VCD ALUMNI MAGAZINE Issue 2 | Spring 2015
Walker/Buchanan The Story of How Our School Got Its Start
Also: Inside: Cece Bell Pugzilla Rachel Downey Bacher & Buirge Jason VCD Goupil ALUMNI MAGAZINE | ISSUE 2 | SPRING 2015
STAFF EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Ken Visocky-O’grady
COPY EDITOR Jennifer Kramer
MANAGING EDITOR Khalil Dixon
CONTRIBUTORS Terran Washington Ruby Kelly
CREATIVE DIRECTOR Larrie King DESIGNER Joshua Kruszynski COPYWRITERS Meghan Caprez Ryn Voith Khalil Dixon Amanda Azzarelli Erica Batyko
Contents Points of Pride . . . . . . . . . . 10
Pg. 46
CreateAthon. . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Studying Abroad . . . . . . . . 18
Graphique. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Putting in Work . . . . . . . . . 30 Student to Strategist . . . 36
El Deafo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Walker/Buchanan
Pugzilla . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Critical Making . . . . . . . . . 76
The story of how our school got its start.
‘‘The Kent State University VCD program has helped students develop into some of the finest design professionals and design educators in this country and in others’’ — j.Charles Walker
Read more from our founders on page XX
8
Letter from the Director
As the acting director In the School of Visual Communication Design, it is my pleasure to welcome you to the special issue of VCD Alumni Magazine featuring the visionary founder j.Charles Walker and his partner and colleague, John Brett Buchanan, creative director of Glyphix. I am grateful to both of them for
our faculty and students. We continue
It is my hope that faculty, students
sharing their story, which brings to
to rejuvenate the complexion of our
and alumni will stay connected with
life our program’s rich heritage. Our
programs to significantly influence
the School of Visual Communication
school pays tribute to both Walker
the next generation of designers.
Design as we continue to build on the
and Buchanan; each has inspired
The National Association of Schools
legacy of excellence that will inspire
generations of students, faculty and
of Art and Design (NASAD) accredits
new generations of creatives.
alumni through their legacy.
our school for the outstanding quality of its curricula, which has produced
I invite you to learn more about our
I would also like to take this oppor-
some of the nation’s most talented
school, students, alumni and faculty
tunity to thank you, our alumni, for
design and illustration professionals.
as well as view student works on our
your dedication to our school and for
website, created by members of our
maintaining high standards of excel-
Our graduates work as designers at
award-winning student design studio,
lence while reshaping academic and
Fortune 500 companies and in lead-
Glyphix, at www.kent.edu/vcd.
professional discourse. It is through
ership positions as educators and
your excellent works that we continue
researchers. Many of our graduates
to challenge and redefine the role of
are entrepreneurs whose enterprises
visual communicators in our society.
began as incubator projects during their years in our school.
You embody the rich heritage in every
Sincerely,
spectrum of visual communication— from our print design roots to today’s new visual narratives in photography, illustration, 3-D design, motion and interaction design. The School of Visual Communication Design grows and evolves with technology and culture as well as through
Sanda Katila Acting Director
> John Brett Buchanan (left) with j.Charles Walker
10
Thing
Points of Pride EDITED BY: KHALIL DIXON
Asst. Professor Larrie King Presented his most recent paper, Wash: The Development of a Culturally Ambiguous Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Curriculum, at the Ninth International Conference on Design Principles & Practices in March 2015 in Chicago.
Asst. Professor Jessica Barness Was featured on Women of Graphic Design, a website project focused on exhibiting the contributions of women in graphic design and in education provided by design institutions.
Asst. Professor Christopher Darling Had work featured by School of Visual Arts during We Tell Stories, an exhibition of work by more than 350 artists who graduated with an MFA in ‘Illustration as Visual Essay’ during the 30 years the degree has been offered by the institution. Learn More Here
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
Christopher Darling, Again Christopher Darling was also featured in the exhibit Process Work! from the University of Central Missouri BFA Studio Art: Illustration Program and the Gallery of Art & Design. Check it out <
Aimee Crane Alumna Aimee Crane completed a space-themed alphabet set for NASA. Follow the link to view the full gallery! See the gallery here
Cece Bell VCD alum Cece Bell’s new book, El Deafo, is the winner of the 2015 Newbery Honor Book award for its outstanding contribution to children’s literature It was also a #1 best seller in children’s physical disabilities books on Amazon.com. Amazing! Get it on Amazon here
William Scharlott VCD sophomore won first place in the Arts category at the Undergraduate Research Symposium for his independent study on typesetting The Iliad, under the tutelage of Assistant Professor Aoife Mooney. Way to go Will.
12
> Will Scharlottâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s resetting of The Iliad took first place at the Undergraduate Research Symposium in the Arts category
Points of Pride | Student Work
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
Points of Pride | Student Work
>
14
ABOVE YALLA — Let’s Go!, an interaction design project from undergrads Joshua Bird, Eddy Gann, Matthew Neidert, Brandon Alvarado took third place at the Undergraduate Research Symposium in the Communications category
> TOP A sample of Aimee Crane’s NASA themed alphabet set.
Check it out here
> BOTTOM Pa Isen, an interaction design project from undergrads Gabe Schutt, Ruby Kelly, Kerry Butler and Amanda Calvin took second place at the Undergraduate Research Symposium in the Communications category.
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
48 to do som hours great A look at KSUâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first-ever CreateAthon BY MEGHAN CAPREZ
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
‘‘...there are very few short-term commitments available for design students, I thought CreateAthon could be a nice fix for this.’’
mething Nearly 20 Journalism, Communication and
‘‘It’s a great opportunity for students
Senior VCD major Jamie Lefevre came
Visual Communication Design,
to get together, collaborate and create
across CreateAthon when she was
students worked together in small
something beautiful and beneficial
browsing the web in 2013, and she
teams to develop pro-bono design and
in the end.’’
contacted the AIGA Faculty Adviser
marketing materials for local non-
Jillian Coorey to ask if Kent State
profits in a ‘‘creative blitz.’’ Students
CreateAthon is a nonprofit organiza-
might be able to host a CreateAthon
had 24 hours, from 9am November 7, to
tion created to encourage communi-
event on campus.
9am November 8, to create and present
cations students and professionals
their products to their clients in the
to aid other nonprofit organizations
‘‘At the time, there were very few
Kent State library.
in the U.S., Puerto Rico and Canada.
colleges that had hosted one, and
In the 16 years since CreateAthon’s
I really liked the idea of Kent State
founding it has produced more than
being one of these pioneers,’’ Lefevre
CreateAthon because it gave me the
3,500 projects, an estimated $16.7
said. ‘’I have also noticed that there
chance to benefit the community
million market value.
are very few short-term commitments
‘‘I decided to get involved with the
while also doing something I’m pas-
available for design students, which
sionate about,’’ said Rachel Kozy, junior
becomes tricky due to the heavy work-
VCD major and CreateAthon team-lead.
load of our major. I thought CreateAthon could be a nice fix for this.’’
Junior Photo Illustration major Nicole Sauter made the most of study-abroad opportunities at the College of Communication and Information when she traveled to Paros, Greece to study photography. WORDS BY: ERICA BATYKO PHOTOS BY: NICOLE SAUTER
20
Student Spotlight: Nicole Sauter
Nicole Sauter studied in Greece through Athena Abroad, whose representatives she met at the Study-Abroad Expo this past fall at Kent State University. The program fit her schedule and allowed her to gain VCD credit while living in Greece for a month. Sauter was thrilled to be accepted into the program and appreciated all the support she received from Kent. ‘‘I really, really appreciate my study
Sauter says one of her favorite parts
Sauter says her summer studying
abroad advisor and VCD advisor; they
of the trip was being immersed in the
abroad was a life-changing experience
helped on everything,’’ Sauter said.
Greek culture. Paros is less of a tourist
and encourages all students to take
‘‘They were so open to helping me get
destination, so she was able to take
advantage of the many programs Kent
there. I really respected the staff at
part in the daily routine of Greek life.
State provides access to.
Kent State for letting me do that.’’
She made friends with the natives and took part in Greek traditions.
In Greece, Sauter lived on the beach of Paros Island and took a class in
‘‘I learned a lot of lessons, and one that struck me was, ‘Don’t say no’, don’t
‘‘It made me feel more open to meeting
hold yourself back.’’ Sauter said. ‘‘This
digital imagery. The class taught
new people and trying new things.
is the moment to try new things; this
students basic photography skills
I learned how to become more diverse
is the time for no regrets.’’
and allowed them to gain experience
through other people and traditions.’’
in the field. The students explored
Sauter is in the third year of the photo-
the streets of Paros to photograph the
On weekends, she traveled to other
illustration program. She hopes that
island and its residents, Sauter said.
Greek cities and islands. Her favorite
after graduation she will be able to
memories include cliff jumping and
combine her love of photography and
‘‘It was unique because some of the
riding ATVs at midnight to see the city
travel. The next stop on her list: the
students struggled...but I was able to
lights on the water. She even hiked
United Kingdom!
use the skills I learned from Kent to
nine miles from Fira to Oia across the
be almost like a student-teacher.’’
mountains of the Santorini Caldera.
All Photos by Nicole Sauter
22
Student Spotlight: Nicole Sauter
VCD Alumni Magazine
‘‘This is the time to try new things, this is the time for no regrets’’
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
Graphi So, how did you become interested in
Alumna and owner of Studio Graphique, Rachel Downey shares how VCD prepared her for owning a studio.
