- Richard Eckersley
Richard Hilton Eckersley (
20 February 1941 –17 April 2006 ) was agraphic designer best known for experimental computerized typography designed to complementdeconstruction ist academic works.Born in
Lancashire, England , his fatherTom Eckersley was a noted poster designer at theLondon College of Printing . After attending Trinity College inDublin , Eckersley began his design career atLund Humphries , the publisher of "Typographica " and "The Penrose Annual", whereE. McKnight Kauffer had once been art director.He later joined the state-sponsored
Kilkenny Design Workshops inIreland . After six years there, Eckersley took a teaching position in the United States, andIn 1981 he got a job at the
University of Nebraska Press , where he shook up the field with computer-designed typography forAvital Ronell 's "Telephone Book: Technology, Schizophrenia, Electric Speech". The unorthodox design had the intended effect of breaking up the text's readability.External links
* [http://www.bobolinkbooks.com/DesignHist/Eckersley.html Roy R. Behrens, A Tribute to Richard Eckersley, online biographical essay]
References
*Heller, Steven (April 19, 2006). Richard Eckersley, 65, Graphic Designer, Dies. "New York Times"
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