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What does Nineteen Eighty-Four look like?

Books, Graphic Design, Illustration

Posted by Mark Sinclair, 1 March 2011, 11:00    Permalink    Comments (12)

US and UK editions of Nineteen Eighty-Four (mid-1950s)

BBC4 screened an interesting film on book cover design last night, featuring contributions from designers John McConnell, David Pearson and David Pelham, who recalled the fascinating story behind his cover for A Clockwork Orange...

As part of the BBC's season of programmes about the written word, Paperback Writer: The Beauty of Books looked at how the role of the cover has changed from functioning primarily as a protective shell, to becoming a complex marketing tool that aims to, as McConnell says, "distill [the book] down into a visual signal." If you're in the UK, you can view the programme on the iPlayer, here.

The film centres on the design of the 15 Penguin covers of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, interestingly bringing together two US and British editions from the mid-1950s for comparison (above).

In the US, Orwell's book was initially sold as a tale of "forbidden love... fear... [and] betrayal" and sported a Rock Hudson type figure as Orwell's protagonist, Winston Smith – while the aesthetic of the three-banded Penguin edition remained steeped in the austerity of post-war Britain.

David Pelham with his 1972 cover of A Clockwork Orange

The story of David Pelham's cover for Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange is also explored in detail. With Stanley Kubrick's film version imminent the director refused to grant Penguin the use of any stills for a book cover, so Pelham (having just been let down by a colleague) had to come up with something overnight in his flat.

Having seen the film, he used its visual language (there are no mentions of bowler hats in the book, for example) but focused on the eye of main character Alex.

At once an intoxicated, dilated pupil and a cog in the machine; the stark graphic device also alluded to Alex's punishment at the end of the book. When Kubrick's film was banned, it was Pelham's cover that initially became the visual identifier for Burgess' work.

The author, however, didn't like it and defaced his own copy, penning the rest of Alex's face in himself. But then Pelham, too, remains equally as unimpressed with his own work. "I don't like the image," he reveals. "I really don't but it has become iconographic. I don't like it because it was primarily done overnight, with very little thought, really. It was an emergency: a graphic design emergency because we had to a have a cover, because we'd miss the hit of the movie."

The Beauty of Books is available to view here on the BBC iPlayer (in the UK only).

In 2005, we also ran a transcript of a lecture David Pelham gave on Penguin's 70th anniversary, which you can read, here. The text is taken from Penguin by Designers, published by the Penguin Collectors’ Society (£15); available from penguincollectorssociety.org.

The 1962 cover for Nineteen Eighty-Four

Jon Gray's most recent cover for Orwell's novel

12 Comments

*waves* to David Pelham.
Gary Day-Ellison
2011-03-01 11:57:53


I am a big fan of A Clockwork Orange and intrigued that I had not noticed they did not mention bowlers in the book. I had seen the film first and then read the book, and this shows how strong the visual content of the film was then and still is. Grant
Corporate portrait photography Ltd
2011-03-01 11:58:34


Interesting, I hadn't spotted this, I'll hop over to the iPlayer for a watch. I actually wrote about the 1984 book cover a couple of years ago and collected some examples if anyone is curious:

http://www.holster.co.uk/blog/the-look-of-1984

®
Richard Holt
2011-03-01 13:02:57


wonderful covers, I've got a great battered copy of 1984 at home from many moons ago
Ashley Pollak
2011-03-01 13:32:24


I can't help but read anything to do with Penguin book covers! Looks a very interesting programme on iPlayer, and I adore the new cover by Jon Gray.
Pickle Design
2011-03-01 13:32:56


Great documentary and it proves that print isn't dead (yet).
Rob Pratt
2011-03-01 13:53:36


Thanks for the link Richard, I own 11 of those 1984 books. I did my dissertation on it (and referred to Clockwork Orange) at uni and got a bit carried away on amazon and in book shops. Your list just goes to show I didn't get carried away enough!

I have to watch this programme later, thanks CR - my week has just got a lot better!
Ian C
2011-03-01 14:01:56


Regarding David Pelham's extensive book cover work, we also ran a transcript of a lecture he gave on Penguin's 70th anniversary in 2005, which you can read at:

http://crmag.co.uk/gBaQhY

The transcript is taken from Penguin by Designers, published by the Penguin Collectors’ Society (£15). See http://www.penguincollectorssociety.org.
CR Mark Sinclair
2011-03-01 14:21:29


I love the David Pelham Clockwork Orange cover and when my original was destroyed by a rabbit (don't ask) I searched high and low to get a replacement with the "correct" cover.
Joanna Cardwell
2011-03-01 15:34:59


Well done BBC or bringing book design to the fore - nice to see the art form getting some critical dissection especially in the kindle age.
Chris Hannah
2011-03-01 16:34:37


what about non-UK citizens? :( i'd really wanna watch the film...
Nika
2011-03-01 22:46:09


I was amazed to hear that Pelham knocked the Clockwork Orange cover up overnight as several people had let him down. Just goes to show that iconic creativity can come from these rushed situations. Equally intrigued that Burgess had scribbled facial features on the design as a mark of his discontent...
Marc
2011-03-06 18:03:58


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