VCD? I always had an interest in art. I was the kid who would stand in the arts aisle of the grocery store and stare in longing at all the supplies. It was really clear to me that I wanted to go into design of some kind, but I really liked visual communication design because it has more commercial value than other art forms and Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m attracted to the business aspect. Why did you choose to complete your degree at Kent? I knew what I was going to major in, so Kent was a pretty clear front runner because of the strength of the VCD
INTERVIEW BY: RYN VOITH
program. Also, I found I really loved
ique
Tell me about your company. What do you do? How many employees? Mission? Clients? Etc. We’re 10 employees, but we work with a lot of freelancers, bring in interns and other collaborators. We stay small with some amount of intention; we’d rather be specialized, specific, and selective rather than grow for the sake of growth. Our specializations are in brand strategy design and wayfinding consulting. The consulting is key for us, we don’t just make stuff look good. We are strategic in helping clients understand their vision and goals.
the size of Kent. The way I describe
other clients,’’ and I was like, ‘‘Yeah!’’
How did the School of VCD prepared
it is: ‘‘it’s a place where there’s always
It was very challenging; I didn’t have
you for your current role as founder
someone new to meet, but there’s
a lot of experience under my belt,
and president of Studio Graphique?
always a familiar face.’’ It was just the
so I had to chart my own course, but
perfect Goldilocks size for me to have
I don’t regret a second of it. It was
I felt like I was more prepared for the
a great experience, and I did.
great because I learned from my own
business world than my peers from
mistakes, I followed my own vision
other schools. When I came out of
You’re currently the president of
and I got to build this company into
school and interviewed, I felt really
Studio Graphique, which you founded
what I’m passionate about and what
confident having an intelligent, busi-
at age 25. What inspired you to start
I find brings value to the world.
ness-minded conversation with my interviewers. I took the [Issues of GD
your own studio? Is Willoughby still a client for you?
Business] class, which trained us to talk about our work in terms other
I always knew that I’d probably want to start my own business, but the oppor-
They’re not a current client but I just
than aesthetics. How do our choices
tunity came sooner than I expected.
got a call from the old owner out of
help the objectives of the project or
I was working full time in a design
the blue, and he’s like, ‘‘Hey Rachel,
the client? We help people achieve
position, and the vice president of
I’m gonna start another brewery!’’
goals first, then layer the aesthetics
marketing there was investing in the
And I was like, ‘‘No way!’’ I would love
on. That’s not to say that design is
Willoughby Brewing Company. He said,
to be a part of that. I haven’t talked to
less important, but that good design
‘‘If you start your own business, we’ll
him yet; he only left me a message,
is built on the backbone of function.
be your first client and help you find
but it’d be so cool to bring it full circle.
26
Alumni Spotlight: Rachel Downey
Talk to me about VCD faculty.
What advice would you offer incoming
a verbal personality, which most signs
How did they help you, academically
students to the VCD program?
don’t have. You’ll be seeing them pop up
or with professional development?
here and there downtown. Take business courses. It’s remarkable
I say the two big takeaways that I got
how much of our work is infused with
Is there anything you would like to
from the faculty were quality and
business. Part of designing is working
add or any messages you would like
thoughtfulness. We were still doing
our way into other people’s businesses,
to share with our students, faculty or
a lot by hand at that time, and the
to immerse ourselves and get really
alumni?
quality of our craft was a huge focus.
familiar with their everyday challenges. Yes. I have three tips for undergrads:
Secondarily was thoughtfulness; I
Have you visited KSU recently? How
made design choices that served the
has the university changed since you
1. Do an internship, no matter how
needs of the project and didn’t just
were an undergrad?
unglamorous. Real world experience is
please me personally. I knew that in
valuable to an employer.
a critique I’d have to go beyond the
Both the city and the university have
aesthetic qualities and explain why
changed tremendously, but the things
2. In an interview, be prepared to share
I made certain choices.
I remember are still there. I actually
your thinking about how your design
gave a TED-style talk a couple of weeks
communicates or solves a business
Why is it important for you as an
ago, and I made my husband and my
issue. Not just a color choice because
alumna to keep in contact with the
11-year-old son come with me. We got
you liked it.
School of VCD?
there REALLY early and drove my son all over campus. He was totally humor-
3. NEVER, EVER send a resume or cover
Well, it’s less because I’m an alumna
ing us, but we showed him all of our
letter with a typo. Stationery is spelled
and more so because I’m a business
hangout spots and took him to Ray’s
with an e, like in ‘envelope’. If you design
owner and always looking for more
after my presentation for dinner.
stationery for a living you need to know
talent! Knowing that Kent still has a
how to spell it!
strong VCD program, I’m always trying
Also, Studio Graphique is currently work-
to keep my eye out for who’s coming
ing with Kent and KSU, which is so cool
out of it and if they might be a good
to be able to say as an alumna. We’ve
candidate for employment here maybe
been working with the university for a
later down the road if not now. We try
few years now in wayfinding programs,
to keep in contact with some of the
and we’ve been working with the City
teachers and go to the senior show.
of Kent on a new sign program, which is being installed right now! The new signs are super fun and funky (which is so characteristic of Kent) and have
‘‘...two big takeaways that I got from the faculty were quality and thoughtfulness.’’
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
Work
Putting in
Alumni Jason Bacher and Brian Buirge earn accolades for something other than their colorful language.
WORDS BY: KHALIL DIXON
Each year, Print magazine’s Regional Design Annual receives thousands of submissions, but awards only the best. Among those awarded this past year were alumni Jason Bacherand Brian Buirge. The project, Buirge said, came from Ken and Jenn Visocky-O’Grady, who had been working on the SAW Inc. annual report for more than a decade when they passed the project along to Bacher and Buirge. Keeping the Kent State legacy alive, the duo won awards both in Print’s Regional Design Annual and Applied Arts, a major Canadian design magazine.
‘‘That basically started as an accident...’’
>
> Buirge reveals the origin myth of GFDA.
Covers for the SAW annual report
34
Alumni Spotlight: Bacher/Buirge
‘‘Part of the experience... is holding yourself to that standard of quality and constantly pushing...’’
Their partnership grew while they
they love to work, Buirge said—at the
June 2014 and Buirge hopes to travel
were in graduate school in VCD, and
same time.
to new cities soon in search of new
amidst teaching, taking classes and
creative collaborations.
research, the duo gained ‘‘C-list inter-
This love for work probably stemmed
net celebrity status’’ with their web-
from the rigorous VCD program in
Though the recognition and growth of
site goodfuckingdesignadvice.com.
both undergraduate and graduate
business so far seems ample, this is
careers, Buirge said.
all still part of a larger undertaking,
‘‘That basically started as an accident,’’ Buirge said. Created after a long talk
Buirge said. As the business continues ‘‘The program sharpened me and
to develop and (potentially) expand
over coffee discussing their frustra-
changed me and helped to manifest
to more cities, Buirge takes his experi-
tions with teaching, he and Bacher
certain work ethic qualities in me,’’
ences in Kent’s VCD program with him.
went from 500 views to over 70,000
Buirge said. ‘‘Part of the experience,
views on the site in a few days.
because it was so rigorous, is holding
The website eventually led Buirge
‘‘It is a work ethic; it’s not a creative
yourself to that standard of quality
moment, it’s a creative process.
and constantly pushing [yourself].’’
It starts messy,’’ Buirge said.
and Bacher to start their company, Good Fucking Design Advice (GFDA). ‘‘By the end of the first semester of
Buirge said this rigor and push for excellence applies to both design
graduate school, we were running a
and business endeavors. While the
business… haphazardly,’’ Buirge said.
undergraduate program gave them their formal design education, the
Their experience built a strong sense
graduate program pushed them to
of trust and an ability to collaborate,
consider expanding their business.
both with their business and design work, Buirge said. In what Buirge calls
In graduate school, Buirge researched
their ‘‘Clark Kent/Superman’’ thing,
how to run a geographically dispersed
they complete both their GFDA and
creative team, which is what he and
their more formal client projects un-
Bacher are now employing for GFDA
>
and Work. Bacher moved to Brooklyn in
Buirge reveals the origin myth of GFDA.
der the moniker Work—named because
From ‘Student’ BY AMANDA AZZARELLI
Alumnus Jason Goupil is the newest senior strategist researcher at Ologie, a branding, marketing and digital media firm based in Columbus, OH. In his position, Goupil will serve as an internal lead for developing discovery and research plans as a resource for both internal teams and clients.
enthusiastic over different applications of design, but our processes and feedback impacted our work collectively."
In a sense, it entails building a strategy to investigate a subject through a designer’s lens and finding the helpful nuggets which will serve the goals of our clients," Goupil said.
Goupil encourages current VCD students to explore the opportunities that exist in both design and research because the field is adapting to a landscape of new technologies and methodologies. "It is an exhilarating moment to consider where the field will develop," Goupil said.
In 2012, he received a Master of Fine Arts in visual communication design. Goupil said the VCD MFA experience at Kent State was transformational. ‘‘It was a fast two-year trajectory of personal growth marked by an education that shaped the path I am on today,’’ Goupil said. ‘‘My colleagues in the graduate program are each talented in their own right, and I was influenced by every one of them. We each were
to ‘Strategist’
a day in the life
Glyphix 2015
ď ? El Deafo
BY: MICHAEL CAVNA
Reprinted from The Washington Post
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
It’s a story Cece Bell knew she wanted to tell, and believed it was something she should share. But it took decades of discovery and experience, and then artistic growth and parenthood, to get to a place where she was ready to put it to paper.
