Books : Arboretum

In association with Amazon.com
 View Shopping Cart or Checkout 

Author name: David Byrne

 : Arboretum
View Bigger Picture

Regular marked price: $24.00
Discount Price: $16.32
Cost Savings: $7.68 (32%)
Price fluctuation possible.

Used Price: $11.98
Third Party New Price: $15.71


How soon does it ship: Normal ship time within one day



Shipping? Absolutely FREE if you qualify for Super Saver Shipping.
Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 153
EAN num: 9781932416572
ISBN number: 1932416579
Label: McSweeney's
Manufacturer: McSweeney's
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 192
Printing Date: August 25, 2006
Publishing house: McSweeney's
Sale Popularity Level: 125088
Studio: McSweeney's




Other books you might be interested in perusing:

Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
For over twenty-five years, David Byrne has focused his unique genius upon forms as diverse as disco, architectural photography, and PowerPoint. Now he presents what may be his most personal work to date, a collection of drawings and diagrams mapping the strange corners of his mental landscape. It’s an eclectic blend of faux science, automatic writing, satire, and an endeavor to find connections where none were thought to exist — a sort of self-therapy, allowing the hand to say what the voice cannot. Irrational logic, it’s sometimes called. It's the application of logical scientific rigour and form to basically irrational premises. To proceed, carefully and deliberately, from nonsense, with a straight face, often arriving at a new kind of sense. The world keeps opening up, unfolding, and just when we expect it to be closed — to be a sealed, sensible box — it shows us something completely surprising.

Byrne’s enigmatic, enchanting collection teaches us that there is absolutely no reason to discount anything, of any type, anywhere.




Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Creative starting point....
What a great book for sparking ideas. Byrne Makes connections to intangible thoughts in a visual medium. It is also wonderful to catch a glimpse of the creative process of one of the greatest creative thinkers of our time.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Start Making Sense
When TIME magazine put Byrne on its cover back in '86 and called him "Rock's renaissance man", some people shrugged it off and said "yeah, right". Well, that caption has more than withstood the test of time. I can't think of anyone who's been as prolific on so many artistic fronts.

Most recently, he's been quite prolific in his online journal, which itself is a mind boggling display of the incredible range of topics constantly churning through Mr. Byrne's gray haired head.

First and foremost, David Byrne's art (yes, even Talking Heads) is about design. So, as with his previous books, the very first thing you notice about the book is its design. "Strange Ritual" was grey with big gold letters; the idea was to make it feel and look like a Bible.

Then came "Your Action World", which was huge, and had rubber covers. Not sure what the deal was on that (although a great book in the annals of anti corporatism).

After that, he did a mini Bible called "The new Sins", which by and large, turned the teachings of the real Bible upside down (literally, the book itself could be read upside down or right side up, and in Spanish or English, depending on your mood or bilingual proficiency).

Anyway, "Arboretum" has the look and feel of a library book on certain subjects, maybe philosophy or archaeology, or psychology, in short, an academic look and feel about it.

I started reading this book by just selecting pages at random. By approaching it this way, at very first the various drawings have an automatic, stream of consciousness writing feel to them. There's a 4 foot pullout in the back of the book, however, which covers a bunch of topics, corresponding to the various diagrams on numbered pages of the book. If you read the book this way, then the tree diagrams begin to make a lot more sense.

On the latter note, it was Byrne who coined the term "Stop Making Sense". I always took that as "let go of reason, and let the spirit and subconscious take over". As it turns out, Byrne is a very methodical fellow. While he draws heavily from dreams and the subconscious, he prefers to stick to a fairly rigid structure in his concert tours. This aesthetic also emerges in the book, for the most part, and sort of contradicts the whole notion of "Stop Making Sense".

At any rate, Byrne is indeed a true renaissance artist by any definition, and it's always a thrill to see and hear what he's up to next. If you're a long time fan, this is definitely worth buying. If you're nostalgic for a Talking Heads reunion and consider that period his finest hour, you're not likely going to enjoy much of his post TH work or this book.



Find other books like this one:

 


Info On Scalp Psoriasis / Panic Attack Prevention / Black Caesars Clan / Anna Karenina / Adhd /
Alice In Wonderland Figurine Candy Arabic Language Sherlock Holmes Book Animal Lover Gift Disney Jungle Book Character Gift Ideas Autism Picture Kids Birthday Present Business Executive Gift Uk Moriarity Villan In Sherlock Holmes Novels

Home - Nancy Drew - Sherlock Holmes - Jane Austen - Enid Blyton