Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Arts and Humanities Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Art and Design

Rhode Island School of Design

Journals

2014

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Manual / Issue 3 / Circus, Amy Pickworth, Editor, Sarah Ganz Blythe, Editor, S. Hollis Mickey, Editor, Gina Borromeo, Alison W. Chang, Michelle Clayton, Jim Drain, Daniel Heyman, Andrew Martinez, Ellen Mcbreen, Thangam Ravindranathan, Rebecca Schneider, Susan Smulyan, Gwen Strahle Oct 2014

Manual / Issue 3 / Circus, Amy Pickworth, Editor, Sarah Ganz Blythe, Editor, S. Hollis Mickey, Editor, Gina Borromeo, Alison W. Chang, Michelle Clayton, Jim Drain, Daniel Heyman, Andrew Martinez, Ellen Mcbreen, Thangam Ravindranathan, Rebecca Schneider, Susan Smulyan, Gwen Strahle

Journals

Manual, a journal about art and its making. Circus. The third issue centers on the theme of "Circus." Includes analyses of various pieces in the museum's archive, a fold-out poster by Jim Drain, and a selection of artworks owned by the museum that loosely address said theme.

Softcover, 62 pages. Published 2014 by the RISD Museum. Manual 3 (Circus) contributors include Gina Borromeo, Alison W. Chang, Michelle Clayton, Jim Drain, Daniel Heyman, Andrew Martinez, Ellen McBreen, Thangam Ravindranathan, Rebecca Schneider, Susan Smulyan, and Gwen Strahle.


Manual / Issue 2 / Lorem Ipsum, Amy Pickworth, Editor, S. Hollis Mickey, Editor, Sarah Ganz Blythe, Editor, James Allen, Alison W. Chang, Kenneth Goldsmith, Daniel Harkett, Cyrus Highsmith, Jan Howard, Kate Irvin, Antoine Revoy, Nancy Skolos Apr 2014

Manual / Issue 2 / Lorem Ipsum, Amy Pickworth, Editor, S. Hollis Mickey, Editor, Sarah Ganz Blythe, Editor, James Allen, Alison W. Chang, Kenneth Goldsmith, Daniel Harkett, Cyrus Highsmith, Jan Howard, Kate Irvin, Antoine Revoy, Nancy Skolos

Journals

Manual, a journal about art and its making. Lorem Ipsum.The second issue. In potently meaningful and deliberately meaningless ways, this issue, “Lorem ipsum,” celebrates text. The standard placeholder text used by designers and printers, lorem ipsum isn’t really Latin. Mangled over centuries of use, the passage has become meaningless and untranslatable—and yet it is highly useful in that in its incomprehensibility, it occupies space. Over the centuries and across many inventions and innovations in type and printing, lorem ipsum has acted as a space filler and form shaper in conventional printing, desktop publishing, and electronic typesetting. Join us as …