At age 4, Bell suffered a bout with meningitis
[five-year] execution of the book was probably
that left her ‘‘severely to profoundly deaf’’. Soon she was wearing hearing aids, and a large Phonic Ear across her chest. As her life, too, began to change profoundly, she created an alter-ego—El Deafo!—who, amid a child’s sense of vulnerability and uncertainty, was determined to feel empowered by her being ‘‘different.’’
the hardest project I’ve ever taken on in my life.’’
Now, at age 43, Bell has introduced her superheroic self to the world in her emotionally truthful graphic-novel debut—titled, naturally, El Deafo (Amulet). As memoir, it is a work that demanded its own journey. ‘‘I think the story was easier to tell, since I knew the material inside and out, and I’ve pretty much spent my whole life trying to make sense of some of the things that happened to me,’’ Bell tells The Post’s Comic Riffs (ahead of her appearance Wednesday morning at Washington’s Politics & Prose bookstore, and tomorrow afternoon at One More Page Books in Arlington, Va.). ‘‘But the
‘‘I’ve said it so many times my throat hurts: I don’t see how the graphic novelists in this world make more than one of these things in one lifetime!” Bell was born in Richmond, and El Deafo recounts her childhood growing up near Roanoke. Her Virginia roots run through her work in many ways, including the very illustration itself. She created the inviting art of El Deafo with Eisner-winning colorist David Lasky, whom she and her husband met while attending the College of William & Mary. Comic Riffs caught up with Bell—who now lives in southwest Virginia with her family, including her husband, children’s writer Tom Angleberger—to talk about the challenges of writing a memoir; mining emotional truths over factual truths; and how El Deafo has been received by other people who are deaf.
>>>
40
Feature Interview: Cece Bell
Congratulations on a beautiful and
outlook very much mirrored mine.
utterly engaging book, Cece. Did you
I enjoyed, and still enjoy, challenging
find this personal story easier to tell
myself—hence the part in the book
because you’re looking back and draw-
where I say: ‘‘I’m gonna show those
ing upon your memories, or did that
kids that I’m not just ‘the deaf kid’ in
make it more challenging? And how
our class—I’m the smartest kid in the
long you did spend writing the book?
whole school!" That wasn’t true, of course—I’m pretty sure this kid named
Thanks so much for your generous
Henry was knocking me out of the
words about the book, Michael. I think
park every day. But anyway, that kind
the story was easier to tell, since I knew
of attitude really helped me stay pos-
the material inside and out, and I’ve
itive, and on track. That, and having
pretty much spent my whole life trying
a loving home to return to each day,
to make sense of some of the things
kept me feeling a-OK.
that happened to me. But the execution of the book was probably the hardest
Related to that, Raina Telgemeier— in
project I’ve ever taken on in my life. I’ve
the same SPX session this month that
said it so many times my throat hurts:
she proclaimed herself a fan of yours
I don’t see how the graphic novelists
—said she aims for emotional truth
in this world make more than one of
first, over literal truth, when writing
these things in one lifetime! All told, it
her childhood-based memoirs [Smile
took about five years to do, but I was
and Sisters]. From your author’s note,
completing other projects during that
I gather you believe similarly. Could
time [the early reader Rabbit and Robot:
you speak to how you approach such
The Sleepover, and illustrations for the
narrative choices when writing from
picture book Crankee Doodle]. The last
your life, and how you weigh such
two years of that five-year period, I
decisions about emotion and fact?
was solely focused on El Deafo. I’m totally with Raina on this one. I was One thing I find especially winning
more interested in showing readers
about the story is our hero Cece’s
how it felt to be the only deaf kid in
resilience throughout each setback
the whole school, and what it sounded
great and small. Could you talk a bit
like, too. I also wanted to tell an enter-
about her outlook — and did that
taining story, and if I had presented
mirror yours?
my life’s events in the exact order in which they had literally occurred,
I was a very positive kid, and I’m now
you’d be asleep by Page 21, I think. I
a positive adult. So yes, ‘‘Book Cece’s’’”
looked back at my life, chose the big
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
moments and then rearranged them
their names, though. Part of me want-
Speaking of realism, I’m so curious
a bit. I chose the main people, and
ed to show the featured players some
to know: The superhero themes and
smushed them together a bit. The mo-
stuff beforehand, but a larger part of
metaphors are so wonderful and help
ments and the people in the book are
me thought that if I did, and someone
endear us to little Cece and her youth-
capital-T true—they really did happen,
became upset, I would probably change
ful bravery and sense of distanced
they really did exist. The big moments
identity from her classmates. Is El
in the book are the ones that are most
Deafo actually a name, if not playful
literally true — for example, I really did
alter-ego, you came up with in grade
kick my mother because I was upset
school. And if so, did it help?
about the sign-language classes she was encouraging me to take. There are
It really was a nickname I had for my-
some small moments that are liter-
self. I don’t think I shared it with any-
ally true, too. But sometimes, I had to
one, though, at least not in my younger
come up with some small moments
years. I didn’t actually see that
to tie those big moments together. For
‘‘Afterschool Special’’ where the one
example, the conversation with my
kid calls the deaf kid ‘Deafo’; someone
mother about not wanting to take the
told me about it and I thought it was
sign-language class—I’m sure some-
the book, and it would no longer be as
funny at first. Then it made me mad.
thing like that really took place, but
honest. So…I’ve heard from Martha,
Then I thought: The hell with it, I’ll call
I don’t remember what was said, or
and she loves it. I’ve heard from some
myself that so if anyone says it to me,
whether or not we were in the kitchen.
of the teachers, too, and they’re cool
I’ll be ready! It did help.
You end up smushing all this together
with it. Even the one who I show using
and – voila! – [you have] a better and
the bathroom—I did change her name
Were there ever darker moments, or
more feeling story than if you had just
to protect her privacy! I heard from
deeper rejections, or harsher wounds
plotted it out literally.
Mike Miller [my crush in the book] that
in your childhood, related to your
he received the copy I sent him, but I
deafness, that you chose not to depict
You say that some of your El Deafo
haven’t heard from him since! Uh-oh.
in “El Deafo”? And if so, what was your
characters are composites of real
But I haven’t heard from other people
thinking — and could you share an
people. Before you published this book,
who may recognize themselves—yet.
example or two?
did you show it to anyone who inspired
I’m pretty nervous about that day, if it
any of your characters? And have you
should come. I know I wasn’t always
My darker moments came later, in
heard from any real-life inspirations
fair. That’s what the afterword is for: to
sixth grade and beyond. I think these
since the book’s publication?
stress the fact that the book is most
moments had more to do with my be-
definitely the irrational-kid version of
ing a very late bloomer [we’re talking
Cece [who is] telling the story.
super-late onset of puberty] than with
I didn’t show it to anyone featured in the book before the book got published.
my deafness. There’s a book there, too,
I did ask the people whose names I
probably! I was so far behind the other
kept as-is in the book if I could use
girls that I found it hard to maintain
42
Feature Interview: Cece Bell
certain friendships that had been
and the times I’ve had to do darker
better for my having waited to write it,
meaningful to me, because the other
freelance projects, I usually ended up
in large part because I’m a parent now,
girls were interested in boys and make-
crying in my big pillow at night.
and I think the version of my mother
up and other grown-up things, while I
in the book is a lot closer to real than
was still reading Richard Scarry in my
[Given the book’s] pop-culture refer-
it would have been if I had written the
free time. That served me well later,
ences, I gather you’re in your 40s. Is
book before motherhood. Plus, I need-
though! But I never did get much, if
this a story you wanted to wait awhile
ed to get to a point where I was ready
any, teasing or bullying related to my
to tell — and if so, how did you know
to tell the world without hesitation: I
deafness. Most of the teasing I re-
the time was right to tell it now?
AM DEAF. That’s taken a long time.
ceived was because I was short! So what kind of feedback are you Speaking of the art and deafness, I
getting from deaf students and their
applaud the decision to give these an-
parents, as well as other people who
thropomorphic characters their rabbit
use hearing aids, or ASL? Are they
ears — all the better to show the plugs
relating to it?
and cords that run to her/your Phonic Ear. Can you tell us some about how
I’ve heard more from folks who were/
you created their characters visually?
are more like me [using an audio train-
They have such warm features [that
er in the classroom as kids] and their
they’re] as appealing as [TV’s animat-
parents; I haven’t heard much feed-
ed] Arthur.”
back from folks who communicate A lady never reveals her age. But I’m
primarily through ASL. I’ve also heard
When I presented my first version of
no lady! Yep, I’m 43. Good call! Well, for
from a lot of parents and teachers, too.
the book to my editor at Abrams, she
years and years, I said: "I’m never gon-
Those who have written have really
said that the characters looked too
na tell this story." I’m not sure what
related to a lot of the book, and have
‘‘picture book-y’’—too young. I’ve mostly
happened, other than finally coming
been able to acknowledge [thankfully]
done picture books and had never
to the conclusions that: a.) it’s a great
that every deaf experience is different.
done a book for this age group before,
story; and b.) I might help a lot of peo-
I try to stress this in the afterword—
so yeah, they did look kind of ‘‘picture
ple if I tell it. I’ve struggled for years
there’s a spectrum of deafness, and
book-y’’. She asked me to age them
with the question: Are my books really
no deaf person’s deafness or approach
up, so I tweaked a few things—but
helping anyone? Am I being selfish
to his or her deafness is going to be
obviously the characters still have a
for sitting on my butt and writing and
the same, and that’s cool. And in-
little picture-book in them, so perhaps
drawing and doing the stuff I love?
terestingly, I’ve heard from kids and
that’s what kept them sweet-look-
Do I even have a right to complain
parents whose kids have other types
ing. Any time I try to draw something
about the work when it gets hard?
of disabilities, and even from folks
dark, it is so not me that I throw it
without significant disabilities, saying
away. Write what you know; draw how
I hope that this book will help some-
that the story resonates with them,
you feel! I’m just not a dark person,
one, anyone. I do know that the book is
too—that it feels kind of universal, or
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
universal in terms of the suburban
terms of color and shading]—he did
some ways, it’s closer to how I actually
American experience, that is. That is
the shading, too, because, let’s face it,
am as a person today: playing for the
really cool.
