POWER_POINT_Graphic_Design_A_Medium_for_the_Masses_James_Beighton_

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Graphic Design: A Medium for the Masses james.beighton@leeds-art.ac.uk


Areas for consideration … The origins of Graphic Design ●Graphic Design in relation to Fine Art ●Graphic Design in relation to Advertising ●Graphic Design as a tool of Capitalism ●Graphic Design as a Political tool ●Graphic Design and Postmodernism ●Graphic Design and Social Conscience ●


Bison and Horses, c. 15,000 - 10,000BC, Cave painting, Lascaux, France


Giotto di Bondone, Betrayal, c. 1305, Fresco, Arena Chapel, Padua, Italy


John Everett Millais, Bubbles, 1886, Pears Soap advertisement


Introduction of the term ‘Graphic Design’: 1922, William Addison Dwiggins (successful designer): ‘In the matter of layout forget art at the start and use horse-sense. The printingdesigner’s whole duty is to make a clear presentation of the message - to get the important statements forward and the minor parts placed so that they will not be overlooked. This calls for an exercise of common sense and a faculty for analysis rather than for art’.


Herbert Spencer: ‘Mechanized art’ Max Bill and Josef Muller-Brockman: ‘Visual Communication’ Richard Hollis: ‘Graphic Design is the business of making or choosing marks and arranging them on a surface to convey an idea’ Paul Rand: ‘… graphic design, in the end, deals with the spectator, and because it is the goal of the designer to be persuasive or at least informative, it follows that the designer’s problems are twofold: to anticipate the spectator’s reactions and to meet his own aesthetic needs’.


‘Whatever the information transmitted, it must, ethically and culturally, reflect its responsibility to society’. Josef Muller-Brockman


‘Although graphic design as we know it originated in the late nineteenth century as a tool of advertising, any association today with marketing, advertising, or capitalism deeply undermines the graphic designer’s self-image. Graphic design history is an integral part of advertising history, yet in most accounts of graphic design’s origins advertising is virtually denied, or hidden behind more benign words such as “publicity” and “promotion”. This omission not only limits the discourse, but also misrepresents the facts. It is time for graphic design historians, and designers generally, to remove the elitist prejudices that have perpetuated a biased history’.

Steven Heller, Eye, No. 17, 1995, reprinted in Bierut, M., Drenttel, W., Heller, S. and Holland, D.K (eds.), (1997), Looking Closer 2, New York, Allworth Press, pages 112 - 119


Edouard Manet (1832 - 83), A Bar at the Folies Bergeres, 1882


Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Aristide Bruant, 1893, poster

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, La Goulue, 1890s, poster


Alphonse Mucha, Job, c. 1898, poster for cigarette papers


Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scottish Musical Review, 1896, poster

Koloman Moser, 13th Secession Exhibition, 1902, poster


Peter Behrens, AEG, 1910


Savile Lumley, Daddy, what did YOU do in the Great War?, c. 1915, poster


Alfred Leete, Britons [Kitchener] wants you!, 1914, poster

James Montgomery Flagg, I want you for U.S. army, 1917, poster


Julius Gipkens, Trophies of the Air War, 1917, poster


Wassily Kandinsky (1886 - 1944), Composition VIII, 1923


El Lissitzky, Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge, c.1919, poster


F.H. Stingemore (UK), London Underground Map, 1931 - 2


Henry C. (Harry) Beck (UK), London Underground Map, 1933


After Harry Beck, London Underground Map


Simon Patterson (1967 - ), The Great Bear, 1992, lithograph on paper


Simon Patterson (1967 - ), The Great Bear, 1992, lithograph on paper


Oskar Schlemmer (German), Bauhaus logo, 1922


Laszlo Moholy-Nagy (Russian), Painting Photography Film, 1925, book cover


Herbert Bayer (German), Kandinsky 60th Birthday exhibition, 1926, poster


Piet Zwart (Dutch), Het boek van PTT, 1938 (Dutch telephone service book)


Herbert Matter (Swiss), Swiss Tourist Board, c. 1932 - 34, posters


A.M. Cassandre (French), L’Intransigeant, 1925, newspaper poster


A.M. Cassandre (French), Etoile du Nord, 1927, poster


Tom Purvis (UK), LNER, 1937, poster


Ludwig Hohlwein (German), Reichs Sports Day for the Association of German Girls , 1934, poster

