By Jasper « Mississippi » Travis – Brush Master, Kyle Long, Douglas Kearney, Sam Roberts, Tatjana Rebelle, Produced and edited by Stuart Hyatt, Design by Janneane and Benjamin Blevins, Illustration by Sam Roberts.

An epic collaboration honoring the work of the Indianapolis sign painter known as the Brush Master!
Late in 2017 our friend and Half Letter Press-published author Wes Janz put us in touch with Stuart Hyatt who was looking for a publisher for a booklet about a local sign painter. For a while, we weren’t quite sure what kind of publication we were going to be making but when Hyatt and the design crew at PRINTtEXT started sending us samples of the writing and pages, we knew that this was going to be a special collaboration about the kind of extraordinarily creative person that deserves every word of this lengthy tribute and examination.
First, Kyle Long interviews the man himself. Jasper « Mississippi » Travis, who paints signs under the name Brush Master, describes his start and evolution as a sign painter, as well as the philosophy behind his approach. In the center-spread, artist and poet Douglas Kearney uses his own lettering and design scheme to reflect on the cultural significance of the Brush Master. In a short but unusually rich essay titled « Drum machines have no soul: the enduring appeal of hand-painted signs » writer Sam Roberts contextualizes the Brush Master’s work within the history of sign painting and supplies a smart guide to recommended reading and viewing for those who want more. Finally, Tatjana Rebelle, a writer and activist who grew up seeing signs by the Brush Master around Indianapolis, crafts verses inspired by his work.
Rather than reprinting photos of these signs, Kyle Long’s original photos were rendered as illustrations by these brilliant designers, along with geometric abstractions of Brush Master sign locations. The result is a three color RISO-printed production that hopefully feels true to the spirit of the source material.
From the back cover, by Kyle Long:
At the height of his activity in the early 2000s, the Brush Master’s artwork covered an enormous span of the Indianapolis cityscape. For me, his once-omnipresent hand-painted signs are an important component of the visual aesthetic of Indianapolis. His hand-painted signs represent a dying tradition in a world increasingly dominated by technology and the generic corporate design of chain stores and franchises.The Brush Master’s work is threatened by the ever-expanding intrusion of gentrification in downtown Indianapolis, a reminder that we need to protect our cultural assets.
Pages: 48
Dimensions: 5.5 in X 8.5 in
Cover: Paper
Binding: staplebound
Process: Risograph
Color: Three-color Risograph throughout

Jean-Jacques a dit - Angèle Douche
Kriss Kross 2019 - Genêt Mayor
gin ciel - Thomas CHMP
A Home with no Roof - Sara De Brito Faustino
Geographia - Christine Demias
Les soleils qui tournent ont des oreilles - coll.
Philatélie - Magali Brueder
Calendrier 2025 - Et dire que notre terre a déjà 2025 ans - Nils Bertho
La Bascule – 15 jours ressentis 100 ans - Jean Chauvelot & Aymeric Swiatoka-Novais
L’île de Reil - Karine Portal
Machiavel chez les babouins - Tim Ingold
Failles - Laura Bonnefous
Plus c'est facile, plus c'est beau : prolégomènes à la plus belle exposition du monde - Éric Watier
Sex I - Kingué Camille
L'amour/Mon ange - Brûle et / Demange - Samoth Trauberchel
MASKS - Damián Ortega
Blink - Martin Lopez Lam
Véhicule N°7 - Collectif
A Compilation Of Contemporary Letter Designs
moj’am al arabeia - Farah Khelil & antoine lefebvre editions
STICK(ER), IT TO THE MAN. A Radical Form of Publishing and the (re)claiming of public space - Matt Plezier and Gloria Glitzer
Autodrône - Divine Vizion
Followers - Agnès Wyler
52 vendredis — Léonore Emond, Damien Duparc, Yaïr Barelli et Charlotte York
Gros Gris n°4 - Duel
Holy Mountain - Maia Matches, Knuckles & Notch
Vanishing Workflows - Xavier Antin
ARBRES-TRONCS - Zoé van der Haegen
Une idéologie pour survivre – Débats féministes sur violence et genre au Japon - Ueno Chizuko
Thierry Tillier No Future - OR BOR #5
Elk - Jocko Weyland
Berlin Design Digest
À partir de n°4 - Collectif
Ellipse - Ismail Alaoui-Fdili
Saint Julien l'hospitalier Tome 1 - Claire Pedot
Les passagers de la ligne 9, journal de bord - Charlie Chine
Parallélisme - Nicolas Nadé
Le Patou, la pomme et son jus - Robin Garnier-Wenisch
PRISON MUSEUM - Nicolò Degiorgis
Alexis Sequera - Dis-Leur
À partir de n°3 - Collectif
Goodbye - Hsia-Fei Chang, Sofia Eliza Bouratsis, Medhi Brit, Enrico Lunghi
Women journal #3
BEAUTY MEE EYE - Luc Natral
Danses d'intérieur - Lotus Eddé Khouri
Livre d'un Révélation - Chloé Ravenel
Dada à Zurich – Le mot et l’image (1915-1916)Hugo Ball
replis de l’anthélix - Rachel Sassi
Aún te espero - Anaí Tirado
Dirty fish - Léa Abaroa
Bienvenue à Colomeri ! - Hécate Vergopoulo,
Tools of Encouragement - Erlend Peder Kvam
Architecture non-référentielle - Valerio olgiati, Markus Breitschmid
BIC011 Montes - Braulio Amado
Unearth 001 - Shun Kadohashi
Chausse-trape - Henri Crabières
Vacuité 9090 - Jérémy Piningre
Echangisme et Seconde main - Fanny Laulaigne
Soleil, eau, vent : vers l'autonomie énergétique - Delphine Bauer
Oblikvaj 4 - Last minute Shodo - Thomas Perrodin, Ensemble Batida
Philonimo - Le Loup de Hobbes - Alice Brière-Haquet, Herbéra
Inflamed Invisible - David Toop
La Typographie Moderne - Robin Kinross 