I’m no good at shading. I also sent him
yuk-yuks, not worrying about the deaf-
lots and lots of my reference photos
ness so much.
On the matter of art, what was it like
to help guide him in color choices. I
working with colorist David Lasky
sent him my linework [all done on
I’m also working on a picture book for
[co-author of ‘The Carter Family: Don’t
the computer] as I completed it, and
Candlewick Press, as well as a second
Forget This Song’]? What was your
he colored and shaded it, and sent it
Rabbit & Robot book, a fourth Sock
process [in] working together?
back. I fine-tuned what he did, and
Monkey book, illustrations for a series
then we turned it in to Abrams. It was
of early-readers by [husband] Tom,
David Lasky is the bomb. David and
grueling for David—for both of us, I
and a comic for the second Comics
I went to [the College of] William &
think—but he was such a good sport
Squad compilation edited by the
Mary together. He was the graphics
and so much fun to work with.
amazing Jarrett Krosoczka and Jenni
editor at the Flat Hat, the college news-
Holm. A fuller plate than I think I can
paper where my husband, Tom Angle-
So, what are you working on now, or
berger, and I met. He was a mentor
next —[what’s on your drawing board
to us then, and I’m still in awe of him
or screen]? Anything you care to share
now. He’s been in the comics business
a few details about?
eat. Good grief.
forever and is amazing.
‘‘I hope this book will help someone—anyone.’’ What happened was: I had a different
There’s a picture book coming out in
colorist lined up, but that person soon
early 2015 from Clarion Books which
realized that he had overextended
has no redeeming value except that
himself and had to back out. I asked
it’s hilarious. Well, I think it’s hilari-
David if he knew anyone who could
ous. And part of what makes it funny
help me, and he said: "I’ll color it!" Just
is that it is the exact opposite of ‘El
like that. I think I fainted from the
Deafo’ in every way possible. It’s called
combination of relief and excitement.
I Yam a Donkey, and the premise is: A
David was terrific to work with. I sent
donkey and a yam get into a big argu-
David a packet of stuff that I liked [in
ment about grammar. There ya go. In
El Deafo is available at fine book retailers and online. Get It Here <
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j.Charles Walker & John Brett Buchanan
VCD Alumni Magazine presents exclusive interviews with visionaries, risk takers and pioneers in the world of visual design—j.Charles Walker and John Brett Buchanan j.Charles Walker began his teaching career at Kent State University in 1964. He would later become the founder and first director of Kent State’s School of Visual Communication Design (VCD). In 1973, Walker created the student-run design firm Glyphix.” John Brett Buchanan began teaching at Kent State in 1975. He became the creative director of Glyphix for 25 years, replacing Walker in 1980. Buchanan also founded the VCD’s internship program and developed several courses that helped shape the school’s curriculum.
48
Thing
j.Charles Walker
INTERVIEW BY: KHALIL DIXON
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
Would you please share with us a
versities but chose to attend the Uni-
an idea or statement. Visual design
little about your design education?
versity of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas,
should never be the primary purpose
which offered me a graduate teaching
or the reason for the design, nor
After graduating from high school
assistantship. I taught basic courses
should it be a substitute for or inter-
in 1956, I attended the University of
in graphic design for the first two
fere with the clear communication
Cincinnati College of Applied Arts,
years, 1961–1963. During the third year,
of the original intended purpose. My
one of the few and one of the best
while completing my thesis, I worked
basic design philosophy has always
schools in the U.S. in those early
for the publications department
been, ‘‘Less is More,’’ the less you
years of the profession. In 1961, I
as staff designer. I graduated in the
have to say, the more you need to
received my B.S. degree in Advertis-
spring of 1964 with an M.F.A. in Graphic
designer-it-up.”
ing Art, which was one of the first
Design and accepted a teaching posi-
co-operative work-study programs
tion at Kent State University’s School
What designers influenced you the
in the country. Second year students
of Art. I thought that I would work
most?
attended classes for seven weeks,
there only a few years before moving
then worked in a design/work related
on. However, I retired from Kent State
Educated as a graphic designer in the
situation for seven weeks. It required
on July 4, 2004, 40 years later.
mid-50s to the mid-60s, I was most
five years to complete this degree.
influenced by the conceptualist/ What is your design philosophy?
By the end of my undergraduate edu-
minimalist designers of the era, most notably, Herb Lubalin, Paul Rand, Saul
cation, I decided that I was more inter-
I have always felt that visual comm-
Bass, George Lois, Eric Gill and Swiss
ested in a teaching career in design,
unication design was more of a
designers and typographers such as
having been influenced by my favorite
communication profession than an
Emil Ruder, Josef Muller-Brockmann,
instructor, Lewis Rockwood. I applied
art profession. The designer’s first
Karl Gerstner and numerous others.
to graduate school at a number of uni-
responsibility is to clearly present
This also was the period when profes-
50
Feature Interview: j.Charles Walker
sional publications and periodicals
regular graduate degree programs
regional, national and international de-
such as Print, Communication Arts
offered, the M.A. and M.F.A., I built one
sign awards. I created a student design
(CA), Art Direction and Graphis mag-
of the most unique programs available
studio in 1973 as a special topic course
azines were coming into the main-
anywhere—a combined B.S./M.A. or
and worked with a small number of the
stream. These publications allowed
a B.S./M.F.A. This program allows the
most talented students, acting as the
students to see what was happening
most qualified students to move into
creative director, also doing work for
in the growing profession.
the graduate program in the senior
various departments and the univer-
year, allowing 12 graduate credit hours
sity. After I saw an article published
Later during my teaching and profes-
courses to be used to satisfy profes-
in a 1975 CA magazine about UCDA, a
sional design career, I met and worked
sional course requirements for the
new international design organization
with many outstanding professionals.
B.S. degree programs.
of graphic designers for colleges and
The list of my ‘‘designer heroes’’, if not
universities formed in 1971, I submitted
direct influences, could be endless.
Kent State University is one of the first
a number of pieces from the studio. We
Through the design workshops I creat-
educational institutions in the U.S.
won a gold award, two silver awards
ed, the Blossom+Kent Art Program, the
to establish a stand-alone School of
and a merit award for several posters
Kent State University & the University
Visual Communication Design, uniquely
we had designed. They were to be ex-
and Designers Association (KSUCDA),
housed in its proper and most logical
hibited as part of the annual exhibition
summer workshops and the Kent
university environment, that of the Col-
at the 1976 Conference held in Snow
Summer(s) in Switzerland, England
lege of Communication & Information.
Bird, Utah. I joined the organization and
and Italy, I was able to work with many
attended the conference. As a small,
incredible designers. They include,
The professional course requirement
new organization of only a few dozen
but are not limited to, FHK Henrion,
in all the degree programs are con-
universities and less than a hundred
Ruedi Ruegg, Fritz Gottschalk, Bruno
siderably more than the minimum
members, I ended up not only making
Monguzzi, Leo Lionni, Alan Fletcher,
standards required by the National
friends but also being elected as vice
Mervin Kurlansky, Stephen Geisbuhler
Association of Schools of Art and
president of the organization in 1977,
and numerous others from all over the
Design (NASAD) found in even the
the following year. One of my respon-
world, all of whom richly influenced
best programs in the U.S. This sets
sibilities, and the primary reason that
my own work and me.
Kent State University’s School of
I accepted the position, was to design
VCD apart from all others in country.
UCDA’s first official annual of competi-
Q. What do you hope will be your legacy?
tion winners. That project took nearly Q. What is your involvement with
two years to complete, utilizing the
UCDA?
Studio 73 student staff as it was called
Against great odds, I envisioned,
originally. Following the 1978 confer-
organized and built one of the larg-
I designed many publications, post-
ence and competition, I was elected
est, most comprehensive, unique,
ers and magazines since the very
as UCDA’s eighth President.
rigorous and highly rated visual
beginning of my teaching career for
communication design programs in
the School of Art and for Kent State
the United States. In addition to the
University, winning more than 100
In those early years, the board consist ed of five [people], each serving a fiveyear term, with the outgoing president becoming the board’s chairperson. In 1979, as the outgoing president, I became board chair. During that year, I rewrote UCDA’s constitution and bylaws, formalizing the structure, workings and duties of the board as the overseeing body of the long-term aims and direction of the organization. The new constitution and by-laws were formally approved by the membership during that year’s Hilton Head Conference. In December of that year, as board chair, I called the first meeting of the board of directors held in Denver, Colorado. UCDA’s president for 1981 chose to run again for that office and was elected to a second term in 1982. Since there was no outgoing president and incoming board chair, the board members elected me chair for a second term. My last year as a member of the UCDA board of directors was 1984. However, I ran for board member at-large and was elected and served again from 1991 to 1993. In 2002, both John Brett Buchanan and I were honored at the annual conference in Chicago with UCDA’s prestigious Gold Award. The Gold ‘‘Cube’’ Award (designed for UCDA by me) is presented by UCDA’s board of directors.
