John Lewis (typographer)

John Lewis (1912-1996) was a typographer and illustrator.[1]

Information

He was educated at Charterhouse and Goldsmiths', where his contemporaries included Denton Welch and Carel Weight.[2] Lewis taught graphic design at the Royal College of Art from 1951 to 1963. With Michael Twyman and Maurice Rickards, he was a pioneer in the study of printed ephemera, and in 1962 published the first major book in the field, Printed Ephemera: the changing uses of type and letterforms in English and American printing.[3] In the 1960s Lewis also edited an influential series of paperbacks for Studio Vista in the UK and Reinhold in the US, including authors such as Peter Cook, Theo Crosby, Alan Fletcher, Ken Garland, Bob Gill, Norman Potter, David Pye, Paul Rand and Alison and Peter Smithson.[4]

The John Lewis Printing Collection of more than 20,000 items from the fifteenth to the twentieth century is held at Reading University.[5]

Selected works

References

  1. Nicolas Barker (28 December 1996). "Obituary: John Lewis". The Independent. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
  2. John Lewis (1994). Such Things Happen: the life of a typographer. Stowmarket, Suffolk: Unicorn Press. pp. 12ff, 30–1. ISBN 0-906290-06-6.
  3. Patrick Hickman Robinson (20 February 1998). "Obituary: Maurice Rickards". The Independent. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
  4. John Lewis (1994). Such Things Happen: the life of a typographer. Stowmarket, Suffolk: Unicorn Press. pp. 157, 171, 205 (Appendix 3 is a list of titles in the series). ISBN 0-906290-06-6.
  5. "John Lewis Printing Collection". Retrieved 27 January 2013.


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