design and visual culture
issue 25 FALL 2011 GB ÂŁ25 de E28
it E24
issn 1767-47-51 Printed in France
issue 25 FALL 2011 GB £25 de E28
it E24
issn 1767-47-51 Printed in France
FALL 2011
ill studio
grayoval
felix pfäffli
futura
gig posters
arabic typography
design and visual culture
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IMAGES & QUICK HITS
P08 CHLOÉ POIZAT P10
MAX & CHARLOTTE
P12
PYUUPIRU
P14
MARCOS CARRASQUER
P16
RYAN MCGINLEY
P18
STUDIO 75B AND AKROE
P19
KOLLE-BOLLE
n° 25 A CLOSER LOOK
P30 BY ISABELLE MOISY
P44 BY MARIE AUMONT
P58 BY ISABELLE MOISY
Isabelle Moisy is editorial coordinator of étapes: magazine.
Marie Aumont is an independent French graphic designer and typographer.
Isabelle Moisy is editorial coordinator of étapes: magazine.
ILL STUDIO
P20 ANTOINE+MANUEL P21
JONGE MEESTERS AND GRUPPEGUT
P22
SUPERSCRIPT 2
P24
G.V.D COLLECTIVE
P25
RAF VANCAMPENHOUDT
P26 ECAL P27
ARTWORKLOVE AND ESTUDIO DORIAN
P28 FEDERICO MAGGIONI P29 ISBN EDIZIONI Cover: © Designed by Magpie Studio for Robert Horne paper, in association with Gavin Martin Colournet. www.magpie-studio.com Fonts: Boton by Albert Boton, Oranda by Gerard Unger, Kievit by Michael Abbink.
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FELIX
PFA
FFLI GRAY OVAL
ANNE-SOPHIE COIFFET P50 BY P38 BY CAROLINE BOUIGE Anne-Sophie Coiffet is a trainee journalist for étapes: magazine.
Caroline Bouige is a journalist on the editorial staff at étapes: magazine.
STUDIO NODE LAUCKE
M. WLASSIKOFF AND A. DUMAS DE RAULY P66 BY M. Wlassikoff is a historian, researcher and exhibition curator. A. Dumas de Rauly is a freelance graphic designer.
SIE FUTU
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OPINION YOLANDA P80 BY ZAPPATERRA
P96 BY ROLAND FRÜH
P112
Yolanda Zappaterra is a writer and designer.
A Swiss writer, Roland Früh teaches graphic design at the ECAL in Lausanne. He is a coordinator at Werkplaats Typografie in the Netherlands.
A journalist and the author of books on design and architecture, J. Stones is a regular contributor to Design Week, Monocle and Elle Decoration.
IITTALA
BY JOHN STONES
HOCHU ARABIC
N. BAKOURI, I. MOISY AND C. BOUIGE JOHN O’REILLY P86 BY P102 BY N. Bakouri is a freelance art and design consultant and curator. She was director of the Anatome Gallery from 2005 to 2011.
John O’Reilly is a freelance journalist and editor/contributor for the British illustration magazine, Varoom.
BY YOLANDA ZAPPATERRA
Yolanda Zappaterra is a writer and designer.
BOOK
JOST
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P129
TYPO
GRAPY ALEX OGG P122 BY Alex Ogg is a writer and a freelance journalist, musical consultant and project manager.
CHAU MONT
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BY JOHN STONES
A journalist and the author of books on design and architecture, J. Stones is a regular contributor to Design Week, Monocle and Elle Decoration.
BLOGS
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BY RICK POYNOR
Rick Poynor is a writer and the author of Transgression: graphisme et postmodernisme, published by Pyramyd.
RU GIG DE POSTERS BRITANNIA
TRAINING
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Intergalactic knits Polymorphic dancing sculptures or monsters in stripy jerseys? Planetaria by Pyuupiru revisits the Japanese artist’s favourite theme: metamorphosis. Stitch by stitch, she disfigures her creatures; facial characteristics disappear as they transform into asexual creatures. The human body is used as a pretext, a three-dimensional form onto which the artist knits her growths. Attached to iron sculptures or covering androgynous bodies, these massive spheres orbit somewhere between Mars and Mercury… A-SC www.pyuupiru.com © pyuupiru
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75B rue de Lille Early in June 2011, the Institut Néerlandais – the Dutch Cultural Centre in Paris – changed its visual identity. Studio 75B, based in Rotterdam and founded by Rens Muis and Pieter Vos, took over from Pierre Péronnet, Wijntje van Rooien (2011) and Rik Bas Backer (2004). The team of seven propose using the country’s colours – Découvrez à partir du 1er juin la nouvelle identité visuelleadecunning l’Institut Néerlandais ! blue, white and red – in the new identity, move, as the same colours hold good for both France and the Netherlands. The logo, as well as printed and online media can be modified and changed using the two colours to reflect each new cultural season. IM WWW.75B.NL Découvrez à partir du 1er juin la nouvelle identité visuelle de l’Institut Néerlandais !
Bubbling Glazart Designed to support multidisciplinary projects, the Glazart space in Paris offers a selection of activities: concerts, cinema and exhibitions. Undergoing constant development for the 2010-11 season, the team worked on a global programming project including visual publicity in the form of a dozen programme booklets. This year designed by graphic designer Akroe, they keep to the artistic framework set up by programmer Matthieu Meyer: reflecting demand for restrained music, the independence of the organisation, and a discerning public – fulfilled through a range of artfully folded materials. A relationship worth keeping an eye on. IM WWW.AKROE.NET WWW.GLAZART.COM
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The grocer redecorated Kolle-Bolle and Épicerie Moderne of Feyzin are a longstanding story. The collaboration with the collective of graphic designers began in 2005 when the concert hall, situated on the outskirts of Lyon, opened its doors. Ever since then, every season (or almost every) has provided an opportunity to work on visual publicity for the current season. Remember their price tags concept? These also appeared on posters presented at the 2010 Chaumont poster festival in the international selection. For 2010-11 and the next five years, Épicerie Moderne are proposing a significant shift in direction: stretching the format, replacing the photography with a more graphic, illustrative approach inspired by lengths of wallpaper and featuring the name of the performance space in black and white with fluorescent Pantone colours in three different tones for each six-month period. IM HTTP://2009.KOLLEBOLLE.COM WWW.EPICERIEMODERNE.COM
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Sweet Little Sixteen Sixteen pages or nothing; Un Sedicesimo magazine turns its format into its title. A project by publisher Pietro Corraini, under the direction of Federico Maggioni, this bimonthly magazine offers graphic designers and illustrators an opportunity to create their own art projects, using a standard print format. Resembling a paper art gallery, the format leaves plenty of scope for imaginative interpretations: while Tomi Um makes it into a leaflet for a giant illustration, Wilhelm Staehle uses it to tell a story. Carin Goldberg creates a repertoire of shapes from cardboard packaging and Paul Cox, an advocate of functionality, transforms it into a sober calendar. By offering graphic designers free expression in an ‘independent’ form of publication, the publishers Corraini, allow the profiles and personalities of each graphic designer to emerge. A nice present to offer your main sponsors. CB HTTP : //UNSEDICESIMO.CORRAINI.COM Issue 15, Wilhelm Staehle, inside double spread
Issue 17, Leonardo Sonnoli, cover and inside double spread
Issue 19b, Studio Alex Rom and Atelier Vostok, cover and double spread 28
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Special Books Special Books is a new collection of foreign fiction published by ISBN Edizioni that uses embossing, spot gloss finishes and a range of illustrations. The publisher wanted to make each book distinct: each work has an original cover design relating to the book’s content and the author’s country of origin. The cover of Toxic echoes the page layout inside the book, Io Sono Febbraio by Shane Jones features a group of beaked characters and I Corpi Neri resembles a film poster. There’s just one common feature: all of the back covers use a visual identity that was created for the collection, which is numbered, linear and follows the collection’s colour range. IM WWW.ISBNEDIZIONI.IT
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Felix Pfäffli LUCERNE (SWITZERLAND) STUDIO FEIXEN, FOUNDED IN 2009 FELIX PFÄFFLI (25) WWW.FEIXEN.CH / WWW.DETEKTIVBUREAU.CH
By Isabelle Moisy
How did you discover graphic design and how long ago? You could say that I grew up amongst designers because in my hometown, Lucerne, there are a lot of graphic designers. It’s difficult to give you an exact date. Officially, I’ve been a freelance graphic designer for a year. Two years ago, I stopped university for a year to do some freelance design projects. I took a three-month sabbatical in Sweden. Actually, I worked as a graphic designer all through university. That allowed me to set up my own studio after passing my baccalaureate. How many people are there in the studio? My studio, Feixen, is like a one-man band. But for a year now I’ve also been working for Detektiv Bureau. It’s an association of graphic designers, illustrators, artists and political activists, all working in the same premises, organising shows together and dedicating a lot of time to discussions.
