Among a set of stencil works was this commentary on the governor's decision to turn down federal money for high-speed rail.
The posted graphic design assignments were quite nice -- identity work and environmental graphics, mostly. But there were also some broadsides displaying typefaces designed by students. The professor asked them to do their final presentations using the words from their favorite protest sign from the Capitol protests.
Font name: Fading Beauty.
Font name: Odjit Regular
Font name: Carolina
Font name: Nailed Regular
I liked this sign, which was attached to one of the art classroom doors.
A short visit to Memorial Library made it clear there are a lot of books in Madison. It's one of those libraries that keep the books in stacks, where two floors of shelves fit into each story, and the stairs between are narrow, metal structures, just wide enough for one person.
There is an elevator, of course. This old painted sign still proclaims the presence of a phone that's not needed in the age of the cell phone. Note the bit of grafitti at lower right.
Wandering through the stacks, my eye fell on these two shelves of books by a writer named Katharine Tynan. There were dozens of titles that, judging from their spines, were published in the late 19th or early 20th century. Checking the Wikipedia, I see that Tynan was an Irish writer who published over a hundred books, and was part of literary circles that included Hopkins and Yeats. But I've never heard of her.
The spines are charming. I will have to look into her work -- it sounds like a few are available on Project Gutenberg.
Because The Handsome Quaker was such an interesting title, I chose that one to look at more closely, and noted the small words beneath the author's name: (Mrs. Hinkson). Can't think of too many authors today who would list there name in that fashion today.
We visited the Capitol for just a little while, and spotted this window on the way in.
At the metal detectors, I was amused and a bit horrified by this sign that prohibits everything from balloons to easels, such as the one the sign is sitting on. And it's good to know that snakes aren't allowed unless they're service animals.
Things were quiet in the Capitol, as far as I could see. We were too early for the Solidarity Singalong, which was going to start at noon. There were signs about cuts to libraries. And one man sat against a stone pillar with a sign saying he was conducting a hunger strike (day 18).
No sign of tape damage, not surprisingly. As I had just read in Madison's Isthmus paper, it's looking like the damage estimates weren't just inflated, they were completely fabricated. A local stone contractor brought in by the paper to inspect the building had this to say about it:
The painter's tape used to affix signs left "little or no residue" anywhere. The worst problem he saw was some residue where media had taped cords to the floor, but even this was easily removed with simple cleaning agents.
"There's no damage to the stone," says Arndt, who has been back in the building several times since, verifying this finding. He says the [Department of Administration] official who showed him around agrees even the lower cost estimate is "completely ridiculous and politically inspired."
Well, I'd like to write a book that would justify the use of Fading Beauty as the cover font.
ReplyDeleteEven if I've heard of Tynan (there might have been a glancing blow in Irish Lit, I imagine), I've certainly never read any of her books. Haroun?
And I read the sign before I scrolled down. I also wondered at the service a snake might be put to--maybe help for the smelling impaired? I'd like to assign imagine an engineering class the task of designing a harness for a service snake.