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The anatomy of design: uncovering the influences and inspirations in modern graphic design PDF

211 Pages·2011·45.705 MB·English
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uncovering the influences and inspirations in modern graphic design steven heller and mirko ilic´ packaging and unpackaging design Graphic design is a composite of many influences and inspirations. Johannes Gutenberg, shinbone’s connected the thighbone—and how we work. In the design body, this the inventor of movable type, inspired by the beauty of illuminated manuscripts though anatomical insight outlines the physical and genetic makeup of a particular work. Below cognizant of the need for mass communication, replicated the hand-scribed letterforms the surface of a poster, package, book cover, or billboard are elements (creative found on sacred religious tracts. Yet he forged old and new into the most revolutionary molecules, so to speak) that determine and define its reason for being. technology since the wheel. Gradually, slavish mimicry of hand letters shifted—owing to the gifts of skilled artisans—into distinct new typefaces that resembled stone carvings, For this book, we selected forty-nine examples of graphic design to from which the Roman letter became the standard Western type. But this process did anatomically disassemble piece by piece—tissue by tissue—to reveal an embedded array not occur overnight. Graphic design methods, manners, and styles emerged only as fast of influences and inspirations. These are not necessarily the best-known or celebrated as technology allowed or culture demanded. In the late nineteenth century, advertising objects of graphic design, though many contain the genetic codes of canonical works. art developed to meet the needs of a new commercial culture and became the Instead, they represent some visible and a few obscure relatively contemporary artifacts cornerstone on which all modern graphic design would ultimately stand. With seminal that are well conceived, finely crafted, and filled with hidden treasures. Some are overtly ties to commerce and industry, graphic design conventions were designed to capture the complex—and their influences easy to see with the naked eye—while others are so public’s attention and persuade them to consume. Printers and designers often simple it is hard to believe a storehouse of inspiration is hidden underneath. The title mindlessly followed these conventions, styles, and tropes until new ones took their place. Anatomy of Design refers to the anatomical charts in science labs, but more precisely we are referencing the sides of beef, those maps of a cow with the dotted lines that look Viewed in archeological terms, the history of graphic design is one of those like states of the union, found on butcher shop walls. Our format is to show a large- cross-sectional, cutaway charts revealing strata and substrata of detritus from scale reproduction of a key design artifact (similar to the famous silhouette of a cow), different eras. Every decade, sometimes every year or month, designers produce but rather than carve up the rump, thigh, shank, etc., we pull out all the probable stylistic manifestations that, when used up, are thrown figuratively and literally into influences that went consciously or not into the final work—and there are many. landfill. Like any other industry that trades in fashion, passé graphic design artifacts are ignored until some intrepid excavator finds and reintroduces them into the culture But how do we know for certain? Did the designers share their influences or as sources of “new” inspiration. (Such was the case in the nineteenth century, when admit to their borrowings? In most cases, we draw our own conclusions because rather the discovery of Egyptian tombs spawned Egyptian—or slab serif—type and ornament, than a traditional case study that emerges from the designer, this is a critical analysis not to mention clothes and furniture.) These days, old becomes new at breakneck that comes from the knowing observer. Where possible, we confirm our assertions with speed and likewise becomes old again in the blink of an eye. Nonetheless, each the designers in question, but it is not necessary. Sometimes—actually most times— new/old discovery adds to an ever-expanding design vocabulary. designers do not know the derivation of their work. Paul Rand once said you design something and then figure out reasons to justify it. Moreover, ideas and images float At the risk of mixing metaphors, all graphic design elements are circulated freely in the air, are breathed in and become part of the circulatory system. They may through a bloodstream that nourishes the field, regardless of when forms were emerge