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How do you usually work? Do you have a specific creative process? It depends. Normally, my working style is determined by the content of the project. For example, a design for a publication about an experimental dance performance requires a different
A lot of your work seems to reveal the underlying structure, the functioning of a system or the creative process. Is this your prime concern when you compose your images? Absolutely. I really like working with systems. It’s not much of a surprise, really, when you consider that the Swiss mentality and way of thinking and ‘Swiss Style’ hasn’t really been fully explored yet. It’s simple: a white page is perfect. When we start to place elements on top we have to follow certain rules. However, to me that doesn’t mean I always have to do everything the same way. On the contrary, each project requires different rules. Most of the time, I set myself two or three rules when I’m working on a project to help me refine the design and emphasise the meaning of the content. Making the creative process visible isn’t just about giving the impression of a moment captured in time; it’s also about telling a story. What’s your relationship to a poster? Do you have a favourite medium or technique? I mainly design posters. That’s probably pretty obvious. It isn’t a preference, it’s just because people hire me to design posters a lot. Actually, I’m interested in all types of design – it doesn’t
matter whether it’s books, posters, clothing or furniture. The less I know about the design technique, the more interesting it is to me. Where do you get your inspiration? Do you have a special interest in everything related to computer code or ‘processing?’ In my opinion, it’s vital to learn something from each project. I don’t like repeating myself, especially in my final output. That means I don’t try to design using techniques that I’ve already mastered. I prefer using methods that I might not know already. If, for example, a poster has to be computer generated, I’ll start learning programming. It’s our choice whether or not we let the wide range of design possibilities become limitations or not. You have been creating visual communication for Südpol, a multicultural centre in Switzerland, for two years now. Could you tell us about your relationship with this client? How and when did the collaboration begin and what is the concept behind your work? The poster series was conceived by Erich Brechbühl, a graphic designer from Lucerne. In the first year we used a different graphic designer for each poster, creating a sort of alternating style. Graphic
designers, illustrators and artists all left their mark on this series. But Südpol needed posters for a few events every month and the administrative and financial costs became too much. That’s why they asked me if I wanted to continue working on the series on my own over the summer of 2010. The Südpol multicultural centre presents dance performances, plays, operas and concerts. Each series of posters deliberately conceals the category of the different productions. Experimental dance incorporates dance, music and theatre, so the boundaries are superfluous. The series of posters is playful, and sometimes daring in its formal aspects. Südpol gave me complete free rein. That’s what made everything possible. The collaboration was very productive. The only instructions I received were for the poster heading, the format and the print method. The posters were short exercises in design, experiments or stories....
Felix Pfäffli
approach to a classical play. I think we can distinguish two main creative attitudes: a subjective attitude and an objective attitude. For example music, from a completely objective point of view, is something you can’t really fully grasp. So I concentrate mainly on the emotion that comes with the music. I ask myself simple questions, like, what kind of landscapes do I see when I listen to this music? What colours and shapes do I associate with it? When the music is fast or improvised, I try to proceed in the same joyful manner, and when it is strict and reduced I tackle the project in a condensed and restricted manner. Beyond this ‘subjective’ way of working there is also an ‘objective’ way of working. I use this when the content is clearly defined – for instance, in a theme-based exhibition or for classical theatre. In such cases I really focus on the content. I read the play and I try to reduce the story into a single scene or image. The visual language, typographic choices and graphic design elements are always generated by the content. If the play takes place in the 18th century, I look for fonts and images that could have been used during this period. Often, I create a ‘toolbox’ of graphic resources which I systematically base the final design on.
Is there are designer or graphic artist whose work you admire? Herbert Leupin.
View of the exhibition “Graphic Design from Leipzig and Lucerne.” Organised by Weltform in November 2010, Lucerne.
Do you have plans for the future, or is there something you would like to do? In the future, I’ll probably start designing modular wooden houses with a colleague of mine.
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What city or place inspires you? Sweden: No mountains, nothing but sky.
Do you have any works of reference? My notes.
Felix Pf채ffli S체dpol. Series of posters for a Swiss multicultural centre that stages plays, concerts and dance performances. Each poster is printed in several colours on an A3 sheet using a risograph machine.
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Felix Pfäffli
What would you do if you couldn’t be a designer? Cry.
B-Sides 2009. Screenprinted poster, T-shirt, signs and album cover for the B-Sides Festival 2009 in Lucerne. Formats: A3, A2, and F4.
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Is there a school or movement that has influenced you during your career? The people around me. My friends. Each passing day.
Felix Pf채ffli B-Sides 11. Poster for the B-Sides Festival 2011 in Lucerne. The poster uses images that were displayed on the website while the poster was being made.
Each of the images illustrates a visual concept or an artistic concept relating to an artist. Offset printed in A3, A2, A1 and A0.
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Felix Pf채ffli
Is there a typeface that you use regularly? Old Akzidenz Grotesk typecasting fonts.
Do you have a favourite quote or philosophy for life? Pass.
Felix Pf채ffli Zufall. Poster series created using data processing. Screenprinted for an exhibition on coincidences in art.
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Gig Posters Charting a revolution in the music industry in recent years, with the arrival of digital media, visual and audio interactions and the return of hand-tailored work, GigPosters.com, the website founded by Clay Hayes, bears witness to the evolution of concert posters, from a medium supplying information to a wholly separate space for expression. Par John O’Reilly
Left-hand page. Rob Jones, posters for The Dead Weather. Below. The Raconteurs, Detroit, 2008.
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Rob Jones. Posters for The Dead Weather and The Raconteurs, 2008. Opposite page. Justin David Cox. Posters for Cut Copy, Crystal Castles and Animal Collective, 2009.