Ludwig Vierthaler (German), Degenerate Art, 1936, exhibition poster


Hans Schleger (German, working in UK), Eat Greens for Health, 1942, poster


Josep Renau (Spanish), Industry of War, 1936


Josep Renau (Spanish), Stalingrad: The New Star of Freedom, 1942


Pere Catala i Pic (Spanish), Let’s Squash Fascism, 1936


V. Deni & N. Dolgorukov (Russian), Our Army and Our Country are strengthened with the Spirit of Stalin!, 1939


G. Klucis (Russian), In the Storm of the Third Year of the Five Year Plan, 1930

G. Klucis (Russian), Long Live the USSR – Fatherland of Workers of the World, 1931


Abram Games, catalogue for ‘Exhibition of Science’, Festival of Britain, 1951


Paul Rand, advert for Jacqueline Cochran, 1946


Helmut Krone for Doyle Dane Berbach, Think Small, advert for Volkswagen, 1959



Saul Bass, poster for The Man with the Golden Arm, 1955

Saul Bass, poster for Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo, 1958

Saul Bass, title graphics for Anatomy of a Murder, 1959


Paul Rand, logo for American Broadcasting Company, 1962 Paul Rand, poster for IBM, 1970


‘We have been bombarded with publications devoted to this belief, applauding the work of those who have flogged their skill and imagination to sell such things as: cat food, stomach powders, detergent, hair restorer, striped toothpaste, aftershave lotion, beforeshave lotion, slimming diets, fattening diets, deodorants, fizzy water, cigarettes, roll-ons, pull-ons and slip-ons ‌ Ken Garland, First Things First Manifesto, 1964


‘There are other things more worth using our skill and experience on. There are signs for streets and buildings, books and periodicals, catalogues, instructional manuals, industrial photography, educational aids, films, television features, scientific and industrial publications, and all the other media through which we promote our trade, our education, our culture and our greater awareness of the world’ Ken Garland, First Things First Manifesto, 1964


F.H.K. Henrion, Stop Nuclear Suicide poster, 1960


Seymour Chwast/Push Pin Studio, End Bad Breath poster, 1968


Art Workers Coalition, Q. And Babies? A. And Babies, 1970


Hipgnosis, 10CC, Deceptive Bends sleeve design, 1977


Jamie Reid, Sex Pistols, Never Mind the Bollocks ‌ sleeve design, 1977


Peter Saville, FAC 001, The Factory Club Night poster


Peter Saville, New Order, Blue Monday, sleeve design, 1983


Neville Brody, The Face magazine covers, 1980s


David Carson, Ray Gun, double page spread


David Carson, Don’t mistake legibility for communication


Public Image Limited, album, sleeve design, 1986

Public Image Limited, compact disc, cd packaging, 1986


Peter Blake, Band Aid, Do they Know its Christmas?, 1984

Chumbawamba, Pictures of Starving Children Sell Records, 1986


Designers Republic, Pop Will Eat Itself, Ich bin ein auslander, sleeve design, 1994


Julian House (for Intro), Primal Scream, Xtrmntr, sleeve design, 2000


Mark Farrow (Farrow Design), Spiritualized, Ladies and Gentlemen we are floating in space, CD packaging, 1997


Mark Farrow (Farrow Design), Spiritualized, Ladies and Gentlemen we are floating in space, limited edition CD packaging 1997


The Coup, Party Music, withdrawn CD cover, 2001


Time Magazine, cover, September 14th 2001



‘Evidence of designer concern is found in the form of well-meaning but woefully masturbatory poster exhibitions and portfolios organized on general humanistic themes such as peace, human rights and the environment’ Steven Heller, 1991


Jonathan Barnbrook, Bastard typeface, 1990


Jonathan Barnbrook, Olympukes


‘Quite understandably, the people behind these campaigns have come to think of themselves as cultural philosophers, spiritual guides, artists, even political leaders. For instance, Benetton, rather than using its ads to extol the virtues of its clothing, opted instead to communicate what Oliviero Toscani believed to be fundamental truths about the injustice of capital punishment. According to the company’s communication policy, “Benetton believes that it is important for companies to take a stance in the real world instead of using their advertising budget to perpetuate the myth that they can make consumers happy through the mere purchase of their product”’. Naomi Klein, Truth in Advertising, 2000 (in Looking Closer 4, page 64)