in a work without the creator knowing where they come from. So, through created or for what original purposes. Taking this concept a step further, if viewed critical observation, we identify the parts of the whole. We parse them, deconstruct anatomically, a piece of graphic design is decidedly the sum of integral parts. Peel them, and show them. Out of this anatomical mechanism emerges a timeline of away the outer skin and the skeleton supports distinct, individual parts that function influence and inspiration. The designs we’ve selected have multiple references, and we with others. Remove a single part and the design pathology is altered. Of course, no draw them out to show how the shinbone is connected to the neckbone, hambone, and matter what the components are, the result is what’s important; but understanding the wishbone as well as the thighbone. The result is a mass of information that may not fit inner workings of any design will help designers appreciate the complexity of their perfectly together but that shows how every graphic design is the sum of logical, craft. The study of anatomy teaches us how the body functions—not simply that the illogical, and inspiring parts. Dedicated to Ivo, Zoe, and Nick acknowledgments To say this was a whale of a book to assemble, design, and produce is an Thanks to Ribal Al-Rayess, Eric Anderson, Kristin Casaletto, Neven Kissenpfennig, understatement. The only thing easy about this entire project was conceiving the Dejan Krsic, Jee-eun Lee, Marija Miljkovic, Luka Mjeda, Masayo Nai, ClintonShaner, premise. Showing the evolution of a single piece of design through past and Iva Simcic, Lisa Sugahara, and Jessica Taylor, the loyal and indefatigable band of present history seemed like a great idea at the time. Even to anatomize the work designers, assistants, researchers, and image collectors, who worked days, nights, by revealing where different traits or components came from seemed quite doable weekends, and holidays to get this into shape. at the time. But once we opened the body, so to speak, and found there were more than one, two, or even three historical connections, this book became an epic. Gratitude to Winnie Prentiss, publisher at Rockport, for her patience and good will. And to the other folks at Rockport for all their assistance large and small: While it was fun to find all the various and sundry visual and contextual Barbara States, Rochelle Bourgault, and Regina Grenier. connections, it was nonetheless incredibly arduous finding each and every one of the more than 2000 examples. Cataloguing, cross-referencing, tagging, captioning, Also, untold gratitude goes to many of the hundreds of designers and illustrators you name it, was more labor intensive than ever bargained for. Now, we’re not and typographers and photographers represented in this book for their interest, making excuses, nor are we telling this to get sympathy from the reader, but generosity, and concern. Without them there’d be no book. rather to set the stage for the acknowledgments to follow. Finally, a special thanks to Tomo Johannes in der Muhlen and Daniel Young for We are deeply indebted to the following people: their support. First and foremost we thank Kristin Ellison,our editor and primary supporter since the beginning of the project and throughout the fits, starts, and postponements. Without her urging this could not have happened. —Steven Heller and Mirko Ilic´ contents St. Vincent Hospital Ambulance—Doyle Partners..............................1 Urban Outfitters—Art Chantry...............................................26 Burek—Trio/Fabrika.......................................................... 2 Kathleen Schneider—Jeremy Mende.........................................27 Printed in USA—Emek....................................................... 3 Absolut Campaign—TBWA\Chiat\Day .........................................28 Meet the World—Icaro Doria................................................. 4 Solar Twins—Stefan Bucher.................................................29 Joseph Goebbels—Aleksandar Macasev....................................... 5 Karim Rashid:Evolution—Stephen Schmidt/Duuplex............................30 Free Will—Nathaniel Cooper.................................................. 6 The Abuse You Yell at Your Kids...—Saatchi&Saatchi,New Zealand............31 Stay Away from Corporations...—Jonathan Barnbrook.........................7 Andrew Kohji Taylor—Tadanori Yokoo...................................... 32 iRaq—Copper Greene.........................................................8 Big Brother—Daniel Eatock..................................................33 The Design of Dissent—Milton Glaser, Mirko Ilic´ .............................. 