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The gig poster is fast becoming the visual equivalent of the classic pop single, an instant affective visual thrill. Back in 2001 Apple launched the iPod and iTunes, removing the need for any physical or visual aspect to the purchasing and enjoyment of music. At the same time, in Calgary, Canada, computer programmer Clay Hayes, who also played in a local band, set up a website where people could share images of their gig posters from around the world. Nearly ten years on and GigPosters.com features over 120,000 posters from almost 9,500 designers and contributors. “I have no art or design background at all,” says Hayes. “I have a music background, but mostly, I’m just a fan.” That’s no small advantage, because being a fan means Hayes has some insight into what drives the fan psyche. “Many people who come to GigPoster.com start out by purchasing a poster for a band they love, but once they see all the amazing poster designs out there, it tends to be the artwork that outshines the bands.” Designers too tap into that fan psyche. Since the 1990s, design studios have accepted that unless you are designing for a household name, the music business doesn’t pay. Or, it pays, but as a loss leader, providing a window onto your creativity for more lucrative, potential clients. Justin David Cox is a full-time User Interface designer for a large corporation. His poster designs, for bands such as The Animal Collective, The Decemberists and Cut Copy, employ space to focus and direct the eye. His poster work has “led to a few editorial and identity gigs.” That space reflects one crucial fact; “I have been given a lot of creative freedom, which is a nice change of pace from the world of corporate design.” The GigPoster site is often the starting point for a wider audience. “My Cut Copy poster sold out the day I posted it thanks to being linked on some prominent blogs, such as Notcot and Swiss Miss,” says Cox. “The print run was 100; others have sold out too, but that was by far the fastest.” Cox’s path is not unusual. The gig poster phenomenon is thriving because of a number of innovations; the availability of
cheap, lo-fi technology at local print shops; the proliferation of screen-printing co-ops (designers want to get their hands dirty); and the affordability of high-quality, digital printers. It also benefits from the fact that, arguably, some gig posters don’t have to communicate a whole lot, as they principally function as merchandise for the fans. Many current designs suggest that the rules of the gig poster are changing. With highly effective fan networks on Facebook and Myspace, shout-outs for times and venues are disappearing in favour of more tasteful executions designed with a domestic afterlife in mind; these posters are designed for display not to impart information. The spatially, open designs of Jason Munn, for example, are often printed in two-colour, and stand out in contrast to noisier sales messaging on the streets. Eventually, they’ll look good on the livingroom wall, or the pages of a book; his collected works have recently been published as The Small Stakes: Music Posters (Chronicle Books). If cheap technology fuels the production, and social networking frees up the aesthetic, then musically the gig poster phenomenon is fuelled by bands who value craft, the lo-fi, and the thrill of collecting one-off, pop objects. In this way the gig poster is the modern equivalent of the perfect pop single, in a picture sleeve of course. Paradoxically, it is collectible because it is throwaway; its value resides in the aura of the ephemeral. The rock poster exists to be flyposted, ripped by acquisitive fans, worn away by weather and generally effaced by time. Bands such as The White Stripes make music that revels in instant, physical thrill. For designer Rob Jones, gig posters comprise the bulk of his portfolio, along with other music biz work, “…stage backdrops, albums, singles, shirts, record boxes, custom camera packaging, a box set, etc., but gig posters remain the primary reason for my sleepless weeks.” He began designing for a friend who started a band called the Pink Swords; two years later he caught a lucky break and began working with The White Stripes. His “White Stripes Blackpool 07” poster remains his most popular.
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Jason Mum. Posters for the Pavement and Saint Vincent groups, 2010.
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“I have a good relationship with the main bands that I work with, The White Stripes, The Raconteurs and The Dead Weather,” he says. All three bands require personal approval; all feature songwriter Jack White. “Generally it’s thumbs up or down, but over the years I’ve gotten to know their tastes so there haven’t been too many thumbs down. The brief is their music, style, and how they present themselves to the public, so in that regard they are highly involved in what I produce. Not too often, but on occasion I’ll be told about a specific direction change.” Designer Lil Tuffy Tuffington also has good things to say about Jack White. “I prefer to have as much control over the image as possible,” he says. “Jack White is probably my favourite creative director. He knows what he wants and is great at making that clear and then letting the designer do their work.” Tuffington’s poster work began around 2002 when he was still designing websites as a means of asserting his creative mark. Working on websites he was “…constantly art directed by programmers and salesmen and people who have no business asserting their opinion in the creative process. It was very frustrating.” That sounds familiar. “But, when making posters I rarely work with clients that want to assert their control.” Tuffington’s design is versatile and ideas-based; from his graphic diptych for Vampire Weekend to the painterly pulp for punk band Dwarves, and the simple shading for Spiritualized’s unique form of electric Gospel. “I think my aesthetic lends itself to certain genres but I’ll do work for anyone. For example, I never considered myself a hiphop designer, but my posters for KRS-One and Wu Tang Clan were very popular despite the fact they weren’t typical hiphop posters.” Tuffington’s best selling posters have a flavour of that musical diversity, from the electro-disco of Devo, to the delinquent storytelling of The Raconteurs (for a gig in Kansas City), to the bohemian noiseniks, Sonic Youth. Tuffy’s website captures the culture, soul and rock and roll attitude of the gig poster cult. Called Tuff Shit, his strapline reads, “Everything dies, baby. That’s a fact.”
Digital technology has changed the music business beyond recognition, and has changed its visual culture, from sleeve art to music promos to websites and online/ downloadable clips. But the metamorphosis of the gig poster, from a straight communication piece to an almost standalone extension of the music, points to a new kind of relationship between the music industry, design and print.
Lil Tuffy Tuffington. Posters for Vampire Weekend, Sonic Youth and The Raconteurs, 2010.
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Gig Posters Containing over 700 posters, Gig Posters: Rock Show Art of the 21st Century brings together a selection of works that demonstrate the collaboration between graphic artists or illustrators and contemporary bands: Zeeloot for Pelt, Rob Jones for The Raconteurs, Justin Hampton for Radiohead and Rage Against the Machine, Todd Slater for Arctic Monkeys. Clay Hayes, the founder of GigPosters.com, has written the preface which looks at the iconographic evolution of the concert poster since he began the website in 2001. Representative of the dynamism in poster design for the contemporary music industry over the last 10 years, GigPosters.com is one of the first websites designed to showcase band-related printed media. Taking this idea further, with its alphabetical listing of designers and 101 detachable posters, the A3 book effectively demonstrates how concert information combines with visual pleasure in large format.
Above. Book by Clay Hayes, Gig posters. Rock Show Art of the 21st century, Quirk Books, 2010. Opposite. Poster by Zeelot for Sister Iodines, The Hague, Netherlands, 2005. Below. Poster by Amy Jo for The Thrones, Saint Paul, United States, 2008. Right. Poster by Lure Design for the American Music Club, Orlando, United States, 2004.
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Above left. Poster by Burlesque of North America for MF Doom, Brother Ali and BK One, 2007. Above right. Poster by Seripop for Aids Wolf, Ottawa, Canada, 2005. Lower left. Poster by Bongout for The Boredoms, Berlin, Germany, 2006. Left. Poster by Largemammal Print for The Pixies, 2004. Lower right. Poster by Patent Pending Industries for Brand New, 2007.
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Above. Left. Poster by Denny Schmickle for DJ Z-Trip, Tulsa, United States, 2007. Centre. Poster by Stainboy for Mastodon, Orlando, United States, 2007. Right. Poster by Todd Slater for Ween, Philadelphia, United States, 2007. Below. Left. Poster by Engine House 13 for Mudhoney, Colombus, United States, 2008. Right. Poster by Justin Hampton for a festival in Chicago, United States, 2008.
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Above. Left. Poster by 3D Glasses for The Locust, London, United Kingdom, 2007. Centre. Poster by Amy Jo for The Donnas, San Francisco, United States, 2006. Right. Poster by Delicious for Acid Mothers Temple, San Francisco, United States, 2006.
