Françoise Mouly: The stories behind The New Yorker's iconic covers
Françoise Mouly: Priče iza ikonskih naslovnica The New Yorkera
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
a somewhat staid institution
nekako ozbiljna institucija
from its ivory tower
s njegovog uzvišenog postolja
the right thing for me to do
by how an image can --
time koliko slika može,
that we see every single day.
koje svakodnevno gledamo.
a social trend or a complex event
društveni trend ili specifičan događaj,
wouldn't be able to do --
mnogo riječi to ne bi moglo,
and turn it into a cartoon.
i pretvori u karikaturu.
drawn by Rea Irvin in 1925 --
koju je nacrtao Rea Irvin 1925. godine,
through his monocle,
promatra leptira,
as the magazine had become known
kako je časopis postajao čuven
and long reports,
i dugim reportažama,
had gotten lost along the way,
was seen as a haughty dandy,
često viđen kao oholi kicoš,
prvi puta nacrtao ovu sliku,
humorističnog časopisa,
of the roaring twenties.
that really captured the zeitgeist
koje su zaista uhvatile duh vremena
not just how people dressed
ne samo kako su se ljudi odijevali,
to be alive in the '30s.
živjeti '30-ih godina.
to be in the subway,
are approved by the editor,
not telling you what to think.
zapravo, ne govore što da mislite.
have to complete the picture.
on the left by Anita Kunz,
Anite Kunz slijeva,
that are in your head.
koji postoje u vašoj glavi.
just have to show people,
samo prikazivati ljude,
with what we were going through,
s onim kroz što smo prolazili
could capture this moment,
ne može uhvatiti taj trenutak,
cartoonist Art Spiegelman,
on je karikaturist, Art Spiegelman,
that I was going to propose that,
going to do a black cover,
napraviti crnu naslovnicu,
the silhouette of the Twin Towers,
that I learned in the process --
nešto istinski duboko,
that say the most
koje govore najviše,
that we published by Bob Staake
koju smo objavili
experience the emotions that we all feel
da doživi emocije koje svi mi osjećamo,
could publish was this,
objaviti bila je ova,
on the week that everybody voted.
u tjednu kada su svi glasali.
somebody would feel this --
netko ovako osjećati ...
was announced.
that was sent by Bob Staake again,
opet poslao Bob Staake
what's going to come next,
što će se sljedeće dogoditi,
know how to move forward,
kao da ne znamo kako ići dalje,
after Donald Trump's election
nakon što je izabran Donald Trump
come to life week after week,
kako izlaze iz tjedna u tjedan
which one is my favorite,
is how different every image is,
koliko je svaka slika drugačija,
and the diversity
Eustace Vladimirovich Tilley.
Eustace Vladimirovich Tilley.
than a flabbergasted Donald Trump
nego zapanjeni Donald Trump,
how to control the butterfly effect,
kako da upravlja efektom leptira,
that was drawn by Rae Irvin in 1925
Rae Irvin 1925. godine,
about this moment
is essential to our democracy.
značaja za našu demokraciju.
the sublime to the ridiculous
into the cultural dialogue.
at the center of that culture,
u središte određene kulture,
where I think they should be.
gdje mislim da trebaju biti.
right now is a good cartoon.
baš sada, je dobra karikatura.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Françoise Mouly - Art editorFrançoise Mouly is The New Yorker's longtime art editor.
Why you should listen
Françoise Mouly joined The New Yorker as art editor in April 1993. She has been responsible for more than 1,000 covers over her tenure at The New Yorker, many of which were chosen by The American Society of Magazine Editors as "best cover of the year."
Mouly is the publisher and editorial director of TOON Books, an imprint of comics and visual narratives for young readers. In 2017, Mouly began publishing RESIST!, a giveaway newspaper of comics and graphics, coedited with her daughter, writer Nadja Spiegelman.
Since 1980, Mouly has founded and co-edited (with collaborator and husband Art Spiegelman) the groundbreaking comics anthology RAW; the New York Times-bestselling Little Lit series; and the TOON Treasury of Classic Children's Comics. Born in Paris, Mouly studied architecture at the Beaux Arts before she moving to New York. Among her many awards, she has received France's highest honor, the Legion of Honneur and, in 2015, the Smithsonian Ingenuity Award for her work in education.
(Photo: Sarah Shatz)
Françoise Mouly | Speaker | TED.com