9 Twin Town—Empire Design.................................................. 34 Ode to the Record Cover Girl—Dietwee..................................... 10 Manchester Dogs’ Home Annual Report—The Chase......................... 35 Obuvalnica Butanoga—Borut Kajbic..........................................11 Slow Food—Bruketa &Zinic..................................................36 Teatro—Maedche und Jongens...............................................12 Sample—Julia Hasting...................................................... 37 Penis Subway Map—Veit Schuetz............................................13 Movements:Introduction to a Working Process—Irma Boom................ 38 Macbeth and The Doll’s House—Harry Pearce ................................14 Amelia’s Magazine—Amelia Gregory......................................... 39 New Jersey Performing Arts Center—Paula Scher...........................15 Eliasson:The Blind Pavilion CYAN........................................... 40 Beautiful Decay—Anisa Suthayaly........................................... 16 A Designer’s Guide to Italy—Louise Fili....................................... 41 Yasel Jidai (Wild Age)—Yuka Watanabe..................................... 17 Monopolis—Dejan Dragosavac............................................... 42 Red Light Winter—Darren Cox................................................18 ChipKidd:Book One—Chip Kidd..............................................43 Friends of Good Music—CYAN...............................................19 Penguin Books—John Hamilton..............................................44 RichardBachman/Stephen King—PaulBuckley............................... 20 Motion Blur:Graphic Moving Image Makers—Onedotzero.......................45 BKLYN—Darren Cox..........................................................21 Antibook—Francisca Prieto.................................................. 46 Second International Exhibition: Call for Entries—Milton Glaser..............22 Either Act or Forget—Stefan Sagmeister.....................................47 Song X—Stephen Doyle and August Heffner................................... 23 L’Espresso—Massimo Verrone, Lowe Pirella Agency ...........................48 Sagmeister—Stefan Sagmeister............................................. 24 Spider—David Cronenberg................................................... 49 School of Visual Arts—James Victore....................................... 25 Bios and Directory.........................................................50 1 A St. Vincent Hospital Ambulance N A TOM Designer: Doyle Partners Y O F D E S IG N Logos are charged symbols that embody and radiate the ethos as well as the expressed through light (“as in the light seen through the stained-glass window of aspirations of a company or institution. The intensity of meaning encoded in a hospital chapel”) and science (“implied in the precise way the shapes and colors this simple iconic mark must not be underestimated, but neither should it be intersect”). Kluepfel initially resisted the shield simply because it is such a familiar worshiped as sacred. A corporate logo is not as mystical as, say, J. J. Tolkien’s motif, but ultimately he accepted its familiarity as comforting. “Yet it somehow famous Ring because it depends on external forces for its power. Even Superman’s conveys aggressiveness—a nice metaphor for proactive healthcare,” he adds. S signifies strength not because the S itself has superhuman powers but because the one who wears it—in this case a symbolic, fictional character—is a Aside from the cross, the shield is the most historically significant of superman. The Nazi SS rune lightning bolt logo represented an organization of the design elements here. Familiarity is actually a modest understatement. The self-styled supermen, but it became shorthand for its members’ inhumanity and shield dates to pre-Christian history but is common iconography of the crimes toward millions of victims. No matter how startling or elegant, beautiful Crusades. Crusaders marched with huge cross-emblazoned shields that, in or ugly, ultimately a logo is only as good or bad as the entity it represents. addition to protecting themselves from their enemies, announced their territorial One thing is certain: No designer deliberately starts out to make a bland logo. ambitions. Today, shields signify authority—like a police badge, also known as a By its nature, a logo must demonstrate visual strength. A visual identity may be shield. In graphic terms, shields frame visual ideas; like an adjective, a shield sophisticated or kitsch; nonetheless, the logo must be a mnemonic, a sign that describes the fundamental concept, which in this context is the cross lights up with resonance. Logos must be indelible when they are in