Oliviero Toscani, Benetton adverts 1990 - 1992


‘It seems like a noble goal, yet Benetton’s political branding campaigns implicitly promise customers a happiness of another sort – not just beauty, status or style, the traditional claims fashion companies make, but virtue and engagement. And that’s where the problems arise, because this claim is simply not true. Benetton’s clothing has nothing to do with AIDS or war or the lives of prisoners on death row, and by using these issues in sweater advertisements, Benetton is inserting a layer of distance and mediation – represented by the Benetton name itself – between consumers and these important issues’. Naomi Klein, Truth in Advertising, 2000 (in Looking Closer 4, page 64)


Oliviero Toscani, United Colors of Benetton advert 1990

Reworked billboard ad by Saatchi & Someone, (original text United Colors of Benetton), 1990 - 91


‘While the publicity generated by such campaigns [Benetton] is immense – and their globalized distribution protects them from the effects of a ban in any one country – it is also surely shocking that the shock effect wears off so quickly. Perhaps the overall driving motive of such campaigns is in fact nothing new – but simply an astute loyalty to one of the oldest adages in the business: there is no such thing as bad Publicity’


Barbara Kruger, I shop therefore I am, 1987

Barbara Kruger/Selfridges, I shop therefore I am, 2006


‘Anyone entering the Selfridges store in London for their new year sale in January may have wondered if the store wasn't doing its best to put off potential customers. Bold red, black and white signs incorporating phrases extolling the distortion of desire that comes with commodity fetishism were everywhere. It was as if a bunch of Marxist subvertisers had crept in late at night and hijacked the space. Critiques of consumerism sourced from Malcolm X, Charles Baudelaire and Edgar Allen Poe, among others, were everywhere - as part of a collaboration between New York artist Barbara Kruger and the store’ Noel Douglas, The Overall Sales Experience, March 2006, at http://www. socialistreview.org.uk/article.php?articlenumber=9706


Barbara Kruger/Selfridges, Buy Me. I’ll change your life/ You want it You buy it You forget it, 2006


‘For the last decade, as a profession, graphic designers have been either shamefully remiss or inexcusably ineffective about plying their craft for social or political betterment’ Steven Heller, 1991


‘Once we’ve acknowledged that designers have certain inherent limitations as message bearers, the question which must be asked is: “Can graphic designers actually do something to change the world?”’ Steven Heller, 1991


‘The answer is “yes”, if one disregards the fact that there are very limited outlets for this kind of work, and accepts the fact that being socially responsible means taking the initiative oneself, dealing rationally with issues, and having a commitment to a specific cause’ Steven Heller, 1991


Judy Blame, Keep Britain Tidy t shirt, 1992



Adbusters ‘We are a global network of culture jammers and creatives working to change the way information flows, the way corporations wield power, and the way meaning is produced in our society.’ http://www.adbusters.org/




Final thoughts Graphic Design is a relatively young discipline ●Links between Graphic Design and different disciplines, e.g. Fine Art, Advertising are arguably becoming increasingly blurred ●Although born out of consumerist/capitalist interests, Graphic Design is arguably becoming increasingly concerned with social issues ●


Bibliography Bierut, M. (ed) Looking Closer: Critical Writings on Graphic Design series (5 volumes), New York, Allworth Press Fiell, C. and Fiell, P. (2007) Contemporary Graphic Design, Cologne, Taschen Heller, S. and Ballance, G. (2001), Graphic Design History, New York, Allworth Press Hollis, R. (2001) Graphic Design: A Concise History, London, Thames and Hudson McAlhone, B. and Stuart D. (1996) A Smile in the Mind: witty thinking in Graphic Design, London, Phaidon Poynor, R. (1993) The Graphic Edge, London, Booth-Clibborn Editions Poynor, R. (2003) No More Rules: Graphic Design and Postmodernism, London, Laurence King


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