Marque-page (Bookmark), Jennifer Caubet, 2023, exclusive edition

Laser-cut stainless steel, polyester wire and lead, 5 x 19 x 0,1 cm
edition of 20
Marque-page (Bookmark), Jennifer Caubet, 2023, exclusive edition
Laser-cut stainless steel, polyester wire and lead, 5 x 19 x 0,1 cm
edition of 20
NASA, Danne & Blackburn’s Graphics Standards Manual reprint
ISBN: 979-10-95991-00-7
English/French
164 pages
310 × 232 mm
Black + 1 spot color
5 spot colors swatch
Design: Syndicat
2016
20 €
ISBN: 979-10-95991-00-7
English/French
164 pages
310 × 232 mm
Black + 1 spot color
5 spot colors swatch
Design: Syndicat
2016
20 €
Beyond a simple fascination for NASA, the manual is of interest for several reasons:
— It is an exhaustive presentation of visual identity – from letterheads to the markings on the space shuttle Discovery
— and thus allows the reader to apprehend the different formal, political and technical scales of the use of signs.
— The clarity of its texts which guided the personnel responsible for producing new documents contrasts sharply with the mainstream vocabulary in the communications field today.
— As an object, it is worthy of the interest it has created. It demonstrates the ambition and care taken in its presentation. Its format facilitates manipulation to ensure the organization, comprehension and implementation of the instructions and propositions it contains.
Intuitions, Naço, Marcelo Joulia
Éditions Empire and Ruptures & Imbernon
ISBN : 978-29-19230-33-4
French version (cover Red, Blue and Green)
English Version (cover Yellow)
560 pages
32 × 22 cm
CMYK + 1 PMS
Hardcover
Design: Syndicat
80 €
2022
Éditions Empire and Ruptures & Imbernon
ISBN : 978-29-19230-33-4
French version (cover Red, Blue and Green)
English Version (cover Yellow)
560 pages
32 × 22 cm
CMYK + 1 PMS
Hardcover
Design: Syndicat
80 €
2022
Creating, traveling, drawing, and building: such is the DNA of the exuberant architect and designer Marcelo Joulia. Driven from his home country of Argentina by the 1976 military coup, this personal trauma gave him the strength to be a great builder. For thirty years, his agency Naço —‘intuition’ in the Guarani language—has been the laboratory of a global and inventive architecture, aiming to decompartmentalise genres and trades, and mixing knowledge, arts, and professional backgrounds together. Belonging to no specific school, and fiercely attached to his independence and freedom, he has imagined a unique creative space in which expertise and rigour both flourish within the domains of luxury, urban mobility, and major architecture. As an insatiable adventurer, he is able to take an interest in anything —large-scale buildings, design, furniture, bicycles, boats— while not denying himself anything. His passion revolves around teamwork and bringing talents together to conceive of new worlds. As an epicurean, a generous person passionate about art and gastronomy, Marcelo Joulia creates places in his image: unique, welcoming, and always dynamic.
This book showcases the vision of a man and an agency that has surrounded itself with the best and strived to bring to life a demanding and iconoclastic architecture, and carry it forth into the future.
Paris la consciencieuse : Paris la guideuse du monde, by Frédéric Bruly Bouabré
éditions Empire & Faro
ISBN : 979-10-95991-23-6
French
352 pages
210 × 310 mm
Copybook cover
Design: Syndicat
35 €
November 2020
éditions Empire & Faro
ISBN : 979-10-95991-23-6
French
352 pages
210 × 310 mm
Copybook cover
Design: Syndicat
35 €
November 2020
Frédéric Bruly Bouabré (1923-2014) is an Ivorian artist, poet, “re-searcher”, creator and inventor of the Bété syllabary. In 1989, he was thrust to the front of the international artistic scene during the Magiciens de la terre exhibition (May 18 – August 14, 1989, Centre Georges Pompidou, Grande Halle de La Villette, Paris). Introduced alongside a hundred other artists from all over the world, he would subsequently become world famous for his drawings on maps enhanced with colored pencil.
But in May of that year, Bruly Bouabré still cherished quite a different dream: that of becoming a writer. As he was getting ready to fly to Paris, leaving African soil for the first time, the poet was commissioned by his friends Odile and Georges Courrèges (then director of the French Cultural Center of Abidjan) to write the story of his trip. This is how, a few weeks after his return, Frédéric Bruly Bouabré would submit his “report” of 325 handwritten pages produced in “33 days”, in which he gleefully recounts his journey – at times punctuated by insignificant events – while questioning the place of Man in Western society.
Until now, this tale of “a blind man in Paris,” as he first was to call it, had remained unpublished. The text – of pleasing findings and enchanting language – is that of an observer seeking to understand a changing world, with his own culture as a starting point. Imbued with such freedom and desire for identification and documentation, which characterize the work of this encyclopedic creator, the book is a very unique testimony to a milestone in the history of contemporary art.
Initiated by Odile and Georges Courrèges, who provided publishers with a copy of the manuscript entrusted to them by the artist, the project for this publication was also made possible thanks to André Magnin, who provided the original manuscript.
Foreword by Jean-Hubert Martin