Middle. Left. Poster by Jay Vollmar for Vampire Weekend, Denver, United States, 2008. Centre. Poster by James Rheem Davis for Franz Ferdinand, Sacramento, United States, 2006. Right. Poster by Dale Flattum for Fu Manchu, Minneapolis, United States, 2006. Below. Left. Poster by Alan Forbes for Sonic Youth, Nashville, United States, 2008. Centre. Poster by Delicious for 1900s, Chicago, United States, 2007. Right. Poster by Ken Taylor for Pearl Jam, Brisbane, Australia, 2006.
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Arabic Typography Long at odds with Western printing techniques and the culture of calligraphy, Arabic script is today a subject of renewed interest. Here we profile three contemporary typographers who reconcile Latin and Arabic forms, for the sake of globalisation. By John Stones
There are few areas of contemporary typography that are being practiced with the same fervour and enthusiasm as Arabic type design. For so long ignored, now the floodgates have opened. Having been frozen in classical historic forms for centuries, Arabic script is being rejuvenated by a new generation of designers creating typefaces that can happily exist in the modern world. Given the beauty of Arabic calligraphy, it might come as a surprise to Western observers that Arab speakers have had to put up with crude, simplified, and sometimes even illegible forms of script in print. Huda Smitshuijzen AbiFarès, founder of the Khatt Foundation, the Netherlands-based centre for the advancement of Arabic typography and focal point of the Arabic typographic community, suggests that the beauty of the calligraphic script may have stifled the development of modern Arabic typography. While calligraphy is held in high cultural esteem, primarily for religious reasons (as Arabic script was originally developed to record the Qur’an), this has had an inhibiting effect on type designers, who have felt that they are dealing with something sacred, which couldn’t or shouldn’t be changed. “It led to the wrong perception that the writing system was connected to the Holy Word, and that you shouldn’t mess with it,” says Mahmoud Hamdy of Dalton Maag’s Cairo office. Taken together with the formidable technical challenges, it is not hard to see why for so long Arabic typography remained starved of development, despite the work of a handful of pioneering figures such as Thomas Milo. The advent of Opentype significantly diminished the technical problems that Arabic script faces, but the recent renaissance in Arabic typography is also paradoxically attributable to globalisation. On
the one hand, the desire for global standardisation can lead to dull sameness, but it has also acted as a major spur to the development of a community of contemporary Arab typographers who now serve global brands. Those brands are aiming to develop local versions of their own typefaces, or to create Arabic versions of mainstream Latin fonts. Nonetheless, Arabic script, written right to left, with its cursive, calligraphic tradition and the fact that there are four forms for each letter, depending on how it marries up with its neighbour, presents significant challenges when placed in the straightjacket of Latin type conventions. Taken together with different modes inherited from calligraphy, primarily the stark and geometric Kufi and the more lyrical Naskh, it is clear that the development of modern Arabic typography, that can stand alongside or mirror contemporary Latin type, has not always been straightforward. Three typographers who are at the forefront of recent developments are Nadine Chahine in Germany, Pascal Zoghbi in Lebanon and Mahmoud Hamdy in Egypt.
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Nadine Chahine
Arabic specialist at Linotype As head of Arabic-related projects for Linotype (and its empire of iconic typefaces), Nadine Chahine plays an important role in the development of Arabic typography. Indeed, she designed the Arabic versions of Neue Helvetica, Frutiger and Palatino. Chahine studied at the American University of Beirut, back when it was the only institution teaching type design in the Arab world. In 2003 she earned an MA in typeface design at the University of Reading, England, then returned to Beirut as a visiting lecturer at her alma mater. Shortly after graduating from Reading, she gave a presentation at Linotype that led to a job offer from the German foundry. On joining Linotype in 2005, she also took on a sales and marketing role, which soon took up most of her time. Generally speaking, I tried to deal with those activities in the morning so that I was free to quietly concentrate on designing in the afternoon. She continues to oversee Linotype’s marketing, and suggests that this helps with her design work. It gives me a different viewpoint on the world of typography, and a clearer sense of what people are looking for. Designers are often too caught up in their work – in which case it becomes design for designers. I spent four years working on Frutiger Arabic, and finally published it because two clients were crying out for it. It was very well received – and this, of course, is reflected in the sales figures. There is clearly a demand for good Arabic typefaces. Of course, when you start with a clean slate, you have more freedom. When you do an Arabic version of a typeface, the concept already exists and the issue is then how to find suitable forms. Designing Neue Helvetica Arabic was very difficult. It’s a very neutral, even sterile, face. To recreate that neutral-
Frutiger Arabic
Top. Nadine Chahine. Centre. Frutiger Arabic based on the Kufic style.
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Above. Bilingual signage with Frutiger and Frutiger Arabic.
ity, I had to combine the geometric forms of Kufic Arabic with the rounded forms of Naskh – thus creating a hybrid, while flattening the movements of the stylus but retaining the quill-line effect. It wasn’t necessary to keep exactly the same curves, because there are different ways of creating neutrality in Arabic script. Although Chahine admits there are some things she would like to improve, she is disappointed by certain criticisms. It’s an iconic typeface. People feel it belongs to them, and have their own ideas about how it should look. When she drew Palatino Arabic, Chahine worked closely with Hermann Zapf: she sat at a desk alongside him, drawing for days and days. As Zapf had already created an Arabic typeface, Al-Ahram, it was a fruitful collaboration. But she drew Frutiger Arabic all by herself. When she showed it to Adrian Frutiger, he approved it without suggesting any changes. Design has become a very international business, in Chahine’s view, but she acknowledges that some factors have driven the popularity for Arabic typefaces. Politics has put the Arab world in the spotlight, and then there are economic reasons – there is high purchasing power in the Gulf states. And there are also lots of international companies with specific requirements for Arabic typefaces. Besides preparing an ambitious dissertation on the legibility of Arabic, Nadine Chahine is also working on a series of new Arabic versions of established typefaces, while also hoping for a type-design partnership in which Latin no longer calls the tune.
Kufic character in large point size
Kufic Arabic alphabet
Kufic Latin alphabet
Above. Koufia is an Arabic typeface by Nadine Chahine, inspired by ancient Kufic styles extinct since the 12th century.
Below. Palatino Arabic, by Nadine Chahine and Hermann Zapf, is inspired by classical calligraphic styles. Designed for body text, it can also be used in large formats.
Palatino Arabic character in large format
Palatino Arabic
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Pascal Zoghbi 29 Letters
Like many others of his generation, Pascal Zoghbi began his studies in his native country but had to go abroad to learn in depth about typography. He obtained a Master’s in typeface design at the Royal Academy of Art (KABK) in Amsterdam. The process of learning typography doesn’t focus on a specific type of script, but some teachers encouraged me to talk to Arabic specialists. In a nutshell, it was primarily up to me to learn about Arabic typography. When I and other designers, such as Nadine Chahine, graduated in 2005, there was suddenly a heavy demand for Arabic typefaces – a happy coincidence. Zoghbi returned to Beirut to set up his own agency. Seeking an appealing name that alluded to Arabic typography, he opted for 29 Letters. It is generally agreed that the Arabic alphabet has 28 letters, but Zoghbi also included the hamza, the diacritic sign that represents the glottal stop. I also liked the idea of having a number in the title, which made it slightly different. Zoghbi soon specialised in designing logotypes in both alphabets, often for multinational companies moving into Middle Eastern markets, and mostly in the Gulf region. There had been a demand for contemporary Arabic typefaces based on Latin counterparts, and they were often very mediocre. So, as well as designing bilingual logotypes, Zoghbi devoted time to improving poor-quality typefaces, and to training the up-and-coming generation of Beirut students at the Lebanese-American University (LAU) and Notre Dame University. One of his unfinished projects, a remnant of his university years, was an Arabic interpretation of Gill Sans. The important thing is not to copy and paste, he stresses. To draw the Arabic, you must start again from scratch.
