Sunday 24 June 2012

Animated Caption Cards


Introduction to the sequence :- Caption cards in the style of Toulouse Lautrec from Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam “ Printmaking in Paris “
The rage for prints at the fin de siele.
Author - Fluer Roos Rosa de Carvalho and Marije Vellekoop.
2012 Van Gogh Museum Publications. ISBN 978 90 79310 296.



I have seen the original prints in the museum, and was very impressed with the work from the period. It is very “loose”, very free and instinctive looking.
Very few colours have been used, limited to three or four with a very sophisticated modern result. This would be in contrast to work at the time. This may be due to the fact Toulouse Lautrec was twenty one at the time and ambitious at producing A0 posters needing three lithography stones to make one large poster. This poster was produced in a print run of three thousand.



Page 149 Prints Aplenty – Highlights
Plate 144
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Moulin Rouge: La Goulue
Poster for the cabaret Le Moulin Rouge, 1891
Colour lithograph, 173 x 123.5 cm

At the start I thought that Toulouse Lautrec lettering was going to be the solution but after researching posters of this period of French graphic design I found that Toulouse Lautrec posters had lettering that was not as expressive as I expected.

Researching posters in the book  from the Van Gogh Museum I discovered that the work of Pierre Bonnard were more expressive and sophisticated than Toulouse Lautrec. Two particular pieces of Bonnards were more influential for me



Page 164
Plate 161
Pierre Bonnard
Artist’s Book Petit solfege illustre
By Claude Terasse, 1893
32 photomechanically reproduced colour lithographs, published by Libraries-imprimeries reunites, Ancienne maison Quantin, 21.2 x 28.6cm.



Page 41
Plate 31
Pierre Bonnard
Poster for La revue blanche 1894
Colour Lithograph
80.4 x 61.8/77.7 x 58.7 cm


The next challenge was to design the lettering “1896 Olympics” in a way that would clearly position the visual language of the letter forms to the viewer by communicating graphic design lettering of this Olympic period.
The second challenge, as this lettering was going to be animated it had to work on its own was to make the lettering work without illustrative supporting images as I quickly realised that Toulouse Lautrec posters were a marriage of image and text.
The typography is very free and appropriate to the period I am looking at.

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