52
Thing
‘‘The success [of the program] is demonstrated by the vast variety of positions held by graduates and of the variety of the work...’’
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
In 2008, John Brett Buchanan and I
Q. How would you like to see the VCD
or the musician. However, being a visual
again were asked by UCDA to be in-
program at Kent State University
communication designer requires a
volved in the early stages of the devel-
evolve?
completely different mind-set, more
opment of a UCDA foundation board to
similar to news writing or non-fiction.
help organize long-term fund-raising
Over the last fifty plus years, the Kent
They need to visually speak for someone
goals. We participated for four years
State VCD program, has helped stu-
other than themselves, to communi-
on the foundation board, retiring from
dents develop into some of the finest
cate a specific and clear message to
it in 2011.
design professionals and design ed-
a specific audience that does not nec-
ucators in this country and in others.
essarily include themselves. The satis-
John Brett Buchanan and I have re-
Obviously, I would like to think that a
faction a designer derives from solving
mained involved with UCDA for nearly
goal would be to continue to provide
a visual communication problem, which
40 years because we support their
the finest education possible to stu-
enhances and extends the meaning of
mission: ‘‘The University & College
dents and to help them develop into
the written word through visual form,
Designers Association (UCDA) in-
visually and conceptually creative
can be as rewarding to the designer as
spires designers working in academia
visual communicators through innova-
self-expression is to the artist.
in North America and around the
tive curriculum, which includes train-
world by delivering relevant program-
ing in constantly changing technology
Q. What is the best way for alumni to
ming and benefits in a personal and
and maintaining rigorous standards.
stay connected?
provides for the professional and
Q. What advice do you have for stu-
Use e-mail and other social media
personal growth of its members, and
dents entering VCD?
platforms, such as Facebook, to ask
thoughtful way. The organization
advocates for designer and educators
alumni to supply contacts from their
roles within their institution. UCDA
It is important for students to know
memories of their classmates. John
works to elevate the importance of
what the visual communication design
Brett has acquired many contacts
design overall.’’
profession is, what innate abilities they
with a VCD Alumni Facebook group
have to hone and what they need to
page he set up.
UCDA continues to improve the quality
learn to have professional success. It
of college and university visual com-
is important to make sure they are
The school could also have periodic
munications through educational
choosing this as a life career for the
exhibitions of alumni professional
conferences and workshops, provid-
right reasons.
work. Alumni should feel that the
ing their members with a venue for
institution celebrates their successes,
interaction with notable professional
It must be stressed that the point of
which were in some part due to the
designers and with colleagues in high-
visual design for communication is
quality of their education.
er educational institutions working
not to create visual form to satisfy a
in their specific part of the graphic
need to solely express oneself. The
design field.
artist wants to say something, hoping someone will listen, similar to the poet
> 1962 - j.Charles Walker with the Chandler & Price press he purchased in Olathe, Kansas.
54
Feature Interview: j.Charles Walker
Q. How did Glyphix begin and what was
its mark. Producing award-winning
In the 1979/80 academic year, when
your vision for the program?
work, Glyphix won a Gold award, two
my workload increased with my
Silver awards and a Merit Award from
growing responsibilities as the coor-
By 1973, program began to grow and
UCDA in 1976. The work was exhibited
dinator of the now [renamed] design
develop, students were becoming ever
at the annual conference in Snow
division, rewriting GD&I curriculum,
more sophisticated and creative in
Bird, Utah.
teaching two graduate level courses,
visual design. While I was still free-
acting as advisor and sole thesis
lancing for a number of departments
I was able to derive some financial
director, organizing and running the
at the university, I was so busy I em-
support for Glyphix by charging clients
summer programs on the campus and
ployed a couple of my best students to
minimally for expenses, far less than
in Europe, I asked Professor Buchanan
help me. I tried to convince the pub-
any outside design firms could or
to take over Glyphix. Having had his
lications office to hire students on a
would offer to non-profit organiza-
help in building many of the programs
freelance basis to help them, but there
tions, which we required for clients
I had created previously, [he] gave me
was little interest by the director for
taken on by Glyphix. Other innovative
complete faith that his organization,
the idea. I decided to develop and for-
programs I was creating such as the
creative ability, and work ethic would
malize a special topic course, offering
Summer Kent + Blossom Workshops
continue to move Glyphix forward. As I
elective credit, in a small working stu-
and the Kent Summer in Switzerland,
had foreseen, Professor Buchanan brou-
dio to do work for some of my clients
England and Italy Programs also
ght a creative and organization level
at the university.
provided some funding. Later, a VCD
to Glyphix as professional a full-time
Resource Center and an official Apple
studio as any studio in the profession.
I selected a small group, five or six
Computer and Peripheral Re-Sale
of the best students, in their senior
Store, approved and set up in the VCD
Q. How did you meet Armin Hoffman,
year of the program. Laying claim to
area of the Art Building, generated
Paul Rand, Fritz Gottschalk and Rudi
a small room in the Art Building to
considerable funds.
Ruegg?
programâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s desks and equipment to
We received additional funding from
In the fall of 1972, an Italian/Swiss
furnish it. I acted as creative director,
grants, such as a 1986 Academic
travel program was being organized,
assigning myself the course as one of
Challenge Grant of $178,000 awarded
ostensibly by an outside group, RE-
my three required courses to teach.
by the Ohio Board of Regents to VCD
GIS, which organized such programs
I was able to do that by virtue of my
for being an outstanding educational
for universities around the U.S. The
position as the coordinator of the Divi-
program. In 1988, Glyphix was awarded
faculty head of the industrial design
sion of Design & Crafts, one of whose
the Ohio Board of Regents Excellence
program, within the Division of Design
responsibilities was to schedule facul-
Grant of $149,000. Both grants were
& Crafts, was involved with them in
ty to teach courses in the division.
written by me, John Brett Buchanan
setting up a travel experience in Italy
and the School of Artâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Director, Wil-
for the Industrial Design (ID) students.
The first group of students named it
liam Quinn. This grant funding went
As the ID program was relatively small
Studio 73. By 1976, the studio had been
a long way in building Glyphix.
in its number of majors, it was unlikely
house the studio, I utilized some of the
renamed Glyphix, and it was making
that sufficient enrollment in a sum-
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
mer program could be pulled off. I
Switzerland on the Rhine River, border-
continued and flourished until 1980.
suggested that perhaps a graphic de-
ing Germany, featuring field trips to
During that period, in addition to
sign component, with its larger num-
studios’ museums and to the Zürich
Armin, guest faculty included Paul
ber of majors, could perhaps make
Design School as well as the Basel
Rand, Ivan Cheramayeff, Wolfgang
it happen. I proposed to expand the
School of Design where Armin was
Weingart and numerous notable
program into Switzerland, as it was
chair. In June 1973, a week ahead of the
international designers as speakers.
the most well-known country at that
beginning of the tour, John Buchanan
time for innovative graphic design.
and I flew to Paris, then we took a train
In the summer of 1980, I decided I
As the Regis Group had no contacts
to Basel where we met with Armin to
wanted to expand the European
with graphic designers in either Italy,
finalize the plans. This was both my
Workshop offerings. During a VCD
or Switzerland, I agreed to find con-
and John’s first trip to Europe. We then
fieldtrip to New York, I approached
tacts and to help organize it. I had a
trained to Turin, Italy, to meet up with
Colin Forbes, a partner in Pentagram
friend, a colleague and faculty mem-
the students and a faculty group to
Design, one of the most famous
ber in the art history department at
begin the tour.
multi-disciplined design firms in Lon-
Kent State, Sheila Tabakoff, who had
don, England and New York. Colin was
studied, lived and traveled in Europe,
During that first travel program,
interested in my idea of developing a
primarily in Italy. She agreed to help
Armin and I discussed the possibility
workshop in England. The first Kent
me set up studio tours, lectures and
of continuing the program the follow-
& Pentagram Summer in England
field trips, etc., in Italy.
ing year. However, both of us agreed
Workshop began the summer of 1981.
that a more hands-on experience for
The first and second years of the work-
I had read about Armin Hoffman, a
students would be more worthwhile,
shop were held at Cambridge Univer-
well-known Swiss graphic designer
but we would retain the field trips,
sity on the campus of Kings College
and educator. I contacted him by mail
lectures, etc. We structured a five-
in Cambridge. Subsequent workshops
and he responded positively about
week study program—a week in Bris-
were held in London. Faculty included
working with me. We agreed on a se-
sago, Switzerland for all the students,
Colin, as well as other partners of the
ries of possible lectures, studio visits
graphic and industrial design, followed
firm, including Mervyn Kurlanski (who
and hotel accommodations in Swit-
by an additional three-week graphic
later took over for Colin as co-director
zerland. He gave me some additional
design workshop in Brissago and a
with me) and Allen Fletcher. Numerous
contacts in Italy, which I sent to Sheila
simultaneous three-week industrial
notable British designers were guest
to organize. The travel program was
design workshop to be held in Zürich.
speakers, including FHK Henrion.
organized to be 6 weeks long, includ-
The two groups would reassemble
ing travel time. It began with 2 weeks
for a final week in Basel. This was
In 1982, we recomposed the Kent
in Italy then a week in Switzerland in
the first Kent Summer in Switzerland
Summer in Switzerland as a graduate
Brissago, on Lago Maggiore and at
Program beginning in June 1974. In
level and post-graduate experience for
the foot of the Alps in the southern
1975, the industrial design portion of
practicing professionals, (similar to
canton of Ticino, the summer home of
the program was dropped for lack of
the new, England Program). It moved
Armin. Another week would be spent
interest and enrollment. However, the
to Rapperswil, located a short dist-
in Basel, Armin’s home in the north of
Kent Summer in Switzerland Program
ance north of Zürich on Lake Zürich.