Bilingual logos by Pascal Zoghbi.
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After this initial influx of business, things quietened down, Zoghbi states. But with the global financial crisis now receding, enthusiasm is growing again: international companies are still just as eager to have a bilingual typographic presence. The market is more mature now, and clients know who to work with. Technical problems have been reduced to the minimum, at least from a printing perspective. Arabic typefaces are no longer forced to adapt to the rules of Latin script. It’s more of a creative issue: how not to get trapped in the early forms, which were essentially based on the Ottoman and calligraphic traditions. It’s all about learning ancient, traditional script while drawing it in a modern way, so that it looks new while also remaining legible. It’s all about creating typefaces that are more idiomatic and less dependent on the simplified Arabic typefaces that were previously the only ones available. When laying out newspapers, Arab graphic designers used to have limited options, but things are changing. Zoghbi has designed modern, bold, strong display faces for three Middle Eastern newspapers (Al Rouiah, Al Watan and Imarat). The main challenge was to ensure each had its own visual identity. The only area where technical problems persist is Arabic typefaces for the Internet, where display optimisation (hinting) and problem-solving have resulted in mediocre ergonomics for Arabic speakers and designers and the selection of inappropriate typefaces. They are often too small, illegible or cut off. That’s the area where the biggest changes will occur in the next five years, says Zoghbi, as a new generation of designers rise to the challenge.
This page: Gill Sans Arabic and Jumeirah by Pascal Zoghbi.
Gill Sans Arabic Light and Caps Light
Gill Sans Arabic Bold and Caps Bold
Rough draft of Jumeirah
Jumeirah
Jumeirah alphabet
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Mahmoud Hamdy Dalton Maag
After running his own Cairo agency, FC Studio, a chance meeting with Bruno Maag after a lecture event, led to Mahmoud Hamdy opening up a Cairo branch of Maag’s London-based font design studio, Dalton Maag. When I graduated in 2000, there were still just a few graphic-design studios. So I worked in some small studios, then in advertising agencies, and then I started to find my way in Arabic typography and calligraphy. In design terms, there was no such thing as an Egyptian identity. Everything that looked nice always had a European or American feel – that’s how designers used to work, trying to imitate. With a few other designers, I started challenging that, and asking why we couldn’t use Arabic or everyday elements in our graphic projects. In every culture, it’s a cyclical thing. To start with, people just copied or produced clichés. Then they introduced local elements such as Coptic, hieroglyphics or Arabic into design, and then they started using their ingredients in a more authentic way. Now the trend is strengthening, and we’re starting to see really good, authentically Egyptian design. When Bruno Maag came to Cairo to give a lecture on typography at the German University, Hamdy and his colleagues were full of enthusiasm. I was passionate about typography, but I’d never managed to persuade a client to grant me an interview. I had lots of questions, and I asked Bruno to give a talk at the agency, which was a success. We started cooperating by email as soon as he needed an Arabic speaker in the country, initially to create a display typeface for McDonald’s. That soon resulted in an invitation to set up a regional office for Dalton Maag, to satisfy demand for Arabic typefaces. The main difference between Latin and Arabic typefaces is that in Arabic, the word is the
Designs and logos by Mahmoud Hamdy.
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form, whereas in Latin the letter is the unit. In Arabic, the form changes organically from word to word. A letter has one of four forms, depending on its position: initial, medial, final or isolated. This makes encoding and drawing really hard – it’s basically four times as much work. Maybe one day there’ll be a simplified form of Arabic where the letters don’t have to be connected and we can just use the form. That’s one of my dreams – reaching a standard where I’m capable of doing that. In recent years global brands and corporations have needed to speak to people more directly in their own language, using the relevant script. As designers, it’s very difficult for us to find corresponding Arabic scripts, so we end up creating them ourselves. In the Arab world, there’s now a growing awareness of what good design is about. After a large quantity of mediocre output, designers and clients are now realising that people can no longer be fooled, and that they have to raise the bar. And as typography is the core ingredient in graphic design, it’s really becoming vital to find good Arabic typefaces. Although Hamdy’s primary focus is on originating an Arabic typeface, with the Latin version as simply a spin-off, most of his work involves adapting Latin faces. If you only produce a clone of a Latin typeface, it might satisfy Westerners but to Arab eyes it will be just that – a clone, a zombie. Of course you have to copy and respect certain features, such as width and x-height, but it must also have its own individual character. My generation has had to learn everything, starting from square one. But in light of what’s happening at the moment and with the up-and-coming generation of graphic designers, I feel very optimistic.
Above: Typographically. Patterns for vinyl wall coverings. Part of the Mulsaq project for the Khatt Foundation’s design collection design. Left: The Arabic version of the Q22 typeface, by Mahmoud Hamdy, and the Latin version by Fabio Haag, head of Dalton Maag’s Brazilian office.
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Arabic script illuminated
La Typographie arabe, le rythme des lettres, le souffle des mots, la vie du texte (“Arabic typography: the rhythm of letters, the breath of words, the life of text”) is a recent fourth-year dissertation by Marco Maione and Tristan Maillet, students at the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs (EnsAD) in Paris, under Nasser Bouzid’s supervision. It relates the development of Arabic typography from calligraphic art through to the latest computer-led innovations. This richly documented book addresses the various complexities and specificities of Arabic script, as well as its interaction with successive typeface-production techniques.
by Marco Maione and Tristan Maillet
Fin.
Méd.
Ini.
Iso.
Doâd
Toâ
Zoâd Most Arabic letters have four forms, determined by their position in the word: initial, medial, final or isolated. The variants shown here are from Thomas Milo’s font family DTP Naskh.
Examples of how letters integrate into the word, with Titus Nemeth’s typeface Nassim, using the Tasmeem extension developed by Decotype and published by WinSoft.
Choice of styles for the same word in Nassim, using the Tasmeem extension.
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Approaches and methods It is now possible to pick out two mainstream approaches in the design of contemporary Arabic typefaces. The first approach is championed by a community of Arab designers, mostly Western-trained and of Lebanese origin. They seem to have united around a single conception of Arabic typeface design and made a big contribution to its considerable rise in popularity in recent years. Their work, through the dissemination of many typeface projects via international publications and events, has become a key source of current developments. The overall approach is well summarised in the tagline used by the Khatt Foundation, Center for Arabic Typography, to define itself: “Building cultural bridges and advancing design.” Typographic concepts are often devised as part of cultural bridges with the West, and designed using typographic methods and forms that consider Arabic’s coexistence with Latin as a core issue. This approach often leads to the synthesis and rationalisation of script forms, Helvetica Arabic being an extreme example. The second approach was introduced by the linguist Thomas Milo, who reached another idea of what Arabic typography could become. Through his work with Decotype ACE, he has co-developed with WinSoft an InDesign extension that lets you manage Arabic text with great precision. The Tasmeem technology, which handles Arabic script in all its subtlety and calligraphic complexity, lets users exploit the typographic effects, variations and nuances peculiar to Arabic. This approach, faithful to the heritage of calligraphy, opens up huge fields of macro and micro type design that are independent of the Latin system. However, designing Tasmeemcompatible typefaces remains a relatively complex affair, beyond the reach of nonspecialists. Arabic type design is thus a field shaken by controversies that herald renewal in the world of typography. These two approaches, sometimes described respectively as progressive and traditional, have produced fairly marked divergences.
In progress and future research will yield solutions of greater subtlety, tailored to users’ requirements and applications.
