Image, branding, and logos are obsessions of our age.
Iconic images dominate the media. Christ to Coke is the
first book to look at all the main types of visual
icons. It does so via eleven supreme and mega-famous
examples, both historical and contemporary, to see how
they arose and how they continue to function. Along the
way, we encounter the often weird and wonderful ways
that they become transformed in an astonishing variety
of ways and contexts. How, for example, has the
communist revolutionary Che become a romantic hero for
middle-class teenagers? The stock image of Christ's face
is the founding icon - literally, since he was the
central subject of early icon painting. Some of the
icons that follow are general, like the cross, the lion,
and the heart-shape. Some are specific, such as the Mona
Lisa, Che Guevara, and the famous photograph of the
napalmed girl in Vietnam. The American flag, the ''Stars
and Stripes'', does not quite fit into either category.
Modern icons come from commerce, led by the Coca-Cola
bottle, and from science, most notably the double helix
of DNA and Einstein's famous equation E=mc2.The stories,
researched using the skills of a leading visual
historian, are told in a vivid and personal manner. Some
are funny; some are deeply moving; some are highly
improbable; some centre on popular fame; others are
based on the most profound ideas in science. The
diversity is extraordinary. There is no set formula, but
do the images share anything in common? So famous are
the images that every reader is an expert in their own
right and will be entertained and challenged by the
narratives that Martin Kemp skilfully weaves around
them. |
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