John Brett Buchanan
j.Charles Walker
>
>
Kent Swizerland Trip 1973
58
Feature Interview: j. Charles Walker
I contacted Fritz Gottschalk and Ruedi
The Kent Summer in Switzerland
Quality and diversity were accomplished
Rüegg during a 1981 trip to England,
Workshop ran from 1973–1991 for a
by carefully selecting and hiring full-
both internationally noted Swiss
total of nineteen years. Kent & Penta-
time and adjunct faculty with different
designers with their design firms in
gram Summer in England Workshop
styles and “training” graduate teaching
Zürich. Each expressed their interest
ran 1981–1985 for five years, and the
assistants. As Division Coordinator, I
in working with me on the recomposed
Kent Summer in Florence, Italy, work-
was in charge of scheduling and assign-
Swiss Workshop. The 10th Annual Kent
shop ran 1982–1984 for three years.
ing faculty to classes. I assigned them
Summer in Switzerland was held in
During the years, 82–84, all three
to teach courses in which they had prov-
summer 1982. Both Fritz and Ruedi,
European Workshops ran for three-
en their competency. I found the way to
along with Edgar Reinhart, noted Swiss
weeks each, beginning with Florence,
avoid teaching a school ‘‘style’’ but to
designer and expert in 3-dimensional
Italy, followed by the Rapperswil, Swit-
instead expose students to the widest
design, were the instructors. Other
zerland, ending with the Cambridge/
variety of possibilities available. In addi-
notable Swiss designers were guest
London. For 20 years, I was working
tion, I interviewed guest adjunct faculty
speakers such as Jean Robert and Kati
and spending from three to ten weeks
who were noted for their styles, but
Durrer, creators of the Swatch Watch.
in Europe overseeing each one of the
selected them for their individual differ-
workshops.
ences. They were hired to teach Special
Also, in 1981, Sheila Tabakoff and I
Topic courses, required in the curricu-
discussed setting up a third workshop
Q. Was there a model for the program
lum or as elective courses in the Blos-
to be held in Florence, Italy. That year
you designed?
som+ Kent, KSUCDA and the Summer
together, we attended the Aspen (Colo-
Workshops. Students were allowed and
rado) International Design Conference,
The visual communication program I
encouraged to develop their own styles.
which was to be focused on Italian
envisioned and built at Kent State, was
The success of the approach is demon-
Design in all areas, including graphic
not based on any model. It was based
strated by the vast variety of positions
design, industrial design, fashion and
more on what most schools were not
held by graduates and of the variety of
interior design. With the help of my
doing or doing poorly. The underlying
the work created by KSU alumni.
New York designer contacts attending
philosophy of the Kent VCD program
the conference, we were introduced to
I built was to avoid teaching ‘‘style’’,”
Later in my career, as a NASAD Accred-
Bruno Monguzzi, who was interested in
concentrating instead on teaching the
itation Reviewer, I saw first-hand how
the concept and in participating as an
basic fundamentals of visual design
poorly curriculum for the programs in
instructor. We held the first Kent Sum-
theory (form), skill with tools (later the
design were constructed. I saw how
mer in Florence, Italy, in the summer of
most important tool, computers) and
disorganized and poorly courses were
1983. The program featured Bruno as
conceptual problem solving. I wanted
structured, the lack of constructive
well as Leo Lionni, Mario Lovergine and
a structured and stepped curriculum
criticism, and rigorous standards for
numerous other notable Italian design-
that was both rigorous and demand-
quality were missing in many higher
ers and illustrators as lecturers.
ing and that offered a constructively
education institutions.
critical evaluation of student work.
> VCD students in class during the late 70s
60
Feature Interview: j. Charles Walker
I also realized how good our program
and energetically for five days with
Q. How would you describe John in
at Kent State actually had become.
the students. It was truly amazing
three words?
the time and effort they spent. The Q. What are some of your favorite
‘‘fun part’’ for me and the other faculty
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER”
memories working with designers you
of record was spending the evenings
brought to campus for Blossom &
at dinner talking and getting to know
Q. How would you describe John’s
UCDA Summer Programs?
them. After the first couple of years,
impact on the program?
the visiting faculty stayed with me at Modeled after the 1973 Kent Summer
my home, later they were housed at a
The three-word description above is
in Switzerland Program, the first
second house I owned next door, both
an appropriate description for Profes-
Blossom + Kent Art (& Design) Sum-
on the shore of West Twin Lake.
sor Buchanan’s contributions to the
mer Workshop, held in 1976, featured
Program, Division and then School. All
well-known design and illustration
The program offered the participants
of the VCD faculty had their strengths
professionals. That workshop started
intensive hands-on work sessions,
and contributed to the school’s devel-
with a bang, bringing the well known
lectures, field trips, portfolio reviews,
opment, but John was unique and be-
New York designer Rudolph De Harak
lunches, cocktails and dinner parties
came indispensible. He was proficient
and San Francisco designer Barba-
at the Lake to ‘‘rub shoulders’’ and
in nearly every aspect of the design
ra Stauffacher Solomon to the Kent
get to know wonderful and talented
curriculum. He taught in almost every
campus for a week and a half each.
designers. Some students were in-
course in the extensive curriculum.
Both Rudolph and Barbara were both
terviewed during the workshops and
While capable of seeing things in a
heavily involved in 3-D design. I had, in
some later hired as interns and even
larger context, he was most efficient
preparation for the workshop, secured
full-time employees by the guest fac-
and valuable in his ability to see the
an Ohio Arts Council Grant (Graphic De-
ulty. Obviously, the guest faculty en-
smallest of details. I found early on
sign for Three Dimensional Spaces) for
joyed their experience as much as the
that whenever he was asked to do
a workshop theme of the same name.
participants and the faculty of record,
something, he always completed the
by the fact that I never had an invita-
task, and usually far beyond what was
For the next 28 years, until my retire-
tion to a prospective guest designer
asked of him.
ment, the summer workshops brought
turned down. Like many professions,
to the Kent State campus nearly two
designers are a tight-knit community,
I chose John Brett to replace me as the
hundred world-renowned visual com-
many know each other and the ‘‘word
Professor/Creative Director of Glyphix
munication professionals to teach and
spread’’ as to the quality of the pro-
because I trusted that he would per-
work with hundreds of students.
gram and how much those who had
fect the most important and unique
participated enjoyed ‘‘giving back’’ to
course, structured for the most cre-
future professionals.
ative students in the program. I was
While not answering the specific question above, I can say that my experienc-
not disappointed. He brought Glyphix
es were 99 percent positive. For a very
to a level, which I doubt any other fac-
small honorarium—food, lodging and
ulty member in the division, including
transportation—they worked tirelessly
me, could have achieved.
VCD Alumni Magazine
In every course assigned to him in the program, especially the professional courses, I relied upon him to help build or to re-build. The internship program, Professional Portfolio and the accompanying Senior Exhibition required for graduation were his to structure. Finally, John was intricately involved in working with me in developing the summer foreign study workshops beginning with the Kent Summer in Switzerland Workshop in 1973. John took over the Blossom+Kent Summer Workshops, becoming the co-director and instructor of record of those programs in 1982. He and I worked together on the Blossom and the KSUCDA Summer Workshops until we both retired in 2004.
> j.Charles Walker
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
‘‘I wanted a structured and stepped curriculum that was both rigorous and demanding and that offered a constructively critical evaluation of student work’’ — j.Charles Walker
John Brett Buchanan
INTERVIEW BY: KHALIL DIXON
Q. Would you please share with us a
In 1971, I received my B.F.A. in 2/D art
plained that I could apply my art and
little about your design education?
with an emphasis in graphics [print-
photo background to the major. Since I
making] and photography. My graph-
had tried to major in design at USC, and
I landed in graphic design purely by
ics/printmaking professor, Ruth Weis-
the three faculty members were very
accident. I wanted to be an architect
berg, recommended that I apply to Kent
welcoming, I decided to remain in the
since the age of five. The School of Ar-
State University for graduate school,
graphic design program. Graphic design
chitecture at The University of South-
which accepted me into its M.F.A. in
is all about problem solving for clients,
ern California (USC) in Los Angeles
printmaking program in The School of
as is architecture, so I was hooked in-
accepted me into their program in
Art. The first day I arrived at Ian Short’s
stantly. Everything about the field and
1967. My first design course was with
printmaking studio in Van Deusen Hall,
the program felt ‘‘natural’’ to me.
Deborah Sussman, who was working
he informed me that I had actually reg-
for Charles and Ray Eames at the time.
istered for 15 quarter hours of graduate
I later left the M.F.A. program to work
She was inspiring. [She later designed
graphic design and illustration (GD&I)
for GD&I for a year and gain Ohio
the 1984 L.A. Summer Olympic graphics
courses, not printmaking courses.
residency status. I became a lab tech
program]. However, once into the pro-
When I attempted to withdraw from
for the photo lab, and j.Charles hired
gram I found that the math component
my current courses and register for
me for some photo assignments that
and I did not get along. I eventually
printmaking courses, I met j. Charles
he had through his graphic design
transferred into the School of Art to
Walker, the head of the GD&I program
studio, Tarragon Graphics. The School
major in design, but the school ter-
and faculty members Doug Unger and
of Art awarded me a graduate teach-
minated that major during my soph-
Eric May in the graphic design offices
ing assistantship, and I was put in
omore year. As a result, I transferred
at White Hall.
charge of the GD&I darkroom. I also
into the 2/D art program.