Techniques and development The current status of Arabic typography is closely linked to its history, which has been untouched by the main typographic evolutions. This is partly due to the influence of Islam, which imposed the use of the kalam (reed pen) for copying the Koran, and long remained hostile to mechanical means of reproduction. In addition, the inherent complexity of Arabic script and its fundamental differences from Western systems have raised technical challenges through the ages. Arabic script contains few basic characters but many supplementary signs – vowellation and reduplication signs, alternative forms depending on the sign’s position on the word, graphic combinations of certain groups of letters – all of which one can easily enhance with decoration and ornament specific to Arab culture. Printing with movable type, which appeared in Europe in the 15th century, and Arabic script seem incompatible at first sight. Adapting a technology to a writing system for which it was not intended poses tremendous difficulties for engravers and foundry workers (high number of characters, forced alignments, problems of inter-sign connection, a much greater risk of mistakes, congestion of certain letters, etc.). Only in the 19th century did Ottoman typographers devise a satisfactory system that allowed any letter sequence to be set in fragments, but the system proved too complex and had little impact on society, which continued to prefer writing by hand. The 20th century witnessed many proposals for reforming and simplifying Arabic. In 1956, Linotype released Yakout, a typeface that halved the character set by keeping only two of each letter’s four possible forms. Yakout met with such success among Arab newspapers and the commercial press that this simplification surely had a considerable effect on reading habits. Today, Arabic typography is still a major
Primitive Kufic
North African Kufic
challenge internationally. The relationship between the structure of the script and the technologies at its service is key. Until recently, all technologies supported only limited use of Arabic script (due to problems with writing direction and glyph identification during changes in platform, country or software). However, nowadays, OpenType format and Tasmeem extension have resolved most of these issues.
Styles and forms
“Flat” Kufic
Oriental Koranic Kufic
Primitive Koranic Kufic
Thuluth
Ruq’a
Diwani Al-Jeli
Diwani
Examples of the variety of Arabic scripts before the advent of typeface design. Source: Khatt Foundation.
Arab-Muslim civilisation has always favoured calligraphic art and its diversity of techniques, forms and media. Consequently, Arabic script, besides its importance in the visual world of Islam, has retained immense formal variety and richness. Whereas in Latin there is a clear and perceptible distinction between everyday writing, calligraphy and typography, the Arabic disciplines seem less differentiated. Although it is hard to draw up a typographic classification, one can discern, among the abundance of calligraphic styles, two major families around which the design and writing of today’s Arabic letters have been sculpted: Kufic and Naskh. Kufic, an angular script, is characterised by geometric forms adapted to motif art. And this script alone includes many variants ranging from primitive Koranic forms to balanced, airy classicism; from extremely geometric, logotype-like forms to baroque profusion of decorative elements. Naskh, which is more cursive, was originally used for profane and practical texts. Then, in the ninth century, it became the script for everyday writing, as it combined ease of drawing and elegance. A harmonious compromise between geometric norms and expressive cursiveness, Naskh relegated Kufic scripts to a titling role. Other styles are equally noteworthy for the potential of contemporary interpretations they offer. Ruq’a, originally used to facilitate administrative writing, stands out for highly economical movement of the kalam and the elimination of all stylistic effects. While its drawing speed and ease of line have made it a popular script in the Arab world, its simplicity also echoes the sobriety of Western type designs. In contrast, more ornamental styles such as Thuluth, mainly used for chapter headings and titles, and Diwani, for official texts, give type designers great inspiration. Contemporary typography has directly tapped these formal distinctions in order to tweak them or apply them to current applications. Like any typographic rule, these principles – fusing geometric rigour, calligraphic variations and formal analogies of language – still leave plenty of latitude for novel and creative interpretation.
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publishing
by john stones
Blogs to Books Through blooks, these printed books based on blogs, John Stones analyzes the evolution of online media and looks at the future of such media in the light of current transformations in publishing.
It’s Nice That Issue #3. April 2010. Collection of the best articles and interviews published on the blog itsnicethat.com between November 2009 and March 2010. © 2010 It’s Nice That.
Whatever happened to blogs?
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Once upon a time, blogs were the epitome of cool. You could casually toss one off, like Carrie Bradshaw, the fictional protagonist of Sex and the City, and the world would lie at your feet. Or so it seemed. But, since those heady days at the turn of the century, blogs have gone from being an exciting novelty to simply ‘required reading’, something to trudge though, and we’ve experienced the blogging sublime – blogs about blogs. Then, Hollywood got in on the act, producing such blog-inspired films as Julie & Julia (2009). And television followed, with the series, Secret Diary of a Call Girl, inspired by the racy Belle de Jour blog (aired on ITV2 in the UK). And now, irony of ironies, we have the book of the blog too. So, are these tomes the blog’s exhausted epitaph; or are blogs actually reviving the staid world of book publishing? “The Big Blog Dream has largely died”, writes commentator Bill Wasik on, you guessed it, his blog. “First, the mainstream media muscled in, using their storehouses of experience and talent to launch scores of their own high-traffic blogs (and when they didn’t build their own, they hired the best amateurs to join their staff). Second, the Internet-native media that has survived are hardly amateur by any definition”. In the rarefied enclave of the creative industries, designers, writers and photographers have found blogs a mixed
blessing. Graphic designers in particular have suffered a double whammy. First, their primary field, the printed page with all its visual and tactile pleasure, was usurped. Plus, creativity and authorship have been devalued, with the promise of financial returns really only benefitting such behemoths as Google. It’s something Jaron Lanier, the dreadlocked, heretic guru of Silicon Valley, has persuasively argued in his recent polemic, You are not a Gadget (Allen Lane). He highlights the dangers to creativity inherent in our current relationship to the Web; music, design, film and journalism are debased and cannibalised, carved up into little bits for blogs, while the creatives that originate new material are sidelined and often deprived of financial recompense for their work.
Back to paper It is against this backdrop that designers and design critics have turned, after a respectable period of blogging, to producing the ‘book of the blog’. Quite apart from their natural propensity for print, what are we to make of the results? Is this what Lanier so picturesquely described as “creative people – the new peasants – resembling animals converging on shrinking oases of old media in a depleted desert?” It’s hard not to have some sympathy with this comment made by D. Gions, on the review section of Amazon (itself a blog of sorts), after buying 79 Short Essays on Design
BLDG Blog Web page showing The BLDG Book, written by Geoff Manaugh in 2009 based on content from the website http://bldgblog.blogspot.com © 2009 Geoff Manaugh (BLDG Blog)/Chronicle Books LLC.
(Princeton Architectural Press). He/she writes, “These are basically posts from this guy’s blog. It’s fairly interesting, but I had a hard time reading it straight through.” The book is an anthology of writing by Pentagram partner Michael Bierut, largely taken from Design Observer, the blog he co-established in 2003. The ‘essays’ (imagine the title 79 Blog Posts…) have been culled from the website and, for the book, given various typographic treatments. Meanwhile, Design Observer is a victim of its own success, leaving the immediacy of its origins behind to become a major commercial entity (with some blogging attached). At the same time, some very popular design blogs, such as Armin Vit’s Speak Up in the USA and Pingmag in Japan, have shut up shop (though both remain archived and accessible), while others, including the UK’s Dezeen, have become rivals to well-established magazines. There are survivors though. Take DailyMonster.com. Begun in 2006, when Stefan Bucher (a German-born graphic designer resident in Los Angeles) began doodling a Rorschach-like monster every day, on his blog, and invited feedback. It was a diverting distraction from the constraints of the daily grind, and the spin-off blog quickly developed a following. Now published as 100 Days of Monsters (How Books), the monsters are relocated from the immediacy of the blog to the highly controlled environment of the book (replete with an animated DVD).
