Book Preview: Arabesque: Graphic Design from the Arab World and Persia
Product description from Amazon:
Due to popular demand, Arabesque is now available as an accessible softcover edition. Arabesque investigates the creative potential of the Arab World and Iran. This book features examples of groundbreaking graphic design, illustration and typography that are inspired by the richness of the region’s visual culture.
Given the important role of calligraphy in the Middle East, Arabesque focuses on typography. The book presents a wide range of Arabic fonts and typefaces inspired by traditional calligraphy; these are accompanied by a rich selection of applications. Further examples of design and graffiti serve as powerful demonstrations of how text can be used illustratively. This work is particularly relevant to those now creating street art and poster design.
Arabesque features graphic design, logos and illustration by young designers and activists from Egypt, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which is complemented by selected projects by Western designers, who are strongly influenced by Arab culture. Regardless of the location and ancestry of their creators, all of the examples included in Arabesque combine modern design with the traditional, letter-based canon of Arab forms in striking ways.
The book includes a foreword by Huda Smitshuijzen AbiFarè, the Director of the Khatt Foundation Center for Arabic Typography, and supplementary text describing the environments in which the featured designers and artists work. As with the successful hardcover edition, this book also comes with a CD-ROM with the Arabic inspired Latin typeface Talib created by the book's editors Ben Wittner and Sascha Thoma.
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Comments
Hi Parka, As a regular on
Hi Parka,
As a regular on your website I know I can trust your opinion when it comes to art books. I bought this book about a year ago and fell in love with it, as has everyone I've shown it to. I traveled to the middle east hoping to find more books like it (thinking there would be no better place) but no such luck.
I was hoping you might know of/heard of reputable books with similar content.
I don't know of any right now
In reply to Hi Parka, As a regular on by Anonymous (not verified)
I don't know of any right now but I'll keep an eye for it at the bookshop.
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