> View of Room 105 from the Director’s Office
assisted j.Charles in his courses. I did j.Charles told me what graphic design
not teach a course on my own that
& illustration was all about and ex-
first year.
66
Feature Interview: John Brett Buchanan
In the meantime, I began to try to pick
terminal degree. By the way, in 1975, I
understated elegance, but I also like
up small freelance [gratis] jobs design-
was offered the tenure track position
‘‘over-the-top’’ and even ‘‘garish’’ if it is
ing posters, brochures and ads around
of Assistant Professor at both KSU and
an appropriate solution for the prob-
the university and learned about the
The University of Akron. Akron offered
lem and the client.
production aspect of design. I worked
me $1,000 more per year, a substantial
with the sole university graphic design-
amount at the time, than KSU. I turned
One of my very first students, who later
er, photographer and an editor in the
Akron down to take the lesser-paid
became a design partner and friend,
University Publications Department
position at KSU, a decision that I have
Chris Nehlen, once quoted Ralph Waldo
along with the director of University
never regretted.
Emerson to me during a class critique:
Printing Services.
‘‘A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin My next big educational experience
of little minds, adored by little states-
I spent a lot of time in the library, read-
was spending the summer of 1975,
men and philosophers and divines.’’ I
ing every graphic design periodical
in San Francisco working for Humbert
initially took offense but then realized
and every book on graphic design and
-Clark, a design agency that special-
just how right he was. I do think that I
illustration as well as advertising and
ized in department store catalogs.
had a teaching philosophy when I first
related art. j.Charles, Doug and Eric
The owner was one of j.Charles Walker
started, however misguided it might
lent me their personal libraries as well.
and Eric May’s classmates from the
have been at the time, and that was
I developed my own personal visual
University of Cincinnati. I wound up
that I taught to the good students and
library in my head and began to see
working on fashion catalogs for Lipp-
hoped that the others could keep up.
the history of graphic design in a very
man’s in Oregon, Bullock’s in San Fran-
I don’t think I was much of a ‘‘nurtur-
informal manner.
cisco, Mervyn’s, Diamonds of Arizona,
ing’’ professor at the beginning of my
The Little Daisy, the fashion designer,
teaching career, but I think that I was
I was hired by the University of Akron
Jessica McClintock, Gump’s, and a
more accessible and supportive to all
as an Adjunct Instructor and taught
non-fashion client, Dutch Boy Paints.
students towards the end of my career.
courses in their advertising (graph-
I worked with modeling agencies and
ic design) program for a year. I later
fashion and product photographers
Q. What designers influenced you the
earned an M.A. degree instead of the
in San Francisco and Oakland. I still
most?
M.F.A. even though I had more than
consider this opportunity as my ‘‘real’’
enough design hours for the terminal
master’s degree.
degree; I was missing some required elective hours. I took the lesser degree
When I became a graduate student in graphic design, I had no real back-
Q. What is your design philosophy?
because I was beginning to apply for
ground on which to draw for influence except for those who I read about in
teaching positions, and I needed a
I don’t think I have a design philosophy.
periodicals and books. Because I had
master’s degree, any master’s degree,
I think some of my former students
been an architecture major, I naturally
in order to be a viable candidate. I have
believed that I was pedantic and only
gravitated to the work of Eero Saarinen,
never regretted taking the M.A. instead
liked ‘‘Swiss design’’ (whatever that
Richard Neutra, Phillip Johnson, and
of the M.F.A., but today a candidate
is], but my design aesthetic is varied
Frank Lloyd Wright and to very simple
for a teaching position must have the
and runs the gamut of tastes. I like
design. The work of Moholy Nagy stood
out because of my photography background. I later began to notice the work of George Lois, and as his work for Esquire magazine and the very simple Volkswagen ads [Think Small] by Doyle Dane & Bernbach. My own freshman basic design teacher at USC had been Deborah Sussman, who worked on Mathematica, the science exhibit at The Museum of Science and Industry in Exposition Park that was across the street from campus. I admire a whole list of graphic designers, of all types and of all design persuasions, and there are too many to name here. However, many of the guest faculty in the Blossom+Kent and KSUCDA summer programs stayed at my house for their week, and I got a chance to get to know them on a more personal basis. Quite a few of them helped to open me up to other avenues of design. April Greiman and Jayme Odgers were a major influence on me. A lecture given by Michael Manwaring at a UCDA Conference in Chicago was life-changing for me. j.Charles Walker was my mentor and later partner and probably had the greatest influence on me and whatever design philosophy I have.
My association with UCDA [University
> John Brett Buchanan
68
Feature Interview: John Brett Buchanan
Q. What is your involvement with
UCDA is an organization that respects
Q. What is the best way for alumni to
UCDA?
and values its members. I have appre-
stay connected?
ciated all that it has done for me and My association with UCDA [University
it has rewarded me time after time.
With websites and social media, it
& College Designers Association] has
I cannot speak highly enough of the
is much easier to stay in touch and
been the most rewarding professional
organization and its mission. It is
reach out to almost anyone.
and personal aspect of my design ca-
because of this that j.Charles and I
reer outside of my university involve-
formed the jCW+JBB Foundation to
Dale Shidler (VCD MFA), acting Chair of
ment. I have begun and maintained
award conference scholarships to the
the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design,
life-long friendships that I cherish
annual UCDA design conference. We
and VCD professor Valora Renicker (VCD
because of my belonging to UCDA.
have awarded scholarships to under-
M.F.A.) started an unofficial Facebook
graduate and graduate students and
Group called Kent State Visual Commu-
The UCDA board of directors awarded
their faculty sponsors nationwide over
nication Design Alumni Group. It is for
me the UCDA Gold Award at the annual
the last seven years. UCDA is the re-
anyone who was ever in VCD; it is not
design conference in Chicago in 2002,
cipient of our personal trusts and our
just limited to alumni.
which was doubly rewarding because
foundation as well. We are now in the
my Glyphix staff attended. They also
process of developing new educational
Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m glad to see that many VCD alumni
awarded me emeritus status. I have
sponsorships for UCDA and hope to
are members of professional organiza-
served on the Board of Directors for
announce those very soon.
tions such as AIGA chapters. Monthly
UCDA and the UCDA Foundation, and
events can, I hope, serve as a way to
have held the offices of Competition
Q. How would you like to see the VCD
Coordinator, Conference Co-Chair,
program at Kent State University
Treasurer, and President. I also coor-
evolve?
dinated the summer KSUCDA design
keep in touch, too. I know first hand that many of my former students and staff of Glyphix have
workshops through which I have met
I would hope that the program con-
remained friends and even colleagues.
and spent time with many national
tinues to offer solid design principles,
Moreover, many of our graduates work
and international designers, illustra-
along with technical, ethical and
together in the same in-house design
tors and photographers.
conceptual skills as well. I hope that it
offices and design and advertising
does not succumb to a one approach
agencies, so there is always that
The Glyphix studio and I have won
suits all program that many programs
connection, too.
numerous gold, silver and merit design
nation-wide are being forced to adopt
competition awards through the ann-
by administrations due to a mere num-
Q. What advice do you have for stu-
ual UCDA design competition, which
bers game [students, revenue, etc.].
dents entering VCD?
I have attended nearly every year and was able to get the Glyphix staff to
This is a profession, not a hobby. This
many as well.
profession is about problem solving for clients, trying to derive satisfaction and expressing oneself within,
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
at times, a myriad of limiting circum-
I never intended Glyphix to be ‘‘my’’
stances. Graphic design is not some-
studio. I had my own studios, Tarragon
thing that exists on its own. One does
Graphics and John Brett Buchanan,
not produce ‘‘graphic design’’ and then
so I never used it for my own clients. I
try to find a client to buy it. There is a
wanted the studio to be the student’s
client. The client has a problem. The
studio, but still under my direction,
designer needs to analyze and solve
guidance and leadership.
the problem by producing a viable and appropriate result.
I never wanted Glyphix to compete directly with professional graphic design
Incoming students must embrace
studios or ad agencies. Glyphix did not
technology, not shun it. Moreover, writ-
have to pay rent, utilities or salaries,
ten and personal skills are even more
so we could always ‘‘undercut’’ a
important than in the past. I am sure
professional. However, I knew that just
that I am not the only one of us to have
offering work gratis was not ‘‘profes-
an email or text message horrendous-
sional’’ either and was not something
ly misinterpreted.
that I encouraged. There were some organizations that needed help and
Graphic design, illustration or photog-
who could never afford to hire design
raphy (since it is now a part of VCD)
services, so I sometimes used paying
can be creative and even lucrative pro-
clients to subsidize clients who could
fessions. Clients can be harsh at times
not pay a design fee. I didn’t want any-
(even harsher than some professors).
one to say, “You get what you pay for”
However, sometimes jobs go better
if we didn’t charge, but I didn’t want
than expected and wind up being
the students to be taken advantage of
experiences of a lifetime.
by a non-paying client with unrealistic expectations, either.