Bldgblog.blogspot.com, the wide-ranging blog of erstwhile Dwell editor Geoff Manaugh, is another that has made the migration to print, thanks to Chronicle Books. Likewise, It’s Nice That, a blog that is the darling of many graphic design students, now produces biannual Issues in print, reshowing work from the blog in expanded form alongside new material, such as interviews with well-known figures (“we’re quite well connected and thought it was a pity not to spend a bit more time with them,” meaning celebrated interviewees). MagCulture.com, the blog of editorial designer Jeremy Leslie, is another that has succumbed to the temptation of a print version. The genre has a name, but it hasn’t really caught on. ‘Blook’ was conceived in the first flush of enthusiasm that has since waned, in the same way that our enthusiasm for instant chat, email and now blogs have. And, of course, the ‘blook’ has gone mainstream too; any narcissistic Internet dilettante may ‘immortalise’ his or her blog with a quick trip to ‘print on demand’ websites such as www.blurb.com (“what will your book be?”) or www.lulu. com (“one million authors have used lulu.com”). “The great thing about blogging is the instantaneous nature of content publication, but the flipside is that the content disappears too quickly, becoming buried below the latest posts. This will help you dig out some of those posts”, writes Leslie about the print version of magCulture.com, as if the search function wouldn’t be much quicker. Selling for a tiny sum, magCulture.com/ paper is an indulgence (printed incidentally on newsprint, by the Newspaper Club, an online facility for creating small-run newspapers). On the other hand, many of the other ‘blooks’ are clearly commercial ventures.
Return on investment… There’s the obvious criticism of ‘cashing in’ to deal with, whether in reference to the spin-off book, or to the initial blog (which may merely be a marketing device for either an egocentric/ambitious individual or a company seeking to ‘get in close’). Take this exchange about Speak Up’s last entry, between Vit and reader, Joe Clark, which incidentally also exemplifies the rude tone or ‘trolling’ so typical of the genre: Joe Clark: So you’re saying that at no time did you start or perpetuate Speak Up so it could advance your career? Armin Vit: I don’t think I said that. I said the contrary, Speak Up made my career basically. JC: As, for example, getting hired by Pentagram? AV: I met Michael Bierut through Speak Up so, yes, I did ‘use’ Speak Up for that. I doubt Michael hired me for my blogging capabilities alone, though. JC: And now that your career is doing so well you can move to Austin, Texas and coast on a couple of clients at a time, you don’t need the blog anymore? AV: Twist words much? Michael Bierut then joins in the discussion.
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Magculture.com Page from the website http://magculture.com. And project for the journal magculture.com/ paper, initiated by the founder of the Jeremy Leslie blog , and based on online content since 2006. © Jeremy Leslie/ Magculture.com
Michael Bierut: I for one am grateful that Armin Vit started Speak Up in order to trick me into hiring him at Pentagram. So much harder than, say, dropping off a portfolio, but that kid never does things the easy way. Vit’s winding up post suggests blogging was a victim of its own success. It simply exhausted itself and fragmented; discussions dried up as previously regular posters set up their own blogs. He also adds that it’s difficult to see the space or desire for new blogs to develop a similar momentum. But with his reputation now secure, commissions for work and for prestigious books such as Design Referenced (Rockport) have rolled. And Vit continues to maintain a clutch of more specialised blogs (Brand New, Quipsologies, Word It). Alex Bec, one of the founders of It’s Nice That, is refreshingly honest about the marketing function of that website. “We make our money as a design agency, all built off awareness of the website. And we use our publications as a shop window, as a way of finding new talent.” Reluctant to call the website a blog, Bec is equally reticent about calling the printed Issue a magazine; “It doesn’t depend on covering current items. We hope people can spend more time with it, have a fuller relationship with it”.
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… or looking for recognition? The foreword to Issue #3 states that it allows, “…a format that gives the work the respect it deserves.” Is this not a strange comment from the founders of a highly successful design blog; that the Web is somehow disrespectful? “We mean that in the sense that the work we show was not originally created to be seen at 72dpi in RGB,” Bec replies cannily. Issue has a print run of 5,000 compared with 90,000 hits and 600,000 page views a month for the blog, but both are self-financing. And how does Bucher defend his book of the blog? “Simply, I love books, and I’ll use any excuse to make one,” he says. “The Monsters, of course, thrive on motion. Each day people react to the new Monsters by writing stories, or commenting on what other people have written. It’s a living system. A book can’t replicate that experience, but it can offer a different view. 100 Days of Monsters was a way for me to create a time capsule of the start of this experiment. It also gives people a chance to see the drawings as I did; as opposed to 480 x 320 pixel video images. I think that this is a general impulse for people who build something online; [a book] is a way to create another, more permanent way of looking at a project.” And was there also the idea that he could make some money from it? “Do I hope? Yes. Do I? Not yet. I don’t know why you’d be worried about saying so. The more I can sustain myself financially by drawing
Daily Monster Right: Drawings of monsters. Books and DVD of the “100 Days of monsters” project. Left: Stefan G. Butcher web page www.dailymonster.com © 2008 by Stefan G. Butcher/Daily Monster Inc.
Monsters, the more Monsters I get to draw. And I don’t think that’s a bad thing”.Given the difficulties for creatives of all sorts to survive in the free-for-all of the Web, so well highlighted by Lanier, who would wish to disagree? If major newspapers and music companies can’t make the Internet work though, perhaps individual designers, lighter on their feet, might.
A new type of book And while structural and financial motives may be primary, for the book of the blog, it would be churlish to deny that some interesting creative possibilities are happening. It’s Nice That certainly adds something to the print-media mix with Issues (for which they recruited an editorial designer). But, so far the ‘innovations’ seem very similar to the pleasures of a well-conceived, well-designed magazine or book. Bucher goes a bit further, including a DVD with extra material, but this still can’t capture the freshness of the Web. The BLDGBLOG Book is perhaps the most successful transition to date. Given its futuristic, architectural bent it’s only natural that Manaugh be sensitive to the chaotic, overwhelming experience of online reading, with its never ending trails of distraction. This is a book that could induce severe indigestion if read cover to cover. Instead, it encourages the reader to either delve or skim.
Like the blog from which it is drawn, Manaugh says the book is built around the pleasure principle of following your desires. “What I wanted to do…was to pull out certain threads from the blog that seemed more worthy of an extended discussion. I wanted to use the book as a book,” Manaugh writes. Too often, however, these ‘extensions’ seem to be a euphemism for less rigorous editing, but the design (by MacFadden & Thorpe) enforces some visual discipline on the book. “For a blog to be in print, there needs to be a very good reason,” Bec says. Certainly in these books of the blogs, the designs, illustrations and photographs work better on the printed page than on screen. But surely, the real reason for these hybrid beasts is that we are still struggling to find a mature way of dealing with the Internet? As the rise and fall of the blog shows, solutions are fast moving. New entrants, such as the iPad, potentially could change the game once again. Book publishers and other media owners are still ‘at sea’, like the rest of us, and will latch on to new trends and content especially when they see proof of an interested audience (one of the blog’s handier features). If this allows designers and other creatives to be viable and recompensed for their work it is surely a good thing; however these blogs to books may only be a curious and anomalous step along the way.
