Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?
Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?

Léo Favier - What, you don’t know Grapus?

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Spector Books
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Grapus [ gra-´pUEs] is a French graphic design collective founded in Paris immediately after the student protests of May 1968. The group saw life as a field for experimentation, putting the new political, social and cultural debates into graphic form for public discussion. At first, Grapus designed posters for local chapters of the Communist Party; 20 years on, they were chosen to design the corporate identity of the Louvre in Paris. By the late 1980s, the collective’s productive days were over. In its heyday, it had attracted many highly committed graphic artists both from France and abroad. After receiving the Grand Prix National des Arts Graphiques, the group decided to disband in 1990. In this volume published by Spector Books (Leipzig), Léo Favier set out in search of the former members of the collective. The 26 interviews in his book tell of the utopian working methods and heated disputes that were at the heart of this collective way of life.

224 pages, 13 x 19 cm, softcover, Spector Books (Leipzig).