use and representing the Sisters of Mercy. memorable when they are out of sight. Of course, they may change with mergers and acquisitions, or simply because a business or organization The ambulance is the most public expression of the St. Vincent’s identity chooses to alter its persona—and a logo is the agent of that persona. program. The bold arrow, a device almost as old as the shield—and arguably the first graphic symbol, and one that appears in all cultures—suggests In 1998, when Tom Kluepfel and Stephen Doyle of Doyle Partners assertive motion in whatever direction it points. It implies thrust, motive, and redesigned the identity scheme for St. Vincent’s Hospital in New York City, the outcome. Arrows lead and we follow, right or wrong. This ambulance also mandate was to unify the attributes of this neighborhood institution under a single follows conventions recalling early branded commercial vehicles and is an contemporary banner. St. Vincent’s had merged with eight other hospitals into a advertisement for itself. Like a moving billboard, the ambulance graphics must citywide healthcare system, so the designers sought an identity that built on its be bold, clear, and unmistakable; they must announce that this is an emergency existing recognition in the community, signaled its newfound reach, and exemplified vehicle as well as promote the institution that operates it. This expressive its distinct holdings. The basic symbol was rooted in a classic motif. “When the logo visual display is no different from that of a UPS truck in that the graphically committee includes nuns from the Sisters of Charity, it’s not too long before dynamic principles of visibility and accessibility are the same. From the fusion crosses show up in the sketches,” says Kluepfel. All the hospitals had a common of these graphic principles the ambulance emerges metaphorically as a crusader Catholic heritage and iconography—the colors, the cross, the shield—that were in its own right—for emergency healthcare. 1998 St. Vincent Logo and Ambulance Graphics, identity ad,d: Tom Kluepfel, Stephen Doyle s: Doyle Partners St. Vincent’s had merged with eight other hospitals into a citywide healthcare system, so the designers sought an identity that built on its existing recognition in the community, signaled its newfound reach, and exemplified its distinct holdings. Shields—serve and protect Arrows Stained-glass effect Travelling advertising 1968–7 1939 Blue Cross logo c1940 The Salvation Army logo d:Fletch 11th C Knights Templar 18thC Arms of Episcopal Church in d:Carl Metzger 1961 United Parcel Service (UPS) logo shield shield the United States of America shield d:PaulRand 1992 City Trail signa s:Why Not Associate 1950 No Way Out film poster c:Hull 1992 Arts Fes 1972 SBB logo d:Paul Rand d:Hans Hartmann Rand's integration of photography, typography, c:SBB Swiss Federal Railways signs, graphic shapes, and the surrounding white space stands in marked contrast to 1924 L. Moholy-Nagy, Kreis Der Freunde Des typical film posters. 1989 In ‘nOut CD cover for Joe Henderson Bauhauses (Circle of Friends of The ad:Micaela Boland d:Bob Venosa Bauhaus) trademark p:Francis Wolff 1998 Advertising lecture poster d:Michael Johnson Poster for a talk by Michael Johnson, Johnson Banks. 1999 Light Years poster Undated Modern stained-glass window ad:Michael Bierut d:Nicole Trice s:Pentagram d:The Architectural League 15th–16th C Stained Glass Window, Sevilla Cathedral, Spain 1963 Alfieri &Lacroix advertisement 1999 Millennium Images logo 200 d:Grignani s:Yacht Associates ad: c:Millennium Images c:P See Chapter #16 A u Aus 1986 China Grill logo d:Tibor Kalman, Douglas Riccardi c:Jefferey Chodorow & Richard Rasansky 0 BP Shield logo Logo for the fusion restaurant in New York City. 1993 New School University Identity logo 2002 Movin’ Out logo her Forbes Gill d:Ivan Chermayeff, Tom Geismar, Steff s:Serino Coyne Geissbuhler 2001 Shields for Rotterdam visual identity Identity for the Broadway Musical. s:Chermayeff & Geismar, Inc. s:75B c:Rotterdam 2001, Cultural Capital of Europe. age 1994 FedEx logo es s:Landor&Associates c:FedEx tival The negative space between the E and the X in 2002 Nottingham theoretical highway signage the logo creates a subliminal arrow. 2000 Reno Cooking Conveyors 3 logo d:Johnson Banks s:Gardner Design ad:Reno Cooking Conveyors 2005 BBX Berlin Brandenburg Express identity s:Thomas Manss Design 1882 Express Dairy Company, United Kingdom 1928 Philips Radio advertising truck 1980s Coke Delivery Trucks Late 1920s Michelin Publicity Vehicles Courtesy of Coca-Cola Company. 06 Paul Auster series covers Paul Buckley d:Greg Mollica enguin USA unique packaging system for Paul ster’s 25th anniversary.

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.