Sunday Inspiration | Mike Perry

I enjoyed what I studied during my undergraduate degree, but I felt like I'd left with no idea where I was or who I was as an artist. It drove me mad for months. When someone asks why I chose to study lettering for my MA, I tell them about the initial struggle I had when I was surrounded by students that knew exactly what they wanted to do, those that wanted to take their practice to new places or those that wanted to shift it into a completely different area.

Filled with doubt about my future, I headed home at the end of an induction session at the Parkside campus of Birmingham City University. Sitting in front of my then limited collection of books, I spotted something I fell in love with when I was studying at college: Hand Job: a Catalogue of Type by Mike Perry. A collection of various artists and designers from the Western Hemisphere (mostly from the U.S) that either dabbled with, or specialised in hand drawn lettering. As I started flicking through the pages (of what I now refer to as my Bible) and grinning to myself, I realised that typography was always something that I should have pursued right from the very beginning. The next day, I took the book on to campus and thrust it in front of my tutor Clive and said "that's what I want to be". The rest is, as they say, history.
The book itself only features snippets of Perry's work on the beautifully illustrated covers, as well as in the accompanying preface and contents pages. So for this week's installment of Sunday Inspiration, I'd like to introduce you to the work of artist, illustrator, serial doodler and my hero Mike Perry.

Mike Perry | Portrait by Matt Rubin for The Great Discontent, 2015

Mike Perry | Portrait by Matt Rubin for The Great Discontent, 2015

Born in Kansas in July 1981, Michael Christopher Perry is an artist, designer and print maker based in Brooklyn, New York. He's worked with a number of institutions, the likes of editorial and commercial clients such as Apple, The New York Times, Dwell, Microsoft, Urban Outfitters, Nike and most recently the opening credits to the American sitcom Broad City.

“I want to show people that the world is a beautiful, powerful place where you can be yourself and make whatever you want.”
 

Perry's work revolves around the philosophical concept of existentialism; the connection between an individual and the universe, and how we are all interconnected. Much of his work, if not all of it, focuses on his own personal metaphysics and the relationship between his imagination and reality. For me, this is most notably portrayed in his more sculptural work, some of which feature ladders that seem to disappear into the ground, or pass through the floor, into an adjacent wall. Interestingly they also only ever seem to go “up” (which I like to think is a notion of positivity), depicting this transition from one realm into the next.

I've always admired his work, but it's difficult to describe; there's a simplicity and seeming naivety to his letter-based work that I love. A kind of cosmic "otherworldly" feel to it which, while being light-years away from the stuff I produce, is every bit as skilful.
You can really feel the passion he has for his work when you look at it. The incredible use of highly saturated colours through everything he does is what really appealed to me way back when I discovered his work. I remember looking over his work and at first thinking "that's so simple" and "how has he managed that?!" and then looking into it and seeing that there's far more to it than my jealousy for his commercial success.

When it comes to typography as a whole, we recognise that it mirrors qualities from history and the physical world (for example the Humanist type classification is influenced by the calligraphic scripts of the Italian Humanist writers) and that understanding is consistently similar from one person to the next. So with that in mind, we could say that the qualities we see in Perry's lettering illustrations reflect the inner workings of his imagination and possibly represents dimensions outside of the one we perceive.

A feast for the eyes | Perry's current homepage

A feast for the eyes | Perry's current homepage

Perry's type triggers the imagination, evokes a sense of playfulness and links to all of the senses. Personally, some of the attributes I recognise are from the real world, like how loud the words might sounds or what it would feel like to hold it in your hands.  I'm not sure if this is subliminal or not because I'm trying to disseminate the work, but if you look at the screenshot of his current homepage (above) it's like a multisensory, imagination grenade with all the warmth and joy that welcomes you to his site!

Below are a selection of small lettering projects from over the last couple of years. I think snippets such as these are great representations of the naivety and playfulness I've mentioned. I also believe that they reinforce the idea of a multisensory approach, the "touch and feel" that is most apparent throughout Perry's 2D work. The initial vibrancy and freedom that drew me to his work all those years ago still fills me with nostalgia and joy.

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I've wanted to talk properly about Perry for a long time as he's probably the biggest influence on my career path. I did a research project on him and the notion of existentialism back when I did my MA, but I think I completely missed the point when I was writing it. In a way, I'm hoping that this post has picked up from that essay and built on it with hindsight, more informed information and a more rounded opinion.

Finally, I'd like to apologise that this is over a week late, but it's taken a while to write and edit this piece. Trying to set myself a benchmark each week is proving slightly difficult!