A History of the World (in Dingbats)David Byrne

Price AUD$59.95 | Phaidon 100 Price CAD$49.95 | Phaidon 100 Price £29.95 | Phaidon 100 Price €34.95 | Phaidon 100 Price USD$39.95 | Phaidon 100 Price T39.95 | Phaidon 100

As featured in The New York Times, T Magazine, and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon

The phenomenally creative musician and filmmaker David Byrne presents new artwork that explores daily life in surprising ways, with unique reflections on shared human experiences - a book for our time from a highly influential artist

Through striking and humorous figurative drawings, the iconic artist and musician David Byrne depicts daily life in intriguing ways. His illustrations, created while under quarantine, expand on the dingbat, a typographic ornament used to illuminate or break up blocks of text, to explore the nuances of life under lockdown and evoke the complex, global systems the pandemic cast in bright light. Edited and designed by Alex Kalman in close collaboration with Byrne, this unique book reflects on shared experiences and presents history as a story that is continually undergoing revision.

Specifications:

  • Format: Hardback
  • Size: 150 × 210 mm (5 7/8 × 8 1/4 in)
  • Pages: 160 pp
  • Illustrations: 115 illustrations
  • ISBN: 9781838665111

David Byrne’s practice spans photography, performance, drawing, illustration, video, design, and publishing. In 1975 he cofounded the seminal group Talking Heads. Byrne’s exuberant and radical creativity has challenged classifications of art for decades. His Bicycle Diaries was a Los Angeles Times bestseller and his How Music Works was a New York Times bestseller as well as an Amazon Editors’ pick and a Best Book of the Month. His hit Tony Award–winning theatrical concert American Utopia was adapted by Spike Lee into a concert film that premiered on HBO and received multiple Emmys.

Alex Kalman is a curator, designer, editor, journalist, and filmmaker. He is the owner of What Studio? and director of Mmuseumm. His exhibitions have been shown at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art. He is a contributor to the New York Times, the Atlantic, and the New Yorker.

'Quirky and moving.' – Publishers Weekly

'Whimsical … an accessible escape from daily drudgery.' – Forbes

'Striking ... Will cheer you up.' – BBC World Service

'A playful yet poignant meditation … radiating from the pages… is Byrne's buoyant vision for the new world.' – The Marginalian, Maria Popova

'Playfully illustrated.' – Open Culture