Tuesday 26 April 2011

Defending Interesting and Unusual Covers: An Interview with Allison Saltzman

I recently showed a set of gorgeous cover designs by US designer , who is the art director at Ecco, one of HarperCollins's imprints. Allison was kind enough to agree to an interview on her work and influences. As always, click on the cover images to see the higher-resolution versions.


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CAUSTIC COVER CRITIC: What’s your background as a designer? How did you get into book design?

ALLISON SALTZMAN: I have no formal training in graphic design or book design. I was a very creative little kid, but when I took a studio art class in high school, I was told—to my great embarrassment—that my skills were more graphic than artistic. I went on to study architectural design in college, and came to a similar conclusion: I was better at creating presentation materials for my buildings than I was at designing the buildings themselves. (Every project culminated in a “jury” at which you presented drawings and models of your buildings. You explained your work and were then eviscerated—in front of all your classmates—by a panel of architects and architecture professors. Good practice for the book cover approval process.)

I finished the architecture program, but in the meantime I also begged an internship at a local graphic design firm. And I did indeed love it. I cobbled together a tiny portfolio of miscellany and set my sights on book cover design. I’ve always been a big reader, so it seemed an ideal focus for me.

Unsurprisingly, I was not overwhelmed with job offers. The only publisher willing to take a chance on unproven me and my unconventional background was Princeton Architectural Press. I was thrilled with the job and I got to design everything there—covers, cases, interiors, catalogs, ads—but after three years of it, I guess I just wanted to stop thinking about architecture. So I tried again with trade publishers, this time with a portfolio of actual book covers, and I was finally able to get my foot in the door. I’ve since worked at Random House, Penguin, and HarperCollins, where I’m now the art director at Ecco.

CAUSTIC COVER CRITIC: Working now at Ecco, and before at Random, Penguin and Princeton, have there been very different approaches to cover design by the different companies? Or is it more down to the individual art directors?

ALLISON SALTZMAN: Princeton Architectural Press—small and independently owned (at the time)—was very different from the larger trade publishers, as you might expect. We were selling mainly to the design world, so although the publisher did want cool covers, his focus extended to the entire book being a beautiful and well-made object. The cover design process was very straightforward: cover images came from the books’ interiors; for monographs I matched the aesthetic of the architect’s work; for architectural histories I took my cues from the aesthetic of the era; and it was only the architectural theory books that left more room for interpretation. After I left PA Press, they hired real, trained designers and their book covers are much more sophisticated now. Anyway, I don’t have many of these early covers digitally available, but here are a few I was able to find and am willing to share. I think Local Code was my first or second book cover ever. 




Everywhere else I’ve worked, the books’ content still informs the cover design, but the overall aesthetic is subject to the publisher’s (and their art director’s) taste. I think the trick to happiness, in this business, is to find yourself a publisher or an art director whose taste you’re comfortable with. And you also need them to trust your instincts as a designer. I am so content at Ecco because the publisher and editors tell me about their books and the audience they’re aimed at, but then they just want me to read them and come up with cover ideas myself. Another good thing about Ecco is that the publisher wants and defends interesting and unusual covers; that’s rare.

There are of course exceptions and it’s not always simple and easy. Some authors and agents get more involved than others (everyone now seems to have a “friend” who’s a “designer”), and we do show many of our covers to key salespeople (in-house and at stores). All these people weighing in inevitably complicates the design process. For example, my cover for Chandler Burr’s novel You or Someone Like You has two Alex Katz portraits on it. 



The publisher, editor, author, and agent all thought the portraits perfectly represented the novel’s characters (in looks and also because the characters were contemporary art collectors), and the author liked the cover so much he wrote Katz’s paintings into the narrative. But at a sales presentation, the cover was met with silence and then one comment: “Covers with comic-book art never sell.”

CAUSTIC COVER CRITIC: A lot of your covers seem to use original commissioned artwork, rather than stock. What determines which approach you take with a cover?

ALLISON SALTZMAN: The decision to commission art, photography, illustration, or typography really depends on each book. A hand-crafted cover does help set a book apart from the crowd. I recently hired Gina Triplett to create an entire illustrated jacket—art and typography—for a book called Weeds, by Richard  Mabey, and the result is that our book looks like nothing else out there.



