Robert Brownjohn was an art director in New York and London at the height of the ad agency boom, like a more experimental and reckless version of Mad Men's Don Draper. Sadly, Brownjohn's longstanding addiction to alcohol and hard drugs ended his life during his prime. Sex and Typography is a book about his truncated life and amazing work.
The first part provides an oral history of Brownjohn told through his friends and coworkers, while the second part reviews some of his body of work with short essays written by Emily King describing major pieces. His high-intensity and chaotic lifestyle comes across in his work, the most well-known of which are the movie title sequences for the James Bond films From Russia With Love and Goldfinger.
Overall, this was a worthwhile read, and provided a lot of great color and perspective the founding of some of the design industry's titans—like Pentagram and Chermayeff & Geismar—at a moment when the booming commercial art field seemed to split into design-oriented and advertising-oriented factions.
I have always admired Robert Brownjohn's amazing and innovative work on the film titles for "Goldfinger," and had this book on my wish list for quite some time. Finally getting a chance to read it, I feel it is solid but something of a mixed bag.
I really appreciated the approach that Emily King took in writing this, cobbling together what amounts to a written biography/oral history of the man and his career using the words of the people who knew him well. It adds up to an intriguing portrait of a man who struggled with insecurity and substance abuse, though we rarely hear from the designer himself.
My only knock on the book is that it didn't include more of his work. The work section of the book is well-considered and dives deep into some of the projects, but it felt surprisingly short for a man who had such an impressive career. I assume there was more work to show, and not certain if there were rights issues or clearances involved that presented an exhaustive body of work.
But in all, it's a worthy chronicle of his work, and I appreciate understanding how he fit into the 60s design scene in the US and UK, especially his partnership with Brownjohn Chermayeff & Geismar, the latter two going on to amazing heights in identity design.
This book is for those interested in design of the era and design history, which never hurts.
A thorough visual and sad oral history of a design genius who died too young. Brownjohn was probably the 20th century master of the "big idea" approach to communication design, which he elevated with wit and poetry that is as rare today as it was then.