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Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Degas Exhibition: Picturing Movement - Royal Academy of Arts, London

On Friday i went with a group to see the 'Degas and the Ballet: Picturing Movement' Exhibition currently on at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. Not previously knowing much about the work of Degas apart from his association with the Impressionist movement, i was introduced to a world of study on the subjects of movement and dance; a subject that Edgar Degas was fascinated with to the point of it being a continual preoccupation to try and capture within his work a sense of the dynamic; the moving image.

It is to this purpose that the exhibition focuses not only on Degas, but features work by the pioneering photographer Eadweard Muybridge, and work by Etienne-Jules Marey, including sculptures of a bird's successive movements in flight, and many photographs, and examples of photography equipment or ways of capturing an object in 3D by taking a series of studies at different angles, by photograph or drawing studies; something that Degas used as preparation for his sculpture, 'The Little Dancer'.

Not only photographs by others; this exhibition also presents Degas the photographer, showing just how enthusiastic and exciting he must have found this and other new mediums such as film. The exhibition shows amateur photographs taken by Degas of himself and his friends, in places such as his own house. A fascinating portrayal of a pioneering point in time, with the emergence of all these new technologies, and the clear inspiration they had.


Monday, 17 October 2011

The Importance of the Cover

Today was somewhat of a treat for those of us on the Publishing MA at Kingston with talks from both Penguin Books and Vintage Books. Nick Robinson, the UK Sales manager for Vintage Publishing, presented a lot of facts and figures on the traditional book trade, and why it continues to matter.  But what i was struck by, particularly as Nick talked us through the building of the author as a brand, was just how integral the jacket cover art is in the success of a book; during the ongoing campaign to win readers to one particular author, for example, the jacket cover was redesigned again and again in a bid to appeal to consumers, attempting to copy other successful similar books in appearance or adding great strap lines.

I have just begun reading, 'One Day' by David Nicholls, that hugely successful book that i'm slightly behind the times with, only just getting to it now; but here we have an example; i wonder how crucial the cover was to the massive success this book has had? It is clearly a superb example of just how iconic and eye-catching a cover can be; it positively screams to be picked up; how can one resist?

The thing i really began to think about on the face of this, though, was how invisible the book is by comparison as an e-book. There is very little opportunity to see a cover and be seduced by it when browsing the Amazon Kindle store, for example; on my Kindle i have also just started reading 'The Hunger Games' by Susanne Collins; and for the life of me i have no idea what the cover looks like; the only reason i downloaded it was through a friend's recommendation. Otherwise maybe i would have noticed it first as a physical copy in a store.

Will this change with more media-based tablets such as the Kindle Fire? Obviously different digital readers are making the books on said digital readers visible with varying degrees of success; on the Apple 'iBooks' app the covers are beautifully arranged on the 'digital shelves' and are much more visible. As e-books become a more normal way of buying content, there is going to be a need to market the books through this format better in itself, rather than people noticing books in bookstores and then going home and buying them on a tablet device later.

Thursday, 13 October 2011

Reflection on ‘What Use Is A Publisher?’ Nicholas Jones, Strathmore Publishing.

This is the question posed to us by Nicholas Jones in Kingston University's second Masterclass of the year, who came to talk to us on Monday from Strathmore Publishing, a company he founded with a view to offering services to publishing companies who have cut back and outsource their editorial and production. So, not the traditional business model for a publishing company; Mr Jones saw an opportunity to offer some of key services of a publisher and had the entrepreneurial spirit to go ahead with it.

This neatly encapsulates two of the key ideas running through Mr Jones’ lecture; firstly, that a Publisher needs to take risks and be entrepreneurial, or even, that they need to be innovators. Secondly, with the rate of change occurring in the industry, that publishers need not to get too hung up on the traditional model of publishing and look to a trans-media approach; one where all different forms of media come together and collaborate, and content is perhaps much more interactive with the user. Mr Jones’ company quickly expanded into audio publishing, for example, and is now a leader of the audio publishing world, utilising the media of radio to publish stories. Emphasized throughout the lecture was the point that perhaps a publishers role in the future will not be so easily defined as the publishing we know today,  instead meshing medias forms and creating products less easily defined as ‘books’.

Because Nicholas Jones liked to describe himself as a ‘media-agnostic’, meaning that as a consumer, he doesn’t mind what form the content comes to him, be it a printed book, e-book or app; he cares more about the content itself. I think that this is somewhat true of most of the users out there these days who have begun to use and get used to digital forms of media but who still also use the printed book; and I for one have no plans to give up buying and reading the printed thing just because I sometimes consume my content digitally. Different formats are good at different things.

The theme of the lecture though was undoubtedly the questioning of what is it that the publisher brings; what are the specific skills & abilities that make the publisher invaluable? In an age with internet and the ‘unconstrained world’ as Mr Jones put it, there is no longer such a need to get work out there; the problem more is findability. How do you, in the crush of online information, make your product visible over all the rest? Mr Jones drew attention to the fact that in the last 5 years, half of Britain’s bookshops have closed; people are using bookshops more as a showroom to go home and buy their finds on the internet, than actually buying from them. Thought needs to be put into what buyers still get from buying a printed book in a bookshop – the personal, specialist selling, the special, gift-like quality of books.

The Masterclass ended with an idea that publishing is about communication, while the means of getting that information doesn’t matter. Awash with examples of apps attempting to blend books with animation and interactive features, the lecture clearly demonstrated the possibilities for new formats and approaches but also highlighted the fact that this is all still largely experimentation, and lots more work is needed to figure out how to use these new forms to their best advantage. According to Nicholas Jones, publishing is about packaging the information, and the risk-taking talked of above, where the publisher must be bold to go out and explore new ways of doing things. 

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

An Introduction.

So this is my first post on a brand new blog. Ahem. Got to fill the screen with something, i hate the blankness. 
This will be a place for all my publishing and art/design related thoughts and reflections as i begin my journey into the publishing industry; i am currently studying for an MA in Publishing at Kingston University. Follow me on twitter here - http://twitter.com/#!/kellylc or view my travel blog here - http://actacanada.blogspot.com/