Q. What was your vision for Glyphix? Glyphix ran like any design office. We j.Charles created Glyphix, and under
put together production schedules
his direction, it was an extension of
and sent requests for quotations to
himself and his university clients. He
vendors. Deadlines were set and ad-
did not charge those clients, and the
hered to, and there were real conse-
students got course credit and printed
quences if a job did not make it out of
pieces in exchange.
the studio on time. There were presentations, photo shoots, and press checks. We compiled and reconciled
70
Feature Interview: John Brett Buchanan
accounts and expenses. However, I
roughs, x-acto knives, rubyliths and
VCD owned. I suggested and enter-
was in charge of the final billing.
overlays! It was all about the skills
tained guest speakers and coordinated
needed to make class projects better
the reception afterwards.
Unlike a classroom with set hours per
as well as how to prepare work for
week, the student’s schedules could
printers. While the computer has
I was most closely associated with
vary depending on their coursework.
taken over many of these earlier tasks
Glyphix, and I was the Creative Direc-
Many of the faculty understood if a
I still think that craftsmanship is im-
tor of the studio for 25 years.
class deadline conflicted with a client
portant and comes into play especially
deadline, and professors often gave
if you look at someone’s computer
I became the Coordinator of the
the students some slack.
document and see how terribly orga-
KSUCDA and Blossom+Kent Summer
nized it is.
Workshops and arranged for the guest
The students and I had a very real-
instructors, lodging for guests and
istic experience through Glyphix.
Another class that I developed was
students who came to campus from
They put in more time than what was
Graphic Design 2, the concept course.
all over the country and even inter-
required in a ‘‘regular’’ class; they re-
Because it was taken in conjunction
nationally and publicizing the public
ceived ‘‘real life’’ experience and very
with the Junior Portfolio Review, I was
lectures. Many of the guests stayed at
often got award-winning work out of
always associated with the review
j.Charles’ and my home and we very
the studio as a result.
even though I was rarely the instructor
often hosted opening night cocktail
of record for the review. I team taught
and dinner parties, lunches and end of
Q. What were the key programs you
this course for many years with Steve
the program lunches and dinners for
were responsible for and how did
Timbrook, and it was one of the most
the guests and students.
these programs change over time?
rewarding and enjoyable teaching experiences in my entire career.
I put together and taught the first
Q. What is your most memorable experience at VCD?
Basic Studio Skills course. You can
I developed our internship program.
also blame me for the 5-pointed star,
I arranged and screened the intern-
I think that one of the funniest mem-
the grid, the box, etc. I had to actually
ship offerings and compiled a printed
ories that I have has to do with one of
draw these for a client, and I felt that
list for the students. I also developed
the first Glyphix staffs. At the time, the
everyone should know how to use a
Internship 1 & 2 to help students
Mary Tyler Moore Show was very popular.
Rapidograph, a ruling pen, a compass
prepare their portfolios, cover letters,
The staff decided that they wanted to
and a Shadler rule!
resumes and portfolios. I secured
re-create the newsroom in the series
internship opportunities all over the
in the very small space they occupied
country and even a couple in Europe.
on the first floor. One night they went
I also taught students how to use the photo lab to make PMTs and ColorKeys
through the Art building and appropri-
so they could improve the ‘‘comp’’
I put together the original Senior Port-
ated all of the clocks. They mounted
quality of their projects and how to
folio Review course as well. I helped
them in the studio and underneath
comp and specify type and charac-
design and make the portfolio stands,
they posted signs like those from the
ter counting. I taught them marker
including the two display systems that
series. The clocks were labeled ‘‘New
VCD Alumni Magazine
York’’, ‘‘London’’, ‘‘Moscow’’, ‘‘Beijing’’,” ‘‘Paris’’, etc. The director of the school
Q. How would you describe j.Charles Walker’s impact on the VCD program?
had to come to j.Charles and demand that they be returned.
Having been there from almost the beginning, I’ve seen the program grow
Q. What part of the VCD program
under j.Charles vision. j.Charles was
makes you the most proud?
always the visionary and ‘‘big picture’’ guy. Acting as, to use his own analogy,
The Glyphix studio and the incredibly
the ‘‘conductor’’, he orchestrated the
talented student staff that I had the
program and saw the major become a
privilege to work with over the years
division and, eventually, a school unto
during my teaching career. I’ve enjoyed
itself. By getting this accomplished, he
observing their careers develop. I’m
had others in design education jealous
proud to say that many are not just
and amazed. Even after retirement,
former students but have become life-
other design educators approached
long friends.
him about how to institute the same kind of program in their institutions.
Q. How would you describe j.Charles
I think that is a good testament to his
Walker in three words?
tenacity and a good legacy for his vision for Visual Communication Design
Crusty, but benign.
at Kent State University.
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
‘‘I have always felt that the primary purpose of the visual communicator is to enhance and expand the conceptual idea.’’ —j.Charles Walker
74
Faculty Spotlight: Jaime Kennedy
Pugzilla
What do a pug, Godzilla and the Sears Tower have in common?
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
a lot of news recently with the ice bucket challenge, but people rarely see how the disease changes people’s everyday lives. The family has been faced with excessive financial burdens; they have to make some serious home renovations just to get Brian’s wheelchair into the house. This money will go to help Brian’s family in that way.’’
Associate Professor Jaime Kennedy and his wife Kelly Urquhart sold ‘Pugzilla’ t-shirts to raise money for the Best Friends Animal Society and the Brian Sirl ALS fund before Kennedy ran the Bank of America Chicago Marathon October 12.
‘‘People have skillsets that can make the community better, and they should use them.’’ In the future, Kennedy would like to get other VCD students and faculty
BY MEGHAN CAPREZ
members involved in the production and design aspects of the fundraiser.
One hundred percent of the proceeds
The couple raised ‘‘a decent amount’’
‘‘I’ve actually talked to several people
from the Urquhart-designed shirts pur-
of money for the Best Friends Animal
about that,’’ Kennedy said. ‘‘Getting
chased through the couple’s Etsy shop
Society, a no-kill shelter, last year
graphic designers and photographers
go toward the Best Friends Animal Soci-
through a t-shirt fundraiser before
and illustrators involved in a project
ety and the Brian Sirl ALS fund charities.
Kennedy ran the Rite Aid Cleveland
like this would be perfect.’’
Customers could choose which charity
Marathon. The shirts were printed by
to help with their purchase, or they can
the Rust Valley Design Co., an organi-
While the couple is no longer accept-
choose to split the funds 50-50.
zation founded by 2012 VCD alumnus
ing donations for this year, they are
Nate Mucha.
already working on next year’s design.
‘‘I think the message we want to send
Kennedy has entered the New York City
out is that everyone should be playing
The couple planned to do another fund-
Marathon lottery for Fall 2015 and has
their part,’’ Kennedy said. ‘‘People have
raiser for the shelter before the 2014
his fingers crossed.
skillsets that can make the community
Chicago Marathon when they received
better, and they should use them.’’
news that a friend of theirs had been diagnosed with Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). ‘‘ALS has been getting
> The dog himself: Mr. Wiggles
Check out kellyurquhart.com
76
Faculty Spotlight: Jessica Barness
Critical Making Asst. Professor Jessica Barness will co-edit a special edition of the journal Visible Language with assistant professor Amy Papaelias of the State University of New York at New Paltz.
WORDS: ERICA BATYKO IMAGE: TERRAN WASHINGTON
g
VCD Alumni Magazine
Issue 2 | Spring 2015
ing with content related to literature,
developing commercially viable prod-
museums or social media, for exam-
ucts,’’ Barness said. ‘‘The students will
ple,’’ she said.
design toward a better understanding
The difference between this issue and others is the incorporation of an online element dedicated to things like interactive reading experiences
of a topic or issue, as part of a larger research agenda. They’ll be authoring and producing creative works that are also critical inquiries into human experience.’’
The special issue,
or works that exist as audio or video. Barness says this is not standard
Barness says she finds passion in this
Critical Making: Design and the Digital
practice for design research journals.
research because it challenges the
Humanities, will explore the point at which those two disciplines intersect in education and research. ‘‘The digital humanities is an interdis-
‘‘The idea that we brought to Visible Language was to do a hybrid issue that was printed but also has an on-
typical expectations of what it means to be a designer. ‘‘One thing I would call a misconception
line space that will host peer-reviewed
is that designers just make things
ciplinary approach to investigating
creative, digital contributions,’’ Bar-
look good; it’s something we constant-
human experiences in the networked,
ness said. ‘‘Journals in a couple other
ly fight,’’ Barness said. ‘‘Our processes
electronic information age,’’ Barness
areas are already doing this. We hav-
and approaches can also add value to
explained. ‘‘Historically, it’s also been
en’t explored it very much in design,
team projects with people outside our
known as humanities computing. Re-
and we’re excited to have the support
areas of expertise.’’
search in this area focuses on digital
of Visible Language to do it.’’
technology and culture, as well as practices of building and inventing.’’
The issue is set to be published in
co-editor aim to have the issue be an
October 2015, but in the meantime,
asset to design practice.
According to Barness, the cross be-
Barness says she is discovering ways
tween the two disciplines is becoming
to incorporate the project into her
more prominent.
curriculum.
‘‘We’re seeing a crossover in that
Overall, Barness says she and her
‘‘This spring, I’ll be teaching a gradu-
scholars in the digital humanities are
ate course called Critical Making in
designing their own research tools,
Design Research.
and designers often create work that
I plan to introduce how design and
is outside of traditional client-based
making can be an active part of the re-
relationships. And both areas are deal-
search process, and not aimed toward
‘‘The digital humanities is an interdisciplinary approach to investigating human experiences in the networked, electronic information age,’’