Graphic designer, illustrator, lecturer, educator and author Paul Sahre established his New York studio in 1997. While consciously maintaining a small office, Sahre has nevertheless built a large presence in American graphic design. The balance he strikes between commercial and personal projects is evident in the physical layout of his workspace: part design studio, part silkscreen lab, part classroom. In one room he designs and prints posters (some of which are in the permanent collection at the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum) for various off-off Broadway theaters, while in the other room he is busy designing book covers for authors such as Rick Moody, Chuck Klosterman, Ben Marcus and Ernest Hemingway. Sahre is also a frequent visual contributor to The New York Times. He is the author of Leisurama Now: The Beach House for Everyone, 1964-_______, a loving look at a short-lived product of early ‘60s consumer optimism: affordable middle-class summer homes. Sahre received his BFA and MFA from Kent State and teaches graphic design at the School of Visual Arts. He lectures extensively all over the world. He is a member of Alliance Graphique Internationale.

A Partial List of Clients:

The New York Times
Academy of American Poets
Sundance Channel
This American Life
The New School University
The School of Visual Arts
Soho Repertory Theatre
Times Square Alliance
Abrams
Marvel Comics
Knopf
Little Brown
Beacon Press
Vintage
Simon and Schuster
Scribner
Farrar Strauss and Giroux
Penguin Putnam
Aids Institute of New York
Not In Our Name
Verve Records
Luaka Bop
Newsweek
Time Magazine
New York Magazine
Good Magazine
Saturday Night Magazine
Metropolis Magazine
Seed Magazine
Maclean’s Magazine
T Magazine
The New York Times Magazine
The Washington Post
Esquire Magazine
The Society of Publication Designers
among others.