THIS IS NOT AN ATLAS
by NICK FOSTER and WARREN HUTCHINSON
This Is Not an Atlas focuses on the strange preoccupation we all seem to
have with “worlds”—Bargain World, Camera World, Movie World, even
Walt Disney World. What’s the fascination with business owners naming
their shop Something World? Are there any criteria that must be met for a
business to deserve this distinction? The book doesn’t actually answer this
question, but it does provide a visual case that this phenomenon exists.

As explained in the introduction, which also serves as the
book’s cover, the idea came to Foster and Hutchinson on a bus
ride through suburban London. They noticed three very different
stores with world in the titles: “Although the three shops sold
entirely different products, they had all been named in a similar
way. The business names were incredibly uninventive ... Bed
World, Cartridge World, and Exhaust World.” From this observation
sprung a project that lasted seven years and traveled through
14 countries. “At times it bordered on the obsessive,” the authors
explain, “not only for us, but also for our friends and families.
Once you become aware of this uninspired naming convention,
you just can’t help but notice them, from the West End of London
to a tiny fishing village in Malaysia, ‘worlds’ are everywhere.”
As noted previously, Foster and Hutchinson invited friends and
family to join in on the fun, and the “game” had several rules for
the players: The business must be called “Something World” and not
any other variation; the players could not use a phonebook or directory
to find a “World” (“If you look a ‘World’ up and go and get it,
it takes the fun away,” note the authors); if you don’t have a camera
when you first chance upon a “World,” you can’t return to photograph
it; and lastly, the photos had to be in landscape format, with
no family or friends as the subjects—random passersby, however,
were OK.
The result of this project is a collection that remarks on the
random and obnoxious naming system many business owners
adhere to. Claiming your store is a “world” is a pretty lofty ambition,
even if you are the world’s most widely known cartoonist.
And if you catch the bug and shops with this name start popping
up in your daily life, the authors have included a blank page at the
back of the collection so that you may start your own.
$19.95, hardcover (casebound), 160 pages, Mark Batty Publisher
ANCIENT MARKS
by CHRIS RAINIER
You’ve seen many tattoos and tribal markings
in
National Geographic, even on the street,
and have probably wondered what they
mean or how they came about. Now there’s
help in deciphering this strange language in
Ancient Marks, by the widely known documentary
photographer Chris Rainier. “Here
was a compelling art form that was as riveting
in its beauty as it was disturbing in the pain
and suffering endured by those whose bodies
it altered,” Rainier writes of his experiences
photographing people around the world,
which led to this book. “Beyond the marks
were their meanings, the motives for undergoing
significant pain to transform skin into striking canvases of
color, form, and content. Cultural identity, societal order, ancestral
heritage, spiritual connection—the more I saw, the more the
meanings of the forms spoke to me.”
Ancient Marks contains brilliant black-andwhite
plates of all types of body adornments
from henna tattoos to scarification, with landscapes
as the only commentary on this art
form—only in his epilogue and list of plates at
the end of the book does Rainier offer up his
knowledge of the varied markings, giving the
reader a chance to speculate. “Millennia after
the dawn of man’s awakening,” Rainier concludes,
“we continue to etch the geography of
our bodies as we have always marked the landscape
of the earth. In creating these sacred
forms, we forge a critical element of human
existence—our identity. … Man has marked
the land with sacred gestures since the beginning. So, too, has he
marked his body—to charge his skin with powers and spiritual
meaning that it grounds him to the earth, his primordial origin.”
$85, hardcover, 204 pages, Media 27, Inc.
ART OF MODERN ROCK: THE POSTER EXPLOSION
by PAUL GRUSHKIN and DENNIS KING
“Q: Why the poster explosion? A: Two things. One,
the internet. It enables an international community
to form. Two, the destructive force of the CD. CDs
destroyed album cover art. Half the fun of going to
the record store was looking at the cover art. No
more,” noted poster artist Uncle Charlie says in
the beginning of Art of Modern Rock. So true, and
thankfully we still have artists out there willing to
fill this void with their inventive, if not completely
crazy, poster art.
From far out to funked up, this hefty book includes examples of
the world’s .nest rock concert posters of the past 15 years. A sequel
to Paul Grushkin’s Art of Rock: Posters from Presley to Punk, which
is considered by many to be the bible of pre-1985 rock poster art,
Art of Modern Rock focuses on the fusion of conventional printing
methods with new digital technology advancements. And because
of the death of the album in the mid-1980s and the consequential
demise of LP cover art, rock poster art has not only .ourished, it’s
expanded exponentially to become the premier source of visual
expression in the world of rock.
“The maker of the modern-day rock poster knows the power of
suggestion,” notes Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips in the book’s
foreword. “What does the rock poster suggest? What does it want
us to believe? The rock poster tells us there is a thing happening
at a certain place in time. It gives this event meaning even before
the event has happened. This is the power of the poster. Both
before the event and beyond the experience it will turn out to be,
the poster says, ‘The event will be like this, it will feel like this, it
really will have this atmosphere, this philosophy, this identity, and
a certain type of person will be there.’ And then the event happens
and is over. Yet the poster, still living on, still having its purpose, is
interpreted to say, ‘The event was like this, it felt like this.’” Coyne
discusses later the important role posters played in the advent of
his own rock band: “Maybe it was the different dimensions of the
lettering or maybe it was the colors they used or maybe it was some
strange unintentional miracle in the design of these .yers, but I
believed in them and wanted to leap into them and infuse myself
with them. In some respects the birth of what would end up being
the Flaming Lips was conceived in those moments. Not by the
posters alone, but seeing firsthand how one could create oneself.”

Authors Grushkin and King, both rock historians and experts
on rock art, have divided the book into chapters based loosely
on production and/or artistic techniques: The Silkscreen Movement,
The Screen-Printed Rock Poster, Taking It to the Streets
(the birth of the telephone-pole rock-band flyers, the punk genre’s
answer to the overly smooth disco and stadium rock tour), Old
School (tried-and-true, American, handcrafted workmanship),
The Devil Made Me Do It (posters featuring devilish characters),
Temporary Insanity (artist as madman), Power Tools (masters of
the digital age), Industrial Strength (posters as commemorative
items for large venues that don’t need advertising to sell tickets),
Explosionist Theory (using minimalist graphic design to communicate),
No Boundaries (rock poster art worldwide), and New
Realities (pushing the boundaries of rock poster art). With more
than 1,800 reproductions, this book is a must-have for anyone
interested in the world of rock, illustration, or graphic design.
Explains Grushkin on the poster’s prominence in society:
“Not even the ubiquitous medium of MTV, which has at best
been only mildly curious about any new music until it is .rmly
embraced by the mainstream, could exert enough in.uence to
diminish the popularity of the rock poster. That’s why, in the
poster medium, rock bands and musicians aren’t represented
by one standard media-made portrait that’s seen over and over.
Instead, the identity promoted by the rock poster is made up of
thousands of singular impressions. This seems to me the essence
of rock and roll. The music remains transcendent because each
fan has his or her personal interpretation.”
$60, hardcover, 492 pages, Chronicle Books