Arboretum
McSweeney’s Publishing, San Francisco, California, 2006
Description
For a few years, Danielle and I wondered if there was a book in the accumulation of tree-shaped drawing/diagrams I had been doing. We thought about whether it should look like an art book or a field guide to trees. At Dave’s urging, we decided that my sketchbooks had a special quality: one can sense thought processes evolving and being built upon in the rough, quick drawings. We tried to retain the feel and look of a sketchbook; we left the erasures and smudges, the paper is like drawing paper, and the cover is made of grocery-bag paper, with hand-drawn dingbats to further set the mood.
I tried writing “explanations” opposite each drawing, but the reading took away from the looking. Images may affect us directly, but I think since we can’t verbalize that, we often rely on text to tell us what things are about. But text can only tell you what can be put into words. McSweeney’s wisely suggested a big fold-out. Now the appendix isn’t lost but one can still see the texts and the drawings together by employing some simple origami skills. So, even though it’s not fancy we ended up with a lovely object.
Juror Notes
“Quiet, simple typography that complements the gentleness of the drawings.”
Credits
- Design firm
- McSweeney’s Publishing
- Creative directors
- David Byrne, Dave Eggers, Eli Horowitz, Danielle Spencer
- Designer
- Danielle Spencer
- Jacket designers
- David Byrne, Danielle Spencer
- Illustrator
- David Byrne
- Production director
- Danielle Spencer
- Author
- David Byrne
- Editors
- Dave Eggers, Eli Horowitz
- Trim size
- 7 x 9 inches
- Pages
- 192
- Printer
- Tien Wah Press
- Paper
- Berga cream
- Publisher/client
- McSweeney’s