serious collection simply because inspiration is as important as instruction. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates, professionals/practitioners, and general readers. --John C. Burns, Dixie State University

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Steven Heller is senior Art Director for the New York Times & author of over seventy books on art, culture, & design.

He lives in New York City.

(Bowker Author Biography)

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