Skip Navigation
Maria Popova

Maria Popova - Maria Popova is the editor of Brain Pickings, a curated inventory of miscellaneous interestingness. She writes for Wired UK and GOOD, and spends a shameful amount of time on Twitter.

Celebrating Vintage Books: A Stunning, $800 Atlas

By Maria Popova
Jun 10 2011, 11:00 AM ET Comment

First up in a new video series on literary treasures: a look at the beautifully designed World Geo-Graphic Atlas, from 1953

atlas5edit.jpg
I love books. Especially obscure ones that brim with vintage design goodness, not to mention my obsession with creative cartography and map books. So I'm exhilarated about the launch of Rare Book Feast—an ongoing video project by Nate Burgos, endearingly self-described "designer for the fortune 5,000,000," celebrating the timeless beauty of books in the age of digital ephemera. Burgos shares my deep belief in the remarkable intellectual and creative enrichment available to us from early design history and the creative problem-solving of eras past.

"This series is about the timeless character of books. Their message and what they look like are what is celebrated here. As our culture becomes digital in a lot of ways, it is all the more important (not to mention inviting) to revisit and learn from the early design challenges, creative solutions and general lessons that the 'old' print world keeps relevant." Nate Burgos

The series launches with a look at World Geo-Graphic Atlas—a stunning 1953 book envisioned by designer, photographer, painter, and architect Herbert Bayer and co-designed with Martin Rosenzweig, Henry Gardiner, and Masato Nakagawa, featuring over 2,200 diagrams, graphs, charts, and symbols about the Earth in 368 gorgeous pages, with a profound underlying message of appeal to protect and preserve our planet. The Container Corporation of America commissioned the project and spent over half a million dollars on it—an unthinkable fortune in the 1940s and '50s. It was as much a feat of design as it was one of curation—in addition to the stunning original artwork, it also culled the best maps from previous published atlases. The book was given away for free to customers and colleges, ironic in the context of its collector's-item status today: You can score a copy on Amazon starting at $800.

atlas10.png
atlas1.png
atlas3.png
atlas4.png
atlas6.png

Rare Book Feast #1: Herbert Bayer's Book of Maps from Nate Burgos on Vimeo.

"Each part of the world the atlas covers is a world of itself." Nate Burgos

The series is a part of design webliography project Design Feast and was directed and produced by Joe Giovenco.


This post also appears on Brain Pickings.
Images: Nate Burgos

via Swiss Mis


Presented by

More at The Atlantic

Can Educators Ever Teach the N-Word? Can Teachers Ever Use the N-Word?
AIPAC's Push Toward War New Push Toward War With Iran
We, the Web Kids We, the Web Kids
Will Raising School Attendance Age Lower the Dropout Rate? Will Raising School Attendance Age Lower the Dropout Rate?
The Risks of Romney's Anti-China Rhetoric The Economic Risks of Romney's Anti-China Rhetoric

Join the Discussion

After you comment, click Post. If you’re not already logged in you will be asked to log in or register.
blog comments powered by Disqus
Special Report
Beyond the BRICs Reuters Beyond the BRICs
A look at the next big global economies—and the rise of a global middle class. Read more ›

Just In

View All Correspondents

The Biggest Story in Photos

More From Carnival 2012

Feb 22, 2012

Subscribe Now

SAVE 59%! 10 issues JUST $2.45 PER COPY

Facebook

Newsletters

Sign up to receive our free newsletters

(sample)

(sample)

(sample)

(sample)