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TD 63-73 Ben Bos Unit Editions 319 pages – 19.5 x 24.5 cm English – £35
Ben Bos tells the story of Total Design from 1963 to 1973, “the agency’s golden era.” When it was founded in 1963, Bos,
Wim Crouwel, Friso Kramer and Benno Wissing formed the core team. The Dutch graphics landscape was then very different from how it is now. The importance of the boundary between advertising and the design business world ruled out any meaningful collaboration. And while in the USA Paul Rand was designing IBM’s logo and communications, the members of Total Design were dreamily wondering about investing in such a market. It was only after many meetings with unconventional advertisers and gifted architects that Total Design was able to penetrate this sector, which radically transformed the Dutch graphics scene for decades
to come. TD 63 to 73 shows, as well as the agency’s seminal works (and there are plenty of them: the Post Office, Philips, Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, communications for the Bijenkork store whose logo was designed by Joseph Müller-Brockmann, etc.), how Total Design was built up with no preconceptions. A team that describes itself as on the political left and is responsible for the identity of many of the country’s banks, an agency that wants to be inspired by sharing and an egalitarian view of job titles and claims to work in the presence of real masters. Total Design have balance things precariously. But these young people who wanted to have
their cake and eat it deserve our congratulations. A minor complaint about the book itself: Although the author warns the reader in the foreword, this history of Total Design is Bos’s own personal memoire. Thus it is full of his likes, his partners and a great deal of name-dropping, to the extent the narrative sometimes comes across as a tribute to his various colleagues. The thread of the story and of the ideas tends to get lost in his ‘small circle’ which the unfamiliar reader cannot relate to. A book for cognoscenti of Dutch graphic design. CB
Alex Steinweiss : The Inventor of the Modern Album Cover Kevin Reagan, Steven Heller Taschen Books 416 pages – 39.6 x 33 cm French, German, English – €500 “Alex Steinweiss designed the first illustrated album cover for a 78 rpm disc in 1940, and in 1948, he invented the cardboard sleeve which became the standard for the 33 1/3 rpm LP until the compact disc first appeared in 1983. Steinweiss’s trademark sinuous print remained for a long time a constant feature on album covers.” This is how Steven Heller begins his foreword to the book Alex Steinweiss: The Inventor of the Modern Album Cover. The book, published by Taschen in the first quarter of 2011, is the size of an A3 format manuscript, and contains the entire career-long output of the American graphic artist, Alex Steinweiss. As Columbia Records’ first artistic director in 1938, he decided how music would be packaged throughout the first half of the twentieth century. The excellent quality, large-format illustrations help the reader discover both the communicational aspects of the music industry in the last century and observe the stylistic variety used to differentiate between very different musical aesthetics. For the author, Kevin Reagan, it is not just a matter of looking at the work of a lifetime but of making a journey through the history and representation of twentieth-century music by analysing a discipline’s growth of expression. Jazz and classical music are well represented and account for the majority of his overall album output, although the publication covers all genres. The genius of Alex Steinweiss is certainly revealed in all his extraordinary creative powers, both in the use of novel materials as well as in his constant adapatation to contemporaries’ needs. Although regularly featured in the American and international press, the unusual career of the small-time graphic artist from Brooklyn still leaves us speechless. IM 142:
books
Not a toy - Fashioning radical characters
IKEA, the book
Scriptes
Graphic Design for Fashion
Atopos Pictoplasma Publishing Berlin 350 pages – 23 x 33.6 cm English – €49.50
Staffan Bengtsson Publisher Arvinius Förlag 443 pages – 17 x 23.5 cm English – €56
Steven Heller, Louise Fili Thames & Hudson 352 pages – 17.2x 24.5 cm French – €32
Jay Hess et Simone Pasztorek Laurence King 240 pages – 21.7 x 28 cm English – €42
Pictoplasma, the Berlin festival dedicated to characters, avatars, figurines and other ‘mascots’, published this book in August as a celebration of the appearance on the catwalks of these ‘beings’ and their growing presence in the fields of fashion, photography and visual creation. Produced in conjunction with Atopos Contemporary Visual Culture, Not a Toy gives plenty of space to quality pictures and shows a selection of works using a broad range of materials – textiles, plastics, textures – and slick new techniques to bring these hybrid individuals into play. The cover picture of Pyuupiru sets the ball rolling between reality and fiction. With, among others, Agatha Ruiz de La Prada, Alexander McQueen, Ara Jo, Sandra Backlund, Anne De Vries and Nick Cave. IM
Not for the rich but for the smart. The first IKEA store opened its doors in 1958. Initially the brand only sold small items: household gadgets, pencils, objects. The founder, Ingvar Kamprad, then left his mark by selling furniture; the idea was to produce accessible design for everyone and transform the quality of Swedish interiors. To democratize design, the Ingvar relied on three principles: form, function and price. The system of production, marketing and storage brought prices down. The furniture was ready to take away, coming in kit form and sold in flat packs. This book retraces the fashions that Swedish design has seen over the second half of the twentieth century. Under artistic director Lennart Ekmark, IKEA affirmed smart, robust and economical design. Thinking of its customer’s everyday needs by providing play areas and restaurants at its stores, IKEA has grasped the fact that social ideals are not incompatible with profit. CB
Steven Heller and Louise Fili look at the history of script in a book packed with illustrations. Declared the bastard daughter of Roman type and handwriting, this typographical family enjoyed its golden age in the early twentieth century in France, Italy, Germany, Britain and the United States. Used to decorate announcements and calling cards, it was a favourite for high society protocol while also featuring prominently in business spheres. Printers at the time would have catalogues with a huge variety of scripts. Later on, the world of advertising gave them a new lease of life before the Dadaists adopted them, thereby criticising the archaism of society and the art world. Jan Tschichold also used script in contrast with his sans serif letters, which was typographical heresy at the time. Polite and elegant, script tells the story of propriety… CB
With its embossed pink-and-fuchsia hardcover, this book by graphic designers Jay Hess and Simone Pasztorek appears both sculptural and arresting. Organised into four chapters – brands, invitations, packaging and catalogues or look books – Graphic Design for Fashion surveys a careful selection of graphic design studios or agencies that have worked with the fashion industry in recent years, including Mevis & Van Deursen for Viktor & Rolf, Antoine + Manuel for Christian Lacroix, Studio Newwork for Robert Geller, Hansje Van Halem for Orson+Bodil and Basedesign for Lowe. Each graphic/ fashion designer pairing highlights the relationship between two creative entities, recalling that between a client and his designer. Each association is an opportunity for graphic experimentation or, on the contrary, for the affirmation of identity of a fashion house, and generally reveals the attempt to push back conventions in the use of material, be it paper or fabric. The art of wielding matter in the service of form. IM
I don’t know where I’m going but I want to be there. The expanding field of graphic design 1900-2020 Sophie Krier, Marjolijn Ruyg et Minke Kampman Bis 165 pages – 17.5 x 25 cm English – €29.50 If a graphic designer has so much difficulty in defining himself, it is doubtless because of the profound changes currently affecting the discipline. Drawing, typography, calligraphy, photography, video, multimedia: the technological advances never cease to redefine the contours of a multifaceted sector. With its title, I don’t know where I’m going, but I want to be there, this book defends the contemporary graphic scene in which one can find tossed together the collaboration between the M/M studio and photographers Inez Van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, the short film by H5 that recently won an Oscar and the video clips by James Frost and Yan Thomas. A chronological frieze traces out a century of
history, from the 1900s to the present day, highlighting the graphic connections between the creativity of the past and that of today. The volume is rounded off with a corpus of theoretical texts on graphic design and ecology, standardisation and the responsibilities of the graphic designer as citizen. While the book does not claim to be exhaustive, it nevertheless offers both amateur and specialist a thorough reading of a graphic design sector that is expanding on all fronts, and whose invisible limits question the position of graphic design in contemporary society – caught between a mission for general interest and the frenzy of communication. RRT
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