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Rian Hughes

    Rian Hughes est un designer et artiste dont l'œuvre fait le pont entre les domaines de l'art visuel et du récit. Sa production couvre l'illustration, l'art de la bande dessinée et la création typographique, le tout unifié par un style visuel distinctif et iconoclaste. À travers son studio, Device, il a laissé sa marque esthétique unique sur une gamme variée de projets, de la réimagination de personnages bien-aimés à la création de designs innovants. La carrière aux multiples facettes de Hughes souligne sa polyvalence et sa capacité à insuffler aux projets une vision artistique singulière.

    The Black Locomotive
    XX
    Third World War
    Device
    Lifestyle Illustration of the 60s
    Rayguns and Rocketships
    • Rayguns and Rocketships

      • 384pages
      • 14 heures de lecture
      4,4(26)Évaluer

      Rayguns and rockets! Spacesuited heroes caught in the tentacles of evil insectoid aliens! Who could resist such wonders?Science-fiction paperbacks exploded over the 1940s and ’50s literary landscape with the force of an alien gamma bomb. Titles such as Rodent Mutation, The Human Bat vs The Robot Gangster, Dawn of the Mutants and Mushroom Men from Mars appeared from fly-by-night publishers making the most of the end of post-war paper rationing.They were brash and seductive – for around a shilling the future was yours. The stories were often conceived around a pre-commissioned cover and a title suggested by the publisher, and the writers were paid by the word, and sometimes not paid at all. Titles were knocked out at a key-pounding pace, sometimes over a weekend, by authors now lost to literary history (plus a few professionals who could spot an opportunity) who were forced to write under pseudonyms like Ray Cosmic, Steve Future, Vector Magroon or Vargo Statten.Despite the tight deadlines and poor pay, the books’ cover artists still managed to produce works of multi-hued, brain-bending brilliance, and collected here is an overview of their output during an unparalleled period of brash optimism and experimentation in publishing.

      Rayguns and Rocketships
    • Lifestyle Illustration of the 60s

      • 576pages
      • 21 heures de lecture
      4,4(53)Évaluer

      The 1960s was an optimistic era of unprecedented change, and its heady zeitgeist was captured in the amazing range of artwork that adorned the magazines of the time. Lifestyle Illustration of the 60s is a colossal survey of magazine artwork from the Swinging Sixties. It not only provides revelatory insight into the extraordinary artistic talents of the illustrators featured--such as Austin Briggs, Lynn Buckham, Antonio Lopez and Coby Whitmore--but also tellingly elucidates the social aspirations of this era of political optimism and sexual freedom. Featuring over 1,000 gloriously inventive and stylistically diverse illustrations, Lifestyle Illustration of the 60s traces the decade's dizzyingly swift evolution from the homemaking ethos of romantic coupledom to the stylish liberation of mini-skirted Chelsea girls and the psychedelic palette that evolved towards the decade's close, conjuring a fabulous and euphoric pageant of 1960s pop culture from rediscovered artworks by the very best i

      Lifestyle Illustration of the 60s
    • Device

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,1(10)Évaluer

      Rian Hughes, aka Device, is a gifted and often-copied illustrator, with his trademark catalogue style of classic 50s and 60s Martini ads and a trained eye for vital details he creates consistent, self-contained settings. Personally responsible for every single detail_from Panton-inspired furniture to the smallest ashtray_Device also shows Hughes as a master of font design with a hand-picked selection on the enclosed CD.

      Device
    • XX

      • 992pages
      • 35 heures de lecture
      3,9(789)Évaluer

      A unique and extraordinary novel of alien first contact, and how humanity copes in the aftermath. číst celé

      XX
    • A brilliantly imaginative novel of literary SF from the acclaimed author of XX, Rian Hughes. The Black Locomotive weaves steam trains, the history and architecture of London, and a mysterious alien artefact below the city into a work of stunning inventiveness and originality.London is built from concrete, steel and the creative urge. Old technology gives way to the new. Progress is inevitable - but is it more fragile than its inhabitants realize?A strange anomaly is uncovered in the new top-secret Crossrail extension being built under Buckingham Palace. It is an archaeological puzzle, one that may transform our understanding of history - and the origins of London itself.And if our modern world falls, we may have to turn to the technology of the past in order to save our future.

      The Black Locomotive