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Peter Fischli. Planet People Profit

Authors

  • Various authors

More about the book

The rhetoric and the toll of economic profit, ingeniously explored through 296 book covers In his latest solo project, Peter Fischli (born 1952), formerly of artist duo Fischli/Weiss, has created an image-based artist’s book depicting 296 book covers in loose topic sequence, imitating the kind of classification principles found in a bookshop or library―self-help, specialist and reference books. Each of the books included revolves around topics of finance and the economy, management, banking, accounting, maximizing profit, improving performance and other related themes. The title of the book comes from John Elkington’s 1994 “triple bottom line” concept, a theory which shifts the measure of a company’s success from financial to holistic. In this vision of corporate success, a company considers not only their financial bottom line, but also accounts for the human and ecological costs of running a productive business.

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Peter Fischli. Planet People Profit, Various authors

Language
Released
2021
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(Paperback)
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Title
Peter Fischli. Planet People Profit
Language
English, German
Released
2021
Format
Paperback
Pages
348
ISBN10
3753300195
ISBN13
9783753300191
Series
Description
The rhetoric and the toll of economic profit, ingeniously explored through 296 book covers In his latest solo project, Peter Fischli (born 1952), formerly of artist duo Fischli/Weiss, has created an image-based artist’s book depicting 296 book covers in loose topic sequence, imitating the kind of classification principles found in a bookshop or library―self-help, specialist and reference books. Each of the books included revolves around topics of finance and the economy, management, banking, accounting, maximizing profit, improving performance and other related themes. The title of the book comes from John Elkington’s 1994 “triple bottom line” concept, a theory which shifts the measure of a company’s success from financial to holistic. In this vision of corporate success, a company considers not only their financial bottom line, but also accounts for the human and ecological costs of running a productive business.