Multiway books

I was brainstorming with B yesterday about how to present my information in a single volume and this might be a really cool way to play with form. I’m thinking of adding three sections to my book:

  • Mystery Guild intro (the meta part of the reading experience)
  • Paul’s journal
  • Pollux’s story

So what I’m looking at here is a way of playing with the experience of reading by framing the two stories within a larger context (i.e. an unsolvable/intriguing case file). I think in essence, everything is still about tension and duality. I do need some feedback on my grids/type/design and I’m still figuring out how to bring the images and illustrations together.

Mysterium Veritatis

Screen Shot 2015-12-14 at 5.18.13 pm

Screen Shot 2015-12-14 at 5.20.27 pm

Screen Shot 2015-12-14 at 5.18.43 pm

Screen Shot 2015-12-14 at 5.18.53 pm

Just a little book layout/experiment I decided to do. I’m basically almost done with the skeleton of the Paul/Pollux story, so I’m trying to come up with ideas about how to present the world I’ve built without spoiling the story. The plot twist (i.e. Paul = Pollux) can be made rather obvious and chronological, which is not exactly what I want.

At the moment I’m packaging the entire volume as part of something released by an organization called The Mystery Guild (I used this as a frame for my calendar project. I’ve been working on designing a proper logo for TMG to use in the project). The text in this InDesign document is mostly finalized, but the images are all fillers (just ignore them. Even the logos are just fillers I took from the Internet to act as visual placeholders before I finish the final logos and images).

Right now, I am working on

  • typography selection for main book (ignoring process book for now)
  • page layout for main book (paper size, grid, hierarchy)
  • format for main book (i.e. books within books, translucent pages)
  • typographic approach for Pollux’s story
  • how to tell the two stories side by side???
  • mini branding for The Mystery Guild (logo mostly)

Some ideas I have for the main book

  • translucent overlays of bone structures printed on tracing paper (or something similar) to be overlaid on anatomical drawings of creatures within Paul’s diary [if you read the previous post you know that Paul is a broke surgeon who makes cryptids for a living, just explaining this in case]
  • hardcover to be embossed with gold foil and book to be coptic bound so it can flip open easily
  • one colour accent within the book pages – not going full-colour at the moment as it doesn’t seem necessary
  • process diary look and feel will probably be informed by the main book, but the aesthetic for the process diary is going to be comparatively more raw (intended because it’s sort of a sketchbook/work-in-progress companion to the final space + book)

I’m going to work on the FYP Report only after I produce more work and experiment more. I haven’t yet found a good way to synthesize all the research I have such that it’s easily understood because I went all over the place with regard to what I was looking at and I’m not entirely sure how to organize it. After I work on more of the book (and do some test prints to see how the layout is shaping up), I’ll start on my report. By then I should be much clearer on how I want to proceed.

PS: Mysterium Veritatis is Google Translated Latin meaning ‘the secret truth’.

Text-heavy update

As promised, I’m spending December ironing out my content and approach for FYP, and I’ve narrowed my deliverables down to these three things: a book containing a narrative, the gallery space as an installation relating to the book’s narrative and a process book (thanks for the advice, Beverley!).

At the moment I’ve been focusing on the narrative the most because it’s the centerpiece of what I’m doing. I’m doing a kind of homage to Greek mythology, to House Of Leaves and to all the good literature that has influenced me over the years, while bringing in my illustrations/skills in layout design to complement the content. I haven’t figured out the visual style precisely yet but my aesthetic has been heavily influenced by The Sick Rose and Crucial Interventions. It’s very likely that the book will be hardcover, but I’m not clear on dimensions yet. Here’s the narrative, from one of my brainstorming sessions with B:

IMG_1184

This is the story, which I’m working on now. My ideas are best explained over text to B, because I’ve spent most of the FYP period talking to him about my project. This narrative lets me bring in aspects of the Castor and Pollux myth as well as the larger canon of Greek mythology, and gives me an avenue for illustration (I can draw all the hybrids) and grotesque/freakshow ideas that I researched on earlier in the semester.

Here are my initial thoughts for the setup:

Screen Shot 2015-12-02 at 9.18.41 pm

The idea is that while the reader is following the stories of Paul and Pollux, they’re standing in front of a mirror, which (as mentioned in the screenshot) will reinforce the ideas of duality and madness. I may also want to incorporate mirrored text into the book pages itself so that the environment can add directly to the experience of reading the book. I haven’t decided where to place the process book, but the walls of this space are likely to be covered in my own drawings (perhaps simulated pages from Paul’s drawings of medical hybrids, and drawings of Castor and Pollux/page extracts from the book) so that people who don’t get a chance to read the entire story get to glimpse the whole project just from the space alone.

Please let me know what you think if you’ve got time to drop me a comment, see y’all next semester and I’ll be back soon with more updates! For now, I will be writing and sketching to work out what I’m going to do with the book, space and process book.