I wish I could commission more original artwork, but that’s just not practical—we don’t always have the time or the consensus. You need everyone involved to be able to see the potential in artists’ samples, and then in their rough sketches, and that’s difficult. Regardless, I don’t think stock is such a dirty word! I find plenty of amazing photographs on stock sites. And I also license a lot of pre-existing art and photography directly from independent artists, which is sort of the best of both worlds: you get high-quality, singular artwork quickly and affordably. For a forthcoming poetry book, Stolen Air, by Osip Mandelstam, I’ve licensed a painting from the artist Il Lee.



CAUSTIC COVER CRITIC: I’m not sure if you can talk about this, but how often do people outside the publishing process, like bookstore buying reps, have an effect on the final look of covers?

ALLISON SALTZMAN: I can talk about it, but I won’t name names.

Yes, bookstore buyers (and our in-house sales force that works with them) have a tremendous amount of clout, because their opinions are backed up by numbers. Anyone can say, “I don’t like the colour green,” or “That woman looks too serious,” but if someone says “Green is off-putting and that woman is depressing. I will take only 300 copies of your book instead of the 3,000 I’d originally intended,” then you have to start revising whether you agree or not.

Kevin Wilson’s The Family Fang, which you featured recently on your blog, got an eleventh-hour overhaul because of outside opinion like that. I’d commissioned an illustration of the family from Julie Morstad, and it was so fantastic that I set it as big as possible on a blank white background. But just before publication, I was told to revise. And fast. The illustration is now a small family portrait in a picture frame that hangs on a gallery wall. With apologies to Julie for shrinking her lovely artwork, the new cover probably does explain the novel better.





CAUSTIC COVER CRITIC: What are some recent covers of which you’re most proud? What about older work?

ALLISON SALTZMAN: I’m really proud of a recent cover that I art directed: The Sisters Brothers, by Patrick deWitt. I hired Dan Stiles, a poster designer who’d never done a book cover before. And he gave us a stunning, clever cover that’s earning the book much more attention than we’d dreamed possible. 





I’m also really pleased with the typographic cover I designed for a forthcoming collection of Czeslaw Milosz’s poems. His previous covers seemed sort of generic, and I liked properly re-situating him, aesthetically, in a Mitteleuropa context.


Other recent favorites: The Marrowbone Marble Company, The Fates Will Find Their Way (hand-lettering by Leanne Shapton), Medium Raw (photograph by Melanie Dunea), and John Lennon, for its heart-stopping photograph (by Bob Gruen). 






Some older favorites from Random House are my paperback cover for Indecision (inspired by an Andy Warhol doodle from 1961), Living with Music, and But Does it Travel? (with artwork by Carin Berger), which the author immediately rejected but which I stubbornly continue to love. 


Friday 22 April 2011

Watery Triplets

This cover image has already been used multiply before, and here it is again: it's a picture by Barnaby Hall.



The previous occurrences...


Wednesday 13 April 2011

Philip Belger's Scandals

It's another case of "If only these were real books!" As a project, graphic design student Philip Belger has created new covers for four classics, based on scandalous tabloids. They're really clever, and suit the chosen books extremely well, even if they do give the ends of the stories away.




Onoda Between Two Ends

Sorry about the relative silence here--bursts of great busyness alternating with terrible sloth have prevented me from posting. But I've got some god stuff lined up! And here's a bit of good stuff in the meantime, too: spotted at This Isn't Happiness, it's the cover for a young adult fantasy novel coming out next month, and it was designed by an artist new to me, Canadian Yuta Onoda.



As far as I know this is his first cover design, but if you look through his portfolio you'll see lots of good stuff. If only this illustration (for a review of that woeful-sounding 'pressure your kids to succeed until they crack' parenting manual Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother) had been the cover for the book.

Thursday 7 April 2011

Fangs, a Gauld, Saltzmans and Morstads

Having recently talked a little more about the great Tom Gauld, I thought I'd better post this new cover of his that I've just come across, for a book due out in August. It's Kevin Wilson's The Family Fang, about a pair of performance artists and their troubled offspring, who are frequently forced into being a part of their parents' artworks.



I also have a copy of the US cover, with a nice paper cut-out 3D effect, by artist Julie Morstad and designer Allison Saltzman.



This seems an opportune time to showcase some of the other design work by Saltzman, who has an extensive portfolio of wonderful cover designs...















..as well as more gorgeous work by Morstad, who has illustrated several children's books, along with other work.









Click on any image for a larger version.


Tuesday 5 April 2011

More Ink

Given the general negative reaction in the comments here to the Penguin Ink series, I wonder what you'll think of these: Penguin UK has also commissioned six books in the series.







I have no artist information as yet.